OPINION
Plaintiffs SODIMA, General Mills Products Corp. (General Mills), and Yoplait USA, Inc. bring this action for infringement of their federally registered trademarks YOPLAIT and YOCREME. Defendants International Yogurt, Inc. and Global Gourmet, Inc. have been using the name YOCREAM and 800-YO CREAM. They deny any likelihood of confusion between YOPLAIT and YOCREAM, challenge plaintiffs’ YOCREME mark as void, and counterclaim for infringement of their common law trademarks YOCREAM and 800-YO CREAM. The parties agree that YOCREME and YOCREAM are confusingly similar. The central issue in this case is whether plaintiffs abandoned or warehoused their YOCREME mark. The case was tried to the court beginning February 24, 1987. I find no likelihood of confusion between YOPLAIT and YOCREAM. I cancel plaintiffs’ federal YOCREME trademark, and I assign common law trademark rights to the parties according to priority of use.
FACTS
Plaintiff SODIMA is a French agricultural cooperative company. It owns the U.S. trademark registrations on YOPLAIT Nos. 980, 605,1,134,239, and 1,224,432, and the registration on YOCREME No. 1,186,-981. SODIMA first began to sell its YO-PLAIT yogurt in the United States in 1974. In October 1977, SODIMA granted an exclusive license to General Mills to produce and market YOPLAIT. YOPLAIT was manufactured and distributed through General Mills’ wholly-owned subsidiary, Yoplait USA, Inc. It has since been marketed continuously. YOPLAIT sales in 1978 were about $16 million. They are now nearly $200 million annually.
In 1978 Yoplait USA formulated a five-year plan which targeted refrigerated yogurts, frozen yogurts, refrigerated desserts, and soft cheeses as potential additional product lines, following the trend toward yogurt consumption in the American market. Top priority was assigned to a refrigerated dessert line of custard-style yogurt. The name YOCREME was coined at a January 1979, name-generating session. By August 1979 plaintiffs rejected the name for the new custard-style yogurt. Nevertheless, they liked the French-sounding name with its implications of creaminess, and decided to register it as a trademark.
For the sole purpose of registering the trademark YOCREME, Yoplait USA sold four products in interstate commerce: a mousse, a plain custard-style refrigerated yogurt, a frozen yogurt, and a refrigerated soft cheese. This October 1979 sale to a friend in Wisconsin totalled $2.52. SODI-MA filed the trademark application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office in January 1980. The trademark office granted the registration in January 1982.
In 1979 and again in 1980, plaintiffs negotiated with two parties other than defendants who were using or considering using the name “Yo Cream.” One was a small Maryland retailer who agreed to abandon use of the name. The other was a major competitor, Land O’ Lakes, who agreed to abandon use of the name in exchange for uncontroverted use of the name YOCHEESE.
From 1979 until early 1982, plaintiffs did not develop any products associated with the name YOCREME or market anything as YOCREME. In March 1982, a report prepared for Yoplait USA suggested that the name might be good for use with proposed soft cheese products. Plaintiffs followed up on that suggestion in May 1982, by using YOCREME as one of fourteen different potential names in a taste test for *842 prototype non-yogurt cheese products. YOCREME scored among the five top names for the cheese product. In a July 1982 name evaluation test for the cheese product, YOCREME ranked fourth among a list of 232 names. However, plaintiffs never again considered the name for that product and they never marketed the cheese product.
Simultaneously, plaintiffs were experimenting with a non-yogurt pudding product. YOCREME topped the list of preferred names for the pudding in a July 1982 test. It was the first and last time the mark was considered in that connection.
In response to competition in the burgeoning yogurt business, plaintiffs experimented with a premium fruit-on-the-bottom yogurt line. The proposed product was significantly higher in butterfat content than the competitor’s product. In April and May 1983, plaintiffs tested the YO-CREME name, along with sample advertisements, on this product. Market tests failed to indicate sufficient sales for the premium product. Consequently, in the summer or fall of 1983, plaintiffs reduced the richness of the product and discontinued the YOCREME mark for that product.
