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Application of E. J. Brach & Sons
256 F.2d 325
C.C.P.A.
1958
Check Treatment

Application of E. J. BRACH & SONS

Patent Appeal No. 6374

United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals

June 18, 1958

256 F.2d 325 | 45 C.C.P.A. 998 | 118 U.S.P.Q. 308

since the patent was opened to public inspection more than a year prior to the filing date of the application on which the United States patent was granted.

Here, the brief for the Commissioner emphasizes that the patentee may obtain as many copies of the application and grant as he desires during the period between the grant and the opening to public inspection, but we do not consider that fact in itself significant. Any inventor has the option of disclosing his invention to the public at any time, but has he really done so and actually made it available to the public? There is nothing to show that, in the instant case, any copies of the papers were ordered or that any knowledge of the invention was imparted to the public prior to the “brevet publié” date of July 1, 1950. In our opinion the Belgian patent was, for all practical purposes, still a secret patent between March 31, 1950, and July 1, 1950.

It is also argued on behalf of the Commissioner that if patenting within the meaning of the statute is limited to patents which are open to the public, then a patent is merely a special form of printed publication, and the expression “patented or described in a printed publication” is redundant. That argument, however, overlooks the fact that there is nothing in the nature of a patent which requires it to be printed. In fact it agreed by appellant and the Patent Office that the Du Pont patent here was a patent on its “brevet publié” date of July 1, 1950, even though it was not printed at that time and was only open to inspection in typewritten form, a form which has been held not to be a printed publication. It is thus quite possible for a document to be a patent without also being a printed publication.

For the reasons given, we are of the opinion, both on principle and authority, that the word “patented” as used in 35 U.S.C. § 102(a) and (b) is limited to patents which are available to the public. Since the Belgian patent relied on was not so available prior to July 1, 1950, it did not become a patent until that date, within the meaning of those paragraphs, and hence is not properly available as a reference against appellant‘s application.

The decision of the Board of Appeals is accordingly reversed.

Reversed.

Cromwell, Greist & Warden, Chicago, Ill. (Fred S. Lockwood, Chicago, Ill., of counsel), for appellant.

Clarence W. Moore, Washington, D. C., for Commissioner of Patents.

Before JOHNSON, Chief Judge, and O‘CONNELL, WORLEY, and RICH, Associate Judges.

JOHNSON, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Assistant Commissioner of Patents, 112 U.S.P.Q. 267, affirming the decision of the Examiner of Trademarks which refused registration of applicant‘s alleged trademark. The “mark” sought to be registered consists of a decorative panel which forms the setting or serves as the background for applicant‘s registered mark “Brach‘s.”1 Following is a representation of the panel:

As set forth in the application for registration, the “mark” is used in connection with candy, use since February 11, 1953 having been asserted.

The record indicates that applicant uses the panel in question on approximately 99% of all its products, on advertising, letterheads, packages, etc. A number of advertisements of applicant‘s products are in the record but in none of them is the decorative panel sought to be registered used alone without “Brach‘s” superimposed thereon. There is no evidence in the record that the panel is ever used without applicant‘s word mark.

The examiner refused registration of the panel on two grounds:

(1) that it is “merely a non-distinctive frame or background design for the combination of the decorative panel and the word “Brach‘s.”

word ‘Brach‘s’ and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is felt incapable of distinguishing applicant‘s goods from those of others“; and

(2) that “the mark shown in the drawing is not the mark actually being used, but is only a portion of it.”

The Assistant Commissioner did not break down her decision into two grounds, as did the examiner, though her decision seems to have been based upon the same considerations. A number of cases, included in which was

In re Hillerich & Bradsby Co., 204 F.2d 287, 40 C.C.P.A., Patents, 990, were cited in support of her holding.

A petition for reconsideration was denied by the Assistant Commissioner, and applicant has appealed.

We are of the opinion that the decision below was correct and must be affirmed.

