Wе must decide whether the publisher of a telephone directory for the Filipino-American community can establish that the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” is protec-tible under trademark law.
I
Roger Lagmay Oriel and Oscar Jorna-cion were partners in four businesses between 1982 and 1986. One of these businesses, Fil-Am Enterprises, Inc. (“Fil-Am”), published the Filipino Directory of California, a telephone directory directed primarily at the Filipino-American community of Southern California. In December 1986, Oriel and Jornacion terminated their business relationship and divided up their business interests through execution of a “Shareholders’ Buy Out Agreement” (“the Agreement”). Under the Agreement, Oriel acquired complete ownership of Fil-Am’s telephone directory business, and Jornacion agreed not to compete “in the Filipino Directory (Filipino Yellow Pages) [market] in California” for three years.
Oriel, as owner of Fil-Am, continued to publish the Filipino Directory of California until 1991. Between 1991 and 1993, Fil-Am joined two partners to publish a telephone directory known as the Filipino Directory of the U.S.A. and Canada. In 1993, Fil-Am sold its interest in the Filipino Directory of the U.S.A. and Canada. Oriel and his wife, Cora Macabagdal Oriel, then formed a new corporate entity, Asian Journal Publications, Inc. (“AJP”). Since 1994, AJP has published a telephone directory called the Filipino Consumer Directory.
Pursuant to the Agreement’s non-competе provision, Jornacion did not participate in the Filipino-American telephone directory market between December 1986 and December 1989. Jornacion reentered the market in 1990 by forming the Filipino Yellow Pages, Inc. (“FYP”), publisher of a directory called the Filipino Yellow Pages. FYP’s Filipino Yellow Pages, AJP’s Filipino Consumer Directory, and the Filipino Directory of the U.S.A. and Canada currently compete in the Filipino-American telephone directory market in Califor
AJP’s Filipino Consumer Directory has a white-pages section, which contains general reference information as well as a listing of people and organizations affiliated with the Filipino-American community. The Filipino Consumer Directory also has a yellow pages section containing information about businesses serving the Filipino-American community. AJP periodically uses the term “Filipino Consumer Yellow Pages” in print advertisements directed at potential advertisers. These advertisements either reference the full name of the directory or are found within the Filipino Consumer Directory itself.
In June 1996, two months before it sued AJP for trademark infringement, FYP applied for registration of “Filipino Yellow Pages” with the Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”). In December 1996, the PTO refused registration of “Filipino Yellow Pages.” The PTO stated: “The proposed mark merely describes the goods and the nature and intended audience for the goods. Accordingly, the mark cannot be registered on the Principal Register based solely on an intent to use the mark in Interstate Commerce.” The PTO informed FYP that because its application “indicate[d] use of the mark for a significant time,” however, FYP could amend its application to seek registration based on acquired distinctiveness. The PTO further advised FYP that its amended application would have to include the following disclaimer: “No claim is made to the exclusive right to use [the term] ‘yellow pages’ apart from [‘Filipino Yellow Pages’].” FYP subsequently amended its application for trademark registration to seek registration based on acquired distinctiveness. FYP’s application for trademark registration remains pending at the current time.
On August 2, 1996, FYP filed a complaint against AJP, Oriel, and Macabag-dal-Oriel (collectively, “AJP”) in the Central District of California. FYP alleged the following causes of action: (1) trademark infringement; (2) fаlse designation of origin and false description of sponsorship or affiliation; (3) unfair competition and misappropriation of goodwill, reputation, and business properties; (4) misappropriation of FYP’s right of publicity; (5) injury to business relationships; (6) unfair competition under California state law; and (7) trademark dilution under California state law.
AJP moved for summary judgment, arguing that the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” is generic and as such incapable of trademark protection. In support of this contention, AJP relied upon:
1. the presence in the dictionary and generic nature of the individual terms “Filipino” and “yellow pages”;
2. Jornacion’s own generic use of the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” in the Agreement with Oriel, in which Jor-nacion “agree[d] not to compete in the Filipino Directory (Filipino Yellow Pages) [market] in California. ...”;
3. the marketing of a second Filipino Yellow Pages, that of Kayumanggi Communications, to the Filipino-American community on the East Coast; and
4. generic usage by the media of the term “Filipino Yellow Pages,” in a Los Angeles Times article on specialty yellow pages which stated as follows: “Virgil Janio of Los Ange-les sells ads nationwide for his Filipino yellow pages.... ”
In opposing the motion for summary judgment, FYP contended that “Filipino Yellow Pages,” rather than being generic,
On November 26,1997, the district court granted AJP’s motion for summary judgment. The district court held that (1) the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” is generic, and as such incapable of serving as a trademark; and (2) even if the term were descriptive, AJP would still be entitled to summary judgment because FYP had failed to produce any admissible evidence of secondary meaning.
