The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (“Board”) found that Bose Corporation (“Bose”) committed fraud on the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) in renewing Registration No. 1,633,789 for the trademark WAVE. Bose Corp. v. Hexawave, Inc., 88 USPQ2d 1332, 1338 (T.T.A.B.2007). Bose appeals the Board’s order cancelling the registration in its entirety. Because there is no substantial evidence that Bose intended to deceive the PTO in the renewal process, we reverse and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
Bose initiated an opposition against the HEXAWAVE trademark application by Hexawave, Inc. (“Hexawave”), alleging, inter alia, likelihood of confusion with Bose’s prior registered trademarks, including WAVE. Bose, 88 USPQ2d at 1333. Hexawave counterclaimed for cancellation of Bose’s WAVE mark, asserting that Bose committed fraud in its registration renewal application when it claimed use on all goods in the registration while knowing that it had stopped manufacturing and selling certain goods. Id.
The fraud alleged by Hexawave involves Bose’s combined Section 8 affidavit of continued use and Section 9 renewal application (“Section 8/9 renewal”), 1 signed by Bose’s general counsel, Mark E. Sullivan, and filed on January 8, 2001. Bose, 88 USPQ2d at 1335. In the renewal, Bose stated that the WAVE mark was still in use in commerce on various goods, including audio tape recorders and players. Id. at 1333. The Board found that (1) Bose stopped manufacturing and selling audio tape recorders and players sometime between 1996 and 1997; and (2) Mr. Sullivan knew that Bose discontinued those products when he signed the Section 8/9 renewal. Id. at 1334-35.
At the time Mr. Sullivan signed the Section 8/9 renewal, Bose continued to repair previously sold audio tape recorders and players, some of which were still under warranty.
Bose, 88
USPQ2d at 1335. Mr. Sullivan testified that in his belief, the WAVE mark was used in commerce because “in the process of repairs, the product was being transported back to customers.”
Id.
The Board concluded that the repairing and shipping back did not constitute sufficient use to maintain a trademark registration for goods.
Id.
at 1337. It further found Mr. Sullivan’s belief that transporting repaired goods constituted use was not reasonable.
Id.
at 1338. Finally, the Board found that the use statement in the Section 8/9 renewal was mate
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rial.
Id.
As a result, the Board ruled that Bose committed fraud on the PTO in maintaining the WAVE mark registration and ordered the cancellation of Bose’s WAVE mark registration in its entirety.
Id.
Later, the same panel denied Bose’s Request for Reconsideration.
Bose Corp. v. Hexawave, Inc.,
Opposition No. 91157315,
Bose appealed. Because the original appellee Hexawave did not appear, the PTO moved, and the court granted leave to the Director, to participate as the appellee. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1071(a) and 28 U.S.C § 1295(a)(4)(B).
II. DISCUSSION
This court reviews the Board’s legal conclusions de novo.
In re Int’l Flavors & Fragrances Inc.,
A third party may petition to cancel a registered trademark on the ground that the “registration was obtained fraudulently.” 15 U.S.C. § 1064(3). “Fraud in procuring a trademark registration or renewal occurs when an applicant knowingly makes false, material representations of fact in connection with his application.”
Torres v. Cantine Torresella S.r.l.,
The Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (“CCPA”), our predecessor whose decisions are binding on this court, explained that, before the PTO, “[a]ny ‘duty’ owed by an applicant for trademark registration must arise out of the statutory requirements of the Lanham Act,” which prohibit an applicant from making
“knowingly
inaccurate or
knowingly
misleading statements.”
Bart Schwartz Int’l Textiles, Ltd. v. Fed. Trade Comm’n,
Mandated by the statute and case-law, the Board had consistently and correctly acknowledged that there is “a material legal distinction between a ‘false’ representation and a ‘fraudulent’ one, the latter involving an intent to deceive, whereas the former may be occasioned by a misunderstanding, an inadvertence, a mere negligent omission, or the like.”
Kemin Indus.; Inc. v. Watkins Prods., Inc.,
Several of our sister circuits have also required proof of intent to deceive before cancelling a trademark registration. See,
e.g., Far Out Prods., Inc. v. Oskar,
The Board stated in Medinol v. Neuro Vasx, Inc. that to determine whether a trademark registration was obtained fraudulently, “[t]he appropriate inquiry is ... not into the registrant’s subjective intent, but rather into the objective manifestations of that intent.” 67 USPQ2d 1205, 1209 (T.T.A.B.2003). We understand the Board’s emphasis on the “objective manifestations” to mean that “intent must often be inferred from the circumstances and related statement made.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting First Int’l Serv., 5 USPQ2d at 1636). We agree. However, despite the long line of precedents from the Board itself, from this court, and from other circuit courts, the Board went on to hold that “[a] trademark applicant commits fraud in procuring a registration when it makes material representations of fact in its declaration which it knows or should know to be false or misleading.” Id. (emphasis added). The Board has since followed this standard in several cancellation proceedings on the basis of fraud, including the one presently on appeal. See Bose, 88 USPQ2d at 1334.
