This сase presents a question of likelihood of confusion under § 2(d) of the Lan-ham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(d). The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (Board) dismissed Opposition No. 65,515 to the registration of the word mark SPICE VALLEY *671 for teas, Application Serial No. 258,167 of appellee Coffee Bean Distributors, Inc. The opposition was brought by appellant Specialty Brands, Inc., based on its registered trademark SPICE ISLANDS for teas. We reverse.
Background
The decision of the Board setting forth the facts of this opposition and the Board’s reasoning is reported at
The Standard of Review
Applicant advises that this court should not substitute its own judgment for that of the “сareful, unanimous judgment of the Board which has substantial support in the record”, citing
Witco Chemical Co. v. Whitfield Chemical Co.,
Applicant points out that opposer Specialty Brands has not challenged any of the factual findings of the Board. These findings, as we recently reaffirmed in
Stock Pot Restaurant, Inc. v. Stockpot, Inc.,
Determination of Likelihood of Confusion
Likelihood of confusion is determined from the probative facts in evidenсe.
In re E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
*672 1) The Similarity of the Goods
The marks SPICE VALLEY and SPICE ISLANDS are used for identical goods, namely “teas”. Applicant’s proposed registration is not limited to spiced teas, and opposer’s mark is used for both spiced and unspiced teаs.
2) The Similarity of Trade Channels
The channels of trade are identical. Both brands of tea are sold in supermarkets and grocery stores across the country.
3) The Circumstances of Sale and Identity of Buyers
Both products are relatively inexpensive, comestible goods subject to frequent replacement. Purchasers of such products have been held to a lesser standard of purchasing care.
See Spice Islands, Inc. v. Frank Tea & Spice Co.,
4) The Variety of Goods on which the Mark is Used
The application for the SPICE VALLEY mark names “teas” as the goods, and the record also shows use on mulled spices for teas. Opposer uses the SPICE ISLANDS mark on a large variety of goods, including teas and spices. 1
5) Actual Confusion
There is no evidence of record оf the presence or absence of actual consumer confusion. Neither party has presented survey evidence.
6) The Similarity of the Marks in their Entireties
This factor encompasses the considerations of appearance, sound, connotation, and commercial impression on which the Board relied. Although applicant disclaimed the word “spice” apart from SPICE VALLEY as a whole, the marks are viewed in their entireties.
Giant Food, supra,
Each party has analyzed the “format” of the marks in support of its position. Oppo-ser considers the format to consist of two words of fairly equal weight, the first of which is SPICE and the second of which is a topographically defined place. Applicant emphasizes that “spice” was disclaimed, leaving the word “valley” as the principal contributor to the impression of its mark. Opposer disagrees and argues that the words SPICE ISLANDS and SPICE VALLEY summon to mind similar images of remote terrain, whether valley or island. In this argument opposer is aided by the fact that applicant has adopted a seafaring image on some of its SPICE VALLEY labels.
SPICE ISLANDS, argues applicant, is a term of geographical and historical significance: the Spice Islands are known today as the Moluccas, an island group in the Malay archipelago which has been a famous source of spices and teas since the Age of Discovery. We are directed to op-poser’s promotional literature which discusses the history of the Spice Islands, even as it advises its customers that its spices are grown in the Sacramento Valley of California. In contrast, applicant contends that SPICE VALLEY suggests a “back-to-nature” or “Early American” image, and points to those SPICE VALLEY packages which show a rustic barn and hills on the label.
A review of the record shows that applicant took a contrary position before the *673 trademark examiner aftеr being advised of the pending registration THE SPICE MARKET. Applicant thereupon defined “valley” as a “depression between adjacent hills, often of a secluded or remote nature”, and drew a contrast with THE SPICE MARKET’S connotations of “down-to-earth value” or “old time basic quality” — images not unlike those now assеrted by applicant for SPICE VALLEY. 37 C.F.R. § 2.122(b)(1) states that the file of the application “forms part of the record of the proceeding without any action by the parties and reference may be made to the file for any relevant and competent purpose”. As the CCPA observed in Interstate Brands,
[Tjhat a party еarlier indicated a contrary opinion respecting the conclusion in a similar proceeding involving similar marks and goods is a fact, and that fact may be received in evidence as merely illuminative of shade and tone in the total picture confronting the decision maker. To that limited extent, a party’s earlier contrary opinion may be considered relevant and competent.
It is the similarity of commercial impression between SPICE VALLEY and SPICE ISLANDS that weighs heavily against the applicant as applied to identical goods. As the court said in Spice Islands, supra:
Of paramount interest is not the descriptive nature of SPICE, but the overall commercial impression derived by viewing the marks in their entireties . . . . Arguments to the effect that one portion of a mark possesses no trademark significance leading to a direct comparison between only what remains is an erroneous approach.