Finally, in early 1984, plaintiffs developed a formula for high fat yogurt, a concept new to the American market that was based upon German and Swiss yogurts. In May 1984, the name YOCREME was assigned to the new product. In December 1984, it was made a top priority project. Between late 1984 and August 1986, twelve tests costing about $368,800 thoroughly examined YOCREME for taste, flavors, packaging, likely volume of sales, advertising, and pricing. The name YOCREME — and only the name YOCREME — was used in each test. Plaintiffs capitalized the project at $3 million, and invested an additional $6 million on consumer coupons, trade promotion, and print and television advertising. YOCREME began to be sold in grocery stores in July 1986 and achieved full national distribution by September 1986. By February 1987, YOCREME had achieved about $10 million in sales nationwide.
In May 1985, plaintiffs learned that defendants were marketing frozen yogurt under the name 800-YO CREAM.
Defendants entered the frozen yogurt business in 1976. They were experienced in business and in the use of trademarks. Their product was a liquid mix designed for stores, institutions or other outlets with soft ice cream machines. It could also be refrigerated and sold as a hard pack. Between 1977 and 1982, defendants operated stores in Washington and Oregon and franchised others under the name “The Yogurt Stand” and “The Healthi Deli.” In 1982 they experimented with an upgraded pref-lavored product containing a higher butterfat content. They called it YOCREAM. In late 1982 it was sold in Oregon and Washington; in 1983 it was also sold in Alaska, Hawaii and California.
In October 1983, defendants conducted a trademark search which showed the existence of plaintiffs’ YOCREME registration. Defendants telephoned plaintiffs to inquire about their intentions for the mark. Defendants verified that YOCREME was not being marketed at that time.
At first YOCREAM was identified simply by signs on the dispensing machines or elsewhere in the stores. By spring of 1984 the name was printed on the cartons shipped to the buyers. Since 1984 defendants vigorously promoted YOCREAM at trade and restaurant shows and by direct solicitation to distributors throughout most of the country. A telephone number, 800 YO-CREAM, was acquired in mid-1984 to take orders and inquiries.
Defendants never attempted to register YOCREAM but did, in March 1985, file an application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to register 800-YO CREAM, claiming June 1984 as the date of first use. The application was rejected in May 1985 on the basis of conflict with YOCREME. In June 1985, John Hanna of the defendants telephoned Richard Berman, plaintiff’s in-house counsel, regarding use of the mark. In October 1985, Mr. Hanna filed a declaration with the Trademark Office stat *843 ing that plaintiffs told him that they were not and never had marketed any products under the YOCREME mark.
STANDARDS
The Lanham Act accords the presumption that a registered trademark is valid and that the holder is entitled to exclusive use of the mark. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1057(b), 1115(a) (1982). The certificate constitutes prima facie evidence of ownership of the mark, absence of likelihood of confusion with other registered marks, and continued use of the mark from the date of filing the application.
Massey Junior College, Inc. v. Fashion Institute of Technology,
[cancellation of a valuable registration around which a large and valuable business goodwill have been built should be granted only with “due caution and only after a most careful study of all the facts.” Petitioner to sustain its burden of proof, must leave nothing to conjecture.
Rockwood Chocolate Co. v. Hoffman Candy Co.,
Defendants must prove their case by a preponderance of the evidence to prevail in their contentions that YOCREAM is not confusingly similar to YOPLAIT, that YO-CREME is invalid ab initio because its registration was based on a “sham” transaction, or that YOCREME is invalid in equity because plaintiffs “warehoused” the mark.
I must also determine the proper standard to be applied to defendants’ assertion that plaintiffs abandoned the YOCREME mark. The Lanham Act permits cancellation of a trademark “at any time if the registered mark ... has been abandoned. ...” 15 U.S.C. § 1064 (1982). A mark is deemed abandoned:
when its use has been discontinued with intent not to resume. Intent not to resume may be inferred from circumstances. Nonuse for two consecutive years shall be prima facie abandonment.
