INTRODUCTION
This еase presents an issue of first impression in our circuit concerning the intersection of the Patent Act and the Lanham TradeMark Act. We must decide whether a product configuration is entitled to trade dress protection when it is or has been a significant inventive component of an invention covered by a utility patent.
After expiration of any patents or copyrights on an invention, that invention normally passes into the public domain and can be freely copied by anyone. The district court found, however, that because the spiral structure of the household fan grill in question is “nonfunctional,” a status largely determined by the availability of enough alternative grill designs so that other fan manufacturers can effectively compete without it, the grill can serve as trade dress. 1 The court held that *1500 the grill could be protected under Lanham Act section 43(a) against cоpying by competitors, because that copying was likely to confuse consumers.
The court’s injunction effectively prevents defendant Duracraft Corp. from ever practicing the full invention embodied in the patented fans of plaintiff Vomado Air Circulation Systems, Inc., after Vornado’s utility patents expire. 2 For the reasons discussed below, we find this result to be untenable. We hold that although a product configuration must be nonfunctional in order to be protected as trade dress under section 43(a), not every nonfunctional configuration is eligible for that protection. Where a product configuration is a significant inventive component of an invention covered by a utility patent, so that without it the invention cannot fairly be said to be the same invention, patent policy dictates that it enter into the public domain when the utility patents on the fans expire. To ensure that result, it cannot receive trade dress protection under section 43(a). The district court’s order is reversed.
BACKGROUND
History of the spiral grill designs
The product configurations at issue in this ease are two household fan grills with spiral — or arcuate — vanes, produced by the plaintiff, Vornado, and the defendant, Dura-craft.
The idea of using a spiral grill on a fan is not new. An arcuate vane structure for propellers “applicable to ventilators and the like” was reflected in expired U.S. Patent No. 1,062,258, a utility patent issued May 20, 1913, to G.A. Schlotter, and arcuate vanes were incorporated into a household fan guard as early as 1936, as shown by expired U.S. Patent No. 2,110,994, a utility patent issued to J.H. Cohen.
Vornado began selling its fans with spiral grills in November 1988, at a time when it was the only fan company using that type of grill. On January 9, 1989, Vornado’s founders, Donald J. Moore and Michael C. Coup, аpplied for a utility patent on their ducted fan with a spiral grill. They asserted, among other things, that their spiral grill produced an optimum air flow, although their own tests had shown that it performed "about the same as the more common straight radial grill, and later tests suggested that some other grills worked better in some respects.
Their patent application claimed a fan with multiple features, including the spiral grill. The inventive aspect of Vornado’s spiral grill was that the point of maximum lateral spacing between the curved vanes was moved inboard from the grill’s outer radius, so that it was at the impeller blade’s point of maximum power. Vomado emphasizes that its fan grill was not patentable by itself because a spiral grill per se was already in the public domain as “prior art,” a patent law term for what was already known from previous patents or other sources.
On May 22, 1990, Messrs. Moore and Coup were issued a utility patent. They subsequently applied for and on February 22, 1994, were granted a reissue patent expanding their claims, including those that involved the arcuate-shaped grill vane structure.
Vornado advertised its grill as the “Patented AirTensity ™ Grill,” although the company had no separate patent on the grill. Between January 1989 and August 1990, Vornado sold about 135,000 fans. In its advertising, the company touted the grill as a “trae achievement in aerodynamic efficiency,” “the result of determinant ergonomic design,” with “[u]nique AirTensity™ vortex action,” accomplishing “a high degree of safety and functionality.” See Appellant’s Br. at 8-10; Appellant’s App. at 1831, 1977.
In August 1990, Duracraft began offering an inexpensive electric household fan called the Model DT-7 “Turbo Fan.” The grill on Duracraft’s Turbo Fan incorporated a spiral *1501 vane structure that was copied from Vorna-do’s considerably mоre expensive fan models but was purposely designed not to infringe Vornado’s patent. Apart from its look-alike grill and some aspects of the fan blade design, the Turbo Fan differed significantly from Vornado’s fans in its overall configuration, its base and duct structure, its center knob, neon colors, packaging, labeling, and price. See Appellant’s App. at 1190 (Mem. & Order). The box in which the Turbo Fan came had a circle cut out of the front so that the grill design showed through and was emphasized when the fan was displayed in its box.
