Foreword: Trademark fights among distillers and whiskey merchants with proprietary brands were common in the pre-Prohibition era. The laws were lax, often poorly written, and subject to interpretation by judges. Although a number of individual past posts have detailed those disputes, I have selected three examples here that illustrate various aspects of such conflicts.
The number of disputes over brand names of whiskey actually taken to court were relatively small, likely because the legal situation. An exception were the liquor house owned by partners and brothers-in-law Aaron Bluthenthal and Monroe Bickart of Atlanta, Georgia. Their experience in trying to protect their popular brand “Old Joe Rye” from competition is instructive.

A Georgia liquor company attempting to shut down a Florida competitor in Florida courts clearly faced daunting challenges. When the lower court in Jacksonville denied B&B an injunction and dismissed their case, B&B appealed to the State Supreme Court. While that court had some legal quibbles with the initial decision, it did not overturn it. Mohlmann’s Old Geo remained on the market.
Seemingly undaunted by this setback, the brothers-in-law subsequently pressed similar charges against a Montgomery, Alabama, liquor dealer named J. W. Epperson. Like Mohlmann, Epperson was aping the Old Joe bottle right down to the corkscrew. He called his booze, “Old Jack.” Once again, Bluthenthal and Bickart found it hard sledding in an out-of-state court. After a lower court denied their action for an injunction against Epperson, B&B appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court.
That court upheld the verdict but went further. The judges scolded the Georgia partners on the grounds that examination had shown that their Old Joe brand was not as, as advertised, very old stock, fine old whiskey, or even rye whiskey. B&B had misrepresented the whiskey on their labels and marks with false statements, the judges said, and by so doing had vitiated any trademark protection that the partners might claim. Although Epperson’s conduct was “without justification,” the Alabama Supreme Court ruled, it was unwilling to issue an injunction and make him stop selling Old Jack Rye.
William S. Turner and Charles S. Looker joined forces sometime before 1880 to create a new Cincinnati liquor house. The pair saw an opportunity to cash in on the popularity of a whiskey called Canadian Club that was finding favor with the American public, a brand from Hiram Walker at his giant distillery at Walkerville, Canada, near Windsor, Ontario. They created a copy-cat brand they called “Windsor Club Whiskey,” and claimed it was made in Walkerville, distilled and bottled under the supervision of the Canadian government — all patently untrue.




The Gaines legal challenges must have caused a great deal of concern on the part of the Knechts. Not only did they have the expense of defending Raven Valley Whiskey against a “deep pockets” foe, but if they lost it would only be a matter of time before they would be served a desist order and their flagship brand would be terminated under pain of law. While this was uncharted territory for the Cleveland company, the Gaines outfit by contrast could count on highly-paid, well-practiced attorneys to handle the case. Brimming with confidence, its attorneys contended that the ravens would “naturally lead to a confusion and enable the applicants [Knechts] to perpetrate a fraud.”
In the end, however, the appeals court disagreed and the judges’ opinion stated, in part, “when the words ‘Raven Valley’ are considered they are so different from the words ‘Old Crow’ that any confusion or deception would be very improbable.” While recognizing that ravens and crows were both birds, the Court found no similarity in their depiction on the whiskeys. When Gaines owners sought to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, the high court denied them a hearing. Almost improbably, the Knechts had won. The Ohio raven had triumphed over the Kentucky crow.


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