15 U.S.C. § 1127 (1982). Thus the statute contains two elements for abandonment— non-use and intent not to resume use — and it permits evidence of intent not to use to be inferred from actual non-use which has lasted for two years. The statute does not, however, explain what is meant by “prima facie abandonment.” In particular, it fails to specify whether a showing of two years of non-use merely shifts the burden of coming forward with evidence (burden of production) to the trademark registrant or whether it also shifts the burden of proof (risk of nonpersuasion) to the registrant.
The legislative history of the Lanham Act suggests that the “intent not to resume use” standard was adopted from the common law.
2
At the turn of the century
*844
the Supreme Court stated “Acts, which unexplained, would be sufficient to establish an abandonment may be answered by showing that there never was an intention to give up and relinquish the right claimed.”
Saxlehner v. Eisner & Mendelson Co.,
But the loss of the right of property in trade-marks upon the ground of abandonment is not to be viewed as a penalty either for non-user or for the creation and use of new devices. There must be found an intent to abandon, or the property is not lost....
Baglin v. Cusenier Co.,
The Fifth Circuit, holding that an oil company’s trademark maintenance program did not constitute sufficient “use” to avoid prima facie abandonment, cited Sterling Brewers for the following proposition:
The burden of proof is on the party claiming abandonment, but when a prima facie case of trademark abandonment exists because of non-use of the mark for over two consecutive years, the owner of the mark has the burden to demonstrate that circumstances do not justify the inference of intent not to resume use.
Exxon Corp. v. Humble Exploration Co., Inc.,
Remy Martin made out at least a prima facie case of abandonment. The burden of proof then shifted to Myers to demonstrate that circumstances did not justify the inference of intent not to resume use. The court below erred as a matter of law in not articulating and applying this rule.
E. Remy Martin & Co. v. Shaw-Ross International Imports, Inc.,
The Second and Ninth Circuits, however, have not shifted the burden of proof. In
Saratoga Vichy,
Although Congress clearly intended some consequence of a prima facie abandonment, none of the cases clearly decide whether the consequence is to shift the burden of production, or to shift the burden of proof to the party that has allegedly abandoned use of its mark. The better rule is that the burden of production shifts to the trademark registrant to produce evidence of lack of intent not to use the mark following two years of non-use. When the registrant has come forward with evidence, the burden of proof remains with the challenger. The owner of a federally registered mark should enjoy an overarching presumption under sections 1057(b) and 1115(a) of the Lanham Act that the registration is valid.
Massey,
In this case the plaintiffs have come forward with evidence of intent to use the mark. The defendants are required to prove by a preponderance of evidence that plaintiffs intended not to use YOCREME.
Finally, if this court finds that plaintiffs’ federal YOCREME trademark is invalid, it must decide the parties’ respective trademark rights under the common law in each state.
New West Corp. v. NYM Company of California, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
A. Infringement Of YOCREAM On The YOPLAIT Trademark.
The threshold question in analyzing plaintiffs’ contention that defendants infringed on their YOPLAIT trademark is whether there is a likelihood of confusion between the marks YOPLAIT and YO-CREAM. I must determine whether consumers of YOCREAM are likely to assume that the product is made by the makers of YOPLAIT.
Shakey’s Inc. v. Covalt,
1. Strength of the Mark.
In general, distinctive marks are considered “strong” and deserving of greater protection. In
Surgicenters of America, Inc. v. Medical Dental Surgeries Co.,
To the American eye unaccustomed to French phrases, YOPLAIT has a distinctiveness that is the earmark of a strong name. Yoplait, USA has spent over $50 million advertising the YOPLAIT name. However, the “YO” phrase became a relatively common prefix or suffix to suggest a yogurt product. I find YOPLAIT to be strong and suggestive, but not unique.
2. Similarity of the Mark.
I must also test the marks for similarity in appearance, sound and meaning.
