
    Stokes et al. v. Allen et al.
    
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    
    May 9, 1890.)
    Teade-Mabk—Inebingement.
    Plaintiffs published a hook called “The Good Things of Life, ” which consisted of pictorial illustrations and short dialogues taken from a serial owned by some of the plaintiffs, and called “Life.” Defendants published a book called “The Spice of Life, ” containing illustrations and dialogues from a German paper. The word “Life” was in quotation marks on plaintiffs’ hook, but not on defendants’, and the letters forming the word were double the size on plaintiffs’ book of those on defendants’ book. The color of the lettering on the two books was different, and, with the exception of a similarity in size and binding, the two books were dissimilar, including the contents. Held, that it was evident that plaintiffs used the word “Life” in a different sense from that in which it was employed by defendants, and that the use of the word by the latter in no respect infringed upon its employment by plaintiffs.
    
      Appeal from special term, New York county.
    Action by Frederick A. Stokes, Horace Stokes, John A. Mitchell, and Andrew Miller against Frank Allen and Joel P. White. There was judgment for defendants, and plaintiff appeals. For former report, see 2 H. Y. Supp. 643.
    Argued before Van Brunt, P. J., and Brady and Daniels, JJ.
    
      Miller & Savage, for appellants. Root & Clarke, for respondents.
   Daniels, J.

The plaintiffs were engaged in publishing and selling an illustrated book called “ The Good Things of Life. ” This book consisted of pictorial illustrations taken from a serial publication known as “Life,” together with brief sentimental dialogues under the illustrations themselves. This publication was at first made when the two defendants were partners with the plaintiff Frederick A. Stokes. It was a publication of the plaintiffs John A. Mitchell and Andrew Miller, and the right to dispose of it by way of sale was secured to Stokes and the two defendants. It was published and sold in this manner by Mitchell and Miller, and the firm of White, Stokes & Allen, from May, 1884, until the firm of White, Stokes & Allen was dissolved, in April, 1887, and by the articles of dissolution the property, business, and good-will of the firm was transferred by the other two partners to Frederick A. Stokes; and the other plaintiff, Horace Stokes, joined bis brother Frederick A. Stokes as a partner in this business in the fall of 1887. The pictorial illustrations contained in the volume designated “The Good Things of Life” were compilations wholly taken from the paper called “Life.” After the dissolution of the firm of White, Stokes & Allen, White and Allen carried on business for themselves as partners, and published a book in its size and color of binding quite similar to the book called “The Good Things of Life.” But the defendants’ book was designated “The Spice of Life.” This book consisted of illustrated pictorials and short dialogues and sentiments referring to or explanatory of the illustrations. But these illustrations and sentimental statements were not taken from the serial called “Life,” but they were reprod uctions from a German paper called “ The Fliegende Blatter. ” Upon the cover of the plaintiffs’ book the word “Life” was included within quotation marks, but these marks did not attend the use of the word “Life” on the defendants’ book. Heither was the color of the lettering similar upon the defendants’ book to that employed in coloring the lettering on the plaintiffs’ book. And additional embellishments upon a gilt ground-work were given upon the cover of the latter beyond and different from those made upon the cover of the former. The similarity of the books consisted wholly in their size and the color of the binding. In other respects they were wholly different, including their contents.

The action brought by the plaintiffs was to restrain the use of the word “Life” upon the book published and sold by the defendants; and it was held at the trial that the plaintiffs had no such title to the use of this word as would authorize them to maintain the action. And it appears by the proof that the use to which the word has been applied upon the defendants’ publication differs from its employment from that made of it on the plaintiffs’. The letters forming the word are nearly, if not quite, double the size on the plaintiffs’ book of those used in the formation of the word upon the defendants’ book; and the quotation marks employed by the plaintiffs as attendants of the word “Life” indicate that what was intended to be referred to as “The Good Things” were obtained from some particular and specific source; while no such limitation affects the use of the word by the defendants, but it has been employed in its general sense without restriction or qualification. And it is evident, from these dissimilarities, that the plaintiffs have employed the word “Life” in a sense differing from that in which it has been employed by the defendants; and the use of it by the latter in no respect infringes upon its employment on the book of the former. The plaintiffs have employed it to indicate and include selections from the serial known as “Life. ” The defendants have employed it to indicate pictorial illustrations and sentiments of an entirely distinguishable character, illustrative of comical and sentimental representations of life in general; and, as this was a word of popular use and significance, there seems to be no substantial legal reason which would stand in the way to prevent the defendants from employing it in this manner.

It may properly be conceded that words of common use may be so employed as to acquire a limited additional significance by way of designating a particular article of manufacture or production, and in that sense be entitled to the protection of the court by way of injunction against infringement by another person or persons. Baking Powder Co. v. Sherrell, 93 N. Y. 331; Taylor v. Gillies, 59 N. Y. 331; Hier v. Abrahams, 82 N. Y. 519. But the law neither does nor could it practically be extended any further than that; and it therefore has been held that “ words are but symbols. When they are used to signify a fact, or when, with what purpose soever used, they do signify a fact which others may by the use of them express with equal truth, others have an equal right to them for that purpose.” Caswell v. Davis, 58 N. Y. 223, 235. And this was followed in Colman v. Crump, 70 N. Y. 573. And the rule applicable to this class of cases was subjected to the same qualification in Manufacturing Co. v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 51. It was there said, with the approval of the court, that a person “has no right to appropriate a sign or symbol which, from the nature of the fact it is used to signify, others may employ with equal truth, and therefore have an equal right to employ for the same purpose. ” Id. 54. And as much as that was conceded by the plaintiffs’ counsel upon the trial, for it was stated by him that “we do not claim any exclusive right to the use of the word ‘ Life.’ ” And that concession was substantially a concession that the plaintiffs had no substantial ground to stand upon in the maintenance of their action; for, while they used the word “Life” for one object, the defendants, without intrenching in the least degree upon that use of it, employed it for another and a different object. By the plaintiffs it was used in a specific and limited sense, while the defendants used it in its general sense, each expressive of a work having no common origin, compiled from different sources, and illustrated by different pictorials and sentiments. It is not sufficient to maintain the action that purchasers inattentively might accept the defendants’ publication in place of the plaintiffs’. But it is necessary to maintain their action that the defendants should have employed this word “Life” with the same significance, in whole or in part, as it has been employed by the plaintiffs, and that from the proofs it is clear they have not done. They were therefore entitled to have the disposition made of the case which was directed at the trial. An exception was taken to a question asking the witness Scannell for his opinion as to the effect of the resemblance between the books. But it is not necessary to decide whether the question was a proper one or not, for no evidence or answer was obtained from the witness which was in the least degree objectionable. The judgment from which the appeal has been brought was sustained by the evidence, and it should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.  