Defendant Standard Products Corporation (“Standard”), a Massachusetts corporation, appeals from an order of the district court enjoining it from further use of the trademark “VALMOR” in connection with its line of electrical “beauty aids”, cancelling its registrations of that trademark, and referring the case to a master for an accounting of damages and profits. The action was brought under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S. C. §§ 1051 et seq., and under the Massachusetts law of unfair competition, M. G.L. c. 110, §§ 7A and 8, with jurisdiction based on 15 U.S.C. § 1121 and 28 U.S.C. § 1338. Appellant challenges the court’s underlying finding that its use of the trademark infringes the right of Valmor Products Company (“Valmor”), an Illinois corporation, to the same trademark and constitutes unfair competition, arguing essentially that the court accorded undue scope to the trademark, which, as an elision of “value” and “more”, is allegedly a weak, self-laudatory one deserving of, at most, narrow protection.
Preliminarily, it is not clear whether Standard contests the propriety of the trademark’s being recognized at all. The claim would not in any event be persuasive, since the trademark is not descriptive or misdescriptive of any of the products of either corporation, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(e) (1),
compare
Devcon Corp. v. Woodhill Chemical Sales Corp.,
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“Plaintiff’s use of the mark on its products and in its advertising over forty-five (45) years has established a close connection between the trademark name and its products and business reputation.”
We construe this as a finding that the mark “has become distinctive of [Valmor’s] goods in commerce”, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(f), and thus appropriate for registration, even though self-laudatory. See 3 R. Callman, The Law of Unfair Competition, Trademarks and Monopolies, § 77.4(c), at 373-75 (3d ed. 1969).
The core issue, then, is not whether the trademark is a valid one but whether its scope is sufficient to make Standard’s appropriation of the mark an infringement. Nor does appellant’s reference to the notion of weak trademarks obviate the need for a detailed evaluation of the record. The strength or weakness of a distinctive mark is a matter of degree.
See generally
R. G. Barry Corp. v. A. Sandler Co.,
The federal statutory test of trademark infringement is whether use by the second party is “likely ... to cause confusion”, 15 U.S.C. § 1114(1) (a)
1
Esquire, Inc. v. Esquire Slipper Mfg. Co.,
Standard takes exception to these supportive findings, insisting, first, on the dissimilarity of the products. While Standard points out that the products are not in direct competition, it recognizes that the inquiry does not end there. See Esquire, Inc. v. Esquire Slipper Mfg. Co., supra. Its brief specifically relies upon the fact that its products are electrically powered and “serve different purposes, such as massaging, erasing callouses, etc.” 2 The district court, acknowledging the use of electrical power, nevertheless found the two sets of products to be closely related. As to some of those products, shel *203 tered under appellant’s “etc.”, the court found:
“In some cases, products may be used in conjunction: defendant’s compact with plaintiff’s face powder or rouge, or defendant’s hair dryers or curling sets in conjunction with plaintiff’s hair care preparations.”
The record, including advertisements and the testimonial statements of the presidents of both parties, support this commonsensical finding. 3 The connection is somewhat less strong between Valmor’s products and others of those sold by Standard. Standard’s “Smooth-away” callous eraser, for example, as a contented foot with smiling toes on the packages suggests, is designed to be used primarily on the feet, while the evidence does not indicate that any of Valmor’s products was intended for such use.
The court did, however, make a broader finding, that all of the products were “designed for the same end — the enhancement of personal appearance”. Though Standard promoted throughout the trial a distinction between “personal care items”, which it says it produces, and “beauty aids”, which it says Valmor produces, there is ample evidence to support the court’s finding the distinction illusory. The callous eraser was advertised by pamphlet as making feet and elbows “pretty”, and its package characterized the product as giving “NEW COMFORT, NEW RELIEF, NEW BEAUTY”; 4 appellant’s battery-powered manicurette was advertised “for her lovely hands” and “for his executive grooming”; and the facial toner was billed as an “amazing and inexpensive new beauty-care aid”. In short, the district court’s finding that the products were closely related was not “clearly erroneous”. F.R.C.P. 52(a).
Additionally, appellant challenges the finding that the two lines of products were advertised in similar publications and sold in similar types of stores. There was considerable evidence demonstrating the extent of Valmor’s advertising in magazines and newspapers. The evidence concerning the advertising of Standard’s products was, we acknowledge, slim, but did include an admission that stores which buy products from appellant receive advertising allowances and place advertising in newspapers. Valmor’s president stated that his company sells goods directly to consumers by mail and house-to-house solicitation and that it sells to stores and distributors, who in turn sell to drug, department and discount stores. 5 Standard’s president indicated sales to department stores among others. Beyond this, any possible infirmities in the findings as to mode of advertising or type of store are peripheral. The ultimate issue is, rather, the likelihood of confusion in the minds of consumers as to the source of the products. The court found, warrantably, that the products appeal to the same class of consumers, and, indeed, appellants do not specifically challenge that finding. Nor does the absence of more than what the court called a “minimal amount” of actual consumer confusion detract from its finding of a likelihood of confusion.
Even if we do not overturn the court’s findings, however, Standard maintains that the remedies granted — an injunction cancellation, and an accounting — were improper. The district court
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found Standard’s affirmative defense of laches, apparently sought to be interposed against any relief, to be without merit, Valmor having learned of Standard’s use of the trademark in late 1969 and having brought suit in April, 1970. Citing 15 U.S.C. § 1072, a provision declaring registration of a mark to be constructive notice thereof, appellant would have us charge Valmor with notice of the mark as of 1965, the year it was registered. We are not persuaded. While a statute of limitations might be thought to begin running upon constructive notice, by analogy to an undiscovered tort,
cf.
Clark v. Gulesian,
The court’s order cancelling Standard’s trademark registrations, 15 U.S.C. § 1119; Blanchard Importing and Dist. Co. v. Charles Gilman & Sons,
We do, however, find merit in appellant's final contention that an accounting for damages and profits was inappropriate. As the governing language of 15 U.S.C. § 1117 indicates, damages and profits may be awarded “subject to the principles of equity”. The opinion below fails to reveal the court’s basis for its action in this respect. It found neither fraud nor “palming off”.
Compare
Champion Spark Plug Co. v. Sanders,
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
Notes
. Our discussion will, for convenience, be cast in terms of infringement under the Lanham Act. Valmor has not shown us, nor have we found, any respect in which the Massachusetts law of unfair competition would afford it greater relief on the facts of this case than is afforded by the Lanham Act.
. As the court recognized, the placement of the products in different classes for the purpose of trademark registration with the Patent Office does not preclude a finding of likelihood of confusion.
. The court’s opinion properly does- not, in finding the products to be related, rely upon Valmor’s 1967 registration for wigs, wig spray and wig oil, which was subsequent to Standard’s 1965 registration.
. In attempting to avoid the clear implication of the legend, Standard’s president made what can only be considered a further confession:
“The major part of the statement is the ‘new comfort, new relief’. ‘New beauty’ is an added part of the statement, but beauty in the form of callous removal is a broad statement.”
. Valmor also introduced a number of sales slips recording sales to stores, for the most part drug stores.