Nutri/System, Inc. v. Con-Stan Industries, Inc.,
Likelihood of confusion between similar marks is increased when, as here, the average consumer does not ponder at length the choice of products from a grocery shelf.
Burger Chef Systems, Inc. v. Burger Man, Inc.,
Beyond the YO prefix, the two marks do not look or sound alike, although both are two-syllable words with the accent on the
*847
last syllable. YOPLAIT is pronounced yo-PLAY. The vowel sound of the dominant last syllable in YOCREAM is very different. Nor are the words similar in meaning. Plaintiffs argue that their advertising, which emphasizes the creaminess of their product, has created a similarity in meaning to YOCREAM. However, it is not the secondary meaning that is the object of analysis, but rather the verbal translation of the word.
Plough, Inc. v. Kreis Laboratories,
3. Marketing Channels and Proximity of the Goods.
YOPLAIT and YOCREAM are in the same marketing channels and are sold adjacent to each other.
4. Good Faith and Intent.
If the infringer knowingly adopted a mark similar to another’s, then the court must examine the infringer’s intent.
Nutri/System, Inc. v. Con-Stan Industries, Inc.,
5. Evidence of Actual Confusion.
Evidence at trial included a letter sent to Yoplait, USA from a consumer complaining that YOCREAM is too similar a name. Her enclosures indicate, however, that she was complaining of the similarity of YO-CREAM to YOCREME, not of YOCREAM to YOPLAIT. Plaintiffs also presented evidence that some participants in some of the various tests felt that YOCREME implied a relationship to YOPLAIT. Often, however, the participants were already aware of the connection of YOPLAIT to YOCREME. There was little or no evidence of actual confusion.
YOPLAIT is a strong mark, but YO-PLAIT and YOCREAM are dissimilar. YOCREAM does not infringe on YOPLAIT because there is no evidence of confusion and no evidence of bad faith by defendants.
B. Validity Of The Trademark Based Upon The Token Sale.
As mentioned previously, in October 1979, plaintiffs consummated a $2.52 token shipment and sale for the sole purpose of establishing use in commerce for federal trademark purposes. An axiom of trademark law is: no trade, no trademark. The right to register a mark depends upon actual use in trade.
Rolley, Inc. v. Younghusband,
For the purposes of this Act a mark shall be deemed to be used in commerce (a) on goods when it is placed in any manner on the goods or their containers ... and the goods are sold or transported in interstate commerce.
15 U.S.C. § 1127 (1982) (emphasis added).
However, the doctrine of token use honors such sales when the product is undergoing development. A single instance of use, if accompanied by circumstances showing an intention to continue use, is sufficient to establish right to its use.
Ritz Cycle Car Co. v. Driggs-Seabury Ordnance Corp.,
There are, however, certain restrictions or limitations on this practice, ... most important of all, that these shipments be accompanied or followed by activity or circumstances which would tend to establish a continuing effort or intent to continue such use and place the product so shipped on the market on a commercial scale.
Id.
at 765. A hiatus of eighteen months in sales, absent any indication of intent to proceed, is reasonable if followed by such activity.
Fort Howard Paper Co. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.,
[W]here the owner of a trade-mark has spent energy, time, and money in presenting to the public the product, he is protected in his investment from its misappropriation by pirates and cheats.
Senate Committee on Patents, Providing for the Registration and Protection of Trade-Marks Used in Commerce, S.Rep. No. 1333, 79th Cong.2d Sess. 3 (1946).
The $2.52 token sale had all the “color” of a bona fide sale. Although plaintiffs’ failure to develop the product for over two years strains the outer limits of the liberal policy on token sales, the hiatus was followed by substantial activity. I find it to be a valid sale.
C. Abandonment.
Unlike copyrights and patent rights, trademark rights exist only as an appurtenance to the business in which they are used. As the Supreme Court said in
United Drug Co. v. Theodore Rectanus Co.,
The law of trade-marks is but a part of the broader law of unfair competition; the right to a particular mark grows out of its use, not its mere adoption; its function is simply to designate the goods as the product of a particular trader and to protect his good will against the sale of another’s product as his; and it is not the subject of property except in connection with an existing business.
