MEMORANDUM OPINION
At issue on cross motions for summary judgment in this action seeking review of a decision from the Patent and Trademark Office’s (“PTO”) Trial and Appeal Board (“TTAB”) is whether the TTAB erred in denying registration for the term “PROBI-OTIC” on the grounds that the term is generic in connection with fertilizer, and alternatively, that the term at best is descriptive and has not acquired secondary meaning. For the reasons that follow, the TTAB did not err in denying registration to plaintiff. Accordingly, plaintiffs motion for summary judgment must be denied, and defendant’s motion for summary judgment must be granted.
I.
Plaintiff Milo Shammas, the sole owner of Dr. Earth, Inc., filed a federal trademark application on June 12, 2009 for the term PROBIOTIC in connection with fertilizer. In an Office Action on September
In affirming the Examining Attorney’s denial, the TTAB found that the term was merely generic, stating that “competitors’ use of the term ‘Probiotics’ as the technology behind their products is persuasive evidence that the relevant consumers perceive the term as generic ... and that competitors need to use the term.” In re Milo Shammas, No. 77758863 at 13. In support of this finding, the TTAB noted that “articles about soil treatment identify probiotics as ... the technology or method of using friendly bacteria on the soil as an ingredient of fertilizer.” Id. Thus, the TTAB concluded that “the relevant consumers are going to understand PROBI-OTIC as the genus of goods, namely a fertilizer utilizing probiotic technology.” Id. at 16.
Alternatively, the TTAB also found that the term PROBIOTIC, even if descriptive, has not acquired secondary meaning. In reaching this result, the TTAB noted that plaintiff “did not submit any sales figures, either in dollar or units, market share information, or advertising expenditures” to support any finding of distinctiveness. Id. at 18. The TTAB also noted that “the record is lacking in any media recognition regarding applicant’s product and how the term PROBIOTIC points uniquely and exclusively to applicant.” Id.
Thereafter, on December 19, 2012, Plaintiff filed this action seeking review of the TTAB’s decision pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1071(b)(1), arguing that the TTAB erred in finding that the term PROBIOTIC is generic, and alternatively, that the term, even if descriptive, has not acquired secondary meaning. Plaintiff seeks (1) reversal of the TTAB’s decision, (2) a declaration that the term PROBIOTIC is suggestive or, alternatively, that it merits registration as a distinctive trademark that has acquired secondary meaning, and (3) any other relief deemed proper.
The parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment that essentially present the following two questions: (1) whether the TTAB erred in finding that the term PROBIOTIC is generic for fertilizer, and (2) whether the TTAB erred in finding, alternatively, that the term PROBI-OTIC, even if descriptive, has not acquired secondary meaning.
II.
The summary judgment standard is too well-settled to merit extended discussion, nor do the parties dispute this standard. Summary judgment should not be granted when the non-moving party has “set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial” through “affidavits or as otherwise provided.” Fed. Rules Civ. P. 56. A genuine factual dispute exists “if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving
III.
Plaintiff has filed this action under 15 U.S.C. § 1071, which allows trademark applicants dissatisfied with the TTAB’s decision either to appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or to file an action in district court. Where, as here, the plaintiff files an action in the district court, the district court “ ‘sits in a dual capacity,’ serving on one hand as the finder of fact with respect to new evidence presented by the parties, and on the other as an appellate reviewer of facts found by the TTAB.” Glendale Intern. Corp. v. U.S. Patent & Trademark Office,
When acting as an appellate reviewer in an action under § 1071(b), a district court reviews the TTAB’s findings of fact deferentially and must uphold those findings of fact if they are supported by “substantial evidence” under the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”).
“Substantial evidence,” as stated by the Supreme Court, is “more than a mere scintilla of evidence” and requires “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind would accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” In re Pacer Technology,
Accordingly, the analysis in this case proceeds as follows: first, the TTAB’s findings of fact — the TTAB’s conclusion that the term PROBIOTIC is generic, and alternatively, lacks secondary meaning— must be reviewed deferentially pursuant to the substantial evidence standard. Next, the new evidence submitted by the parties must be reviewed de novo to determine what findings of fact are warranted by this new evidence. Finally, in the event that the new evidence warrants findings that contradict, or are inconsistent with, the TTAB’s factual findings supported by substantial evidence, the district court must then consider whether the record as a whole establishes that plaintiff has borne his burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the term PROBIOTIC is a protectable mark.
IV.
The essential facts found by the TTAB are as follows:
1. The genus of the goods at issue in this case is fertilizer.
2. The relevant public, when it considers PROBIOTIC in connection to fertilizer, perceives the term to be generic for fertilizer.
3. PROBIOTIC has not acquired distinctiveness.
A review of the record before the TTAB reveals that each of these findings of fact is amply supported by substantial evidence.
