Plaintiff, Investacorp, Inc. (Investacorp), appeals the grant of summary judgment entered in favor of defendants, Arabian Investment Banking Corporation (Invest-corp E.C.) and Investcorp, International, Inc. (Investcorp International) on the claims of service mark infringement and unfair competition.
Facts
Appellant, Investacorp, is a Florida corporation whose primary business is providing financial services as a broker/dealer and as a financial intermediary between individuals, corporations and institutions seeking investment opportunities. There are two appellees in this case: Investcorp E.C., the parent corporation, and its wholly owned subsidiary, Investcorp International. Investcorp E.C. is an investment bank headquartered in Bahrain which began doing business in the United States under that name in 1983. Investcorp International was created by Investcorp E.C. in November of 1986 to continue conducting the business of its parent in the United States. Hereinafter, the two co-appellees will be referred to as “Investcorp”.
Investcorp filed for federal service mark registration in June of 1987. The Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) allowed the Investcorp service mark to pass for potential opposition to registration. Four months later, in October 1987, Investacorp filed for federal service mark registration. In February, 1988, Investacorp filed a Notice of Opposition with the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board of the PTO, opposing registration of the Investcorp service mark.
Later in 1988, Investacorp sued Invest-corp on several counts of service mark infringement and unfair competition. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant on all counts of the complaint, because it determined that plaintiff does not have a proprietary interest in the mark “Investacorp”. Plaintiff appeals to this Court asserting that genuine issues of material fact are involved in the trial court’s summary resolution of the claims.
Issue
We must determine whether the district court’s finding involved the resolution of an issue of material fact. As an appellate court, we must also determine the applicable law, independent of that interpretation rendered by the district court. If no issue of material fact was presented and the independently determined applicable law supports the grant of summary judgment ordered by the district court, then we must affirm.
Opinion
Plaintiff, Investacorp, alleges that defendants, Investcorp, unfairly competed by infringing on plaintiff’s unregistered service mark. Appellant asserts that the district court should have found genuine issues of material fact presented in the following counts: Federal service mark infringement,
Prima Facie Service Mark Infringement
To prove service mark infringement in this case, plaintiff must prove (1) that
In order for defendant to infringe on plaintiffs mark, plaintiff must have a protectable property interest in the mark “Investacorp”.
The Categories of Distinctiveness
There are four categories of distinctiveness in which a service mark may be classified.
Distinctiveness Inquiry
The district court determined that the term “Investacorp” was descriptive. Because the distinctiveness categorization given a term is a question of fact,
Investacorp is a corporation in the business of advising their customers in corporate investment opportunities. Pursuant to a customer’s desires, Investacorp sells stocks, bonds and other securities which are often initially issued by corporations. The two key formatives in the term “Inves-tacorp” are “invest” and “corp”. “Invest” is the verb “to commit (money) in order to earn a financial return,”
To determine whether a term is descriptive, third party usage by competitors is probative.
The likelihood of prospective use by competitors is high. Both of the two forma-tives “invest” and “corp” pervade the lexi- . con of business terminology. Because the two formatives are indispensable to the investment services industry, we agree that it is very likely that competitors will need to use these terms.
Moreover, the popularity of actual use of the two key formatives also indicates that the mark is descriptive.
Also probative of the descriptiveness of a mark is the idea that is conveyed to the observer by the plain dictionary definition
Plaintiff relies on the inaction of the Patent and Trademark Office to inject an issue of fact into the district court’s determination of distinctiveness. When the defendant submitted the “Investcorp” mark application, the PTO passed the mark on to publication. Because a finding of descriptiveness is one of the grounds for refusal of registration, appellant argues that the PTO must have decided that “Investcorp” was not merely descriptive; otherwise, the PTO would not have passed the mark on to publication according to Section 1209 of the TRADEMARK MANUAL OF EXAMINING PROCEDURE.
Plaintiff asserts that these two facts negatively imply that the PTO found that both marks, “Investacorp” and “Invest-corp,” were not merely descriptive. Consequently, because it is proper to defer to any determination made by the agency “entrusted with the duty of administering the Lanham Act,” appellant argues that we must accept the determination made by the PTO in accord with Wynn Oil Co. v. Thomas.
