Hyman v. Solis Cigar Co.
Hyman v. Solis Cigar Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant was plaintiff below, and brought suit against appellee for an injunction to restrain the appellee from the use of a certain trade-mark, alleged to have been adopted and legally secured by appellant, and for damages alleged to have been sustained for the infringement.
It is alleged by the appellan.t, a dealer in cigars, that he adopted for a certain, brand or quality the words “ Hotel Metropole” as a trade-mark,-and he obtained from one of the proprietors of the Hotel Metropole an electrotype picture of the building in this city, with which he combined certain symbols or devices, the whole constituting his trade-mark, which he had placed upon the "boxes, and that, under such trade-mark, he introduced the cigar, and established a large trade; that the defendant subsequently adopted substantially the same trade-mark, and put the stock upon the market. Much evidence was taken, the injunction refused, and suit dismissed. It is alleged and established by the testimony that appellant’s first use of the label by sale of cigars was in October or November, 1891. That on May 13,1892, he filed in the United States patent office his application for letters patent and registration of his trade-mark, which was allowed June 7, 1892; on the 13th of June, 1892, he filed his statement with the secretary of state, as required by the act of 1891 (Sess. Laws, 1891, p. 396), — in both of which he claimed under oath to have adopted and used the trade-mark in September, 1891. That.must be regarded as conclusive of the date of adoption and first use.
It is established beyond controversy that on June 1,1891, appellee secured from the same source (one of the proprietors of the Hotel Metropole) an electrotype of the building, and used it, with the word “Metropole,” upon a certain brand of
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.