Australian Woollen
Mills Ltd v F S Walton and Company Limited
[1937] HCA 51
HIGH
COURT OF AUSTRALIA
DIXON, EVATT & MCTIERNAN JJ
DIXON
AND MCTIERNAN JJ:
This
is an appeal form a decree dismissing a suit for infringement of trade mark and
passing off. The appellant is a woollen manufacturer in Australia and has a
large output of serges. For some time it has widely advertised its serges and
worsteds under the title “Crusader.” Its trade mark consists in a knight or
squire in armour but without his casque. He is seated
on a white horse. The horse is caparisoned at the saddle, but behind the rider.
His shield is suspended from the pommel and he wears his sword. The horse is
ambling across the picture and his near side is shown. The rider is blowing a
very long trumpet held in his right hand from which is suspended a rather large
banner inscribed “Service”. Although the trade mark forms part of most of the
appellant’s advertisements and is never inconspicuous, the word “Crusader”
receives much greater prominence. There can be little doubt that the purpose is
to create a reputation for the appellant’s serges ad suitings
under the name “Crusader”. It appears that great success has attended the
efforts of the appellant by its advertisements to go, so to speak, over the
heads of the retailers and to reach the pubic. It has, it seems, established
Crusader serges as in effect a proprietary article. There is some evidence that
from time to time the serge has been described by reference to “a man on a
horse” but we agree in the opinion expressed in the judgment under appeal that
it was not established and is unlikely “that the ordinary man in the street
used to ask for the ‘man on the horse’ serge.”
The
respondent, which is the defendant to the suit, is a company that dealt in
cotton piece goods. It procured its fabrics from
English manufacturers and sold them under the name “Cesarine”.
It, too, had obtained for the goods sold under this title the reputation of a
proprietary article, and the word “Cesarine” appears
to be widely known among the public as the name of cotton fabrics. The chief
members of the respondent company with others have lately formed a partnership
for the purpose of woollen manufacturing in Australia, and in the middle of
1934 this firm began to produce serges, the distribution of which was undertaken
by the company. Various attempts were made to establish the serge but at the
end of a year the respondent appears to have thought that some more definite
plan should be adopted. The manager of its Melbourne branch dealt with the
matter in a letter to the Sydney office dated 9th August 1935. After referring
to the prospect of over-production among Australian woollen mills and the
competition likely to ensue, he said: “I quite agree with you therefore
that our only salvation lies in establishing ourselves firmly by means of one
proprietary line after the Fox Serge idea, and the sooner we do it the better.”
His letter goes on to relate his discussions with wholesale houses and to
suggest that his company should “run” two grades of twill at prices
stated. It then proceeds: “The name I have thought most appropriate (a
name and goodwill which will remain in the sphere of your organization)
is ‘Caesar Serges’ or twills as illustrated herewith. Our friends like it
immensely, as it is easy to remember, inspires might and prestige as well as
being closely associated with ‘Cesarine.’” What
was enclosed is a matter the appellant disputes. But we feel no doubt, after an
examination of the documentary and oral evidence, that it was a picture of a
mounted Roman in a cloak holding a truncheon and with laurel on his brow. The
writer, who appears to have French antecedents or connections, took this figure
from a picture in a finely illustrated French book intended for young people
and entitled France Son Histoire . This book was in his household.
The picture represented Caesar in the van of a legion. The letter evoked an
invitation to Sydney upon which the writer acted. He was there on 16th August
1935 and remained about six days. During his visit the company adopted his figure
and title as a trade mark. On 21st August 1935 an application was lodged for
registration of a mark consisting substantially of what the French picture book
had supplied. It consists in the horse and rider as we have described them with
the word “Caesar” underneath inscribed in Roman capitals on a block like
the pedestal of a statue. The registration was not sought in respect of woollen
goods but in respect of cotton piece goods, a circumstance which suggests the
existence of a fear or belief on the part of the respondent that the mark was
too close to that of the appellant for registration in respect of woollen
goods.