Activities designed merely to prevent use of the mark by others do not protect it.
Exxon Corp. v. Humble Exploration Co., Inc.,
The liberal doctrine honoring token sales as sufficient use to register a mark does not extend to honoring mere token use to sustain the mark against a charge of non-use.
La Societe Anonyme des Parfums Le Galion v. Jean Patou, Inc.,
Although abandonment must always be proved by a preponderance of the evidence, some cases differentiate between those in which the registrant previously used the mark, and those in which it was not so used
Defiance Button Machine Co. v. C & C Metal Products Corp.,
In this case no goodwill toward YOCREME existed prior to its 1986 introduction to the marketplace. Nevertheless, plaintiffs’ intent need not be shown in the form of sales. Development of the product, packaging, design, or advertising plans are evidence of intent to use.
Brawn of California v. Jojoba Products Co., Inc.,
211 U.S.P.A. 881, 883 (S.D.Cal.1980). When it reasonably takes a considerable period of time to develop, perfect, and market a product, evidence of intent to use is proved by a reasonable constancy of effort in the product’s development.
General Mills, Inc. v. Frito-Lay, Inc.,
Plaintiffs admit that following the October 1979 sale, no products associated with the YOCREME mark were tested or developed in any way until April 1982. This constitutes prima facie evidence of abandonment under 15 U.S.C. § 1127, which may be rebutted by showing that circumstances do not justify the inference of intent not to use.
Exxon Corp. v. Humble Exploration Co., Inc.,
activities which would tend to indicate a continuing effort or intent to continue such use and place the product on the market on a commercial scale within a time demonstrated to be reasonable in the particular trade.
Signature Guardian Systems, Inc. v. Lee,
Bruce Becker, director of strategic analysis for General Mills, testified that it typically takes two years, or possibly as long as three years, to introduce this type of *850 product on a national scale. Thus plaintiffs had no specific plans for YOCREME for the entire length of time it would have been reasonable for them to develop and introduce the product. Plaintiffs argue that, during the critical period of 1979 through 1982, two other projects absorbed their attention: the custard-style yogurt, which was introduced in June 1981, and the breakfast yogurt, which was introduced in June 1982. The YOCREME mark had been ruled out for the custard product and was considered inappropriate for the breakfast product. Plaintiffs contend that they would have been ill-advised to introduce a third product during this period because the company would end up replacing its own products in the limited available refrigerated supermarket shelf space. Even if, for the moment, this argument were entertained as a plausible excuse, by their own rationale plaintiffs could have introduced YOCREME by June 1983. However, the product that eventually became YO-CREME was unknown to plaintiffs’ own laboratories until 1984.
Plaintiffs’ state of mind is indicated by a telex from Yoplait USA, to SODIMA in August 1979 in which the American firm requested the French company to register the YOCREME trademark in the United States. The telex stated: “Yoplait USA plans to consider the use of this name for the line of French creme desserts currently being developed.” (Emphasis added.) At least four years passed while plaintiffs “planned to consider” using YOCREME and before they actually decided to use it.
In May, June, and July 1982, the YO-CREME name was considered for two products, a non-yogurt soft cheese and a non-yogurt “natural pudding” oriented toward children. YOCREME was considered among many other names for the purpose of developing the right name for the products. YOCREME was never further considered in relation to either of these products. Neither of them was ever marketed.
In late 1982, one of plaintiffs’ competitors introduced a fruit-on-the-bottom yogurt product. In response, Yoplait USA revived its earlier work on this idea and developed a similar product. In April and May 1983, plaintiffs considered YOCREME in several taste tests for a high-butterfat fruit-on-the-bottom product. When market tests in the summer or fall of 1983 showed insufficient sales for the richer product, they dropped the name and the butterfat content, and proceeded with a more “mainstream” fruit-on-the-bottom product. By the end of 1983, plaintiffs were not working on any projects bearing the YOCREME name.