First, the TTAB found that the genus of goods at issue is fertilizer. As the TTAB pointed out, the parties do not dispute this fact. In re Milo Shammas, No. 77758863 at 4.
Second, the TTAB found that the relevant public, when it considers PROBIOTIC in connection with fertilizer, readily understands the term to identify a type of fertilizer, and therefore, that “the relevant consumers perceive the term as generic.” Id. at 13. In reaching this conclusion, the TTAB relied on several sources. For example, the TTAB cited to the fact that at least eight of Dr. Earth’s competitors use the term “probiotic” to describe an aspect or feature of their fertilizer and soil products.
But the TTAB did not end its analysis at this point, as it might have;
V.
This does not end the analysis. Because the plaintiff has chosen to sue in district court, rather than appeal to the Federal Circuit, the parties have the opportunity to introduce new evidence here not considered by the TTAB.
With regard to the generic nature of a proposed mark, the Fourth Circuit has stated that a generic name “merely employs the common name of a product or service or refers to the genus of which the particular product is a species.” Retail Services, Inc. v. Freebies Publishing,
As the Federal Circuit has stated,
According to the Federal Circuit, a finding of genericness involves a two-step inquiry. First, a court must identify the “genus of goods or services at issue.” H. Marvin Ginn Corp. at 990. Second, a court must determine whether “the term sought to be registered ... [is] understood by the relevant public primarily to refer to that genus of goods or services.” Id. Here, the TTAB established, and the parties do not dispute, that the “genus of goods at issue in this case is adequately defined by the description of goods — fertilizer.” In re Milo Shammas, No. 77758863 at 4. Thus, the only disputed issue on the genericness issue is whether purchasers of fertilizers understand the term PROBIOTIC as referring on one hand to fertilizer or a distinctive characteristic of fertilizers, or on the other hand to plaintiffs product specifically.
Here, both plaintiff and defendant have offered new evidence on the issue of the relevant public’s understand
Thus, the plaintiffs evidence pertinent to genericness, in the end, consists only of the testimony of three of Dr. Earth’s retailers stating that they are unaware of any other producers of organic fertilizers who also use the term “probiotic” to describe their fertilizer and soil products.
Nor is this a complete summary of the evidence on the genericness issue, as defendant has offered new, additional evidence on the issue as follows:
(1) dictionary definitions of the term “probiotic” as referring to “microorganisms and substances that promote the grown of microorganisms;”
(2) two patents using the term probiotic to refer to fertilizers and soils;
(3) forty-four scholarly or news articles using the term probiotic to describe the addition of microorganisms to soil and plants;
(4) twenty-five third-party websites advertising probiotic soil and fertilizer products; and
(5) several articles referring to Dr. Earth’s products and allegedly using the term “probiotic” in a generic or descriptive sense.
The five additional sources submitted by defendant are strong evidence the term PROBIOTIC, in the minds of purchasers of fertilizer, describes fertilizers or a distinctive characteristic of fertilizers.
In summary, the record as a whole — the parties’ newly-submitted evidence and the record before the TTAB — points convincingly to the conclusion that the term PRO-BIOTIC is generic. Put another way, a review of the entire record discloses that plaintiff has failed to adduce evidence that would permit a finder of fact to conclude, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the term PROBIOTIC is something other than a generic term ineligible for trademark protection.
VII.
A finding that a term is generic necessarily precludes a finding that the term is descriptive with secondary meaning. As noted, if a term is generic, it cannot have the type of consumer recognition necessary for a finding of acquired secondary meaning. See McCarthy on Trademark, § 12:46. Because secondary meaning denotes evidence of trademark usage by some majority of relevant customers, “if the consuming public does perceive the symbol as designating the producer rather than the product, then the generic label has been incorrectly applied.” Id. (quoting Miller Brewing Co. v. Falstaff Brewing Corp.,
Secondary meaning is “a new and additional meaning that attaches to a non-inherently distinctive word,” such as a descriptive word.
Importantly, proof of secondary meaning “entails vigorous evidentiary requirements.” Id. Evidence for such a claim may include direct evidence, such as customer surveys, or circumstantial evidence, such as input of the seller, evidence of sales volume, length of time used, and quantity and quality of the advertising and promotion. McCarthy on Trademarks, § 15:1. The most direct, and likely most expensive, means of showing secondary meaning is a rigorously conducted customer survey that is fully consistent with statistical sampling methodology.
An analysis of the record evidence on secondary meaning properly begins by recalling that the TTAB, in concluding that the term PROBIOTIC has not acquired distinctiveness, noted that “applicant did not submit any sales figures ... market share information, or advertising expenditures,” nor did applicant submit “any media recognition regarding applicant’s product and how the term PROBIOTIC points uniquely and exclusively to applicant.” In re Milo Shammas, No. 77758863 at 18. Now, plaintiff has attempted to remedy that lack of evidence before the TTAB by relying on the following newly submitted material:
*613 (1) Sales figures and tax returns indicating that plaintiffs company has sold over five million PROBIOTIC fertilizer products during the period from 2000-2012, resulting in seventy-four million dollars in retail sales. (Affidavit Declaration of Milad Shammas at 6-7).