The
appellant's complaint is based upon the subsequent use of the representation of
Cæsar and of his name made in many forms of advertisements
when the respondent opened its campaign.
In
deciding that there was no infringement and no passing off, the learned primary
judge was guided by his opinion that no such resemblance existed between the
two words or the two figures or marks, or between the word and figure together
of the one and the word and figure of the other, as to lead to any probability
of deception or confusion, and that no such probability arose whether the test
applied was visual or verbal.
Upon the
hearing of the appeal, the appellant attacked the correctness of this estimate
or judgment of what may be called the objective considerations governing the
decision. But it also maintained that deception was shown by the evidence to be
the very purpose or motive of the respondent in choosing as a mark for its
serges the title “Caesar” and the representation of the mounted Roman. In
our opinion, the evidence, so far from establishing this allegation, rather
shows the contrary. The manager of the Melbourne branch put forward the picture
of Caesar and the proposal to adopt the name at the time and in the manner we
have described. We do not think that he selected it because either the name or
figure appeared to him to resemble those of the appellant's mark. He was
concerned primarily with the association of the name Caesar with Cesarine. There was a natural desire to obtain whatever
benefit could be derived from the very widespread reputation of Cesarine as a word familiar to the public. In the
subsequent advertisements the respondent made a feature of the connection. No
merit can be claimed for it on this ground. For it untruly stated in the
advertisements that Caesar serges were the product of the maker of Cesarine fabrics, although the latter were obtained by it
from English manufacturers. But the intention to avail itself of the existing
reputation of Cesarine not only explains the choice
of the word Caesar but also rather suggests the absence of a desire to create a
confusion between Crusader and Caesar serges.
Before
the Melbourne manager's visit to Sydney, his directors had formed a favourable
judgment of his proposal, and, as a result of the discussions after his
arrival, the plan he had put forward in his letter was elaborated and adopted.
But, on the day before his arrival, a new commercial traveller had been
engaged. He is no longer in the respondent's employment and at the hearing of
the suit gave evidence for the appellant. According to him, on the afternoon
when he was engaged, one of the directors asked him who were
their greatest opponents. On his answering that the appellant was, he
was then asked how it had built up its business. He replied, by the quality of
its materials and by extensive advertising, and then, in response to further
questions, described the appellant's methods of advertising. He said that it
had displays in shop windows not only of its goods but of the process of
woollen production and manufacture, and it also made a widespread distribution
of all kinds of literature and advertisements. He then promised to obtain price
lists and samples of the appellant's goods, which he did by the next morning.
He was called into the discussion or consultation between the directors and the
Melbourne manager who had then arrived. He repeated his exposition of the appellant's
business methods. There was, of course, nothing new or original in the methods,
but they fitted in with the proposal under discussion and met with expressions
of commendation from those present. Some two or three weeks later, one of the
directors showed the traveller a sketch of the trade mark. It brought from the
latter, he says, a comment that it was very similar to the Crusader mark and
this comment was reiterated by another employee. The director merely made a
vague reply that it was all right and he would look after that. Similar
expressions of opinion about the resemblance of the figure to the Crusader mark
were deposed to by two other witnesses. They had been commissioned to prepare
blocks or the like, representations of Caesar, and remarked to the director
concerned that it seemed too close to the Crusader and, in effect, that it
would not pass muster. They received the answer that the horse was in a
different position. The horse in fact is advancing towards the reader, although
it does not quite face him.
In our
opinion the correct conclusion from the circumstances proved is that neither
the original selection in Melbourne nor the adoption in Sydney of the
representation and name of Caesar was prompted by a desire or purpose of
imitating the appellant's mark. We think that in the original selection no
thought was given to the Crusader mark. By the time when in Sydney it was
finally decided upon, the discussions with the new traveller had directed the
attention of those managing the respondent's business to the manner in which
the appellant conducted its business. We do not doubt, notwithstanding their
denials of or refusals to admit the fact as witnesses, that those concerned had
seen the appellant's mark and knew its serge was sold under the name “Crusader.”
