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" Crowley Millington" were merely technical terms, yet there is sufficient to show that they were very generally used, in conversation at least, as descriptive of particular qualities of steel. In short, it does not appear to me that there was any fraudulent... "
Reports of Patent, Design, and Trade Mark Cases - Page 404
1899
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Harvard Law Review, Volume 16

Electronic journals - 1903 - 652 pages
...in short, it does not appear to me that there was any fraudulent intention in the use of the marks. That circumstance, however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...their right to the exclusive use of those names." and by Hammerslev, J., in Hygeia Distilled Water Co. v. Hygeia Ice Co , tupra, at page 959. In some cases...
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The Law of Unfair Business Competition: Including Chapters on Trade Secrets ...

Harry Dwight Nims - Business - 1909 - 640 pages
...generally used in conversation at least as descriptive of a particular quality of steel, and added " that circumstance, however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...stated that the case is so made out as to entitle the plaintiffs to have the injunction made per• Millington v. Fox, 3 Myl. & Cr. facturer, whether...
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The Revised Reports: Being a Republication of Such Cases in the ..., Volume 122

Frederick Pollock, Robert Campbell, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead - Law reports, digests, etc - 1911 - 1078 pages
...and said: "It does not appear to me that there was any fraudulent intention in the use of the marks. That circumstance, however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...to the exclusive use of those names ; and therefore " " the case is so made out as to entitle1 the plaintiffs to have the injunction made perpetual " ?)...
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The Law of Trade Marks and Trade Name: With Chapters on Trade Secret and ...

Duncan Mackenzie Kerly - Business names - 1913 - 1222 pages
...marks.' I am not reading the whole of the sentence, but simply the relevant words. Then it goes on : ' That circumstance, however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...stated that the case is so made out as to entitle the plaintiffs to have the injunction made perpetual.' If the fact is that the act which the defendant...
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Trust Legislation: Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary, House of ...

United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1914 - 1174 pages
...In short, it does not appear to me that there was any fraudulent intention in the use of the marks. That circumstance. however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...by the fact that the trade marks act has since been passed, which gives a feasible and perfectly facile mode of remedy in cases in which trade marks apply."...
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The Law of Unfair Competition and Trade-marks: With Chapters on Good-will ...

Harry Dwight Nims - Competition, Unfair - 1917 - 968 pages
...generally used in conversation at least as descriptive of a particular quality of steel, and added "that circumstance, however, does not deprive the...stated that the case is so made out as to entitle the plaintiffs to have the injunction made perpetual" (id., p. 352). There was considerable evidence...
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Cases on Trade Regulation: Selected from Decisions of English and ..., Part 1

Herman Oliphant - Antitrust law - 1923 - 1114 pages
...In short, it does not appear to me that there was any fraudulent intention in the use of the marks. That circumstance, however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...stated that the case is so made out as to entitle the plaintiffs to have the injunction made perpetual.2 1 The pleadings are abridged and the statement...
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The Law Times Reports: Containing All the Cases Argued and ..., Volume 83

Law reports, digests, etc - 1901 - 864 pages
...In short, it does not appear to me that there was any fraudulent intention in the use of the marks. That circumstance, however, does not deprive the plaintiffs...stated that the case is so made out as to entitle the plaintiffs to have the injunction made perpetual.' " Then the Lord Chancellor adds : " That, my...
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The Law Journal Reports, Volume 68

Law reports, digests, etc - 1899 - 492 pages
...that the case is so made out as to entitle the plaintiffs to have the injunction made perpetual." That I believe to be the law. It was the law then, and...by the fact that the Trade Marks Act has since been passed, which gives a feasible and perfectly facile mode of remedy in cases in which trade marks apply....
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