This is аn appeal from the decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board,
Applicant has sold cigаrettes under the mark “ADVANCE” periodically since February 1970, but only in Los Angeles, California and Providence, Rhode Island. Sales have not been “commercially substantial”. Applicant has not advertised or promoted “ADVANCE” cigarettes and has not test marketed these cigarettes.1
The mark was published for opposition in the Official Gazette on July 7, 1970.
Appellant is the prior user. Appellant’s sales of cigarettes from 1965 to 1970 were “extremely limited” and were conducted without any test, marketing or advertising. In December, 1969, or January, 1970, a supplier of filter materials and filter configurations offered appellant a “unique” filter. Having found that the filter could deliver full flavor with low tar and nicotine, the initial step was to select a trademark which would communicate this feature of the cigarette to the consuming public. Desiring to move quickly, appellant selected a mark from its name bank whiсh it thought connoted “an advance, an advantage . . . superiority, something different, something new.” An agreement with the filter supplier was reached in February or March of 1970. On April 17, 1970, appellant announced that VANTAGE cigarettes would be nationally distributed. Sales commenced July, 1970, only in Portland, Oregon, and Syracuse, New York, since at that time adequate production facilities for national distribution were not yet available. Nationwide introduction commenced November 2, 1970, with advertising beginning one week prior thereto.
Appellant’s notice of opposition was timely filed (apparently through extensions of time) on November 12, 1970. According to the deposition of the product manager of VANTAGE cigarettes, a one percent market share was secured within approximately eight weeks after nationwide introduction; sales thereafter increased at a moderate rate; use of VANTAGE was extended to a menthol filter cigarette in April or May of 1971; millions of dollars in advertising were expended in the promotion of VANTAGE cigarettes through various .media ; and extensive print advertising was undertaken in 1971. He also stated in a deposition taken on May 13, 1971, that eighty million match books bearing a representation of VANTAGE cigarette packages were authorized for distribution throughout 1971.
In holding that there was no likelihood of confusion between the marks, the board fоund that the marks appeal to cigarette customers in quite a different way, are everyday words with distinct differences in sound and appearance, have well-understood meanings which are not synonymous, do not create similar commercial impressions, and are readily distinguished by the public.
In addition to arguing similarity of sound and appearance, appellant particularly emphasizes similarity in meaning and its extensive advertising and promotional efforts of VANTAGE cigarettes. In support of its position, appellant cites Hancock v. American Steel and Wire Company of New Jersey,
Although supporting the board’s decision concerning the dissimilarities between the marks, appellee argues that evidence of use of appellant’s mark may
The Issue of Terminal Date for Evidence Bearing on the Question of Likelihood of Confusion
Before reаching the issue of likelihood of confusion, the threshold argument raised by appellee with respect to appellant’s evidence of use must be considered. Essentially, the question is: through what point in time is evidence bearing on the issue of likelihood of confusion admissiblе? The question of whether likelihood of confusion at the time of opposition is not sufficient to defeat registration was recognized in Gillette Company v. “42” Products Ltd., Inc.,
I would reach the issue, avoided by the majority, of whether the time for determining the possibility of likelihood of confusion is the date of first use of the mark sought to be registered or the date of the opposition proceedings.
The statutory command concerning likelihood of confusion is expressed in prospective language: . . . This meаns that registration is prohibited if there is today a likelihood of confusion, and the question of whether confusion was likely ten or twenty years ago is irrelevant.
Section 2(d) does not speak of priority but rather of conditions extant at the time the application for registration is before the Patent Office. Contour Chair-Lounge Co., Inc. v. Englander Company, Inc.,324 F.2d 186 ,51 CCPA 833 [1963].
“Today” should be interpreted in light of section 15 U.S.C. § 1071 which restricts evidence in appeals to this court from the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board to that produced before the Patent Office. Obviously it would serve no useful purpose to deny registration because in the past there existed a likelihood of confusion when, during the time registration is under consideration, there exists no likelihood of confusion. Conversely, it would frustrate the purpose of the statute
This court has, in fact, considered evidence bearing on the issue of likelihood of confusion covering a periоd subsequent to the date of the application for registration in a number of cases. In Industria Espanola De Perlas Imitacion v. National Silver Co.,
The correctness of this approach finds support in decisions of this сourt on sufficiency of the evidence under 15 U.S.C. § 1052(f) to overcome an allegation of descriptiveness under section 1052(e) and under 1052(d) regarding concurrent use registration. In re Thunderbird Products Corporation,
In concurrent use proceedings, this court, in In re Beatrice Foods Co.,
In view of the foregoing, we hold that evidence bearing on the issue of likelihood of confusion is admissible for the period extending through the latеst date permitted by the procedural rules of the Patent Office for taking testimony and presenting evidence.
The Issue of Likelihood' of Confusion
Turning to the issue of likelihood of confusion among purchasers, all evidence of record concerning appellant’s advertising expenditures and sales of VANTAGE cigarettes and extension of use of its mark to a menthol filter ciga
The fallibility of memory of the purchaser is, of course, a factor to be considered. Geigy Chemical Corporation v. Atlas Chemical Industries, supra. However, the differences between the marks here are persuasive that fallibility of mеmory would not be a significant factor in determining the likelihood of confusion. Indeed, from the standpoint of sound and appearance, the only real similarity is the syllable “van,” and the marks as a whole are readily distinguishable.
Concerning similarity in meaning, appellant argues thаt VANTAGE connotes superiority of a cigarette having full flavor with low tar and nicotine, and that ADVANCE would generate the same, or at least substantially the same, connotation. However, VANTAGE connotes a benefit or gain to the purchaser, while ADVANCE connotes progressivenеss of the product itself — a different commercial impression.
Accordingly, we hold that there is no likelihood of confusion between the marks.
The decision of the board is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This finding by the board is apparently derived from a Request for Admission made by appellant and a Notice of Reliance thereоn according to Rule 2.120(b) of the Trademark Rules of Practice, but no response to the Request for Admission is of record. Neither party asserts any error in the board’s finding, or any effect such finding has upon the alleged first use of March 10, 1970. See Rockwood Chocolate Co., Inс. v. Hoffman Candy Company,
. “To protect trade-marks, therefore, is to protect the public from deceit, to foster fair competition, and to secure to the business community the advantages of reputation and good will by preventing their diversion from those who havе created them to those who have not. This is the end to which this hill is directed.” H.R.Rep.No.219, 79th Cong. 1st Sess. 3 (1945) : S.Rep.No.1333, 79th Cong. 2d Sess. 4 (1946).
. The filing date of the notice of opposition does not appear in either the decision of this court or that of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board. However, it is a matter of verifiable certainty from the case record of this court and may, in the exercise of the court’s discretion, he judicially noticed.
. Although not cited in the Thunderbird Products Corp. case, the court in Roselux Chemical Company, Inc. v. Parsons Ammonia Company, Inc.,
. Appellee has cited a number of cases for its proposition that evidence of use by an opposer cannot be considered for the period subsequent to either an applicant’s first use or the filing date of the application. However, cases such as Williamson-Dickie Manufacturing Company v. Carl-Morris Mfg. Inc.,
. Hancock v. American Steel and Wire Company of New Jersey, supra, which involved the marks “TORNADO” and “CYCLONE” is, therefore, inapposite.
