Plaintiff-appellant, Courtenay Communications Corporation (“CCC”) appeals from • the June 9, 2001 judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Lawrence M. McKenna,
Judge),
granting the motion of defendants-appellees, Patricia M. Hall and Hallmark Capital Corporation (collectively, “Hall”) to dismiss CCC’s complaint which alleged various violations of the Lanham Act § 43(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), and state law claims of libel per se, breach of fiduciary duty and conversion.
See Courtenay Communications Corp. v. Hall,
No. 01 CIV. 2228(LMM),
I. BACKGROUND
We assume familiarity with the district court decision dismissing CCC’s complaint, and denying CCC a preliminary injunction and a temporary restraining order against Hall. The court concluded that CCC’s mark was generic and thus not entitled to any trademark protection. On the basis of this determination, the district court dismissed the lawsuit and denied the injunc-tive relief sought by CCC.
CCC’s mark is comprised of the words “Marketing News” with the following graphic features: the “i” is red, lowercase and the same size as the other letters; “MARKETING NEWS” is in small caps; *212 and there is a yellow circle superimposed over the red “i” and part of the “M” in “Marketing News.”
In support of its Lanham Act trademark claim, CCC made, inter alia, the following allegations in its complaint:
28. Plaintiff established “Marketing News” as a trademark for its product.
29. Defendants have a website, www.hallmarkcapital.com, that advertises the services of Ms. Hall and Hallmark Capital.
30. [D]efendants have displayed ...— under the title “What’s New” — the mark of “Marketing News” without the permission of Plaintiff and in a manner that is likely to cause confusion, mistake or deception among persons using ordinary care and prudence in the purchase of defendants’ services.
31. In a letter dated February 21, 2001, Plaintiff wrote to defendants and demanded that they remove, inter alia, Plaintiffs trademark from [the website]. Defendants [did not comply-]
32. On defendants’ website, a hyperlink under the words “smartest strategic move” in the text beside the “Marketing News” mark links to another page entitled “Success Stories” and to a paragraph that, because of the association created by the link, describes Plaintiff as “a $15 million privately held direct marketing media company [that] was poorly managed, unfocused and unprepared to take advantage of strategic opportunities. Hallmark Capital provided interim COO services for eight months, overhauling a weak and ineffective corporate infrastructure and creating a strong, dynamic operating environment.”
33. Above the paragraph containing the offending statements, a false endorsement purportedly from the “PresidenVOwner” appears stating, “Hallmark Capital gave us the No. 2 executive we had been looking for [sic] years and could never find. Thanks for making this a better place — and us better managers.” The Presi-denVOwner of Plaintiff never authorized the defendants to use any such statement as an endorsement, and [sic] such PresidenVOwner and Plaintiff consider the services - provided by Hall to be unsatisfactory, as evidenced by Plaintiffs termination of Hall.
35. The use of the trademark “Marketing News” or any colorable imitation thereof by defendants is likely to cause confusion, mistake or deception as to the affiliation, connection, association or sponsorship of the services of [defendants] and Marketing News and/or Plaintiff, and it is believed that it has already caused actual mistake, confusion or deception of the general public.
36. The use of the trademark “Marketing News” by [defendants] constitutes a knowing and willful false representation concerning the endorsement of their services.
37. These acts of false endorsement by [defendants] have caused and are continuing to cause irreparable injury to the reputation that Plaintiff and Marketing News have established, and unless the use of Marketing News by [defendants] is restrained, [defendants] will continue these acts to the detriment of Marketing News and Plaintiff.
39. Plaintiffs trademark “Marketing News” is the name of Plaintiffs publication of the same name.
*213 40. Defendants, knowing that “Marketing News” was associated with Plaintiffs publication, sought to take advantage of Plaintiffs trademark and name and engaged in unfair competition by advertising her services on her website by using Plaintiffs trademark.
Compl. ¶¶ 28-33, 35-37, 39-40 [A13-15] Attached to CCC’s complaint were printouts from Hall’s website that support CCC’s allegations.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss de novo.
Miller v. Wolpoff & Abramson, L.L.P.,
When presented with a 12(b)(6) motion, the district court may not consider matters outside of the pleadings without converting the motion into a motion for summary judgment.
Friedl v. City of New York,
III. DISCUSSION
The district court based its decision to dismiss CCC’s complaint entirely on its conclusion that CCC’s mark is not entitled to trademark protection because it is generic.
See Courtenay Communications Corp.,
A. The district court failed to view CCC’s allegations in a light most favorable to CCC.
CCC’s complaint alleged, inter alia, that CCC “established ‘Marketing News’ as a trademark for its product;” that defendants’ use of CCC’s mark injures “the reputation that Plaintiff and Marketing News have established;” and “that Marketing News’ was associated with Plaintiffs publication.” Compl. ¶¶ 28, 37, 40. Although imprecise, these allegations, viewed in a light most favorable to the plaintiff, are sufficient to allege that the mark is distinctive, either inherently (e.g., if it was found to be suggestive in the minds of the public) or otherwise (i.e., if it was found to be descriptive and to have acquired secondary, meaning), rather than generic (i.e., if it were found to refer to a genus of products rather than a particular producer’s product), and therefore protect-able under trademark law. 2 Based on CCC’s allegations, we cannot agree with the district court’s conclusion insofar as it may have presumed that CCC did not sufficiently allege a protectable mark.
