Lead Opinion
Bush Brothers appeals the decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board affirming the examining attorney’s refusal to register the term DELUXE on the Supplemental Register as a trademark for canned pork and beans.
The Supplemental Register
Bush Brothers initially applied for registration on the Principal Register. The examining attorney refused registration, and suggested that the applicant seek registration on the Supplemental Register. The applicant did so, and after various proceedings registration on the Supplemental Register was refused by the examiner and affirmed by the Board. The Board held that DELUXE was neither distinctive nor capable of becoming distinctive of the source of appellant’s goods, and thus was incapable of serving as a trademark.
A mark that does not meet all the requirements for registration on the Principal Register, but that is “capable of distinguishing the applicant’s goods or services,” 15 U.S.C. § 1091, may be registered on the Supplemental Register. The test is not whether the mark is already distinctive of the applicant’s goods, but whether it is capable of becoming so. In re Simmons Co.,
If the mark later acquires distinctiveness through use in commerce, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1052(f) (five years of substantially exclusive and continuous use as a mark may be deemed prima facie evidence of secondary meaning), the mark becomes eligible for registration on the Principal Register. See 15 U.S.C. § 1095. However, at the time of application for registration on the Supplemental Register the future is unknown, for it depends on such factors as the applicant’s ensuing advertising and marketing efforts and their effect on the public. The Court of Customs and Patent Appeals discussed this point in In re Minnesota Mining and Mfg. Co.,
[S]ection 23 [of the Lanham Act] refers not to what a mark does or would be likely to do to a purchaser but what it is capable of doing. When we talk about what a purchaser “would be likely to consider” we must take into account what conditioning the owner of the mark might bring to bear on that purchaser through promotion of its mark as an indicator of origin. Section 23 does not speak in terms of a fait accompli but only in terms of capability. [Emphases in original].
Judicial focus on the Supplemental Register has been sparse, perhaps because of the ease of registration thereon, coupled with the general policy favoring registration as a matter of public information and for other benefits.
Analysis
The Commissioner states that whether the term DELUXE is capable of becoming distinctive of canned pork and beans is a question of fact, and that the Board’s decision must be affirmed absent clear error. The Commissioner reasons by analogy to similar issues in trademark causes, citing In re Advertising & Marketing Dev., Inc.,
In most controversies there are two types of fact questions involved — questions as to evidentiary facts and questions as to ultimate facts. The first involve the “raw elements” of the case, usually what the witnesses observed by their physical senses — what they saw, heard, and the like. The second have to do with the conclusions to be drawn from the evidentiary facts.
Ultimate fact is occasionally equated with mixed questions of fact and law, for the same question often has factual and legal attributes, viz. the question of whether a term has the capability of serving as a trademark. See Stern, Review of Findings of Administrators, Judges and Juries: A Comparative Analysis, 58 Harv.L.Rev. 70, 93 (1944). Such choice of designation is generally considered to be without effect on the standard of judicial review:
Ultimate facts going to the merits are usually reviewed narrowly and deferentially like questions of historical fact even when the underlying historical facts are not in dispute. Indeed, with [a few exceptions], mixed questions going to the merits are almost presumptively classified as questions of fact.
Louis, Allocating Adjudicative Decision Making Authority between the Trial and Appellate Levels: A Unified View of the Scope of Review, The Judge/Jury Question, and Procedural Discretion, 64 N.C. L.Rev. 993, 1003-04 (1986).
Thus it is apt to treat the question of whether a term is capable of distinguishing an applicant’s goods or services as one of ultimate fact based on historical or evidentiary fact, and to review the Board’s decision for clear error.
The examining attorney cited references showing “deluxe” used with a wide range of products, generally to show or suggest a superior version of the product {e.g., a deluxe hamburger). On this evidence the Board found that DELUXE is a “laudato
Appellant does not dispute that “deluxe” is a generally laudatory term. However, laudation is not inimical to a term’s capability of functioning as a trademark. Appellant points to an assortment of generally laudatory terms that serve as trademarks, e.g., In re Ralston Purina Co.,
The Court of Customs and Patent Appeals has described “deluxe” as “obviously suggestive” and “descriptive”, and used “in a great variety of trademarks and trade names.” Lever Bros. Co. v. Thrift-D-Lux Cleaners, Inc.,
The Board has not argued that DELUXE identifies a recognized grade of canned pork and beans, by analogy to American Cyanamid, supra, or that it signifies anything other than a “vaguely desirable characteristic”, Ralston Purina, supra. Applying the reasoning of precedent to the facts of this case, we discern clear error in the Board’s conclusion that DELUXE is incapable of serving as a trademark for canned pork and beans.
The refusal of registration on the Supplemental Register is
REVERSED.
Notes
. In re Bush Brothers & Co., Serial No. 499,982 (TTAB Sept. 15, 1988).
. Registration on the Supplemental Register is not evidence of ownership, validity, or the exclusive right to use, and may not be used to stop importations; but inter alia enables the registrant to satisfy registration requirements under the trademark laws of foreign countries, enables the registrant to sue for infringement in federal court, and provides useful business information on a readily accessible, central register. See generally J.T. McCarthy, Trademarks and Unfair Competition, § 19.8, at 886-88 (2d ed.1984).
. The concurring opinion expresses the view that the question of whether a term has the capability of serving as a trademark is a question of policy. In accordance with the separation of powers it is the duty of Congress to make policy by law, that of the executive to execute the laws, and of the judiciary to interpret and apply them. Whether certain types of mark are registrable at all is indeed a question of policy, and such policy is embodied in the trademark statute; e.g., the exclusion from registration of scandalous matter, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(a), or the authorization of registration of certification marks, 15 U.S.C. § 1054. But whether a particular term has the capability of acquiring secondary meaning is no more a question of policy than is any other determination based on specific facts.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the majority’s reversal of the refusal to register DELUXE on the supplemental register. I do not agree, however, that the determination of registrability on the supplemental register is a question of fact reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard.
“All marks capable of distinguishing [an] applicant’s goods ... may be registered on the supplemental register.” 15 U.S.C. § 1091 (1982); In re Minnesota Mining & Mfg.,
In In re Deister Concentrator Co.,
mark registrable on the principal register. Cf. Deister,
