Three articles have appeared in the Georgetown Law Journal in which the thesis is asserted that trade-marks are monopolies in restraint of trade under the Anti-Trust Acts. Their publication seems to have been caused in part by the proposed revision of the United States Trade-Mark Statutes, which was started by a bill originally introduced into the House on January 19, 1938. The thesis of this present article is that a trade-mark in fact distinguishes one man\u27s product from the products of his competitors, with the result that the consumer can make a choice among them
The widely favored Lanham Act makes important changes in the former picture, chief of which perhaps ...
Monopolization, the restriction of competition by a dominant firm, is regulated in roughly half of t...
The protection of trade dress restricts the ability of competitors to compete by imitation. It may...
Three articles have appeared in the Georgetown Law Journal in which the thesis is asserted that trad...
If it can be said that trade-mark rights are, in fact, monopoly rights, it must be added that they a...
THE new Trade-Mark Act,1 widely heralded as giving added protection to trade-mark owners, has in its...
The United States Trade-Mark Act of July 5, 1946, is a statute designed to be of far-reaching effect...
Since 1742, when Lord Hardwicke seemingly equated trademark protection with monopoly in one of the f...
The divergence between the economic and legal concepts of monopoly and the consequences thereof have...
The law of trade symbols is of modern development, largely judge-made and only partly codified. Its ...
Defendants are American corporations marketing trade-marked toilet goods obtained from their French ...
The monopoly theory of trademarks would antitrustize trademark law by incorporating antitrust le...
Trademarks are devises used by business men to distinguish their goods from those of others. The uti...
The availability of a wide range of branded products makes the selection of the right type of good a...
Developments in trade marks law have called into question a variety of basic features, as well as bo...
The widely favored Lanham Act makes important changes in the former picture, chief of which perhaps ...
Monopolization, the restriction of competition by a dominant firm, is regulated in roughly half of t...
The protection of trade dress restricts the ability of competitors to compete by imitation. It may...
Three articles have appeared in the Georgetown Law Journal in which the thesis is asserted that trad...
If it can be said that trade-mark rights are, in fact, monopoly rights, it must be added that they a...
THE new Trade-Mark Act,1 widely heralded as giving added protection to trade-mark owners, has in its...
The United States Trade-Mark Act of July 5, 1946, is a statute designed to be of far-reaching effect...
Since 1742, when Lord Hardwicke seemingly equated trademark protection with monopoly in one of the f...
The divergence between the economic and legal concepts of monopoly and the consequences thereof have...
The law of trade symbols is of modern development, largely judge-made and only partly codified. Its ...
Defendants are American corporations marketing trade-marked toilet goods obtained from their French ...
The monopoly theory of trademarks would antitrustize trademark law by incorporating antitrust le...
Trademarks are devises used by business men to distinguish their goods from those of others. The uti...
The availability of a wide range of branded products makes the selection of the right type of good a...
Developments in trade marks law have called into question a variety of basic features, as well as bo...
The widely favored Lanham Act makes important changes in the former picture, chief of which perhaps ...
Monopolization, the restriction of competition by a dominant firm, is regulated in roughly half of t...
The protection of trade dress restricts the ability of competitors to compete by imitation. It may...