By November 1992, Duracraft had sold nearly one million Turbo Fans in the United States. The Turbo Fan was the company’s second-largest-selling household fan product.
District court’s findings
Vornado sued, alleging that Duracraft had intentionally copied Vornado’s grill design, but both sides agreed that the Turbo Fan did not infringe Vornado’s patents. Vornado argued during the bench trial that the curved vanes in the “Patented AirTensity Grill” were legаlly nonfunctional, which they had to be in order to be protected as trade dress under section 43(a).
The district court found that the spiral grill was functional in a lay sense but not in a legal sense, based on our definition of trade dress functionality in terms of the competitive need to use a feature.
See Brunswick Corp. v. Spinit Reel Co.,
The district court did not find enough evidence to support a finding оf aesthetic functionality, a type of functionality based on decorativeness or attractiveness, which we have previously recognized'.
Brunswick,
The court found that the grill design was nonfunctional and held that trade dress protection of nonfunctional product configurations under the Lanham Act was not ineom- *1502 patible with patent law. The court further found that the grill design was a suggestive symbol combined with a device, and thus inherently distinctive, so that no showing of secondary meaning was required. 7 The court found that consumers were likely to be confused by Duracraft’s use of а similar grill, and granted Vornado an injunction but no damages on the section 43(a) claim. 8
Duracraft contends on appeal that the district court committed legal error in: 1) concluding that Vornado’s trade dress claim was not barred by federal patent law; 2) rejecting Duracraft’s statutory estoppel argument; 3) concluding that the spiral grill could be a “symbol or device” within the meaning of section 43(a); 4) enjoining the use of the spiral grill without proof of secondary meaning in any relevant market; 5) concluding that Duracraft’s continued use of the spiral grill would be likely to confuse an appreciable number of persons; and in 6) issuing a nationwide injunction against continued sales of the Turbo Fan, regardless of how it might be packaged or labeled.
We have considered all of the issues raised by Duracraft, but, finding the patent law argument to be dispositive, we do not decide the other questions.
DISCUSSION
Protection of trade dress under section JpS(a)
Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), provides a federal cause of action for unprivileged imitation, including trade dress infringement.
Hartford House, Ltd. v. Hallmark Cards, Inc.,
A plaintiff in a trade dress infringement case must make two showings. First, the plaintiff must show either (a) that its product’s trade dress features (or feature) are inherently distinctive because their intrinsic nature is such as to “almost automatically tell a customer that they refer to a brand,” or (b) that thе trade dress has become distinctive through acquisition of secondary meaning, so that its primary significance in the minds of potential consumers is no longer as an indicator of something about the product itself but as an indicator of its source or brand.
See Qualitex,
— U.S. at -,
The producer of an allegedly infringing product may defend
10
by showing that what the plaintiff is claiming as its trade dress is functional, and therefore that all competitors must be permitted to copy it in their own products, regardless of any producer-identifying capacity it may possess.
See Brunswick,
The conflict before us
Subsequent to
Hartford
and
Brunswick,
the Supreme Court ruled in
Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc.,
Vornado replies that there is no problem or inconsistency in its ability to obtain both patent protection for its fan in toto and trade dress protection for its spiral grill. Vornado argues 1) that of the main Supreme Court cases on which Duracraft relies, Sears, Compco, and Bonito Boats are all distinguishable, and Kellogg predates the Lanham Act; 2) that the Supreme Court and Congress both have said section 43(a) applies to product shapes; and 3) that the functionality doctrine properly reconciles the Patent Act with the Lanham Act, for if a product feature is not necessary to competition, no patent law purpose is served by allowing it to be copied.
