OPINION OP THE COURT
In his classic “Essay on Walking,” Thoreau expressed the notion that there is nothing in a name. This view has been vigorously rejected by both parties to this litigation, not to mention almost all of mankind to whom a name is an important means of identification. Very often, intangible connotations which are not facially apparent are attached to a name. The long history of the development and growth of the companies involved in this controversy bears testimony to the force of the biblical aphorism that “a good name is better than precious oil,” 1 particularly in the corporate and commercial life of this nation.
The primary issue raised on this appeal is whether the surname “Scott,” a registered mark applied to plastic and paper household products, had acquired a secondary meaning of such significance as to bar its use on noncompeting products. Scott Paper Company (“Scott Paper”) filed suit against Scott’s Liquid Gold, Inc. (“SLG”), in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware alleging infringement of trademarks, false attribution of origin of its product, and unfair competition. After a bench trial on the merits, the district court granted a permanent injunction, enjoining SLG from using the surname “Scott” in its trade name, but denying plaintiff’s request for money damages, an accounting, and attorney’s fees,
Scott Paper Co. v. Scott’s Liquid Gold, Inc.,
I.
Our review of the facts will be brief; a more detailed recitation can be found in the district court opinion. Defendant’s origin can be traced to Lee Scott of Colorado, who, as early as 1925, manufactured, and sold door-to-door, a furniture polish under the name of Scott’s Liquid Gold. For a long time this remained a small operation confined to the Denver area with some change in ownership. In 1951 a partnership purchased the business for $350. Three years later, it was incorporated in Colorado under the name of Scott’s Liquid Gold, Inc., and efforts were made to develop a nationwide market for the product.
Not until 1969 did sales of the furniture polish show significant signs of improvement. In that year, the company decided to sell shares of its stock to the public. The proceeds derived went largely into advertising, generating a marked rise in revenues. As the figures demonstrate, the business expanded dramatically in the 1970’s. 2 On May 24, 1971, SLG applied for registration of the trademark “Scott’s Liquid Gold” in the United States Patent Office. The mark *1228 was officially published for opposition purposes. When notice of it came to Scott Paper’s attention, it requested and received a thirty day extension to investigate a possible conflict, but then decided not to oppose it. On December 19, 1972, the Patent Office issued its registration of the trademark.
Plaintiff, Scott Paper, has been selling paper goods since 1879. The earliest use of the company name on a product appears to have been 1911, when the company began selling Scot-Tissue paper towels. In 1916, Scott Paper obtained a federal trademark registration for this name. By 1925, sales of Scott Paper products aggregated nearly 4 million dollars nationwide. Over the years, the company prospered and expanded. By 1975 its annual sales exceeded 450 million dollars. During this time, additional trademark registrations were obtained. In all, nineteen trademark registrations allegedly have been infringed by the defendant. None of these, however, pertain to a furniture polish.
II.
The appellant challenges each of the four primary conclusions reached by the district court. We will address the first three of these conclusions. In view of our disposition of the case on the merits, we find it unnecessary to decide BLG’s contention that laches barred any relief to Scott Paper.
Under the common law and the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051-1127, owners of trademarks are protected from other marks that are likely to cause confusion. However, a non-distinctive trademark, such as a common-name mark, only achieves protection if the mark is shown to have secondary meaning.
See Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Safeway Properties, Inc.,
Secondary meaning exists when the trademark is interpreted by the consuming public to be not only an identification of the product, but also a representation of the product’s origin.
E. g., Blisscraft of Hollywood v. United Plastics Co.,
Under certain circumstances, a trademark can develop a secondary meaning as to goods or services to which the mark has not been applied. Reasons advanced by this court for extending protection of a trademark into a noncompeting market are the potential dangers that: (1) the reputation of the holder of the mark may be tarnished or (2) the user of an infringing mark may be attempting to benefit from the general goodwill developed by the holder of the protected mark.
Wall v. Rolls-Royce of America, Inc.,
*1229 ' SLG does not contest the district court finding that Scott Paper has established secondary meaning for paper goods. SLG does contest, however, the court’s conclusion that Scott Paper “has secondary meaning in the use of ‘Scott’ as an endorsement on household cleaners.” This holding prompted the district court to decide that the mark deserved protection beyond the scope of its actual use — paper and plastic wares — and that it could attach to other goods, namely household cleaners. Unfortunately, the court failed to delineate explicitly the evidence upon which it relied in concluding that Scott Paper had satisfied its burden of proving secondary meaning in. a noncompeting market. The extensive discussion in the district court’s exhaustive opinion of the evidence presented at trial focuses on the likelihood of confusion, not secondary meaning. Likelihood of confusion is an analytically distinct, albeit closely related element of the case. Even assuming arguendo that proof of likelihood of confusion is a fortiori proof of secondary meaning, we believe that the trial court erred in concluding that sufficient likelihood of confusion exists in this case to warrant injunctive relief. 3
Likelihood of confusion exists when consumers viewing the mark would probably assume that the product or service it represents is associated with the source of a different product or service identified by a similar mark.
See James Burrough Ltd. v. Sign of the Beefeater, Inc., supra,
The district court dwelt in his analysis of likelihood of confusion primarily upon the parallels in marketing and use. It assumed that as the number of similarities between two products increases, the distinctions between the markets blur and a single market shared by both products emerges. Furthermore, the court believed that in a shared market of narrow scope, the likelihood of confusion between two products bearing similar marks is enhanced.
