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"That where spirits are withdrawn from distillery warehouses for exportation according to law, it shall be lawful, under such rules and regulations and limitations as shall be prescribed by the commissioner of internal revenue. with the approval of the secretary of the treasury, for an allowance to be made for leakage or loss by any unavoidable accident, and without any fraud or negligence of the distiller, owner, exporter, carrier or their agents or employés, occurring during transportation from a distillery warehouse to the port of export."

It is pressed upon the court that these various equitable provisions for relieving the distiller from the payment of tax upon whisky destroyed, whether it be in process of manufacture or in the cistern, in the distillery warehouse or in transportation to the manufacturing warehouse, or for export, require the court to construe section 54 of the act of August 28, 1894, liberally, so as to grant the same relief for whisky which is destroyed while in transit to a general bonded warehouse from a distillery warehouse.. It is conceded that the tax attaches to the spirits as soon as they come into existence (Rev. St. § 3248); and it must be further conceded that the tax is to be paid by the manufacturer unless he can put his finger upon some clause which relieves him from its payment. The particularity with which congress specifies the circumstances under which the tax can be remitted is itself significant of the legislative intention that, unless the claim of exemption from the payment of the tax comes within the particular description in some one of the remedial statutes, it shall not be allowed. Congress might easily have adopted a general law authorizing a remission of the tax entitling the distiller to relief in respect to whisky destroyed before the tax is paid, and while it remains in the custody of the officers of the government, but it has not done It has specified each case, and, unless the plaintiff's case comes within one of them, he is without remedy.

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Section 56 applies to spirits after they have been in general bonded warehouses under the act. It applies to their withdrawal from such warehouses upon payment of tax or for exportation or for transfer to the manufacturing warehouse or for use of the United States or scientific institutions or colleges of learning. It refers to the gaug ing, marking, branding, and stamping of the spirits upon such withdrawal. Sections 52, 53, and 54 contain the provisions as to the removal from the distillery warehouse to the general bonded warehouse. Sections 55 and 56 refer to the conditions under which spirits deposited in the general warehouses may be either kept there or may be removed. It is clear, therefore, that the provisions for allowance for loss by accidental fire or other unavoidable accident refer to such spirits after they have been deposited in the general bonded warehouse, and not to spirits in course of transportation to it. There may be the same equitable ground for the remission of tax on whisky which is being removed from the distillery warehouse to the general bonded warehouse as there is for its remission when in transit from the distillery warehouse to the manufacturing warehouse or for exportation. But it is a complete answer to this suggestion to say that congress has not provided a remission in such a case. By no natural construction of the words used in section 56 can they be extended to cover a case of spirits before they have reached the general 88 F.-41

bonded warehouse. This was the view which was taken by the court below. The issue was made by demurrer to the amended petition, the demurrer was sustained, and a judgment entered for the defendant. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

ATWATER et al. v. CASTNER et al.

(Circuit Court of Appeals, First Circuit.

No. 239.

June 1, 1898.)

L TRADE-NAMES-PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION-PUBLIC ACQUIESCENCE. The word "Pocahontas" having been used by complainant as a tradename for coal for fully 20 years, with unbroken public acquiescence, and such trade-name having been sustained and its infringement enjoined by the circuit court of another circuit, held, that a preliminary injunction was properly granted in the present case.

2. SAME-GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES.

It seems that if a manufacturer, producer, or dealer furnishes goods of such excellent quality, and builds up so extensive a trade, that his tradename becomes a distinctive appellation of the locality where his business is pursued, he is not thereby prevented from having a trade-mark right in the name.

8. SAME-PUBLIC ACQUIESCENCE.

That one person, other than complainant, shipped coal marked "Pocahontas Coal, from the Browning Mines," does not show an interruption of public acquiescence in complainant's use of the name "Pocahontas," but rather, from the use of the qualifying words, supports complainant's exclusive use of the unqualified words.

4. SAME-PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION-APPEAL.

When an order granting a preliminary injunction was clearly proper when made, it will not be reversed merely because the circuit court of appeals for another circuit, in a case in which the same party was com plainant, has since held that the trade-mark cannot be sustained.

5. PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION-AFFIRMANCE ON APPEAL.

The rule as to the effect of a judgment on appeal, affirming an order for a temporary injunction, as stated in Davis Electrical Works v. Edison Electric Light Co., 8 C. C. A. 615, 621, 60 Fed. 276, 282, repeated.

Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts.

Causten Browne and James M. Morton, Jr., for appellants.
Arthur v. Briesen and Henry E. Everding, for appellees.

Before PUTNAM, Circuit Judge, and WEBB and BROWN, District Judges.

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction, and relates to an alleged trade-mark or trade-name, "Pocahontas," used in the coal traffic. This has been used for fully 20 years by the complainants below, and their predecessors in title, in a very extensive trade, with unbroken public acquiescence, until the controversy out of which this litigation arose in this circuit and in the Fourth circuit. It does not indicate merely that the complainants below are the producers of the coal sold, but quite as much that it is sorted and put on the market under their

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implied representation of uniform quality and excellence. dition to the public acquiescence of which we have spoken, there had been, prior to the injunction order appealed from, an adjudication, in the circuit court in the Fourth circuit, sustaining the claimed trade-mark or trade-name, and enjoining its infringement.

It is said that the complainants' coal, and also the alleged infrin ging coal, come from an extensive locality, now generally known under the name of "Pocahontas"; and it is claimed that the case, therefore, falls within the rule of Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 311, and Mill Co. v. Alcorn, 150 U. S. 460, 14 Sup. Ct. 151. But, even if this were true in a general sense, it would remain to be considered whether the supreme court, in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U. S. 169, 203, 204, 16 Sup. Ct. 1002, was not compelled to a qualification of the broad principle, claimed to have been stated in the cases referred to, as applied to trade-marks and trade-names which have been long and extensively used, and have become widely recognized by the public at large, even when they might not have originated in accordance with the ordinary rules of law. In that case the court found that some qualification of the rule that a word which indicates quality cannot be protected as a trade-mark or trade-name is necessary, at least in some classes of cases; and there is ground for maintaining that this applies with the same necessity to trade-marks and trade-names which represent well-known localities as to those of the character of that in question in that case. We do not, however, find it necessary to decide, at present, whether or not any qualification of that nature would be applicable to the case at bar, because so sharp a question does not now arise. Some of the reasons which render it necessary, under some circumstances, to protect, at least to a qualified extent, a trade-mark of a geographical origin, were given by us in Levy v. Waitt, 10 C. C. A. 227, 61 Fed. 1008, 1012, 10 C. C. A. 227.

The exact rule of Mill Co. v. Alcorn is implied in the following statement, at page 464, 150 U. S., and at page 152, 14 Sup. Ct.:

"The word 'Columbia' is not the subject of exclusive appropriation, under the general rule that a word or words, in common use as designating locality or section of a country, cannot be appropriated by any one as his exclusive trade-mark."

This is explained in the same opinion, at page 465, by citing from Canal Co. v. Clark, ubi supra, the following expression:

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"The word 'Lackawanna' was not devised by the complainants. found it a settled and known appellative of a district in which their coal deposits and those of others were situated. At the time they began to use it, it was a recognized description of the region, and, of course, of the earth and minerals in the region."

It is necessary to recognize carefully the distinction which these expressions imply. Otherwise, a manufacturer, producer, or dealer, who furnishes goods of such excellent quality that they build up so extensive a trade as to give a distinctive name to the locality where it is pursued, would be defeated of the just fruits of his industry and integrity by the very fact of his own meritorious conduct. Therefore, even under the rule as stated in Mill Co. v. Alcorn, ubi supra, and

without the qualification recognized in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., ubi supra, the case at bar, as presented to the court below, and also to this court, involves a difficult question of fact, to the effect whether, at the time the trade-mark or trade-name in question was adopted, the word "Pocahontas" was in common use, as designating a known locality, or whether the locality gained its name from the complainants. Therefore the circuit court was not met with a pure question of law, but with a mixed question of law and fact; and, by the well-settled principles touching the granting of temporary injunctions, the court was fully justified in its action by the long and unbroken public acquiescence, without reference to the adjudication in the Fourth circuit to which we have referred.