We find each of these arguments wanting. At the same time, we need not rule as broadly as Duracraft would have us do either. We need not deal with whether every useful or potentially patentable product configuration is excluded from trade dress protection. 11 Vornado does not argue that its grill was not a significant inventive component of its patented fans. 12 Without that particular grill, the Vornado fan would not be the same invention that it is. We focus, therefore, on the law with regard to product configurations that are patented inventions or significant components thereof, and whether these product configurations can serve as trade dress.
*1504 The statute itself
The wording of section 43(a) does not help us answer the question before us. Neither the latest version of the statute nоr the wording prior to the 1988 revision makes any mention of product shapes or configurations.
13
We cannot assume by the absence of such reference, however, that section 43(a) was not meant to apply to them, because most of the law of section 43(a) is not reflected in the statute. Justice Stevens has described in great detail the way in which the courts, through “judicial legislation,” have expanded the scope of section 43(a) far beyond its original wording as a ban on false designations of geographic origin, creating at least a partial federal law of unfair competition.
See Two Pesos,
— U.S. at - - -,
Supreme Court precedents
When asked to balance the concerns of patent law against those of unfair competition law with respect to the copying of product shapes, the Supreme Court has ruled repeatedly over the years that the right to copy must prevail.
See Bonito Boats,
Applying the common law of unfair competition, the Court held in
Kellogg
that it was not unfair competition for Kellogg Co. to copy National Biscuit Co.’s pillow-shaped shredded wheat cereal after invalidation of the design patent for the cereal shape and expiration of the utility patents for the machines to make it, where Kellogg had made reasonable efforts to distinguish its product by using a different carton, label, company name, and biscuit size.
See Kellogg,
Sears
and
Compco
pitted patent law’s public domain principles against state unfair competition statutes with respect to product copying where patents had been invalidated. In both cases, the Court again held that patent law’s public domain concept must prevail over unfair competition concerns about consumer confusion where those concerns arose solely from the product copying.
See
*1505
Sears,
In 1989, in
Bonito Boats,
the Court yet again addressed the copying of product shapes, and, because of the same patent law public domain concerns, struck down another state statute, this one prohibiting the use of the direct-molding process to copy unpatent-ed boat hulls.
Bonito Boats,
Vornado would have us ignore these holdings, and we must acknowledge that distinguishing
Sears, Compco,
and/or
Bonito Boats
has become a veritable jurisprudential art form in recent years, in which we as well as many other courts have engaged.
See Brunswick,
To say we find distinctions is not the end of the story, however. Although we may not be strictly bound by the Court’s holdings in these cases, we find it impossible to ignore the clear and continuing trend they collectively manifest in favor of the public’s right to copy. We turn, then, to the legislative history to see whether Congress has reversed this direction. 15
Ambiguous legislative history
Congress acknowledged and, to some extent, ratified the judicial expansion of section 43(a) in 1988, when it enacted its first comprehensive revision of the Lanham Act. Among other things, Congress broadened the wording of section 43(a), but, as noted above, that wording itself does not help us.
The Senate report accompanying the bill explained that the section was reworded “to codify the interpretation it has been given by the courts. Because Section 43(a) of the Act fills an important gap in federal unfair competition law, the committee expects the courts to continue to interpret the section.” S.Rep. No. 515, 100th Cong., 2d Sess. 40 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5577, 5603.
The district court relied heavily on the Senate report in concluding that Congress intended to grant trademark and trade dress protection to nonfunctional product configurations. That report observed that the courts have applied section 43(a) to cases involving “infringement of unregistered marks, violations of trade dress and certain nonfunctional configurations of goods.” Id. (emphasis added). It also stated that in the revised definition of “trademark,” the words “symbol or device” were retained “so as not *1506 to preclude the registration of colors, shapes, sounds or configurations where they function as trademarks.” Id. at 44 (1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5607) (emphasis added).
The district court read too much into this report. We cannot conclude that because at the time of the report, “certain nonfunctional configurations of goods” had received trade dress protection, Congress was saying that in the future, all such configurations should. 16 As of 1988, when the Senate report made its observation, we are unaware of any legal precedents upholding protection for those nonfunctional configurations covered by utility patents. But there was case law denying protection to a closely related type of nonfunctional design.