But it must be remembered that the appellant is only one among many
manufacturers of suitings, that the respondent was
comparatively fresh to the trade and probably did not, at any rate before the
new traveller said it, regard the appellant as in any more direct competition
with it than other manufacturers. The new traveller may well have supposed that
he was the source of inspiration in what the respondent set about doing. But we
think his contribution has been over-estimated. Before his advent the not very
unusual or original plan of advertising the goods had been put forward and
practically determined upon. The respondent as a result walked more perhaps in
the appellant's footsteps than otherwise it might, but the path was known and
would have been followed in any case. The mark was not, we think, a feature
adopted in conscious imitation of that of the appellant's mark. The intrinsic
suitability of the representation and name of Caesar and the desire to profit
by the established reputation of Cesarine was the
motive for its choice which had, we think, been approved tentatively or
provisionally before 15th August 1935, when the traveller was engaged. We
believe that in fact the respondent did not really perceive any resemblance
between the word and the mark it was adopting and those of the appellant. But,
at the same time, when the three witnesses we have mentioned stated their view
that the mark was too close, we do not imagine that the question of propriety
so raised caused the respondent any embarrassment and we suspect that the
application for the trade mark was limited to cotton fabrics because the patent
attorney raised a like question.
But the
examination made of the respondent's motives and good faith seems to us to
leave the question of infringement and passing off very much in the same
position as it stood in without it. The rule that if a mark or get-up for goods
is adopted for the purpose of appropriating part of the trade or reputation of
a rival, it should be presumed to be fitted for the purpose and therefore
likely to deceive or confuse, no doubt, is as just in principle as it is
wholesome in tendency. In a question how possible or prospective buyers will be
impressed by a given picture, word or appearance, the instinct and judgment of
traders is not to be lightly rejected, and when a dishonest trader fashions an
implement or weapon for the purpose of misleading potential customers he at
least provides a reliable and expert opinion on the question whether what he
has done is in fact likely to deceive. Moreover, he can blame no one but
himself, even if the conclusion be mistaken that his trade mark or the get-up
of his goods will confuse and mislead the public. But the practical application
of the principle may sometimes be attended with difficulty. In the present case
it has caused a prolonged and expensive inquiry into the states of mind,
motives and intentions of three people whose combined judgment decided that the
company should adopt the trade brand and description complained of. This in
turn necessitated an investigation of the steps by which the picture was
obtained, considered and adopted and what was said and done by a number of
persons in relation to the subject. From all this material, it appears to us
that no more emerges than that though the name and mark Caesar were not sought
or taken with any fraudulent intent, yet three or four people conversant with
the matter saw in them too great a resemblance to those of the appellant, that
their views were disregarded by the respondent, who may have thought they were
erroneous, or may have thought that such a resemblance, if it existed, only
added to the suitability of the mark. Incidentally the issue of intention
provided an occasion for the disclosure in the witness box of much want of
candour on the respondent's side. But, in the end, it becomes a question of
fact for the court to decide whether in fact there is such a reasonable
probability of deception or confusion that the use of the new mark and title
should be restrained.
In
deciding this question, the marks ought not, of course, to be compared side by
side. An attempt should be made to estimate the effect or impression produced
on the mind of potential customers by the mark or device for which the
protection of an injunction is sought. The impression or recollection which is
carried away and retained is necessarily the basis of any mistaken belief that
the challenged mark or device is the same. The effect of spoken description
must be considered. If a mark is in fact or from its nature likely to be the
source of some name or verbal description by which buyers will express their
desire to have the goods, then similarities both of sound and of meaning may
play an important part. The usual manner in which ordinary people behave must
be the test of what confusion or deception may be expected. Potential buyers of
goods are not to be credited with any high perception or habitual caution. On
the other hand, exceptional carelessness or stupidity may be disregarded. The
course of business and the way in which the particular class of goods are sold
gives, it may be said, the setting, and the habits and observation of men
considered in the mass affords the standard. Evidence of actual cases of
deception, if forthcoming, is of great weight. In the present case a few people
said that they mistook a newspaper advertisement of the respondent for an
advertisement of the appellant. But their evidence amounted, we think, to very
little. In the Supreme Court it was fully discussed and was disregarded on
grounds some of which were attacked in this court. Whatever may be said about
the reasons given by the learned primary judge, we think that he was right in
refusing to act on an account of the mental processes set up by perusing a
newspaper advertisement, an account given by witnesses long after the
occurrence of what must have been a casual and unimportant mental experience.
