
    PREST-O-LITE CO. v. H. W. BOGEN, Inc., et al.
    (Circuit Court, S. D. California, S. D.
    September 12, 1910.)
    No. 1,492.
    Tbade-Marks .and Trade-Names (§ 72)—Unlawful Competition—Injunction.
    Complainant manufactured, sold, and exchanged “Prest-O-Lite” . auto gas in tanks bearing complainant’s trade-mark, which tanks were sold to automobile owners, and when empty could be'exchanged for full tanks at a nominal charge at complainant’s exchange stations. Defendants purchased these tanks, when empty, from automobile owners, refilled them with other gas, and sold and furnished them to customers, after having pasted a paper label on them indicating that they had been refilled; but such label did not entirely cover plaintiff’s trade-mark, nor was it sufficient to successfully advise the purchaser that he was not obtaining Prest-O-Lite gas. Held that, though defendants were entitled to purchase such tanks and refill the same, their resale under such conditions constituted unfair competition, which complainant was entitled to enjoin.
    [Ed. Note.—For other eases, see Trade-Marks and Trade-Names, Cent. Dig. § 83; Dec. Dig. § 72*
    Unfair competition, see notes to Scheuer v. Muller, 20 C. C. A. 165; Lare v. Harper & Bros., 30 C. C. A. 376.]
    In Equity. Suit by the Prest-O-Lite Company, against H. W. Bog-en, Incorporated, and others.
    Decree for complainant.
    Woodruff & McClure, of Eos Angeles, Cal., for complainant.
    H. C. Millsap and R. T. Quinn, both of Eos Angeles, Cal., for defendants.
    
      
      For other cases see same topic & § number in Dec. & Am. Digs. 1907 to date, & IRep’r Indexes
    
   WELLBORN, District Judge.

While I do not purpose to here review the arguments or authorities submitted in the briefs of the respective parties, or, indeed, to do more than announce generally my conclusions, yet one matter of argument, since it is brief, may be profitably suggested.

To limit the consideration of this case to the right which the purchaser of one of complainant’s tanks has to use and dispose.of it according to his pleasure affords but an incomplete, and therefore misleading, view of the controversy. This is exemplified in that part of defendants’ brief filed June 27, 1910, where they quote from the case below cited as follows:

“Tbe fact remains, however, that when complainant company sells the tank filled with gas, without restrictions as to the use, such tank becomes the property of the purchaser, and he may use the tank as he sees fit, and have it refilled with gas by any one.” Prest-O-Lite Co. v. Avery Portable Light Co. (C. C.) 161 Fed. 648.

Construed properly—that is, with reference to its context—this is doubtless a correct statement of the law. The question, however, it determines, is very different from that which arises where a person embarks in the business of buying up, or otherwise procuring and recharging, old tanks bearing a peculiar trade-mark, and then offering to resell' them to the public, in competition with the owner of the trade-mark, who is also engaged in like business. The one case does not necessarily involve detriment to the owner of the trade-mark, while, in the latter, injury to him manifestly results from an unauthorized use of his property; for, of course, no one will assert that the sale of an article bearing a trade-mark operates as an assignment or license of -the latter. A careful reading of the case from which the above extract was taken shows that the distinction which I have endeavored to present was clearly in the mind of the judge by whom the opinion was written; indeed, the applicability of the doctrine the extract announces is expressly denied in the context, which, together with the extract itself, is as follows:

“The fact remains, however, that when complainant company sells the tank filled with gas, without restriction as to use, such tank becomes the property of the purchaser, and he may use the tank as he sees fit, and have it refilled with gas by any one or with something else. This, however, is a different; proposition from the one presented in this case. The defendant company either buys up these old tanks with the plate first described, or trades for them, thus becoming the owner. This it has the right to do. It then fills them in its way with its own acetylene gas, and, in some cases, pasting over a part of the copper plate on the tank a paper label, easily removed, either sells them outright, or gives them to users in exchange for others. This label is sometimes above or below the plate, and sometimes is bottom side up when the tank stands on end. This label reads as follows: ‘This tank has been refilled with acetylene gas by the Avery Portable Lighting Company, Milwaukee, Wis., Albany, N. Y., Manufacturers of Autogas Tanks.’ The defendant is a competing company in this business, and has a tank of its own, which it can and does fill with its own gas, described and advertised as ‘Autogas.’ Avery, of the defendant company, was formerly with the complainant company, and is familiar with its business methods.
“It is evident to me that the defendant pursues this method, and gets hold of these ‘Prest-O-Lite’ gas tanks, and passes them out to its customers, for the purpose of taking- trade from the complainant company. It in no way changes the appearance of the tank, except by pasting on the label, easily removed, and which only covers a part of the plate, and when it says, ‘This tank has been refilled with acetylene gas by the Avery Portable- Lighting Company,’ etc., it implies and fairly represents to the purchaser, not only that he is getting acetylene gas made by the Prest-O-Lite Company, but that he is obtaining a properly refilled ‘Prest-O-Lite gas tank.’ When the lower part of the plate is not covered by the label, surely the user or purchaser recognizes it as a ‘Prest-O-Lite gas tank,’ and will naturally assume that it holds ‘PrestO-Lite gas,’ and this is especially true as the defendant company has a different tank of its own make, bearing a different plate, and the purchasers will naturally assume that, when they take a ‘Prest-O-Lite tank,’ they get Prest-OLite acetylene gas properly placed therein, and that, when they take an ‘Autogas tank,’ they obtain Autogas properly placed therein. The natural result is that would-be purchasers of the Prest-O-Lite gas get Autogas imperfectly placed in the Prest-O-Lite tank. If the purchaser has doubts that he is -getting a Prest-O-Lite tank properly filled with Prest-O-Lite gas, he easily scrapes off the label, and, finding the complainant’s trade-mark, ‘Prest-O-Lite,’ he feels assured he has obtained what he desired.. I think, and am constrained to hold, that this is an improper use of these tanks bearing complainant’s trade-marks, and that these acts constitute unfair competition in trade, and should be restrained.” Prest-O-Lite Co. v. Avery Lighting Co., supra.

The labels which defendants in this case claim they placed on the tanks they recharged do not fulfill the requirements of the order made in the case cited, nor can such labels, in the very nature of things, fully counteract, so far as concerns the public, the effect of the trademark, and to the extent they fail in this respect they are lacking in adequate protection to complainant.

The foregoing views, it will be observed, do not take into account the restrictive conditions stenciled on many of complainant’s tanks, and it is a fair inference from the testimony that such tanks constitute the bulk of those covered by this litigation. These conditions, however, obviously give additional strength to complainant’s case, so far as it involves the stenciled tanks.

I am of opinion that the record on this hearing shows unfair competition, involving also infringement of complainant’s trade-mark, and, accordingly, an injunction will be issued, as prayed for in the bill.  