In
In re Shakespeare Co.,
The Senate report never even mentioned these patent law concerns, let alone purported to address or resolve them.
Functionality doctrine: An incomplete answer
To interpret the Senate report as broadly as Vornado would have us do, we would also have to ignore the strong possibility that if Congress thought at all about patent policies in 1988, it assumed that any product qualifying for a utility patent would automatically be functional. It would have been understandable for Congress to assume that a nonfunctionality requirement would eliminate any possible conflicts between the Lanham Act and the Patent Act — at least as to utility patents — given the repeated statements by various courts and commentators that functionality doctrine has рrecisely that purpose and effect.
See Rogers, 778
F.2d at 337;
Sylvania Elec. Prods., Inc. v. Dura Elec. Lamp Co.,
Despite what appears to be a widespread perception that product configurations covered by utility patents are automatically functional for Lanham Act purposes, the district court in our case ably demonstrated that this is not so. Configurations can simultaneously be patentably useful, novel, and non-obvious and also nonfunctional, in trade dress parlance.
This is the case because to meet patent law’s usefulness requirement, a product need not be better than other alternatives or essential to competition.
Stifbung v. Renishaw PLC,
Functionality, by contrast, has been defined both by our circuit, and more recently by the Supreme Court, in terms of competitive need.
See Qualitex,
— U.S. at - - -,
As some courts have explained the competitive need test, it conceivably could allow one producer to permanently appropriate any distinctive patented invention for exclusivе trademark or trade dress use as soon as its patent expired and sufficient alternatives became available to make the invention no longer one of a few superior designs.
See Clamp Mfg. Co. v. Enco Mfg. Co.,
Reconciling two federal statutes
Given that the functionality doctrine does not eliminate overlap between the Patent Act and the Lanham Act, we must decide whether Vornado is right that this doctrine nevertheless should be used to limit patent law’s public domain.
Except to the extent that Congress has clearly indicated which of two statutes it wishes to prevail in the event of a conflict, we must interpret and apply them in a way that preserves the purposes of both and fosters harmony between them.
See Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc.,
— U.S. -, -,
Purposes of the Patent Act
First, patent law seeks to foster and reward invention; second, it promotes disclosure of inventions to stimulate further innovation and to permit the public to practice the invention once the patent expires; third, the stringent requirements for patent protection seek to assure that ideas in the public domain remain there for the free use of the public.
Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil Co.,
Vornado suggests that no patent law purpose is served by allowing copying of product configurations that are not necessary to competition. We cannot agree. We find no support in the Patent Act itself or its application for the proposition that the patent goals are limited to enhancing competition, at least in the direct sense. To the contrary, patents operate by temporarily reducing competition. They create monopolies to reward inventors who invent “ ‘things which are worth to the public the embarrassment of an exclusive patent.’ ”
Graham v. John Deere Co.,
In this respect, it is significant that the framers of the patent system did not require an inventor to demonstrate an invention’s superiority to existing products in order to qualify for a patent. That they did not do so tells us that the patent system seeks not only superior inventions but also a multiplicity of inventions. A variety of choices is more likely to satisfy the desires of a greater number of consumers than is a single set of products deemed “optimal” in some average sense by patent examiners and/or judges. And the ability to intermingle and extrapolate from many inventors’ solutions to the same problem is more likely to lead to further technological advances than is a single, linear approach seeking to advance one “superior” line of research and development. We conclude that patent law seeks the invention and the passing into the public domain of even what trade dress law would consider nonfunctional inventions.
Allowing an inventor both patent and trade dress protection in a configuration would not necessarily inhibit invention directly. Quite the opposite, this double benefit would probably increase an inventor’s direct incentives to pursue an idea. But the inventor’s supply of ideas itself and freedom to experiment with them might diminish if the inventor had to do a competitive market analysis before adopting useful features from others’ inventions once their patents expired.