The
main issue in the present case is a question never susceptible of much
discussion. It depends on a combination of visual impression and judicial
estimation of the effect likely to be produced in the course of the ordinary
conduct of affairs. For ourselves we find it very hard to suppose that anyone
would confuse Caesar as a name or the representation of Caesar with the title Crusader
or with the brand of the appellant. The impression created by each of the
respective pictures or representations strikes our minds as widely dissimilar.
The various reproductions of the Crusader would, we think, leave on the mind of
anyone, whether his familiarity with them grew to be great or remained slight,
an impression in which the banner and trumpet and the mounted knight holding
them were the most definite elements. In many representations the caparison of
the horse is also prominent.
The
picture of Caesar in his cloak holding a truncheon on his hip, with his war
horse advancing, would not, we think, be at all likely to revive latent
impressions of the appellant's Crusader. It is true that both pictures are of
mounted men and that neither represents a horseman in present day costume. Both
perhaps are warlike. But here the points of similarity end, and, indeed, we
think that when they are described in words the resemblance between the
pictures sounds greater than that actually presented.
As
to the word “Crusader,” we do not think that there is
any likelihood of “Caesar” being confused with it. It
may be conceded that complete ignorance of what a Crusader was or who Caesar
was may be imputed to the potential buyer. A timely reminder of the state of
knowledge on matters of antiquity is given by a letter passing between the
Melbourne and Sydney offices of the respondent, dated 27th August 1935, in
which the former suggests for the improvement of the trade mark representing
Caesar the giving “a faint suggestion in the distance
of the Accropolis [sic] or other well-known Roman buildings.” But
neither in sound or popular association does the word “Caesar”
appear to us at all to resemble Crusader. We agree in the observations made in
the judgment under appeal as to the unlikelihood of confusion.
In
our opinion the decision of the Supreme Court is right and the appeal should be
dismissed.
EVATT
J:
This is an appeal from a judgment of Maughan A.J., who dismissed the suit wherein
the plaintiff claimed that the defendant company (a) had infringed the
two registered “Crusader” trade names of the plaintiff, and (b) had
with the fraudulent intention of acquiring the benefit of the plaintiff's
business name and reputation used its “Caesar” trade device for the
purpose of deceiving the public.
The two marks of the plaintiff are registered in
class 34 in respect of woollen cloths and stuff. One of them, No. 48348 , represents a warrior, knight or herald holding a
trumpet to his mouth and riding on a horse which is moving towards the left,
the word “Service” being inscribed in small lettering upon a banner
attached to the trumpet and the whole design resting upon a foundation pedestal
on which the word “Crusader” appears. The associated mark, No. 46342 , shows a warrior with lance or banner and in this
case the horse is being ridden towards the right, and the words “Crusader”
and “serge” appear on the two sides of the warrior. As used on and in
connection with the plaintiff's serge materials, the two marks are subject to a
number of trade variations. Thus the word “Service” is frequently not
visible on the trumpet's banner and the word “Crusader” is sometimes
omitted altogether.
Maughan A.J. held that the chief characteristic of
the plaintiff's mark was the word “Crusader” and that in most of the
plaintiff's publicity material the word “Crusader” was given more
prominence than the figure. “I think,” he said, “that the directors
and officers of the plaintiff company wished to make the word ‘Crusader’
practically a household word throughout Australia amongst those persons
interested in the make of the serge they were wearing or buying, and I have no
doubt they succeeded.” Later in his judgment the learned judge returned to this
same point and said: “To me the leading characteristic of the plaintiff
company's design is the word ‘Crusader’ and of the defendant's design is
the word ‘Caesar.’”