The soft spot in appellant’s argument is that there is no recorded finding by the PTO that either service mark was not descriptive. Consequently, all that this Court can do is guess at what the PTO’s determinations were while evaluating the merit of each mark. We do not know whether the PTO even considered the descriptiveness of either mark. Although we will bestow proper respect to the determinations of the PTO, we will not defer to an ethereal determination that is not affirmatively stated by the administrative agency. Therefore, withstanding the implications that appellant points out, the finding that “Investacorp” is merely descriptive involved no genuine issue of material fact. Consequently, in heeding the proposition that the descriptiveness category encompasses a broad range,
Secondary Meaning
Because the term is not inherently distinctive, for appellant to have a protecta-ble interest in the term “Investacorp,” it must have attained secondary meaning before the date that appellee used the similar term “Investcorp”.
Appellant asserts that because the parent, Investcorp E.C., intended not to use the mark in the United States, it had abandoned the use of the mark. The argument goes that the previous use by the parent corporation between 1983 and 1987 does not count because it had abandoned the mark. Hence, appellant argues that appel-lee’s first use did not occur until 1987, when the subsidiary, Investcorp International, first began using the mark in the United States.
To establish abandonment, appellant must prove (1) nonuse and (2) intent not to resume use.
Secondary meaning is the connection in the consumer’s mind between the mark and the provider of the service.
(1) [T]he length and manner of its use; (2) the nature and extent of advertising and promotion; (3) the efforts made by the plaintiff to promote a conscious connection in the public’s mind between the name and the plaintiff’s ... business; and (4) the extent to which the public actually identifies the name with the plaintiff’s [service].42
Appellant began designating their services with the “Investacorp” mark in January of 1978. Thus, the length of appellant’s use of the mark was five years prior to the appellee’s use of their mark. However, there is nothing significant about the manner of appellant’s use of the mark, other than appellant merely “displayed its service mark on nearly all of its transactional documents.”
The nature and extent of appellant’s advertisement and promotion and its achievement of a conscious connection in the public mind between the mark and the appellant’s business during the relevant time period is far short of spectacular. During this period, appellant’s advertising expenditures did not exceed one-hundred dollars per month. Although, appellant emphasizes that they had expansive growth and
The evidence that the public actually identifies the mark with appellant’s business is also lacking. Although instances of consumer confusion are probative of secondary meaning,
Conclusion
In order to prove all of its claims, appellant must establish ownership of the right to use the mark to designate its services. Because the undisputed facts show that the “Investacorp” mark is not inherently distinctive, a protectable interest does not attach until the mark acquires a secondary meaning. The district court found that the undisputed facts established that “Investa-corp” did not acquire secondary meaning before appellee commenced use of their similar service mark, “Investcorp”. Therefore, appellant does not own a protectable interest in the “Investacorp” service mark. We agree with the district court’s view of the evidence. Accordingly, as a matter of law, appellee did not infringe on the appellant’s service mark or unfairly compete with appellant because appellant never owned a protectable interest in the mark, “Investacorp”, and appellee is entitled to judgment. Affirmed.
Notes
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).
. Lanham Act § 43(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a) (1988).
. Fla.Stat.Ann. § 495.151 (West 1988).
. Lanham Act § 43(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a) (1988).
. American Television & Communications Corp. v. American Communications & Television, Inc.,
. 1 J. McCarthy, TRADEMARKS AND UNFAIR COMPETITION § 16:1 (2d ed. 1984).
. Id.
. Id. at § 16:2.
. Id.
. American Television,
. Id.
. Soweco, Inc. v. Shell Oil Co.,
. American Television,
. The examples given in this paragraph are believed to be a hypothetical service marks for a fictional milk delivery service. The examples are given strictly for pedagogical reasons and have no legal effect.
. American Television,
. Id.
. Id.
. J. MCCARTHY, supra note 6, § 13:2.
. Id.
. Id. at § 14:1.
. American Television,
. Id.
. Id.
. Soweco,
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).
. WEBSTER'S NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY, 603 (1979).
. See J. MCCARTHY, supra note 6, § 11:2.
. Vision Center v. Opticks, Inc.,
. In re Bongrain Int'l Corp.,
. Vision Center,
. Id. at 116,
. Id.
. (6th rev. 1986).
.
. Vision Center,
. Co-Rect Products, Inc. v. Marvyl Advertising Photography, Inc.,
. Aloe Creme Laboratories, Inc. v. Milsan, Inc.,
. E. Remy Martin & Co., S.A v. Shaw-Ross International Imports, Inc., 756 F.2d 1525, 1532,
. AmBrit, Inc. v. Kraft, Inc.,
. Vision Center,
. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
. Conagra, Inc. v. Singleton,
. McCarthy, supra note 6, § 15:3.