In early 1984 plaintiffs developed a formula for a high fat yogurt, which apparently was a new concept based upon similar German and Swiss yogurts. The YO-CREME product as eventually marketed was based upon this idea. In May 1984, the YOCREME name was assigned to the new product. At this point over four and one-half years had passed since the 1979 sale. By December 1984, plaintiffs made YOCREME a top priority project. In June 1986, plaintiffs filed this action. YO-CREME began to be sold in grocery stores in July 1986, slightly more than two years after the project began and almost seven years after the 1979 sale.
Once a mark is abandoned, subsequent use does not retroactively cure its past abandonment.
AmBrit, Inc. v. Kraft, Inc.,
*851 By late 1982 or 1983, defendants had been marketing YOCREAM for more than a year. More than three years had passed since the 1979 sale. Plaintiffs could easily have gone into the national marketplace in the interim, but they did nothing until May 1982. Between May 1982 and the end of 1983, they considered the use of YOCREME for three different products. By the end of 1983, plaintiffs were not considering YOCREME for anything.
I find that plaintiffs had no unequivocal intention to use the mark until well after 1983. In October 1983, defendants learned of the existence of SODIMA’s registration of the YOCREME mark. In January 1984, Terry Lusetti, an employee of defendants, telephoned Richard Berman, in-house trademark counsel for General Mills, to inquire about plaintiffs’ use and intentions for the mark. Mr. Lusetti testified and his notes confirm that Mr. Berman stated that plaintiffs were not using the mark but were “interested” in it. Mr. Lusetti inquired about purchasing the mark. He was told that defendants could make an offer. Mr. Berman does not remember the call. In June 1985, defendants placed a second call to Mr. Berman, this time from Mr. John Hanna, chief executive officer of defendant International Yogurt and secretary-treasurer of defendant Global Gourmet. By that time plaintiffs were actively developing YOCREME. Mr. Berman indicated that the product was being worked on, that the mark was “very much of interest” to plaintiffs, but that no large-scale marketing had yet taken place.
When the clock is turned back it becomes apparent that the evidence does not support an inference of intent to use. Plaintiffs liked the mark, but made no decision to use it until at least four and one-half years, and probably longer, after the 1979 sale. The Lanham Act does not demand either great speed or absolute certitude by a trademark holder. But such prolonged indecision as displayed here, where the mark was but one of a stable full of names to bear the product on its commercial career, cannot constitute intent to use. When there is no intent to use, the mark is deemed abandoned. 15 U.S.C. § 1127. Plaintiffs’ subsequent commercial use cannot retroactively cure a cancellation of a trademark.
AmBrit, Inc. v. Kraft, Inc.,
D. Warehousing.
It is also my finding that for a period of at least four and one-half years, plaintiffs had only the vaguest notion of the kind of product that YOCREME represented. They registered the mark for four broad categories of food — yogurt, frozen yogurt, refrigerated dessert, and soft cheese. YOCREME was but one of a stable full of steeds held in readiness to bear the next new product on its commercial career. YOCREME was not reserved for any particular product. Over a period of almost five years YOCREME was tried out on a custard-style yogurt, a soft cheese, a pudding, and a fruit-on-the-bottom style yogurt before finally being selected for the high-fat yogurt concept — a concept unknown to plaintiffs at the time of the 1979 sale.
