DocketNumber: File No. CR 7-0662
Citation Numbers: 1 Conn. Cir. Ct. 454, 24 Conn. Supp. 129
Judges: Dearlngton, Kosicki, Pruyn
Filed Date: 10/1/1962
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The defendant was convicted, after a trial to the court, on four counts for violation of § 53-347,
All but the last assignment have reference to the finding, and the ultimate question raised by these assignments is essentially the same as that presented by the final claim, namely, that the court upon all the evidence erroneously found the accused guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Upon this last assignment of error, it is seldom necessary for the
The evidence shown by the finding to have been accepted by the court as true, supplemented by the inferences the court could reasonably draw, may be summarized as follows: The defendant engaged in the business of engineering, manufacturing, designing, inspecting and packaging bearings in a shop located in Meriden. In June, 1960, he and George Humphrey, a printer, agreed at a meeting in Meri-den to undertake the manufacture of cardboard bearing boxes imprinted with the labels and trademarks of known bearing manufacturers, referred to herein as Fafnir, New Departure, Norma-Hoffman, and S.K.F. The purpose of this opera
Using the genuine original boxes and labels of Pafnir, New Departure, Norma-Hoffman, and S.K.F. bearings as samples, Humphrey designed art work necessary to duplicate the labels of these manufacturers. Printing plates were then made by a company in Massachusetts. Humphrey cut and printed a large number of boxes of various sizes, duplicating in size and appearance boxes used in the packaging and sale of bearings of the manufacturers mentioned. All of these boxes had printed thereon the counterfeit labels and trademarks, as well as distinguishing code numbers, of such manufacturers without their knowledge or consent. During the period from July, 1960, to May, 1961, counterfeit
The defendant claims that no violation of § 53-347 had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt in that the state had failed to establish certain essential elements of the charge; these we shall examine in detail. Each of the four counts, as augmented by the bill of particulars filed by the prosecution, and as relied on by the accused for his defense, in the light of the proof adduced on trial charges the defendant with the use, forgery or counterfeiting of the label of one of the manufacturers named, with intent to defraud another, or vending or offering to vend any goods having such forged or counterfeited label thereon, knowing it to be forged or counterfeited, without disclosing the fact to the purchaser.
There is no reported case construing the provisions of § 53-347. The statute is an old one, its prototype having been first enacted in 1847. Although in subsequent revisions its wording had been simplified and its provisions condensed, nevertheless its scope and purpose, as well as the definition of the prohibited acts, have remained substantially unchanged.
The defendant concedes that the labels and packages in evidence were “imitations” but denies they were “forgeries” or “counterfeits.” This distinction is without substance. All of the labels and the boxes manufactured, used and sold by the defendant and Humphrey were copied with such minute precision and exactness as to deceive experts skilled in the art of printing and packaging and who dealt with and were thoroughly familiar with the genuine
The defendant further claims that no criminal act was committed by him in Connecticut; that whatever may have been done in violation of the statute was performed by Humphrey in Massachusetts; that what sales or offers to sell were made took effect and occurred in New York; that G-ranowitz and not the defendant owned the surplus bearings packed by the defendant, and therefore there could be no sale of such bearings under a counterfeit label in fraud of Granowitz; that Granowitz was aware of the forged or counterfeit labels and packages and there was full disclosure to him; that the delivery by Humphrey to the defendant in Simsbury was at variance with the information charging that the crime or crimes were committed in Meriden; and that no damage or injury to any purchaser was proved.