By equating “should have known” of the falsity with a subjective intent, the Board erroneously lowered the fraud standard to a simple negligence standard.
See Ileto v. Glock, Inc.,
We have previously stated that “[m]ere negligence is not sufficient to infer fraud or dishonesty.”
Symbol Techs., Inc. v. Opticon, Inc.,
Subjective intent to deceive, however difficult it may be to prove, is an indispensable element in the analysis. Of course, “because direct evidence of deceptive intent is rarely available, such intent can be inferred from indirect and circumstantial evidence. But such evidence must still be clear and convincing, and inferences drawn from lesser evidence cannot satisfy the deceptive intent requirement.”
Star Scientific, Inc. v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
The Board in
Medinol
purportedly relied on this court’s holding in
Torres to
justify a “should have known” standard. The Board read
Torres
too broadly. In that case, Torres obtained the trademark registration for “Las Torres” below a tower design.
Torres,
True, the court concluded that
If a registrant files a verified renewal application stating that his registered mark is currently in use in interstate commerce and that the label attached to the application shows the mark as currently used when, in fact, he knows or should know that he is not using the mark as registered and that the label attached to the registration is not currently in use, he has knowingly attempted to mislead the PTO.
Id.
at 49. However, one should not unduly focus on the phrase “should know” and ignore the facts of the case, i.e., the registrant “knows.” Doing so would undermine the legal framework the court set out in
Torres.
Indeed, in
Torres,
the court cited various precedents — some persuasive, others binding on the court — and reemphasized several times that (1) fraud in trademark cases “occurs when an applicant knowingly makes false, material representations,” (2) the Lanham Act imposes on an applicant the obligation not to “make
knowingly
inaccurate or
knowingly
misleading statements,” and (3) a registrant must also “refrain from knowingly making false, material statements.”
Id.
at 48. The “should know” language, if it signifies a simple negligence or a gross negligence standard, is not only inconsistent with the framework set out elsewhere in Torres, but would also have no precedential force as it would have conflicted with the precedents from CCPA. See
Newell Cos. v. Ken
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ney Mfg. Co.,
Metro Traffic Control, Inc. v. Shadow Network Inc.,
Applying the law to the present case, Mr. Sullivan, who signed the application, knew that Bose had stopped manufacturing and selling audio tape recorders and players at the time the Section 8/9 renewal was filed. Therefore, the statement in the renewal application that the WAVE mark was in use in commerce on all the goods, including audio tape recorders and players, was false. Because Bose does not challenge the Board’s conclusion that such a statement was material, we conclude that Bose made a material misrepresentation to the PTO. •
However, Mr. Sullivan explained that in his belief, Bose’s repairing of the damaged, previously-sold WAVE audio tape recorders and players and returning the repaired goods to the customers met the “use in commerce” requirement for the renewal of the trademark. The Board decided that Bose’s activities did not constitute sufficient use to maintain a trademark registration.
See Bose,
88 USPQ2d at 1335-37. It also found Sullivan’s belief not reasonable.
Id.
at 1338. We do not need to resolve the issue of the reasonableness as it is not part of the analysis. There is no fraud if a false misrepresentation is occasioned by an honest misunderstanding or inadvertence without a willful intent to deceive.
Smith Int’l,
We hold that Bose did not commit fraud in renewing its WAVE mark and the Board erred in canceling the mark in its entirety. Indeed, the purpose of the Section 8/9 renewal is “ ‘to remove from the register automatically marks which are no longer in use.’ ”
Torres,
We agree with the Board, however, that because the WAVE mark is no longer in use on audio tape recorders and players, the registration needs to be restricted to reflect commercial reality. See Bose, 88 USPQ2d at 1338. We thus remand the case to the Board for appropriate proceedings.
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the Board’s decision is reversed and remanded.
IV. COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
REVERSED and REMANDED
Notes
. Federal trademark registrations issued on or after November 16, 1989, remain in force for ten years, and may be renewed for ten-year periods. To renew a registration, the owner must file an Application for Renewal under Section 9. In addition, at the end of the sixth year after the date of registration and at the end of each successive ten-year period after the date of registration, the owner must file a Section 8 Declaration of Continued Use, "an affidavit setting forth those goods or services recited in the registration on or in connection with which the mark is in use in commerce 15 U.S.C. § 1058(b)(1); see also, id. §§ 1058, 1059.
. The PTO argues that under Torres, making a submission to the PTO with reckless disregard of its truth or falsity satisfies the intent to deceive requirement. We need not resolve this issue here. Before Sullivan submitted his declaration in 2001, neither the PTO nor any court had interpreted “use in commerce" to exclude the repairing and shipping repaired goods. Thus, even if we were to assume that reckless disregard qualifies, there is no basis for finding Sullivan's conduct reckless.
. Indeed, even though the Board cancelled the registration of the WAVE trademark, it continued to analyze Bose’s common law right in the mark. Eventually, the Board found likelihood of confusion and rejected Hexawave's application to register trademark HEXAWAVE. Bose, 88 USPQ2d at 1342-43.
