Two brothers by the name of Nolan wer'e engaged for ten years in carrying on a wholesale shoe business in the city of San Francisco under the name of “Nolan Bros.” One brother sold his interest in the business to the other, and that brother (W. II. Nolan) shortly thereafter closed out the wholesale business and opened"up a retail shoe business at another point in the city under the name of “W. H. Nolan & Co., Successor to Nolan Bros.” A third brother, P. F. Nolan, had been engaged in the retail shoe business in the city of San Francisco for twenty-two years, some of this time in company with J. C. Nolan, a brother, and some of the time joined with one or more of his sons. In the year 1895, and shortly after the defendant W. H. Nolan had launched his retail shoe business upon the world, P. F. Nolan changed his business into a corporation under the name of “Nolan Bros. Shoe Company,” *275and thereupon that company brought this action to restrain defendant in the conduct of his business from using the trade name “Nolan Bros.” The action is based upon the claim that such use is an infringement upon the rights of plaintiff to the use of the name “Nolan Bros.”
It is asserted upon the part of defendant that plaintiff allowed him' to use the name “Nolan Bros.” in the conduct of his shoe business for a period of ten years without objection, and that it is now too late to attack his right to its use. Whatever legal effect this long term of use might have as against plaintiff’s claims, if defendant had been engaged in the retail .shoe business, we will not decide; for during that period of time defendant was only engaged in the wholesale shoe business, and for that reason no occasion or necessity arose for plaintiff to make any objection. The use of the name by the defendant did not interfere with plaintiff’s business, and hence it was an immaterial matter to him. Plaintiff was not injured by the use of the name, and therefore was not concerned in the use. If defendant had been using the name “Nolan Bros.” for these ten years in the conduct of the plumbing business, plaintiff surely could not have objected. It does not appear from the showing here made that defendant’s wholesale shoe business interfered with plaintiff’s retail shoe business to any degree; and without a showing of injury plaintiff had no right, under these circumstances, to object to defendant’s use of the name any more than if the defendant had been engaged in the plumbing business. The mere use of a trade name in one business does not give a party a right to its use in any other business. We therefore attach no importance to the use of the name “Nolan Bros.” by defendant for ten years without objection upon the part of plaintiff; and we hold that the case stands exactly as though defendant engaged in the retail shoe business, never having been in the wholesale business.
Upon the foregoing assumption, has plaintiff such an interest in the name “Nolan Bros.” as to be entitled to an order restraining defendant from making use of it; and this depends upon whether or not plaintiff’s predecessor in interest had 'established a right to the use of the trade name “Nolan Bros.” in the retail shoe business when defendant started his retail *276shoe business? We will not give the evidence in great detail upon this cpiestion. While to some ’extent it may be said to be conflicting, yet we deem it ample to support the restraining order made by the trial court, to the effect that the der fendant’s use of the name was an interference with plaintiff’s rights. Plaintiff’s predecessor in interest had been carrying on the retail shoe business in the city of San Francisco twenty-two years or more; and in a great many ways, and certainly for a great portion of that time, was doing business-under the name of “Nolan Bros.” The evidence before us of abandonment of the name by plaintiff’s predecessor in interest does not establish the fact. The fact that the name “Nolan & Sons” was used as a trademark for a certain period of time by plaintiff’s predecessor in interest is but a circumstance, and not at all sufficient, of itself, to prove an abandonment. “A person may temporarily lay aside his mark and resume it without having in the meantime lost his property in the right of its use. Abandonment in the nature of a forfeiture must be strictly proven.” (Browne on Trademarks, sec. 681.) In Julian v. Julian Hoosier Drill Co., Am. Tr. M. Cas. 572, 573, it is said: “Abandonment means general abandonment to the public, and must be shown affirmatively and positively as affecting the interests of the public.” At no time during the period of twenty-two years wras the name “Nolan Bros.” absent from the place of business. For fourteen years continuously prior to the commencement of this action four metallic signs in conspicuous places upon the front of the store bore the trade name “Nolan Bros.” For thirteen years immediately prior to the commencement of the action, within the doorway of the store, a large glass sign carried over its front the words “Nolan Bros.” For the same length of time a large sign bearing the words “Nolan Bros.,” so that all could see it, was visible from the office door; and for the past two years prior to the commencement of this action it is conclusively established by affidavits that the business was in all substantial respects carried on under the name of “Nolan Bros.” The fact that other trade names may have been used by plaintiff for a short period of time in connection with the one here involved cannot neutralize the effect of the evidence quoted. *277Our conclusion is that this evidence greatly lacks in showing an abandonment of the right of plaintiff to use the name «Nolan Bros.”