The court was persuaded that the similarities it found held a “potential for confusion of source or sponsorship.” Both the furniture polish and the paper products are designed by the companies to be sold to female heads of households. Both companies advertise through the same type media with emphasis on network television and national women’s magazines. They often use the
*1230
same retail outlets. Supermarkets and grocery stores account for 90 percent of Scott Paper sales and 85 percent of SLG’s. The items are relatively inexpensive and consumers cannot be expected to examine the labels carefully. Paper towels are functionally related to furniture polish in that they are often used together. Although Scott Paper does not now sell household cleaners, the district court found that the household cleaning market may be a logical area for Scott Paper’s expansion. Finally, both marks use the same name “Scott” to identify the source of the goods.
We believe that the trial court erred in concluding from these facts that a likelihood of confusion sufficient to warrant injunctive relief exists in this case. Notwithstanding the parallels in marketing techniques and goals of the two companies, these parallels encompass a substantial number of distinct market areas. Although the products of each company are advertised on television, sold primarily in supermarkets, and are designed to be sold to female heads of households, these circumstances do little to narrow the scope of the market shared by both. In cases where the courts have found a likelihood of confusion between two non-competing goods, the relationship between the products was considerably closer.
See Scarves by Vera, Inc. v. Todo Imports Ltd., supra
(women’s scarves and apparel with women’s cosmetics and fragrances);
James Burrough Ltd. v. Sign of the Beefeater, Inc., supra
(liquor with restaurant selling liquor);
Union Carbide Corp. v. Ever-Ready, Inc., supra
(batteries and lamps with lightbulbs and lamps);
Alfred Dunhill of London, Inc. v. Kasser Distillers Products Corp.,
Furthermore, the court in evaluating the likelihood of confusion also believed that future expansion into the household cleaning market was a logical step for Scott Paper, but it ignored the absence of evidence showing that other paper companies sell liquid cleaners, or that the production processes for the contested goods are similar.
Cf. Scarves by Vera, Inc. v. Todo Imports Ltd., supra,
[Although the plaintiff may at some future time wish to make cleaning fluids, it does not now even intimate such a purpose. We cannot conceive any justification in these circumstances for allowing it to reach a choking hand into a market not its own, and to deprive the defendants of an interest, natural and proper in its origin, and after sixteen years presumably an important element in their business.
S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc.
v.
Johnson,
Nor did the court consider the intent of SLG in adopting the mark, even though it listed this as a relevant factor. Scott’s Liquid Gold was named after its originator, Lee Scott, who began its manufacture more than a half century ago. This good faith explanation of the origin of the accused mark contrasts with the situation sometimes suggested in other cases — adoption of a mark in order to take advantage of the owner’s goodwill.
See e. g., Alfred Dunhill of London, Inc. v. Kasser Distillers Products Corp., supra,
*1231
Although the district court found the evidence sufficient to support the finding that SLG’s use of “Scott’s” is likely to cause confusion as to the source of sponsorship of defendant’s goods, it also went on to consider evidence of actual confusion. This included letters and phone calls by consumers directed to one party intended to reach the other. The letters were buttressed by depositions of some of the authors. Scott Paper also introduced its 1973 market survey to support a finding of actual confusion. The trial judge properly recognized that the survey design was “flawed,” but acknowledged that part of the survey was “confirmatory of the conclusions” already reached. Nonetheless, he was “reluctant to base a holding solely upon the results of the CIR survey.”
The evidence of actual confusion in this case is insufficient to determine that in-junctive relief is appropriate. The evidence relied on by the district court constituted merely nineteen misdirected letters received between 1972 and 1976 supported by depositions of some of the authors. However, during the same period SLG sold 50 million cans of its products. We think that the court committed error in discerning from this extremely minimal evidence a “pattern of confusion in the marketplace.”
Ownership of a trademark does not guarantee total absence of confusion in the marketplace. Selection of a mark with a common surname naturally entails a risk of some uncertainty and the law will not assure absolute protection.
4
Each case of trademark infringement must be evaluated on its own facts and circumstances.
See Dresser Industries, Inc. v. Heraus Engelhard Vacuum, Inc.,
We believe that the district court also erred as a matter of law in its formulation of the test for priority. The court correctly observed that relief is only available if the plaintiff establishes priority, but formulated the test that Scott Paper “must demonstrate that its mark was the first to acquire secondary meaning in that other’s market.”
Priority depends not upon which mark succeeds in first obtaining secondary meaning but upon whether the plaintiff can prove by a preponderance of the evidence that his mark possessed secondary meaning at the time the defendant commenced his use of the mark. The district court failed to recognize the distinction between SLG’s right to continue using the mark that its predecessor had adopted in 1925 and the separate right to exclude others from using it. Because SLG seeks only the former, we
*1232
hold that the proper test is whether Scott Paper had established secondary meaning in the household cleaner market before SLG began using its mark.
See General Radio Co. v. Superior Electric Co.,
III.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed and the case dismissed with prejudice. Costs will be taxed against the appel-lee, Scott Paper Company.
Notes
. Ecclesiastes 7: 1.
.
Advertising and
Sales Promotion Expenses
$ 92,000 $ 12,000 1968
177,000 104,000 1969
Sales Advertising and Promotion Expenses
1970 $ 1,105,000 $ 688,000
1971 5,897,000 3.068.000
1972 14,991,000 7.428.000
1973 16,276,000 10,318,000
1974 12,694,000 5.394.000
1975 8,559,000' 1.871.000
. The numerous findings of fact in this case are subject to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a) and should only be disturbed if clearly erroneous.
See Krasnow v. Dinan,
. When all is said, if a man allows the good will of his business to become identified with a surname so common as Johnson, it is fair to impose upon him some of the risk that another Johnson may wish to sell goods not very far afield; and he must show a substantial interest if he would seriously impair the second Johnson’s privilege to use his own name in customary ways.
S.
C. Johnson & Sons, Inc. v. Johnson,