See Bonito Boats,
As to the second patent law objective, encouraging public disclosure of inventions, it is not immediately apparent what effect, if any, the trade dress protection in question would have. But this case clearly shows that trade dress protection can directly interfere with the public’s ability to practice patented inventions after the patents have expired, and that it undermines the principle that ideas in thе public domain should stay there. We conclude that the inability freely to copy significant features of patented products after the patents expire impinges seriously upon the patent system’s core goals, even when those features are not necessary to competition.
Purposes of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act
The core concepts of trademark protection are that consumers not be confused, misled, or deceived as to whose product they are buying, that sellers’ goodwill — or investment in their reputation for quality — be protected, and that competition thereby be enhanced.
See Park ’N Fly, Inc. v. Dollar Park and Fly, Inc.,
Clearly, any limitation on the use of product designs as protected trade dress will give trade dress less than “the greatest protection that can be given.”
Park ’N Fly,
The degree to which a producer’s goodwill will be harmed by the copying of product configurations correlates with the degree of consumer confusion as to source or sponsorship that is likely to result from the copying. 18 We do not doubt that at least some consumers are likely to ignore product labels, names, and packaging and look only to the design of product features to tell one brand from another. These consumers are likely to be confused by similar product designs, and to the degree that this confusion is tolerated, the goals of the Lanham Act will be undermined.
But the Lanham Act, like common-law unfair competition law and most state unfair competition statutes, has never provided absolute protection against all consumer confusion as to source or sponsorship. For its first fifteen to twenty years, the act was not even applied to the shapes of products or their containers. See McCarthy, supra, §§ 1.09[3], 7.31, 27.03[1][b]. And even after it was, courts consistently denied protection against that degree of confusion caused by the copying of functional configurations.
As a practical matter, the fate of nonfunctional configurations within patented products has rarely been the subject of legal analysis, because courts often have found such designs to be functional.
See, e.g., In re Bose Corp.,
In two appellate decisions where courts have considered nonfunctional designs that were part of utility-patented products, we find an even split. In
In re Shakespeare,
We recognize also that consumer confusion resulting from the copying of product features is, in some measure, a self-fulfilling prophecy. To the degree that useful product configurations are protected as identifiers, consumers will come to rely on them for that purpose, but if copying is allowed, they will depend less on product shapes and more on labels and packaging.
We conclude that protecting against that degree of consumer confusion that may arise from the copying of configurations that are significant parts of patented inventions- is, at best, a peripheral concern of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act.
Conclusion: Balancing competing policies
Given, then, that core patent principles will be significantly undermined if we do not allow the copying in question, and peripheral Lanham Act protections will be denied if we do, our answеr seems clear. Much has been said in this and other section 43(a) cases about whether a second competitor needs to use a particular product design to compete effectively. But where Lanham Act goals are not the only ones at stake, we must also examine the degree to which a first competitor needs to use a useful product feature instead of something else — a name, a label, a *1510 package — to establish its brand identity in the first place.
It would defy logic to assume that there are not almost always many more ways to identify a product than there are ways to make it.
19
See In re Water Gremlin Co.,
We hold that where a disputed product configuration is part of a claim in a utility patent, and the configuration is a described, significant inventive aspect of the invention, see 35 U.S.C. § 112, so that without it the invention could not fairly be said to be the same invention, patent law prevents its protection as trade dress, even if the configuration is nonfunctional. 20
In future cases, the contribution of a particular configuration to the inventiveness of a patented product may not always be clear, and we do not wish to rule out the possibility that a court may appropriately conduct a factual inquiry to supplement its reading of the patent’s claims and descriptions.
But in this case, we do not find it necessary to remand for such an inquiry. Vorna-dо included the arcuate grill vane structure as an element of its patent claims and described the configuration as providing “an optimum air flow.” Then, after the first patent issued and Vornado subsequently found evidence that other grill structures worked as well as or better than the spiral grill, Vornado did not repudiate or disclaim in any way the grill element of its patent. Instead, Vornado sought and received a reissue patent that expanded its claims with respect to the grill.
