Both parties to this suit use the mark Bliss in connection with beauty salons and beauty-care products, such as shampoo. Bliss Salon is the senior user between the two, having opened in 1979 its one and only outlet in Wilmette, a suburb of Chicago. Bliss World adopted the mark in 1996 when it opened Bliss Spa in the Soho district of New York. It has set out to create an international chain of beauty parlors, also selling Blissout and Blis-slabs products in retail outlets such as Saks Fifth Avenue, by catalog, and through a web site. Bliss World registered its marks in 1997 for use in connection with spas and beauty-care products, a step that Bliss Salon neglected; it is uncontested that Bliss World adopted the mark without knowledge of Bliss Salon’s prior use.
In this action under § 43(a)(1)(A) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1)(A), Bliss Salon seeks an injunction that would forbid Bliss World to open a beauty parlor, or sell any of its products, within 100 miles of Chicago’s Loop. The district court denied Bliss Salon’s motion for a preliminary injunction,
At oral argument plaintiffs counsel invited us to cut the radius from 100 miles to 25 (a mere 1,963 square miles), but this is not the right forum; our task is to decide whether the district judge abused her discretion, not to make an independent decision about appropriate relief. And a smaller radius would do Bliss Salon no good, at least on this record. So far as the record reveals, not a single customer has ever expressed confusion about source, returned one of Bliss World’s products to Bliss Salon seeking a refund, or complained to Bliss Salon about the high prices in Bliss World’s catalog. Bliss Salon has not conducted a survey or offered any other means by which the district court could infer a likelihood of confusion in the future.
Instead Bliss Salon argues that it is entitled to relief without the need for evidence, because the word “bliss” is “suggestive,” and all “suggestive” marks are protected automatically, without need to prove secondary meaning or likely confusion. “Bliss” is not generic, and it does not describe any attribute of hair styling or shampoo. Emotions are not product attributes; if one could achieve “bliss” by washing one’s hair many religious leaders and psychoanalysts would be out of business. Thus the word must be “suggestive,” and a suggestive mark creates an entitlement to protection from usurpers, the argument wraps up.
That is itself a misleading (confused?) statement of trademark law. Section 43(a)(1)(A) provides relief only when another person’s use of a mark “is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive ... as to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of his or her goods, services, or commercial activities by another person”. Proof of likely confusion about source is a statutory requirement. Judge Friendly proposed the continuum of generic, descriptive, suggestive, arbitrary, and fanciful marks as a heuristic, a means to guide thought rather than to replace the statutory requirements. See
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. v. Hunting World, Inc.,
A court cannot choose between the “descriptive” and “suggestive” categories on the basis of a dictionary; Judge Friendly’s continuum is functional, and placement must be functional too. This is why we held in
Platinum Home Mortgage Corp. v. Platinum Financial Group,
AFFIRMED.