As indicated above, applicant argues that its trade dress negates any similarity in commercial impression. In response Specialty Brands points out that applicant has expanded its country valley image in favor of a seafaring image on its packages of mulling spices. 2
*674
The Board found this evidence to be insufficient to demonstrate an intent to trade on the reputation of SPICE ISLANDS mark, but we do not consider it for this purpose. Ordinarily, for a word mark we do not look to the trade dress, which can be changed at any time.
Vornado, Inc. v. Breuer Electric Mfg. Co.,
7) The Fame of Opposer’s Mark
Specialty Brands has been using the SPICE ISLANDS mark for over forty years, and over one hundred spices, herbs, and seasonings are sold under the mark with annual sales of approximately $25,-000,000. Teas have been sold under the SPICE ISLANDS mark since the late 1950’s, generating approximately $12,000,-000 worth of sales between 1957 and 1981.
Specialty Brands has been successful in protecting its mark SPICE ISLANDS against other confusingly similar marks.
See Spice Islands, Inc. v. Frank Tea and Spice Co.,
The Board now holds that “[w]hatever fame opposer may have achievеd for its ‘SPICE ISLANDS’ mark by using it for some forty years and by having made enormous sales and large advertising expenditures is of little consequence in this case.”
8) The Number and Nature of Similar Marks on Similar Goods
Applicant introduced evidence of eight third-party registrations for tea which contain the word “SPICE”, five of which are shown to be in use. 3 None оf these marks has a “SPICE (place)” format or conveys a commercial impression similar to that projected by the SPICE ISLANDS mark, and these third-party registrations are of significantly greater difference from SPICE VALLEY and SPICE ISLANDS than either of these two marks from each other.
9) Descriptive Usage of the Word “Spice”
Applicant introduced several exhibits to show third-party use of the word “spice”. Some of these exhibits involve teas, but these use the word “spice” in a descriptive, non-trademark sense. Examples include PIKE PLACE spiced teas, spicy orange KAFFREE tea, peppermint spice MAGIC MOUNTAIN herb tea, LIPTON orange and spice tea, and BOSTON’S lemon spice tea. None of applicant’s exhibits conveys a similar commercial impression to that of the SPICE ISLANDS mark.
The Board found that the evidence of third-party use and registration shows that the word “spice” has descriptive significance when used in conjunction with spiced teas. We agree. Third-party usage can demonstrate the ordinary dictionary meaning of a term or the meaning of a term to those in the trade.
Tektronix, Inc. v. Dak-tronics, Inc.,
Descriptive use of the word “spice” does not entitle applicant to use the word in a confusingly similar trademark manner.
See Squirtco v. Tomy Corp.,
Conclusion
We have evaluated all of the evidence relating to thе possibility of confusion between these marks. We conclude that opposer has met its burden of demonstrating that there exists a likelihood of confusion between SPICE ISLANDS and SPICE VALLEY.
Sanyo Watch Co., Inc. v. Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.,
The law has clearly been well settled for a longer time than this court has been dealing with the problem to the effect that thе field from which trademarks can be selected is unlimited, that there is therefore no excuse for even approaching the well-known trademark of a competitor, that to do so raises “but one inference — that of gaming advantage from the wide reputation established by appellаnt in the goods bearing its mark,” and that all doubt as to whether confusion, mistake, or deception is likely is to be resolved against the newcomer, especially where the established mark is one which is famous and applied to an inexpensive product bought by all kinds of people without much cаre.
See also Giant Food, supra,
REVERSED.
Notes
. Specialty Brands’ Registration No. 574,147, issued May 12, 1953 for various food seasonings and spices; Registration No. 765,595, issued February 25, 1964 for various food seasonings, spices, coffee and tea; Registration No. 654,201, issued November 5, 1957 for various food seasonings, spices, and coffee; and Registration No. 1,195,319, issued May 11, 1982 for tea.
Although Specialty Brands had argued likelihood of confusion based on a family of marks, it has not pressed this point on appeal.
. Applicant considers mulling spices to fall within the description of goods contained in its application. Both parties sell mulling spices.
. Reg. No. 1,202,918 (SPICE ON ICE); Reg. No. 1,148,579 (THE SPICE MARKET); Reg. No. 1,148,578 (THE SPICE MARKET and DESIGN); Reg. No. 1,140,486 (COUNTRY SPICE); Reg. No. 1,098,938 (MARKET SPICE TEA).