Even if we discount entirely Vornado’s extensive advertising campaign emphasizing the importance of the “AirTensity Grill,” this patent history on its face obviates any need for a remand on the question of inventive significance. We simply take Vornado at its word. Because the “Patented AirTensity Grill” is a significant inventive element of Vornado’s patented fans, it cannot be protected as trade dress. The district court’s order is REVERSED.
Notes
. Under the Lanham Act, trademark owners can register their marks federally and thereby benefit from certain statutory advantages and presumptions. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. §§ 1065, 1072, 1111. One does not register a product’s trade dress — its overall look or image — but trade dress is protect *1500 ed under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a).
. It may also interfere with Duracraft's ability to practice other inventors' earlier spiral-vane inventions covered by previous, expired utility patents. But we need not rest our holding on this further interference, because the conflict with the ability to practice Vomado's invention in the future is clear.
. In Brunswick, we examined at length the requirement that a product feature's design be nonfunctional before it can qualify for trademark or trade dress protection. We found that the cone-shaped cover of a spin-cast fishing reel was nonfunctional, because competitors did not need to use it in order to make an equally competitive product. Our definition of functionality relied heavily on the existence of a sufficient number of alternatives, or substitutes, for the design in question. See id. at 518-20. The question of potential conflict with patent law was not before us in Brunswick, however, because the evidence concerning an expired utility patent had not been made part of the record on appeal. See id. at 521 n. 4.
. Duracraft contends on appeal that the court either overlooked or misunderstood some of Du-racraft's evidence regarding the grill's superior efficiency. Appellant's Br. at 37 & n. 9. We need not decide whether the court’s factual finding was clearly erroneous, because we decide this case on a point of law.
. The court did not discuss the evidence suggesting that, regardless of whether the Patented Air-Tensity Grill offеred any real operational advantages, Vomado's advertising to that effect had succeeded in convincing at least some customers that it did.
See
Appellant’s App. at 1854-72, 2676, 2678-81, 2683-85, 2701, 2703-05, 2707-09. If Vornado stimulated enough consumer demand to create a submarket for fans with spiral grills, Duracraft would be entitled to compete in that submarket, as well as in the broader fan market.
See J.C. Penney Co. v. H.D. Lee Mercantile Co.,
. The name "Vornado” is a combination of the words "vortex” and "tornado,” and the court found that the spiral design evoked a mental picture of these two concepts.
.Vornado insists in its brief that the district court made an alternative finding of secondary meaning, but what the court actually found was just an association between the grill design and Vornado, not that the primary significance of the design in the consumer's mind was as a brand identifier, rather than as a grill type. Some of our previous cases may have led Vornado to believe that mere association is sufficient.
See, e.g., Marker Int'l v. DeBruler,
. Vornado did not appeal the court's treatment of its registered trademark and common law unfair competition claims.
. In
Brunswick,
we found protected trade dress in the cone-shaped cover of a spin-cast fishing reel.
See
. In its motion for emergency stay pending appeal and in its reply brief on appeal, Duracraft questioned whether the Supreme Court’s language in
Two
Pesos, - U.S. at -,
. Nor do wе need to take a position on whether utility patents should be viewed differently than design patents, as some courts have held.
See Kohler Co. v. Moen Inc.,
.Indeed, the fact that Vornado applied for and received a reissue patent broadening its claims with respect to the grill would belie any insignificance argument the company might make.
The district court noted that neither party had asked the court to rule on the Vornado patents' validity, Appellant’s App. at 1152 (Mem. & Order), and it did not do so. Our analysis applies the statutory presumption of patent validity to all of the extant and expired patents involved in this case. See 35 U.S.C. § 282.
. Prior to revision, the relevant portion read:
(a) Any person who shall affix, apply, or annex, or use in connection with any goods or services, or any container or containers for goods, a false designation of origin, or any false description or representation, including words or other symbols tending falsely to describe or represent the same, and shall cause such goods or services to enter into commerce, and any person who shall with knowledge of the falsity of such designation of origin or description or representation cause or procure the same to be transported or used in commerce or deliver the same to any carrier to be transported or used, shall be liable to a civil action by any person doing business in the locality falsely indicated as that of origin or in the region in which said locality is situated, or by any person who believes that he is or is likely to be damaged by the use of any such false description or representation.