In my view this opinion takes too little account of
the very large number of varying impressions which must have been created as a
result of the plaintiff's elaborate publicity. There is a type of mind which
does not and apparently cannot remember a word like “Crusader,” and yet
retains a pictorial image of the warrior on horseback. Equally there is a type
of mind which rejects the picture either for the abstract idea or for the name
to which the picture is attached. Trade mark legislation and interpretation
cannot single out one type of mind as the standard public mind so as to exclude
all others. The serge material was of the cheaper variety, and it was important
to consider the class of purchasers to whom such material might appeal.
I think, with respect, that Maughan A.J. does not do this sufficiently, and
his treatment of the evidence of the three witnesses, Nathan, Dwyer and Tremain thus becomes of first rate importance. Of the
first, it is said that some of his answers “reflect so seriously on his
intelligence that his evidence was worthless.” Dwyer is “rather a stupid
witness,” presumably because, at the end of some discussion in court as to the
differences between the “Caesar on horseback” and the “Crusader on
horseback,” he repeated that “they both look alike to me in the
advertisement here.” Tremain, although “quite an
honest person,” was “unobservant,” and, like the other two, he belonged to
the class of “men of poor education” who were “dull specimens of
their class.”
In my opinion, the judgment under appeal is over
emphatic in its rejection of the view that, in determining the probability of
confusion or deception, the court is “to pay attention to the actions of a
careless or incautious or foolish purchaser.” The result was the annihilation
of the evidence of honest witnesses merely because of the diagnosis that the
witness was “of poor education,”“unintelligent,”“stupid,”“dull”
or “unobservant.” Further, the reason for the use of these extremely
critical epithets also appears fairly plainly, for the learned judge seems to
attribute dullness and stupidity to witnesses mainly because they were
impressed by the pictorial representations of the two marks, the judge himself
having taken a very different view as to the dominating element in the two
marks.
I have carefully studied the evidence of Tremain, and I must say that I see nothing whatever to
suggest that the impressions which he had received were not accurately and
faithfully described by him. Tremain narrated the
manner in which the customers demanded “Crusader” serge by reference to
such words as “a man on a horse.” He said:—
“Q. Apart
from referring to the man on the horse what other way do they ask for it?
A. They speak of it in funny
ways, they would say ‘horse back rider.’ I have
been asked for the ‘man on the horse’ or the ‘king on the horse’
or ‘prince on the horse,’ or the ‘herald on the horse.’ I have had
them ask in all sorts of ways.
Q. Does that take place only
occasionally or frequently?
A. I should say it averages
at a conservative estimate I suppose 20 per cent of our customers.
Q. They would ask for it in
one or other of that type of way?
A. Yes.”
Now, Tremain was found to
be an honest witness. The evidence I have quoted is either invented or true. No
question of “lack of education” or being “unintelligent” can be
allowed to confuse this important matter. If the evidence was honestly given,
it clearly establishes what I should otherwise think is obvious, that a
substantial percentage at least of the interested public would remember the
plaintiff's mark merely as having conveyed an impression of a “warrior on
horseback.” Further, the evidence of the very important witness Taylor (of whom
the judge says “I have no doubt that he was an honest witness”) also
referred to the plaintiff's mark as that of “the man on horseback,” and he
so described it to the two Waltons and Hamparsun, when, on August 16th 1933, they were extracting
from him valuable information as to the plaintiff's publicity methods.
Nor does the matter rest here. The defendant's
trade device of Julius Caesar riding a horse and words “Caesar Serge”
certainly resemble the plaintiff's marks for the purpose of forming a
conclusion whether a feature of either is the rider. How did the defendant's
officers themselves describe their device when in August and September, 1935,
they were on the point of launching their serge on the market? On August 31st
1935, the head office at Sydney, controlled by the two Waltons,
refer to the device as including “Caesar on horseback,” and the answering
letter of September 5th 1935, uses the same words to describe the new design.