FYP timely appealed.
II
The first issue presented is whether the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” is generic with respect to telephone directories targeted at the Filipino-American community. If the term is generic, it cannot be the subject of trademark protection under any circumstances, even with a showing of secondary meaning.
A
Before proceeding to the merits, a word on the burden of persuasion is appropriate. In cases involving properly registered marks, a presumption of validity places the burden of proving genericness upon the defendant. See 15 U.S.C. § 1057(b) (“A certifiсate of registration of a mark ... shall be prima facie evidence of the validity of the registered mark.... ”). If a supposedly valid mark is not federally registered, however, the plaintiff has the burden of proving nongenericness once the defendant asserts genericness as a defense. See, e.g., Blinded Veterans Ass’n v. Blinded American Veterans Found.,
B
Case law recognizes “four different categories of terms with respect to trademark protection: (1) generic, (2) descriptive, (3) suggestive, and (4) arbitrary or fanciful.” Surgicenters of America, Inc. v. Medical Dental Surgeries Co., 601
“A ‘generic’ term is one that refers, or has come to be understood as referring, to the genus of which the particular product or service is a species. It cannot become a trademark under any circumstances.” Surgicenters,
A descriptive term, unlike a generiс term, can be a subject for trademark protection under appropriate circumstances. Although descriptive terms generally do not enjoy trademark protection, a descriptive term can be protected provided that it has acquired “secondary meaning” in the minds of consumers, i.e., it has “become distinctive of the [trademark] applicant’s goods in commerce.” Abercrombie,
In determining whether a tеrm is generic, we have often relied upon the “who-are-you/what-are-you” test: “A mark answers the buyer’s questions ‘Who are you?’ ‘Where do you come from?’ ‘Who vouches for you?’ But the [generic) name of the product answers the question ‘What are you?’ ” Official Airline Guides, Inc. v. Goss, 6 F.3d 1385, 1391 (9th Cir.1993) (quoting 1 J. Thomas McCarthy, Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 12.01 (3d ed.1992)). Under this test, “[i]f the primary significance of the trademark is to describe the type of product rather than the producer, the trademark [is] a generic term and [cannot be] a valid trademark.” Anti-Monopoly, Inc. v. General Mills Fun Group,
Here the parties do not dispute that “Filipino” and “yellow pages” are generic terms. The word “Filipino” is a clearly generic term used to refer to “a native of the Philippine islands” or “a citizen of the Republic of thе Philippines.” Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 462 (1986). The term “yellow pages” has been found to be a generic term for “a local business telephone directory alphabetized by product or service.” AmCan Enters., Inc. v. Renzi,
The issue then becomes whether combining the generic terms “Filipino” and “yellow pages” to form the composite term “Filipino Yellow Pages” creates a generic or a descriptive term. AJP argues, and the district court concluded, that “Filipino Yellow Pages” is generic based on this court’s analysis in Surgicenters of America, Inc. v. Medical Dental Surgeries Co.,
In reaching our conclusion of genericness in Surgicenters, we placed significant but not controlling weight on the dictionary definitions and generic nature of “surgery” and “center.” We explained that “[w]hile not determinative, dictionary definitions are relevant and often persuasive in determining how a term is understood by the consuming public, the ultimate test of whether a trademark is generic.” Id. at 1015 n. 11. But we also based our genericness finding upon detailed information in somе 45 exhibits that, taken collectively, suggested that the consuming public considered the composite term “surgicenter” to mean a surgical center generally speaking, as opposed to a surgical center maintained and operated by the plaintiff specifically. See id. at 1017. These exhibits included letters from potential consumers and several publications that used the term “surgicenter” in a clearly generic sense. The finding of genericness in Surgicenters cannot be separated from the uniquely well-developed record in that case. See Park ‘N Fly,
In this case, the district court cited Sur-gicenters for the proposition that “a combination of two generic words is also generic, unless the combination is a ‘deviation from natural usage’ or an ‘unusual unitary combination.’ ” The court then stated that “[u]nder this analysis, the term ‘Filipino Yellow Pages’ seems to be neither a ‘deviation from natural usage,’ nor an ‘unusual unitary combination.’ ” The district court’s reading of Surgicenters appears somewhat troubling insofar as it oversimplifies our opinion. First, it overlooks our explicit recognition that “words which could not individually become a trademark may become one when taken together.”