15 U.S.C.A. § 1125(a) (West 1982).
After the revision, the section read as follows: (a)(1) Any person who, on or in connection with any goods or services, or any container for goods, uses in commеrce any word, term, name, symbol, or device, or any combination thereof, or any false designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, or false or misleading representation of fact, which—
(A) is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive as to the affiliation, connection, or association of such person with another person, or as to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of his or her goods, services, or commercial activities by another person, or
(B) in commercial advertising or promotion, misrepresents the nature, characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin of his or her or another person's goods, services, or commercial activities,
shall be liable in a civil action by any person who believes that he or she is or is likely to be damaged by such act.
15 U.S.C.A. § 1125(a) (West Supp.1995) (This citation also reflects paragraphing changes from a 1992 amendment, but that amendment made no substantive changes to the wording relevant here).
. We also can distinguish
Singer
because it was decided at a time when the tort of unfair competition was generally perceived to require fraudulent passing off, and unfair competition law has since evolved and expanded, so that it may be violated without active deceit, wherever, a product shape has acquired secondary meaning and a likelihood of consumer confusion is found.
See
McCarthy,
supra,
§ 5.02. The force of this particular distinction is reduced, though, by the fact that both the Supreme Court and our own circuit have also preserved defendants' right to copy even where defendants were found to have deliberately palmed off their goods in an effort to deceive consumers.
See Warner & Co. v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
Kellogg, Sears,
and
Compco
arе distinguishable on the basis that neither secondary meaning nor inherent distinctiveness was found in those cases, whereas in our case the district court found inherent distinctiveness. And, finally, it is possible to distinguish
Bonito Boats
on the grounds that the statute struck down in that case offered broader protection to product shapes than does § 43(a).
See Kohler,
. Duracraft bases its argument on both the Patent Clause, U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8, and the Patent Act of 1952, codified as amended at Title 35 of the U.S.Code. We do not address the constitutional argument, however, unless this case cannot be resolved'as a matter of statutory law.
Jean v. Nelson,
. Vornado similarly draws too much from the language of two Supreme Court cases it cites. It points to
Two Pesos,
- U.S. at -, n. 1,
. While the Principal Register of trademarks provides similar notice to the public for registered trademarks, 15 U.S.C. § 1072, trade dress is a much more nebulous concept, not subject to registration, and an inventor may have difficulty determining whether someоne is claiming any given product shape or configuration as its protected trade dress.
. This is so because unfair competition law protects only the goodwill a producer has attained by virtue of its reputation for quality, not any goodwill that inheres in the product itself. If people like a particular product regardless of who produces it, that type of “product goodwill” is something all competitors are entitled to appropriate, once any applicable patents expire.
See Kellogg,
. Although a producer may find efficiencies in combining the brand-identifying function with a product's utilitarian function by using a useful product feature as a trademark or trade dress, we accord this type of efficiency little weight. Although the efficient combining of form and function is at the heart of good industrial design, promoting it is not a Lanham Act objectivе. For discussion of the repeated, unsuccessful attempts over the years to persuade Congress to pass a general industrial design protection bill, see
Bonito Boats,
. We note that our resolution of this issue will avoid any confusion as to the right to copy a patented invention which may arise by virtue of the fact that a feature can switch back and forth between being functional and nonfunctional with the vagaries of the marketplace.
Compare In re Honeywell, Inc.,
It also avoids potential problem scenarios in which a commercially unimportant but patented configuration is deemed nonfunctional and registered as a trademark, and then later, because of a change in the direction of research and development, inventors wish to use the old technology taught by the expired patent but cannot, because of the trademark. The Fourth Circuit has held that once a trademark becomes incontestable, it may not be cancelled on functionality grounds.
Shakespeare Co. v. Silstar Corp. of America, Inc.,