(2) Plaintiffs affidavit statement that his company has spent over one million dollars (or approximately 200,000 dollars annually) in marketing and advertising from 2008 to 2012. Id. at 7.
(3) Plaintiffs affidavit statement that Dr. Earth and six other sellers, all of whom do not use the term “probiotic” to describe their products, account for “the sale of substantially all (more than 80% and likely above 90%) of the organic soils and organic fertilizers containing beneficial microbes and/or mycorrhizae.” Id. at 9.
(4) Three affidavits from retailers— Wade Long, Thomas Medhurst, and Rob Williams — selling PROBIOTIC Dr. Earth products, all of whom state that they are unaware of any other seller of organic fertilizer products using the term “probiotic” or “probiotics.”
To be sure, evidence of sales volume, market share, and advertising expenditures may, if reliably and contextually established, have some probative value to show, circumstantially, the existence of secondary meaning. Yet, plaintiffs submissions on these topics fall far short of doing so; they fail to meet the “vigorous evidentiary requirements” necessary to show that there is a link in the minds of relevant consumers between the term PROBIOTIC and a single source of organic fertilizer containing microbes and mycorrhizae. Perini Corp.,
To begin with, plaintiffs 74 million dollars in total sales of fertilizer products over the past twelve years — roughly six million dollars per year — has little, if any, probative value on the issue of secondary meaning, as there is no clear information concerning whether these sales constitute a significant share of the national market for organic fertilizers containing microbes and mycorrhizae. Nor is this deficiency remedied by plaintiffs claim that his sales of Dr. Earth fertilizer, along with the sales of six other sellers of organic fertilizers (who do not use the term probiotic) account for between 80 and 90 percent of the market for organic fertilizers containing microbes and mycorrhizae. There are two problems with such evidence. First, it is unclear whether plaintiffs sales are a substantial or insubstantial part of the 80 to 90 percent of the claimed market share. If plaintiffs market share is relatively small, then his evidence of sales, revenue, and market share would have little, if any, probative value on the existence of secondary meaning. The second problem is that plaintiffs statement flies in the face of record evidence of as many as thirty-two producers of organic fertilizer using the term “probiotic” to describe their product — eight producers relied on by the TTAB, and twenty-five more producers submitted by defendant in this action.
Similarly, plaintiffs advertising expenditures do little to advance the cause of establishing secondary meaning. As Professor McCarthy has noted, “mere expenditure of money [on advertising] is not, in itself, determinative of the actual result in buyers’ minds.”
Finally, plaintiff has submitted affidavits from three retailers of Dr. Earth products, all of whom state that they are unaware of any other sellers in the organic fertilizer market using the term “probiotic” for their fertilizer products. As noted previously, these affidavits are unpersuasive because they merely attest to and establish the retailer’s unawareness of a fact, and therefore fall short of contradicting the evidence establishing the fact. Moreover, as Professor McCarthy has noted, conclusory “opinion evidence” from friendly retailers is often biased and “does not necessarily reflect the view of the consumer class.” McCarthy on Trademark, § 15:39.
VIII.
In sum, plaintiffs submissions on product sales, market share, advertising expenditures, and seller affidavits are collectively insufficient to satisfy plaintiffs burden to show the existence of secondary meaning. Plaintiffs submissions also fail to cast doubt both (i) on the TTAB’s finding — supported by substantial evidence on the administrative record — that PROBI-OTIC is generic, and (ii) on the result reached here that the record as a whole shows convincingly that the term is generic. Because defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law with respect to the genericness issue, it is unnecessary
An appropriate Order will issue.
Notes
.See Dickinson v. Zurko,
. In re 1800Mattress.com IP, LLC,
. DuoProSS Meditech Corp. v. Inviro Medical Devices, Ltd.,
. See Skippy,
. The third party competitors to which the TTAB cites are:
• "Probiotic Fertilizer Supplements” on EarthBalance.com.
• SURYA natural probiotic fertilizer products on GardenCenterMagazine.com.
• GWhiz lawn treatment using "organic and probiotic fertilizer programs designed to reduce the build up of salts in the soil” on Marshall Pet Products’ website.
• A "patented fertilizer called PROBIOTIC 1F/1G” on AnConBio-Services.com.
• "Soil Probiotics” on MaterialScienceOrganics.com, marketed as scientific blends of microbes and minerals formulated to restore soil fertility ... our soil probiotics are of the highest quality for organic growing.
• SCD Probiotics Soil Enrichment on SCDProbiotics .com.