A product as eventually marketed need not be identical to that which was registered. For example, in
Fast Chemical Products Corp. v. Pillsbury Co.,
132 U.S. P.Q. 561, 562 (T.T.A.B.1962), the trademark holder discontinued sale of a powder laundry detergent and substituted a liquid all-purpose cleaner. The Appeal Board held that it will not cancel a mark because of a mere change of formulae or primary use. Similarly, in
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. G.C. Murphy Co.,
*852
Introducing a product on a national scale is an expensive and risky project, and certainly courts will accommodate significant modifications of the original product concept. In
Ralston-Purina Co. v. On-Cor Frozen Foods, Inc.,
If the product which will be offered commercially is available, then that product should be involved in the initial sale. It can be expected, however, that in most instances the specific new commercial product will still be in the development stage at the time the trademark for the new product is selected. After all, the entire token use doctrine was developed to deal with the gap which arises between mark selection and final product commercialization. Therefore, when the final product form has not yet been developed or if development is ongoing, care should be taken to use a product (i.e., the current prototype) or to select the closest available product in the company’s present line.
Nevertheless, the product must be something more than a vague concept at the time of the initial sale. It must actually exist. In
Richardson-Vicks, Inc. v. Franklin Mint Corp.,
In this case, plaintiffs hoped that one of the four products for which the product was registered would be sufficiently similar to YOCREME as it was eventually marketed. I find that YOCREME does not have the inherent and identifiable characteristics of soft cheese. Nor is YO-CREME, which is refrigerated but not frozen, sufficiently similar to frozen yogurt. Nor is the high-butterfat YOCREME, which is marketed as an extravagant dessert with exotic flavors, inherently identifiable from plain yogurt. It may be that YOCREME is inherently identifiable from plaintiffs’ 1979 sale of chocolate mousse, although this is somewhat doubtful because mousse is a non-yogurt product.
Herein lies plaintiffs’ fatal flaw. The smorgasbord for which they registered YO-CREME is strong evidence of their uncertainty. They did not know, except in a most general way, how they intended to use the trademark. An application based on initial use must reasonably target the specific product.
La Maur Inc. v. International Pharmaceutical Corp.,
E. Common Law Trademark Rights.
Because plaintiffs’ federal trademark for YOCREME fails, and defendants have no federal trademark rights in YOCREAM or 800-YO CREAM, their
*853
respective rights to use these confusingly similar marks must be determined according to common law.
8
The use in commerce required for obtaining a federal registration is generally congruous with the required use of a mark for obtaining ownership under the common law. 1 J.T. McCarthy,
Trademarks and Unfair Competition
§ 16:5, at 773, § 19:4, at 881 (2d ed. 1984). Common law rights are acquired through priority of bona fide use under the common law in each state.
Hydro-Dynamics, Inc. v. George Putnam & Co., Inc.,
As unseemly as it may appear, this case is a horse race. The equities do not tilt in favor of either party. Defendants early discovered plaintiffs’ federal YO-CREME registration, yet took a risk in proceeding to market YOCREAM. Plaintiffs, for their part, attempted to corral the YOCREME mark with only the vaguest notion of how it might be used, and then let it languish for years. Although plaintiffs invested by far the greatest sum in product preparation, that fact cannot be of any weight when both parties aggressively promoted their product.
Where, as here, marketing involves sales demonstrations to distributors, priority need not depend solely on who gets to the consumer first, as long as there is bona fide shipment or activity reflecting an effort to create a viable business.
La Maur Inc. v. International Pharmaceutical Corp.,
Defendants began selling YOCREAM much earlier but never achieved full national distribution. The evidence establishes that defendants achieved at least minimal sales prior to June 1986, in Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, Washington, and Wisconsin.
In addition, defendants made several major presentations sufficient to constitute use in commerce in May and June 1986, to food chains that distribute throughout the six New England states and New York. Plaintiffs began their presentations to the trade in New England on June 2, 1986, and in New York on June 12, 1986. I hold that defendants’ activities in Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York were sufficiently substantial to establish priority.
*854 Defendants also produced evidence of shipment of samples or sales solicitations, or both, in Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Texas, and Wyoming prior to plaintiffs’ introduction of YOCREME. In no instance were the shipments or sales substantial enough or followed by significant activity sufficient to establish priority for defendants.
In Virginia, defendants shipped samples to two potential customers on the same day that plaintiffs began sales presentations. However, there is no evidence that defendants’ shipments were followed by any further activity in that state. I hold that plaintiffs established priority.