In evidence, albeit unconsciously, Hamparsun referred
to the plaintiff's mark as “a knight on a horse.”
In my opinion, the evidence, including that of Tremain, establishes that the plaintiff's mark came to be
referred to by many readers of the plaintiff's advertisement as “man on horseback,”“warrior on horseback,”“prince
on horseback,” &c. I cannot understand why this conclusion should be
rejected. Fortunately, the reasons for the rejection are set out:—
“The word ‘Crusader’
is not a very difficult word to remember, even for an illiterate person. The
average person amongst the poorer classes who buys serge suits probably does
not know the date of the crusades or what they were about or what country they
were fought in, but he would know at least that there had been such persons as ‘Crusaders’
in ancient times and that they were fighting men, and in my opinion he would
not ordinarily forget the word ‘Crusader’.”
With all respect, this general a priori reasoning
is destroyed by the finding that Tremain was an
honest witness, as well as by other evidence. As a matter of probability, I
should hold that many members of the public reading the plaintiff's advertising
material would fail to remember the word “Crusader” at all, and yet be
sufficiently attracted and impressed by the qualities attributed to the serge
depicted by the “warrior on horseback.” If so, they would have to describe
the wanted material by reference to the impression conveyed by the picture. The
fact that in the very shops where the serge was to be obtained the picture of
the “crusader on horseback” was displayed in various forms could hardly
fail to cause confusion or deception.
The plaintiff took notice of the first attempt of
the defendant to advertise Caesar serge, which took place on January 14th 1936.
The advertisement contained a pictorial representation of “Caesar on
horseback.” The name “Caesar” appeared sufficiently prominently to warrant
the inference that many, perhaps most, people would identify the rider with
Caesar. But undoubtedly there would be many who would obtain, or at all events
retain, only the impression of a “warrior on horseback.” If so, the
probability of confusion and deception is at once established. Those upon whom
the plaintiff's advertisements left the impression of a “warrior on
horseback” would probably regard the advertisement of the defendant as being
connected with the material of the plaintiff or the business it conducted.
Apart from the first advertisement, many other advertisements of the defendant
were even more calculated to cause confusion.
The usual technique of an infringing defendant has
been employed in the present case. Many advertisements are produced and placed
throughout a long hearing in close juxtaposition with those of the plaintiff.
By this means, the differences are continually being emphasized; but the
practical side of the problem is unconsciously overlooked. By the powerful, if
subtle, suggestion of contrast, a new question is insinuated, viz., does not
the judge perceive the differences in the way in which the horse is being
ridden? Between “Caesar” and a “Crusader”? Would not a careful judge
remember the name of the material or note it down? While the eye of the judge
mainly decides these disputes, there must be a continuous realization of the
classes of purchasers and possible purchasers who would be affected by the
advertising and also of the differences in mental make up.
All this is increasingly necessary as modern advertising methods become more
and more directed to obtain, not particular, but only broad and general effects.
Maughan A.J. concludes: “I am satisfied that I
personally should never have mistaken it (the defendant's mark) for that of the
plaintiff company.” This may readily be conceded. But the learned judge adds
the reason that, in his opinion, the leading characteristic of each mark is the
word and not the picture. For this reason the judge's impression should not be
regarded as decisive. The learned judge adds nothing to his reasons by pointing
out that, as the plaintiff cannot claim the monopoly of “any man on a
horse,” it cannot claim the monopoly of “a man on a horse whenever the man
happens to wear some garb redolent of ancient times.” All that the plaintiff
claims is that the defendant's mark as used is sufficiently close to the
plaintiff's to be calculated to confuse and deceive the public, and that the
statutory right of the plaintiff has been infringed.
This is not a case where it is necessary for the
plaintiff to show that his goods are known by the secondary title of “the
man on horseback” &c. The evidence as to the use of that and similar
phrases shows the general character of the impression made by the plaintiff's
mark on members of the public, just as, by parity of reasoning, “man on
horseback” would describe the symbol of the defendant. Probability of confusion
and deception occur, not because a secondary title is attributed to the
plaintiff's goods, but because an essential, and, in many cases, the only
essential feature of the plaintiff's mark is reproduced in a similar essential
by the defendant's mark.