In United States Jaycees v. San Francisco Junior Chamber of Commerce,
Several of our more recent cases have taken а fairly integrative approach to evaluating composite terms, rejecting the breaking down of such terms into their individual (and often generic) parts. In Park 'N Fly, Inc. v. Dollar Park and Fly, Inc.,
The above [argument by the defendant] strongly suggests that the validity of Park ‘N Fly’s mark is questionable. It cannot compensate, however, for Dollar’s failure to provide any evidence with respect to consumer perceptions. We must decide the case on the record before us, not on our own set of assumptions. Without evidence that to the consuming public the primary significance of the term is to denote the service Park ‘N Fly offers and not its source, we are without a sufficient evidentiary basis to find Park ‘N Fly’s mark generic.
Id. We distinguished the case before us from Surgicenters by noting that the very well-developed record in Surgicenters, replete with some 45 exhibits, contained evidence sufficient to sustain a finding of invalidity in that case.
In California Cooler, Inc. v. Loretto Winery, Ltd.,
We have reaffirmed this holistic approach to examining the genericness of composite terms in two fairly recent cases. In Self-Realization Fellowship Church v. Ananda Church of Self-Realization,
Finally, in Committee for Idaho’s High Desert, Inc. v. Yost,
As the foregoing discussion illustrates, several pre- and post -Surgicenters cases have announced what could be described as an “anti-dissection rule” for evaluating the trademark validity of composite terms. Official Airline Guides, Inc.,
In light of the foregoing discussion, the district court here may have oversimplified matters somewhat when it stated that “[t]he Ninth Circuit has held that a combination of two generic words is also generic, unless the combination is a ‘deviation from natural usage’ or an ‘unusual unitary combination.’ ” Any arguable imprecision in the district court’s application of Surgicen-ters was harmless, however, because the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” would be unproteetible in any event.
In finding “Filipino Yellow Pages” generic, the district court did not rely solely upon the generic nature and presence in the dictionary of “Filipino” and “yellow pages.” The district court also considered other evidence tending to suggest that “Filipino Yellow Pages,” even when considered as an entire mark, is generic with respect to telephone directories. The district court took note of the following facts: (1) Jornacion himself appeared to use the term “Filipino Yellow Pages” in a generic sense in the Shareholders’ Buy Out Agreement with Oriel, when he “agree[d] not to
These three pieces of evidence are not as weighty as the 45 exhibits presented in Surgicenters, in which the record established generic use of the term “surgieen-ter” by Newsweek magazine, six medical publications, and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. See
Even assuming that AJP’s other evidence of genericness would be insufficient to sustain a genericness finding by itself, it certainly suggests that “Filipino Yellow Pages,” if descriptive, would be the feeblest of descriptive marks — in the words of one court, “perilously close to the ‘generic’ line.” Computerland Corp. v. Microland Computer Corp.,
Ill
A descriptive term can be protected as a valid trademark only with a showing of secondary meaning. See Surgicenters,
In his declaration, Jornacion testified that FYP had suffered lost revenues of at least $82,000 as a result of consumer confusion generated by AJP’s use of the
Even if Jornacion’s testimony regarding consumer confusion and lost revenue for FYP were admissible, it would be insufficient to establish secondary meaning so as to withstand summary judgment. Evidence of secondary meaning from a partial source possesses very limited probative value. See, e.g., Norm Thompson Outfitters, Inc. v. GM Corp.,
In sum, FYP’s evidence of secondary meaning was inadmissible, lacking in substantial probative value (as emanating from a far-from-objective source), or both. The district court did not err in concluding that FYP had failed to establish secondary meaning for “Filipino Yellow Pages.” Thus “Filipino Yellow Pages,” even if descriptive rather than generic, is not a valid and protectible trademark with respect to a telephone directory for the Filipino-American community.
IV
For the foregoing reasons, FYP was unable to establish the trademark protecti-bility of “Filipino Yellow Pages” as a descriptive mаrk with secondary meaning. The grant of summary judgment in favor of AJP was proper.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. AJP is opposing FYP’s trademark application before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, in an opposition proceeding that has been stayed pending this appeal.
. We review a district court's grant of summary judgment de novo. See Newbery Corp. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
. FYP does not claim (nor could it do so successfully) that "Filipino Yellow Pages” can qualify for trademark protection as a suggestive mark, in which case it could be protected without a showing of secondary meaning. A term is suggestive if "imagination” or a "mental leap” is required in order to reach a conclusion as Lo the nature of the product being referenced. Self-Realization Fellowship Church v. Ananda Church of Self-Realization,
. Furthermore, Judge Ely, in separately concurring, explicitly rejected Judge Merrill’s analysis, arguing that the term "Junior Chamber of Commerce,” taken as a whole, "refer[s] to the specific source of a ‘prоduct’ (the National/Jaycees), and is not commonly understood as merely a generic term describing any group of young men pursuing civic betterment.” Jaycees,
. We have noted in the past that "the lines of demarcation [between the four categories of marks] are not always clear" and that "courts often have difficulty in distinguishing between generic and descriptive terms.” Surgicenters,