Coleman etc. Co. v. Dannenberg Co., 103 Ga. 784,10 is cited, to support the contention that P. F. Nolan could not, by using the name “Nolan Bros. Shoe Co.” two years before incorporation, acquire any right to the use of the name “Nolan Bros.” It is claimed upon this point that the use of tags by P. F. Nolan, conspicuously indicating and representing that the business conducted by him was owned and conducted by a corporation, was a fraud on the public by which he could not acquire any right. On examination we find the case cited fails to support the contention, while Block v. Standard etc. Co., 95 Fed. Rep. 978, is the other way.
It is next claimed “that defendant had the absolute right to use a sign indicating that he was the successor to Nolan Bros., 10-13 Sutter street, that b'eing the fact.” What we have already said is opposed to this contention. The wholesale business carried on by defendant and his brother in another portion of the city is not the same business now carried on by defendant. The latter is a separate, distinct, and different business, and, the statement upon the sign that he (defendant) is a successor of the business formerly conducted under the name of Nolan Bros., 10-13 Sutter street,” is not correct. No one succeeded to that business and it had no successor. The business became extinct, and the sign does not express the facts.
It is insisted that “the family name of a tradesman or manufacturer cannot be made a trademark so as to exclude the right to its use by another bearing the same family name.” This contention is sound to a limited extent only. If the name is used in a manner clearly indicating an intent to mislead and deceive the public, then the use of the name will be restrained by a court of equity. The first answer to appellant’s contention in this regard is found in the fact that it is not a use of the family name “Nolan,” standing alone, to which objection is made, but it is a use of the name “Nolan Bros.”; and in a •case like that at bar the principle of law invoked seems to have no application. Furthermore, it is shown by the affidavits: *278“That the said defendant established a retail boot and shoe business at Nos. 1022 and 1024 Market street .... and over such store placed a large sign containing the words and figures-following, to wit: ‘W. H. Nolan & Co., Successor ito Nolan Bros., 10-12 Sutter street.’ That the words ‘W. H. Nolan & Co., successor to’ and the words and figures ‘10-12 Sutter street,’ are in such small and inconspicuous letters and figureslihat the same cannot be re'ad at a distance o-f more than seventy-five feet or one hundred feet, while the words ‘Nolan Bros.,’ are in such large and conspicuous letters and so prominently displayed that the same may be readily seen and read for a distance of nearly three hundred feet thereof.” It is also stated in the affidavits of various parties that said sign is a deceptive sign, and is calculated to deceive the public, and lead the public, the dealers and buyers of boots and shoes and footwear, and the patrons and customers of plaintiff to believe that ithe plaintiff is conducting a retail boot and shoe store, and a branch place of business at Nos. 1022 and 1024 Market street. It is further shown that almost daily, 'ever since the establishment of said store by said defendant at Nos. 1022 and 1024 Market street, the salesmen of plaintiff have encountered many of the buyers of boots and shoes and the customers and patrons of plaintiff, who haye purchased shoes at the store of defendant under the impression and belief that they were dealing with the plaintiff. Under the foregoing facts appellant’s contention upon the proposition that he has here advanced is undermined. (England v. New York Pub. Co., 8 Daly, 375.)
' The remaining propositions advanced by appellant are not, considered meritorious.
For the foregoing reasons the order is affirmed
;Van Dyke, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.