*215 B. The district court engaged in 'premature fact-finding on whether the composite mark as a whole is generic.
The district court states in its order dismissing CCC’s complaint that it “finds that ‘Marketing’ is a generic term.”
Courtenay Communications Corp.,
In support of its conclusion that CCC’s mark is generic, the, district court relied on
CES Publ’g Corp. v. St. Regis Publ’ns, Inc.,
We need not decide, however, whether the district court may take judicial notice of the English language to conclude based on the pleadings that word-only marks in near-standard fonts are generic because they are necessary to describe the product. The district court erred when it did not treat CCC’s mark as a composite mark, and we conclude that whether a composite mark, which must be treated as a whole for classification purposes, is generic presents an issue of fact that cannot be resolved on the pleadings. After deciding that the terms used by CCC were generic, the district court concluded as a matter of law that “[b]ecause the Court has found the words that make up plaintiffs mark generic, not descriptive, the addition of the design and typeface elements, regardless of their minimal distinctiveness, could not suffice to make the mark, taken in its entirety, arbitrary, fanciful or suggestive.”
Courtenay Communications,
There are many examples of legally protected marks that combine generic words with distinctive lettering, coloring, or other design elements.
See, e.g., In re Miller Brewing Co.,
[W]e have held that even the distinctive display of descriptive or otherwise un-registrable components of a mark cannot bestow registrability on a mark as a whole unless the features are of such a nature that they would serve to distinguish the mark in its entirety or it can be shown through competent evidence that the unitary mark displayed in the assertedly distinctive manner does in fact create a distinctive commercial impression separate and apart from the descriptive significance of its components .... That is, while an entire mark cannot be disclaimed and also registered, nevertheless, where the unregis-trable components of a mark are combined in a design or display which is so distinctive as to create a commercial impression separate and apart from the unregistrable components, it is possible to disclaim those unregistrable components and still have a mark which is registrable as a whole.
United States Lines, Inc. v. American President Lines, Ltd.,
As “[w]e have noted on many occasions ... the decisions of the TTAB, while not binding on courts within this Circuit, are nonetheless ‘to be accorded great weight.’ ”
Buti v. Impressa Perosa
*217
S.R.L.,
Viewing CCC’s allegations in a light most favorable to CCC, we conclude that CCC’s claim should not have been dismissed because (1) determination of the mark’s classification — a question of fact— was premature, and (2) the court failed to use the correct legal standards to analyze the composite mark.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the district court is Vacated and the case is Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The alternative ground for dismissal raised by Hall, namely that CCC's allegations of false endorsement are insufficient, is without merit. First, the statements on Hall’s "Success Stories” webpage are endorsements; second, on Hall’s "What’s New” webpage, the hyperlink labeled "smartest strategic move” in the paragraph describing Hallmark’s alleged in
*214
volvement with launching iMarket News, is adjacent to the ¡Marketing News mark, and could support a factual finding that the "trade newspaper publishing parent”
(i.e.,
CCC) made one of the endorsements.
See Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, Inc. v. Pussycat Cinema, Ltd., 604
F.2d 200, 205 (2d Cir.1979) (concluding that the "district court did not err in holding that plaintiff had established a likelihood of confusion within the meaning of the Lanham Act sufficient to entitle it to a preliminary injunction” where "[p]laintiff expects to establish on trial that the public may associate it with defendants’ movie and be confused into believing that plaintiff sponsored the movie, provided some of the actors, licensed defendants to use the uniform, or was in some other way connected with the production.”);
c.f. Pebble Beach Co. v. Tour 18 I Ltd.,
. Although CCC has not registered its mark, an unregistered mark is entitled to Lanham Act protection if it would qualify for registration.
See Thompson Med. Co., Inc. v. Pfizer Inc.,
"In contrast, generic marks ... are not registrable as trademarks.”
Id.
at 768,
We express no opinion as to whether the mark qualifies for protection.
. Notably, the cases the court relied on,
CES, Abercrombie & Fitch,
and
Reese
are distinguishable from this case because in all three cases there was no indication that typeface, color, and other design elements were used to make the composite mark distinctive; rather, in each of those cases the focus was on the plaintiff’s ability to control the defendant's use of the words that comprised the plaintiff’s mark
(i.e.,
"Consumer Electronics Monthly,”
*216
"safari,'' and "Video Buyers Guide”).
See CES,
. The district court and Hall both note that in
GMT Prods., L.P. v. Cablevision of New York City, Inc.,
. CCC maintains that its mark has unique design features, such as the use of a red, lowercase "i” inside a yellow circle along with “MARKETING NEWS” (in times new roman "small caps” font), that are analogous to Miller’s use of design elements to create a protectable composite mark using “lite.” Moreover, it is worth noting that CCC's complaint is focused on Hall's use of a nearly identical composite mark (i.e., words plus al-Iegedly distinctive design elements) and not just the allegedly generic words alone.
. Under such a scenario, should CCC want to register its mark, it might be required to disclaim any generic words, but still would be able to register and otherwise protect the mark as a composite whole.
See, e.g., In re Miller,