Plaintiffs established common law priority in all other states.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs’ claims for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and injunctive relief are denied. Plaintiff SODIMA’s federal trademark registration No. 1,186,981 for YOCREME is cancelled. The parties established common law trademark rights in the states indicated above. The foregoing constitutes findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).
Notes
. Some cases imply that the applicable quantum of evidence required to rebut this presumption is that of clear and convincing evidence.
Coca-Cola Co. v. Overland, Inc.,
. See Trademarks: Hearing Of H.R. 82 Before the Subcom. of the Committee on Patents, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 24 (1944), in which Daphne *844 Robert, Member of Trademark Legislation Committee, American Bar Association, stated:
There is in this bill a definition of abandon-ment_ That, of course, is present law. Intent not to resume may be inferred from circumstances. The bill provides that discontinuance of use for 2 consecutive years shall be prima facie abandonment. It would shift the burden to the registrant.
Later in the same hearing, the following colloquy occurred among Senator Hawkes, Karl Fen-ning, a patent attorney, and Henry J. Savage, a representative of the National Association of Manufacturers:
Mr. Fenning: Under the present law the user of a mark may drop it, but it still remains on the register for 20 years. Nobody knows whether it is in use or not. Under the new bill at the end of 5 years a registrant again comes in with an affidavit that he is using the mark, or it will be canceled. That will remedy that, but—
Sen. Hawkes: Even if he does or does not come in with a certificate of use, still if he abandons the trademark for a period of 2 years the trademark is automatically canceled.
Mr. Fenning: It is not. After the affidavit of use has been filed 2 years of discontinuance of use is evidence of abandonment.
Sen. Hawkes: It is pretty good evidence of abandonment under this law.
Mr. Fenning: Yes, sir.
Sen. Hawkes: If anyone else wanted to use that trademark, and could show that the use of the trademark had been abandoned for 3 or 4 years I do not think there is any doubt a court would uphold the use of the trademark in the hands of somebody else.
Mr. Fenning: Yes; unless due to circumstances beyond the control of the registrant.
Sen. Hawkes: Do you mean he would have to be out of business?
Mr. Savage: Yes, sir.
Mr. Fenning: Or an act of war.
Mr. Savage: Yes, sir.
Mr. Fenning: Prohibition would be an example.
Sen. Hawkes: It might not be a very good example. [Laughter.]
. Plaintiffs alone have registered YOPFLAN, YOPI, YOZEN, YOPLIGHT, and YOPLAIT FLEUR BLEUE. Other federally registered trademarks include YOGO, YONSON, YOGO-NAISE, YONUT, YO-SICLE, YOFERS, YOGUR-YEAST, YOZERT, YOGO-PREME, YOGWICH, YOFU, YOGUMENTS, YOGI, YOGLACE, YOJ-OUR, YUM-YO, SNOW-YO, DARI-YO, DANNY-YO, LO-YO, and FRO-YO. This does not include state registered or common law trademarks.
. Plaintiffs’ 1979 acquisition of the name from a small Maryland retailer, and its 1981 agreement with Land O' Lakes whereby that company abandoned its use of the name are activities of this nature.
. For sake of clarity, I refer to defendants' need to prove "intent to use” rather than the statutory term of "intent to resume use” because in this case there was no commercially significant but only token prior use.
. Some courts have stated this as a requirement of "justifiable excuse for the lack of commercial activity” when the two-year period of non-use is exceeded.
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. G.C. Murphy Co.,
. One of the purposes of trademarks is to foster fair competition. Senate Committee on Patents, Providing for the Registration and Protection of Trade-Marks Used in Commerce, S.Rep. No. 1333, 79th Cong. 2d Sess. 4 (1946).
. Trademark rights under a federal registration and under state common law rights stand independently of each other; common law rights may exist on a state-by-state basis even though the federal mark fails. 1 J.T. McCarthy, Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 19:4, at 880-81 (2d ed. 1984).
