162 F.2d 464 | C.C.P.A. | 1947
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a decision, 68 USPQ 95, of the Commissioner of Patents, by the First Assistant Commissioner, affirming that of the
The proceeding was brought pursuant to section 18 of the TradeMark Act of 1905 (15 USCA § 93).
Appellant’s application for registration, under the provisions of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905, of its involved mark “PLYMOLD,” as applied to “* * * UNFINISHED PLYWOOD SHAPES IN THE FORM OF SHELLS AND PANELS * * *” was filed September 24, 1942, and the mark was registered June 8, 1943. July 22, 1942, was alleged to have been the date of the first use of the mark as applied to its goods.
Appellee was incorporated under the name of Plymold Corporation on July 10,1942.
In the petition for cancellation it was alleged that appellant’s registered mark so closely resembled the mark “PLYTUBE” of appellee, registered on October 5, 1943, under the act of 1920, and applied to goods of the same descriptive properties as those of appellant, that it was likely to cause confusion in trade. It was further alleged that the notation “PLYMOLD” is descriptive of appellant’s goods and also constitutes an appropriation of appellee’s corporate name.
The allegations of the petition were traversed by answer and both parties took testimony and many exhibits were received in evidence.
It was held below that appellant’s registered mark is merely the corporate name of appellee and is not distinctively displayed.
Appellant’s mark is printed in capital letters with the middle letter “M” having lines extending from the legs thereof in horizontal, fashion, over the left extension of which appear the letters “LY” and over the right extension the letters “OLD.” The letters “P” and “D” are the longest letters. The letters “LY” and “OL” progressively diminish in height from each end of the word toward the center letter “M,” which is the shortest letter in the mark. In other words the bottom of the letters is in a straight line and the top arrangement thereof is in the shape of an obtuse angle.
It is clear that appellant’s mark is petitioner’s corporate name. Holly Molding Devices v. Esquire, Inc., 32 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 935, 148 F. (2d) 355, 65 USPQ 125.
It is equally clear that appellant’s mark is not distinctively displayed. In re American Steel and Wire Co. of New Jersey, 23 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 841, 81 F. (2d) 397, 28 USPQ 348.
Appellant contends that because the use of its mark precedes ap-pellee’s adoption of its corporate name there is no legal basis for cancellation.
That prohibition, as was stated by the commissioner, is absolute and contains no limitation as to the time of adoption -of either the name or the mark. In his decision he cited the case of National Dairy Products Corporation v. Allied Mills, Inc., 469 O. G. 773, 30 USPQ 274, an opposition proceeding, tb support that statement and further said that such prohibition relating to registration of corporate names has been consistently followed in the Patent Office and has been recently affirmed in the case of Ex parte Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, 166 Ms. D. 934, 68 USPQ 21.
From the commissioner’s decision it appears that the Patent Office has not heretofore been called upon to apply the provisions of section 5, supra, in a cancellation proceeding where the precise question, as is here involved, was presented.
Sectioir 13 of the act provides that any person who shall deem himself injured by the registration of a trade-mark may at any time apply to the Commissioner of Patents for cancellation thereof and that if it appears after a hearing before the examiner in charge of interferences that the registrant “* * * was not entitled to the use of the mark on the date of his application thereof, * * * and the examiner shall so decide, the commissioner shall cancel the registration.”
There can be no question but that the registration of another’s corporate name to a competitor is a manifest injury to the corporation. The Abestone Co. v. The Philip Carey Manufacturing Co., 41 App. D. C. 507, 1914 C. D. 146.
Since appellee was a corporate entity prior to the date upon which appellant made application for registration, appellant was not entitled to the exclusive use of its mark at the date thereof and, therefore, the registration was granted inadvertently in direct violation of section 5. Howard Co. v. Baldwin Co., 48 App. D. C. 437, 1924 C. D. 310, 313. Since that section was violated appellant was not entitled to such use of its mark on the date of its application as would give it the right to registration and, therefore, section 13 clearly is authority under which cancellation of appellant’s registration is proper.
The decision of the commissioner is affirmed.