The defendants below suggest that the acquiescence was not unbroken, as stated by us, because the affidavits show that there was one dealer, Browning, who shipped his coal as Pocahontas coal; but they also show that all such coal was plainly tagged as follows: "Pocahontas Coal, from the Browning Mines." This, so far from interrupting the public acquiescence to which we have referred, supported it by an evident attempt on the part of Browning to bring himself within the rule stated in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co.

Since the granting of the injunction in the case before us by the court below, and since the appeal to this court and the arguments at bar on the appeal, the circuit court of appeals for the Fourth circuit, in Coffman v. Castner (by an opinion passed down May 3, 1898) 87 Fed. 457, has held that the claimed trade-mark or tradename, "Pocahontas," cannot be sustained, and has reversed the adjudication of the circuit court to which we have referred, and has remanded the cause to that court with instructions to dismiss the suit. As the complainants in this case were the complainants in the case in the Fourth circuit, it may be that, if this had occurred before the action of the court below, now appealed from, no temporary injunction would have been granted. But, as the injunction was granted before the decision of the circuit court of appeals was announced, the position is radically different. The order was clearly proper when made, and, if the circumstances remained unchanged, we could not reverse it. If the decision in the Fourth circuit were in all respects final, we snould hesitate to allow the injunction to continue, especially as the parties complainant are the same in each case. It is, however, not final, as it may be reversed, possibly, on a writ of certiorari from the supreme court. It would not be seemly for the courts in one circuit to grant, dissolve, and, perhaps, renew, temporary injunctions according to varying conditions of litigation in other circuits; so that, as this injunction was clearly proper when granted, our only suitable course is not to interfere with it for any reason now apparent to us.

We, of course, do not mean to limit the usual powers of the court below over the injunction, as, while we accept the usual form of order, we attach to it the qualifications stated by us in Davis Electrical Works v. Edison Electric-Light Co., 8 C. C. A. 615, 60 Fed. 276, 282. Some incidental matters were brought to our attention by the parties; but we believe all of them are rendered unimportant, in

view of the conclusions which we have stated. As neither party takes from our decision anything substantial, and as the circumstances are without precedent, we are not satisfied that equity_requires that the appellants should pay the costs of this appeal. The order appealed from is affirmed, neither party to recover costs of appeal.

Note by the Court. Mills Co. v. Eagle, 86 Fed. 608, which came to hand since our opinion was passed down, fully sustains our suggestions about tradenames of geographical origin.

CLISBY et al. v. REESE.

(Circuit Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit. June 3, 1898.)

No. 480.

1. PATENTS-INVENTION-ANALOGOUS USE.

An exhaust fan for removing dust and chaff, and an elevator for carrying away the seed, both being old devices, long used in connection with the threshing of grain, there is no invention in adapting them to use with a broom-corn cleaner.

2 SAME-PRIOR USE-ABANDONMENT.

Where for a number of years a farmer had practically used on his own farm a broom-corn cleaner, the fact that he afterwards discontinued such use, and the machine was not thereafter employed by others, does not show that it was an abandoned experiment in the sense of the patent law. If there was any abandonment in such case, it was to the public.

8. SAME-COMBINATIONS-AGGREGATIONS.

A combination, to be patentable, must produce a different force or effect, or result in the combined forces or processes from that given by their separate parts. Hence the use, with an old style of broom-corn cleaner, of an exhaust fan to take away the dust, and an elevator to scoop and carry away the grain, is a mere unpatentable aggregation.

4 SAME-BROOM-CORN CLEANERS.

The Reese patent, No. 505,128, for improvements in broom-corn cleaners, is void for want of invention, and as covering a mere unpatentable aggregation.

In Error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Illinois.

This was an action at law by Frederick W. Reese against Ripley A. Clisby, John R. Clisby, and Frank W. Clisby for alleged infringement of a patent for improvements in broom-corn cleaners. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and judgment was given for plaintiff, to review which the defendants have sued out this writ of error.

James H. Peirce, for plaintiffs in error.

Ephraim Banning, for defendant in error.

Before WOODS and SHOWALTER, Circuit Judges, and BUNN, District Judge.

BUNN, District Judge. This is an action at law for the infringement of letters patent No. 505,128, issued September 19, 1893, to Frederick W. Reese for improvements in broom-corn cleaners. By stipulation the action was tried before the court without a jury, the

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