Custom Vehicles sued Forest River for trademark infringement, lost on summary judgment, and appeals. In 1999 Custom (actually a predecessor, but we can ignore that detail) had created a product that it called “Work-N-Play.” It was a van the interior of which could be converted by the owner in about an hour from a mobile office to a camper, or vice versa, so that he could, in Custom Vehicles’ words, “work out of it through the week” and “play out of it on the weekends.” Hence the name, which Custom Vehicles first registered with the Patent and Trademark Office in 2000 as an “intent to use” trademark— meaning that it would be used in commerce, in a sense we explain later in this opinion, within six months. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051(b), (d);
WarnerVision Entertainment Inc. v. Empire of Carolina, Inc.,
Custom Vehicles sold its first van— though not under the “Work-N-Play” name — that year. The following year Forest River, a much larger company, decided to build a towed van with a ramp door at the back and space inside for a repair shop so that the van’s owner could both trans *483 port his motorcycle or snowmobile and repair it without taking it to a repair shop. Vans of this sort are called “toy trailers,” because motorcycles, snowmobiles, and the like are referred to by aficionados as “adult toys.” Forest River called its new product “Work and Play,” a name as apt to its dual use as to Custom Vehicles’.
Forest River began selling the vans in 2002, and by 2004 their annual sales exceeded $10 million. Meanwhile, Custom Vehicles sold only one other ‘Work-N-Play” van — its demo model, which it sold to a family member of Custom Vehicles’ owner for $1,000 — until 2004, when it sold six more vans. Those were its first bona fide sales of vans under the “Work-N-Play” mark, since its first sale had not been under that name and the second sale, to a relative for roughly 2.5 percent of the van’s normal sales price, was not a commercially meaningful sale.
Both Custom Vehicles and Forest River promoted their respective products at recreational-vehicle trade shows. We may assume without having to decide that the products are sufficiently alike that if Work-N-Play” is a valid trademark, Forest River’s use of “Work and Play” as the name of its van is potentially infringing, though even if the trademark is valid, Custom Vehicles, to prevail in an infringement suit, would have to prove that Forest River’s use of it would be likely to deceive or confuse. 15 U.S.C. § 1114(l)(a);
Sullivan v. CBS Corp.,
“Work-N-Play” is what in trademark law is called a “descriptive” mark. That is, it does more than merely name a brand; it describes the product category to which the brand belongs (so Maxwell House is a brand, coffee the product), in this case vans usable both for work and for play. “Holiday Inn,” “All Bran,” and “American Girl” are familiar examples of descriptive marks. A descriptive mark is not a complete description, obviously, but it picks out a product characteristic that figures prominently in the consumer’s decision whether to buy the product or service in question.
A seller must not be permitted to appropriate as the name of its brand a term by which the public knows the product category to which the brand belongs, for that would make it difficult for other sellers of the same product to describe their brands, and this would impair competition. Hence a descriptive mark cannot be registered, 15 U.S.C. 1052(e);
Park ‘N Fly, Inc. v. Dollar Park & Fly, Inc.,
So unless and until “Work-N-Play” achieved secondary meaning as the name of Custom Vehicles’ product, it could not be a legally protected trademark. And even if it could be, its use by another firm would not infringe because, unless Custom Vehicles’ descriptive mark had achieved secondary meaning, a consumer would not associate the name with Custom Vehicles and so could not be confused if someone else used the name. 2 McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition, supra, § 15:11. “[I]f there is no secondary meaning, there is no mark to protect and confusion is not possible.” Id.
Forest River could in that event, by dint of heavy advertising and a large sales volume, acquire secondary meaning for
its
use of the name first chosen by Custom Vehicles. This is the case of “reverse passing off,” where, as we explained in
Peaceable Planet, Inc. v. Ty, Inc., supra,
But Forest River’s swamping of Custom Vehicles’ marketing efforts infringes only if Work-N-Play” is a legally protected trademark; and it is difficult, maybe impossible, for a small seller of an unpopular brand — a seller who has negligible sales— to acquire secondary meaning for its brand name. Such a seller is better off adopting a fanciful or arbitrary mark, which is enforceable without proof of secondary meaning. When Forest River launched its “Work and Play” van in 2002, Custom Vehicles’ predecessor had made only one commercial sale, and that sale wasn’t even made under the name Work-N-Play.” New consumers could have thought that “Work and Play” designated Custom Vehicles’ brand rather than an indefinitely larger set of products usable for both work and recreation.
We acknowledge that the difficulty of obtaining secondary meaning in a mark equally descriptive of a range of products made by established firms may create a dilemma for the producer of a genuinely novel product. As we noted earlier, a descriptive mark will facilitate introducing a new product to the public, and so it is a natural choice for a start-up, but if he *485 adopts such a mark he may find himself drowned out, as may have happened to Custom Vehicles. However, a product that is genuinely novel will be sheltered from competition (to a degree anyway) by patent or trade secret law, or more commonly just by the headstart created by its being first in the market; and so it will not be drowned out by a product sold by a larger competitor. Custom Vehicles’ basic problem is that the only novel feature of its van — that it can be used as both a mobile office and a recreational vehicle— did not satisfy a large pent-up demand that, had it materialized, might have conferred secondary meaning on Custom Vehicles’ mark before anyone else could get in on the act. Furthermore, the someone else was not a competitor — -Forest River was seeking to satisfy a different consumer demand. There was and is nothing to prevent Custom Vehicles from adopting a new mark, even a new descriptive mark— such as “Office-N-Rec” — that might acquire secondary meaning. Its “Work-N-Play” mark, however, described too much.
Having insufficient evidence to demonstrate secondary meaning, Custom Vehicles falls back on its registered trademark, noting that such a trademark, like a patent, carries a presumption of validity. 15 U.S.C. § 1115(a);
CAE, Inc. v. Clean Air Engineering, Inc.,
We suppose that one sale of a $150 million airplane or yacht within the first six months might be sufficient use, see 3
McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition, supra,
§ 19:110, for it would be enough to seize the attention of the relevant market. See
General Healthcare Ltd. v. Qashat,
We acknowledge that
Chance v. Pac-Tel Teletrac Inc.,
The formula is especially inapt to a descriptive mark, for without significant sales (always excepting the case of the super expensive prototype) the mark could not achieve secondary meaning. Cf.
PaperCutter, Inc. v. Fay’s Drug Co.,
In the absence of registration, a producer can still obtain relief by proving that the defendant is using a mark that “is likely to cause confusion ... as’ to the origin, sponsorship or approval of his or her goods.” Lanham Act, § 43(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a);
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Samara Bros., Inc.,
Affirmed.
