
    Howard v. Henriques and others.
    The principle upon which trade marks are protected, is not confined to persona) property. It applies to a name applied or appropriated to real property, as to a public hotel.
    Where the proprietor of a hotel, opened it under the name of Irving House, and it very soon became generally and equally known as the Irving House and Trving Hotel, and was kept by him while thus designated ; it was held that he had a right to the use of those names, to the exclusion of other persons in the same city or town ; and on their subsequently setting up a hotel called Irving Hotel, they were • restrained from the use of that name by injunction.
    March 22, 1851.
    
      The decision of the court contains a statement of the facts. The motion to dissolve the injunction was heard by Campbell, J.. with three other justices sitting with him as advisory.
    
      John Graham, for the defendant,
    
      J. jG. JBurrill, Jrfor the plaintiff,
   Campbell, ,T.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff,who is the proprietor of a hotel in this city, known as the Irving House or Irving Hotel, and which was opened and named by him “ Irving House ” in the fall of 1848, against the defendants as proprietors of another hotel in this city, which they have also called the Irving Hotel, and which was opened and named by the defendants, during the past summer. An injunction was granted by one of the justices of this court, restraining the defendants from using the name of Irving Hotel for their house, after an early day designated. A motion is made to dissolve this injunction. The plaintiff’s house, although originally designated by him, as the Irving House, very soon became generally known also as the Irving Hotel, and was designated by both names indiscriminately, for more than a year before the defendants opened their hotel.

It was urged by the defendant’s counsel, first that the plaintiff had not appropriated the name, because no such name appeared on the external walls of Ins house. And second, even if it did so appear, the name was not the subject of appropriation as applied to a hotel; that the principle upon which trade marks and other similar rights had been protected, was applicable alone to personal property, to manufactured articles, to such things as were necessarily movable, and in reference to which frauds could he practised without being easily detected, or at all events frauds could be practised operating injuriously upon the pruty claiming the trade mark and also upon the public.

There can bo no doubt of the appropriation of the name by the plaintiff for his hotel. It was on all Ids bills rendered to his guests, on cards, on large cards placed in other hotels throughout various portions of the country, and in cabins of steam boats and steam ships, accompanied by an engraved view of the building, and was so designated in numerous advertisements in public newspapers circulating throughout the country. If we were permitted to speak from our own knowledge, we should say that the fact of such name being applied by the plaintiff to his hotel was, at the time the defendants applied the same name to their hotel, and is now, notorious. There would he no more necessity for the plaintiff to place in large letters upon the front of his building, “ This is the Irving House,” in order to designate it and secure an appropriation of the name, than there would be to write on the public edifices of the city “ This is the City Hall,” and “ This is Trinity Church.”

Upon the second objection of the defendant, I at first had some doubt, which, by a more careful consideration and by conference with my associates, lias been removed.

¥e think that the principle of the rule is the same, to whatever subject it may be applied, and that a party will be protected in the use of a name which he has appropriated and by his skill rendered valuable, whether the same is upon articles of personal property which he may manufacture, or applied to a hotel where he has built up a prosperous bitsiness.

¥e are not disposed to interfere with the lawful pursuits of any one. Every man may, and ought to be permitted, to pursue a lawful calling in his own way, provided he does not encroach upon the rights of his neighbor or the public good. But he must not, by any deceitful or other practice, impose upon the public, and he must not by dressing himself in another man’s garments, and by assuming another man’s name, endeavor to deprive, that man of his own individuality and thus despoil him of the gains to which by his industry and skill he is fairly entitled. To make the application; if one man has, by close attention to the comfort of his guests, and by superior energy, made his hotel desirable for the traveller, and caused its name to become popular throughout the land, another man ought not to be permitted to assume the same name in the same town, and thus deprive him who first appropriated the name, of some portion of the fruits of that good will which honestly belong to him alone.

It can hardly require argument, to show that the use by the defendants of the same name for their hotel, interferes with the plaintiff’s business ; — and the fact is fully established by the affidavits. Such a result, under the circumstances, would seem to be inevitable. If the defendants may use the name, others may do the same, and the public would be inconvenienced by the confusion which would necessarily arise.

There is no hardship in enforcing the rule against these defendants. There is an abundance of names by which they can designate their hotel, and if they can succeed by their own efforts, by their skill and careful attention in building up a profitable business, in causing their hotel to become known and popular through the land, they will in turn be entitled to protection against those who may seek to deprive them of the advantages which they may thus honestly acquire.

The three of my associates, the Chief Justice and Justices Duer and Mason, who were present at the argument, together with Justice Sandford who granted the injunction, concur with me in opinion that the injunction must stand.

The motion to dissolve it must be denied with costs.  