[Download] "Kastor v. Federal Trade Commission." by United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Kastor v. Federal Trade Commission.
- Author : United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
- Release Date : January 12, 1943
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 59 KB
Description
This case comes before us upon a petition to review an order of the Federal Trade Commission which forbade the petitioner to use the words, "Scout," "Boy Scout," or "Scouting," upon, or in connection with, any knives made or sold by it. The facts upon which the order issued are in substance as follows. The Kastor Company, or its predecessor - a partnership - has been making and selling cutlery and the like since 1879; and the subject of this controversy is a "Scout Set," comprising a three-bladed "Scout Knife," and a "Sportsmans Knife," sold together in a box, for fifty cents. The "Scout Knife" has one large cutting blade, a can opener, and a combination screw driver and bottle opener; the "Sportsmans Knife" is a hunting knife with one large blade and a bone handle. On the cover of the cardboard box it used to print the words, "Scouting Set," with the picture of a tent, a campfire, and boys in "Boy Scouts" uniform; but this box it discarded some years ago, and it now sells the set in a plain box. It also makes and sells a four-bladed "Scout Knife" like the three-bladed knife just mentioned, except that this knife has a leather punch in addition to the other tools. It introduced testimony that it had begun selling a similar "German Army" knife, marked "Scout Knife," as early as 1895 like the present "Scout Knife"; and that before 1910 it had also imported from England, and sold, hatchets and knives with the words, "Boy Scout," on the blades. The Commission found that before 1910 "there was and had been no pocket knife on the market marked with the word Scout"; but it is not necessary for us to decide whether the testimony should have prevailed, because, as will appear, such user would be in any event immaterial, whatever its length. In the year 1910, the sale began which the order forbids and it has continued ever since except that the legend, "Boy Scout" was discontinued more than fifteen years ago, giving place to "Scout," simpliciter.