Since much stress has been placed on the

Hillerich case, supra, by both the Assistant Commissioner and the Solicitor, it would be well to discuss that case at the outset. There, the applicant sought to register an oval line which appeared around the identifying words “Louisville Slugger” (and other words) on baseball bats. Registration was sought under § 2(f) of the Lanham Act (the secondary meaning section), applicant having admitted that the oval was not inherently distinctive. It was also admitted that the oval was never used without the identifying words. In the course of its opinion, this court stated:

Concededly, buyers never see applicant‘s bats with only the oval thereon. Consequently, it is clear that usage of the oval per se has never been attempted as an origin-designating medium. The oval, not being inherently distinctive, must acquire that quality through such usage and association as will establish in the minds of the buying public that the oval of a bat clearly indicates a bat manufactured by applicant. * * * (Emphasis added.)

The court, not finding that the oval had acquired distinctiveness through use, affirmed the refusal of registration of the oval.

The Solicitor urges the

Hillerich case as standing for two propositions:

(1) “that mere background display of a mark is not registrable apart from the dominating word mark, except in those cases where secondary meaning is shown“; and

(2) “that subject matter which constitutes only a component of a composite mark is unregistrable.”

Unless these propositions are amplified they are apt to be misleading. As to the first proposition, it must be made clear that it is not every case in which the background display of a mark is sought to be registered apart from the word mark with which it is associated that secondary meaning must be shown. It is only in those cases where what is sought to be registered is “mere background material” that this holds true. This distinction is important, for this court has approved the registration of background material apart from the word marks with which it is associated, without any proof of secondary meaning of the former.

In re Swift & Co., 42 C.C.P.A. (Patents) 1048, 223 F.2d 950, 106 USPQ 286. One reading both the Swift and Hillerich cases can only conclude that the essential question is whether or not the background material is or is not inherently distinctive. (Note the italicized portion of the quote from the
Hillerich
case, supra.) If the background portion is inherently distinctive, no proof of secondary meaning need be introduced; if not, such proof is essential.

As to the Solicitor‘s second proposition, it must be noted that in the

Swift case, there was no indication that the polka-dot background sought to be registered was ever used without the accompanying printed matter appearing in the specimens. If what the Solicitor is referring to when he uses the words “composite mark” is something equivalent to the “polka-dot-plus-words” specimens of the
Swift
case, his second proposition

would appear to be rebutted by the holding in that case. But if what is meant is that where the background material plus the word marks so blend together that they are inherently incapable of creating more than a single commercial impression, his views would be consistent with the

Swift case. For the real significance of the
Swift
case is that the polka-dot background was distinctive apart from its accompanying words. In effect, the background material there was not part of a composite mark (the polka-dot design plus the word) but was one of two distinctive marks.

In the instant case, however, the background sought to be registered is not itself distinctive. We do not think that the average consumer of applicant‘s product will regard its background frills and curves as “an unmistakable, certain, and primary means of identification pointing distinctly to the commercial origin of such product,” as this court felt was likely in the

Swift case. In short, we feel that only a single commercial impression can be created from the use of applicant‘s background together with the word “Brach‘s.”

The merits of Ex parte Dole Refrigerating Co., 111 USPQ 282 (Commr.Pats. 1956), cited by applicant, need not be discussed here, as this decision would not in any event be binding upon us.

For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the Assistant Commissioner is affirmed.

Affirmed.

WORLEY, J., concurring.

I concur solely on the basis of our decision in

In re Hillerich & Bradsby Co., 204 F.2d 287, 40 C.C.P.A., Patents, 990.

Notes

1
Reg. No. 516,342, issued Oct. 18, 1949. Applicant is also the owner of Reg. No. 581,109, issued Oct. 13, 1953, for the combination of the decorative panel and the word “Brach‘s.”

Case Details

Case Name: Application of E. J. Brach & Sons
Court Name: Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
Date Published: Jun 18, 1958
Citation: 256 F.2d 325
Docket Number: Patent Appeal 6374
Court Abbreviation: C.C.P.A.
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