It is true that the fabrication of the counterfeit labels and boxes occurred in Massachusetts. That was but the first step essential to accomplish the use, forgery or counterfeiting of the labels of Fafnir, New Departure, Norma-Hoffman and S.K.F. The “use” referred to in the statute is not to be construed narrowly, as contended by the defendant, that is, that its meaning must be restricted to the actual process of reproducing the label. If such were the true interpretation, the word “use” in the statute would be redundant. “[I]n construing a statute, every part should, so far as possible, be made operative.” Hurlbutt v. Hatheway, 139 Conn. 258, 262. We take the statute to mean what the original statute expressed: “Every person who
Among other things, the statute prohibits the use, upon any goods, of the individual stamp or label of any manufacturer, with intent to defraud another. It was not necessary for the state to prove actual damage to the named manufacturers, although evidence was produced to show injury through loss of or reduction in sales. The gist of the offense is the probable or consequential injury to the person aggrieved, arising out of the impairment of his goodwill and reputation and the potential adverse effect on his market, and the imposition on the public through its deception regarding the origin of the merchandise. See, for example, Boardman v. Meriden Britannia Co., 35 Conn. 402, 413; Holmes, Booth & Haydens v. Holmes, Booth & At
The evidence amply sustains the conclusions of the court that such unlawful use was made by the defendant in his receiving, storing, and selling the counterfeit labels and boxes at his place of business in Meriden, as well as packing used bearings in his plant in the admittedly counterfeit boxes; and that all of this was done with intent to defraud each of the four manufacturers and eventually to defraud the ultimate retail purchaser. The word “use” is not to be construed so strictly as to require proof of personal execution of the prohibited acts; the statute permits a broader construction and includes procuring or causing such acts to be done.
Nor is there error in the conclusion of the court that the defendant was guilty of vending or offering to vend such counterfeit merchandise without disclosing the fact to the purchaser. The court found tation of the defendant that the counterfeit boxes that Grranowitz was deceived through the represen-were in fact genuine and that sale of them to him and to others occurred in Meriden. The goods were shipped from Meriden, payment for them was made in Meriden, and remittances to Humphrey were made from Meriden. The principal business of selling the counterfeit goods, including all the usual and necessary activities attending the promotion, sale, and distribution of merchandise, was conducted by the defendant from his office in Meriden.
The defendant contends that he could not be found guilty under the vending clause in the statute because a sale is not completed until the article is delivered, and since delivery was not made in Connecticut, no crimt was committed here. Reliance
Under the vending portion of the statute, the state was required to prove that the defendant was guilty of vending or offering to vend the prohibited goods. That did not require proof of a completed transaction or full performance of a contract. It was enough to satisfy the statute if the defendant set in operation at least one act essential to the commission of the crime; and this was amply shown by the defendant’s sales negotiations, deliveries to carriers, and financial accounting, all of which occurred in Meriden. It was not incumbent on the prosecution to establish a violation of both parts of the statute. Proof of either, in the requisite degree, was sufficient for conviction.
The defendant also claims that the evidence shows only one delivery of counterfeit boxes to him in Connecticut and that occurred in Simsbury, which is located in a circuit other than the one in which the trial took place. The finding of the court, sustained by evidence, is otherwise and must be accepted. State v. Simborski, 120 Conn. 624, 626. Moreover, there was no error in the finding as to the delivery in Simsbury. This subordinate fact was relevant to the fifth count of conspiracy. Objection to it was not raised in the trial court; the objection, if any, relates to venue and not to jurisdiction, as claimed. If there was a variance between proof and the al
The fifth count in the information charges the defendant with conspiracy to violate § 53-347. The crime of conspiracy is a separate offense, distinct from and independent of the criminal or unlawful act which is the object of the conspiracy. See State v. Faillace, 134 Conn. 181, 183. In this state, a conspiracy to commit a crime is not merged in the crime committed pursuant to the agreement, and punishment may be imposed for both. State v. Gargano, 99 Conn. 103, 114; State v. Setter, 57 Conn. 461; note, 37 A.L.R. 778, 780, 790. There can be no serious dispute that a conspiracy in fact existed between the defendant and Humphrey to sell boxes with counterfeit labels to dealers in surplus bearings. The combination was astutely planned by diversifying operations in three states, thereby making proof for conviction difficult to obtain. The defense consisted mainly in a denial of the fact of conspiracy in that there was no violation of § 53-347; in maintaining that no overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy was committed in this state by the defendant; and in asserting the absence of criminal intent because any act performed by the defendant was done in reliance upon legal advice. In view of the foregoing discussion on the four counts of violation of § 53-347, it will suffice to say that the state had proved a conspiracy within the definition of § 54-197. The remaining questions are whether the defendant committed in Connecticut an overt act which could make him chargeable with the crime; and, if so, whether he is excused because he
The act essential to the proof of the crime of conspiracy need be only one performed in furtherance of the conspiracy. It may not be successful toward accomplishing the object of the conspiracy. State v. Devine, 149 Conn. 640, 649. Of itself, the overt act need not be a criminal act, nor does it need to constitute the very crime that is the object of the conspiracy. United States v. Rabinowich, 238 U.S. 78, 86. The recital of facts in the above summary discloses numerous acts on the part of the defendant within this jurisdiction, any one of which, beginning with the inception of the unlawful combination in Meriden and its financing by the defendant, and terminating with the successful sales of the counterfeit goods, would constitute an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. This claim of the defendant is without merit.