• An advertisement on SoulSoup.com for its product for treating stressed tree roots: “SoulSoup Probiotic is a mildly acidic solution that is used to treat stressed tree roots.”
.The articles to which the TTAB cites are:
• The Probiotic.com webpage entitled "Soil Probiotic” stating that "soil probiotics” are commonly known as soil-based organisms (SBO's). SBOs are referred to a[sic] probiotics because they are beneficial bacteria in the soil
• An article on SeaChar.org stating that "[p]robiotics for soil is a method of using friendly bacteria on the soil to bring back the symbiotic relationships that create ‘breathing’ for the entire agroforest floor” and that probiotics are ‘‘[l]ive microorganisms which when administered in adequate amounts confer a health benefit on the host.” The article also discusses how "probiotics [work] with biochar to sequester carbon, hold good bacteria and create a colony of microorganisms that sustainably nurture the soil and the flora.”
• An article on LactoPAFI.com entitled "GregoGro Probiotic Fertilizer: Restoring the fertility of the soil” discussing the first probiotic manufacturer in the Philippines who manufactures a "probiotic natural organic fertilizer.”
• “An article on Energy Farms Network website entitled "All Natural, Probiotic Fertilizer” discussing a liquid “probiotic organic fertilizer” used to fertilize plants at a South American farm.”
• An article on PRWeb.com entitled "Go Green Without Going Broke with New Technology — Natural, Probiotic, & Enzymatic Fertilizer Products from the FertilizerStore.com” discussing how "probiotics and natural enzymes ... give soil a probiotic jump start” and stating that "[t]he technology and use of probiotic, natural, and enzymatic products is particularly applicable to the agriculture industry.”
• The InnovativeProbiotics.com website, which states that probiotics can be used in agriculture for improved crop performance, improved nutritional uptake, improved seed germination, accelerated composting, and odor control in livestock areas.
. As the leading commentator on trademark law notes, "generic use by competitors which has not been contested by plaintiff” and "generic usage in the media such as in trade journals and newspapers” are two typical sources of evidence from which the TTAB may determine that a term is generic. McCarthy on Trademark, % 12:13.
. Encarta is a digital multimedia encyclopedia published by Microsoft Corporation.
. Because dictionary definitions usually “reflect the public’s perception of a word's meaning” and the way in which it is used,
. The TTAB's finding that the term was generic could have ended the inquiry because "a generic name of a product can never function as a trademark.” McCarthy on Trademark, § 12:1.
. Evidence that third parties use the term in question "is evidence of a lack of secondary meaning because where purchasers are faced with more than one independent user of a term ... distinctiveness in one seller is lacking.” McCarthy on Trademark, § 15:27.
. A company’s sales figures and size are relevant to secondary meaning because "the larger a company and the greater its sales, the greater the number of people who have been exposed to this symbol as a trademark, and the greater the number of people who may associate [the term or symbol] ... with a company or source.” McCarthy on Trademark, § 15:49. But "raw sales figures need to be put into context to have any meaning.” Id.
. See, e.g., Harlequin Enterprises, Ltd. v. Gulf & Western Corp.,
. See 35 U.S.C. § 145; Dickinson v. Zurko,
. No circuit has exclusive appellate jurisdiction over trademark matters. See CAE, Inc. v. Clean Air Engineering, Inc.,
. Plaintiff also relies on additional evidence identified for the first time in his memorandum in support of summary judgment, filed more than five months after the deadline set in the March 5, 2013 Discovery Order. Thus, this evidence is excluded as late under Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A)(ii). Additionally, it is worth noting that much of this evidence focuses on the state of mind of the general public rather than the state of mind of the relevant consumer of fertilizer, and hence is not probative of either genericness or secondary meaning.
. Descriptive marks constitute one category of terms requiring proof of secondary meaning for trademark protection. McCarthy on Trademark, § 15:2.
. See also George & Co., LLC v. Imagination
. Several circuits have recognized that scientifically-conducted consumer surveys are exceedingly persuasive evidence of secondary meaning. See, e.g., Vision Sports, Inc. v. Melville Corp.,
. Id. at § 15:51. See also E.T. Browne Drug Co. v. Cococare Products, Inc.,
. The value of such affidavits from friendly business associates is similar for inquiries into both genericness and secondary meaning. McCarthy on Trademark, § 12:13 fn. 17.
. Because it is unnecessary to reach summary judgment with respect to secondary meaning, it is similarly unnecessary to confront the as-yet unsettled issue whether summary judgment is ever appropriate on the question of secondary meaning. For cases in which summary judgment was found to be appropriate on the issue of secondary meaning, see Filipino Yellow Pages, Inc. v. Asian Journal Publications, Inc.,
Nor is it necessary to reach the issue of whether a jury trial is appropriate in a § 1071(b) case, as neither party requested a