On infringement of trade mark the plaintiff should
succeed.
I am also of opinion that the plaintiff has
established its claim in respect of passing off. As to this, the question of
the credibility of the two Waltons and their
Melbourne representative Hamparsun is all important.
Both inferentially and directly the findings of Maughan A.J.
destroy the credibility of all three. As to the two Waltons,
they were not “candid with the court,” and the learned judge found their
demeanour “most unsatisfactory.”
As to Hamparsun, he swore
that he first saw the plaintiff's publicity material in December 1935, before
which he did not know of the plaintiff's “knight on a horse” mark. On
being pressed, he swore most positively that he did not know the plaintiff's
symbol until December, and that the defendant's advertising of “Caesar on
horseback” had been invented before he even saw the plaintiff's symbol. The
unexpected production of the witness Taylor, who had been employed by the
plaintiff and was engaged by the defendant on August 15th 1935, just prior to
its new “Caesar serge” campaign, forced Hampursun
to admit that he had seen a sample book of the plaintiff as early as July 1935.
As to Taylor, the learned judge found, not only
that he was an honest witness, but that “the substance of his evidence on
the crucial points was correct.” This finding involves a rejection of vital
portions of the evidence of Hampursun as well as the
two Waltons. Taylor's evidence shows that on Friday,
August 6th, 1935, he had an interview with the two Waltons
and Hamparsun and produced price lists, goods and
samples. On some of these materials the plaintiff's mark was prominently
displayed. Taylor says:—
“I told Mr. Hamparsun that the Australian Woollen Mills had built up their
business on their values and their trade mark which they branded every three
yards, the man on horseback, on the material, also their window displays of the
Crusader materials in the course of manufacture, their display cards and the
literature which they distributed to the tailors' shops and the retail stores.
Mr. Hamparsun agreed with Mr._______
Q. You cannot
say that.
A. Well, said it
was an excellent idea and should be adopted by F. S. Walton & Co.”
This evidence is of crucial importance. During
Taylor's cross-examination, a certain amount of confusion as to dates was
introduced, but the substance of his evidence is quite unaffected. The result
of accepting Taylor as a witness of truth is that both the Waltons
and Hamparsun deliberately attempted to deceive the
court, not only as to the time when they became aware of the plaintiff's mark,
but as to the method of conducting their “Caesar serge” campaign, which
followed the lines suggested by Taylor. The evidence provides convincing
evidence of an intention to appropriate as much as possible of the plaintiff's
business methods. Such an intention might turn out to have miscarried by a
failure to appropriate an essential part of the rival's trade mark. It is more
flattering to the conspirators and more in accordance with human experience to
credit them, not only with piracy, but with successful piracy. In one respect,
it was certainly successful. The defendant's advertisements declared that
the “Caesar serge” was “by the makers of Cesarine.”“Cesarine” was a material which the defendant distributed in
Australia, but it was made by English manufacturers who had nothing whatever to
do with the manufacture of the defendant's “Caesar” cloth. The particular
representation was a further attempt to appropriate the goodwill belonging to
another person.
The learned judge found that the origin of the
defendant's “Caesar on horseback” mark was innocent. This finding requires
some attention. It is dependent entirely upon the evidence of the discredited Hamparsun, who swore that the first design was traced from
an elementary French history book belonging to his son, aged three. A book was
produced, and there is no doubt that the first design was derived from it. But
when and where? Hamparsun says it was at Melbourne
and prior to August 9th, when, he says, he sent a tracing to Sydney. The letter
of August 9th does not corroborate this assertion. The letter stated that “our
only salvation lies in establishing ourselves firmly by means of one
proprietary line.” Then emerges the use of the name “Caesar serges,”
largely because it is “closely associated with Cesarine.”