The defendant seeks to excuse himself by pleading reliance on the advice of counsel that what he did was not in violation of the law. The short answer to this argument is that the court obviously did not believe what he said. His testimony on this point is the barest hearsay, and the court could quite properly accord it no credit. Even though the facts were true, they would furnish no defense to the charges contained in any one of the five counts. The axiom is elementary that ignorance of the law excuses no one; and refuge from the consequences of one’s conscious acts cannot be found behind a wall of legal advice, be it sound or unsound. The defendant, furthermore, is mistaken as to the rule governing situations where a person acts under misapprehension of the law. Onr courts have held that in the case of illegal use of a trade name, amounting to unfair competition, a defendant, in an action
It was urged in argument that there could be no fraud from the use of the labels in question and in the eventual sale of the contents of the boxes because the bearings sold or offered for sale were in fact the genuine product of the manufacturers designated. This argument is more disingenuous than plausible. A label is used to indicate manufacturing origin, and this connotes every process in manufacture until the article is finally placed in distribution or offered for sale. The counterfeit packages were used to pass off used merchandise as new. See 52 Am. Jur., Trademarks, Tradenames and Trade Practices, § 120. An essential step in manufacture is inspection in order that imperfect merchandise may not reach the ultimate purchaser. The bearings in the present case were not inspected or sold by the original manufacturers. They had no
Moreover, what the law prohibits is not solely the imitation of merchandise under a spurious label but also the sale of genuine merchandise under the guise of authentic origin. The cost of distribution, including advertising and sales promotion, enters into the value of the goodwill created; and this goodwill the law is designed to protect. Thus, it has been held that even a genuine product obtained by one in bulk cannot be sold by him in a package, or under a label, used by the original manufacturer in the distribution of his packaged product. Butler v. State, 127 Ga. 700; see 52 Am. Jur. 596, Trademarks, Tradenames and Trade Practices, § 119.
There is no error.
“See. 53-347. forging or counterfeiting stamps or labels. Any person who uses, forges or counterfeits the individual stamp or label of any mechanic or manufacturer, with intent to defraud another, or vends or offers to vend any goods having any such forged or counterfeited stamp or label thereon, knowing it to be forged or counterfeited, without disclosing the fact to the purchaser, shall be imprisoned not more than six months or fined not more thaD one hundred dollars or both.”
Statutes, 1849, pp. 246, 247, §§119, 120; Statutes 1854, p. 335, §§119, 120; Rev. 1866, p. 274, §§180, 181; Rev. 1875, p. 523, §2 (first condensation); Rev. 1888, § 1577; Rev. 1902, §1407; Rev. 1918, §6510; Rev. 1930, § 6359; Rev. 1949, § 8685.
This statute had received no further legislative action except through the approval of subsequent revisions and codifications.