The letter uses the phrase “as illustrated herewith,” but that refers,
most naturally, to the name only. There is no evidence that any design was
decided upon before the letter was sent.
On the other hand, the design of “Caesar on
horseback” came into existence before August 21st, when the defendant applied
to register the trade mark of “Caesar on horseback,” but only in class 24
and in respect of “cotton piece goods.” What took place between August 9th
and August 21st?
On August 12th, Walton senior acknowledged Hamparsun's letter of August 9th, but made no reference
whatever to the receipt of any sketch or tracing. On August 15th, Taylor was
interviewed by Walton senior and, at the latter's request, produced on Friday,
August 16th, among the samples of the plaintiff's advertising material,
documents displaying the plaintiff's trade mark. On August 16th, Hamparsun arrived from Melbourne to spend the week-end with
the Waltons, and all three officers of the defendant
interrogated Taylor. The learned judge found that “the design of Caesar on
horseback was received in Sydney and adopted by the defendant company as its
future label before Taylor came on the scene.”
This finding is inconsistent with the letter of
Walton dated August 12th, which shows that no decision was come to yet as to
whether an attempt to institute a new serge “popularity” line would ever
be commenced. It is also inconsistent with Hamparsun's
admission that the decisions to commence the campaign were made “in
Sydney.” Taylor swore: “I said that the Australian Woollen Mills branded
their goods every three yards with a man on horseback and I advised him to do
the same thing.” Taylor also said that he was told by Walton “that he was
going to have the man on horseback and call it Caesar.”
An analysis of Taylor's evidence, and the
coincidence of the decision to employ Taylor at the very time when the new
serge campaign started, make it reasonably clear that the decision to use
a “Caesar on horseback” was not arrived at before Taylor's advice was
given on August 15th and August 16th, and that the decision was to venture as
close to the plaintiff's mark as was thought prudent. It is quite probable that
the French history book was obtained and the tracing made after August 16th,
and it is an extraordinary coincidence that of all the Caesars who might have
been depicted, the one said to have been chosen at random was Caesar as a
warrior on horseback.
I rather think that the significance of the
defendant's failure to apply for registration of its Caesar on horseback mark
in respect of its serge has not been sufficiently appreciated. The defendant
naturally hesitated before embarking upon a campaign involving the use of the
dangerous mark. The letter of August 23rd refers to a bas relief mark of
Caesar, this time “borrowed” from L'Illustration. On
August 27th, the “Caesar on horseback” design was being somewhat modified
from the form of the drawing in the French history book, the idea being inter
alia to make the four legs of Caesar's horse more plain. But the bas
relief mark has not been abandoned. On August 29th, the details of the “Caesar
on horseback” were still being reconsidered. The letter suggested that the
drawing should have “a faint suggestion in the distance of the Accropolis [sic] or other well-known Roman [sic]
buildings”—a suggestion which reinforces the view that, in relation to trade
marks, it is a mistake to require from the public generally a keen
discrimination as to mediæval or ancient history.
It is found as a fact that, before the defendant
used the unregistered trade mark for serge, they were warned by a number of
experts that they were trespassing upon the plaintiff's mark. It is perhaps not
of decisive importance to inquire into the precise origin of the
defendant's “Caesar on horseback” mark. It is undoubted that it was
decided to appropriate as much of the plaintiff's valuable business connection
as was possible. There was always a possibility that the inevitable law suit
might be successfully compromised or defended. The defendant deliberately chose
to use its mark in connection with the same class of serge goods as were sold
by the plaintiff. In my opinion, the risk deliberately undertaken by the
defendant was so great that taking it could only be justified by the practical
certainty of gain at the plaintiff's expense if the risk came off. I am
satisfied that such gain has been made, and that it has been made partly at the
plaintiff's expense by reason of the confusion and deception caused by the
defendant's mark. Also I greatly regret that the risk has come off,
particularly as it is clearly established that the three persons concerned in
taking it all attempted to bolster up the defendant's case by an impudent
attempt to deceive the court.
The appeal should be allowed.