Alfred Electronics v. Alford Manufacturing Company

333 F.2d 912, 51 C.C.P.A. 1533, 142 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 168, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 337
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 9, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7192
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 333 F.2d 912 (Alfred Electronics v. Alford Manufacturing Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred Electronics v. Alford Manufacturing Company, 333 F.2d 912, 51 C.C.P.A. 1533, 142 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 168, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 337 (ccpa 1964).

Opinions

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

Alfred Electronics, owner of two registrations of “ALFRED” for certain electronics equipment, appeals from the adverse decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board in an interference between it and Alford Manufacturing Company, applicant for registration of' “ALFORD” for “antennas, high frequency components, such as hybrid junctions, side band filters, baluns, diplexers, slotted lines, r-f switching systems, and high frequency phase shifters.”

Alfred’s involved registrations, No. 677,965 for “traveling wave tube amplifiers, traveling wave tube power supply, sweeping power supply, and vacuum power controls,” and No. 684,034 for “sweeping oscillators, backward wave oscillator panels, levelers, thermocouple gauge controls, and ionization gauge controls” issued on May 5, 1959 and August 25, 1959, respectively, on applications filed on October 22, 1957 and December 22, 1958, respectively. Those applications alleged first use on December 15, 1949. Alford Manufacturing’s application, which alleges first use by December 1946, was filed on July 5, 1960, making Alfred the senior party.

The board held that Alford Manufacturing is entitled to the registration for which it has made application and stated that Alfred’s registrations will be can-celled in due course.

Both parties filed testimony and documentary exhibits. The evidence of Alford Manufacturing is dealt with in the board’s opinion, from which, in view of its thoroughness and accuracy on that point, we quote at length:

“According to testimony adduced in behalf of the junior party, ‘AL[914]*914FORD’ is the surname of Andrew Alford, the president of Alford Manufacturing Company and the owner of a majority of the stock of said company. Andrew Alford is a well known, nationally recognized authority and inventor in the television and FM-AM broadcasting antenna field and is the sole or joint owner of some one hundred patents primarily related to antennas and related wave guide devices, including a hyperbolic navigation system and antennas used to transmit signals in station broadcasts to aircraft, a number of which have been known and referred to as ‘Alford Loops’. In September 1945, while working part-time at the Radio Research Laboratory at Harvard University, Alford started his own business, a sole proprietorship, under the name, Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers, to engage in rendering consulting engineering services and the broadcasting antenna field. Alford terminated all connections with the Radio Research Laboratory on December 31, 1945 and from January 1946 on, he devoted all his time to his business. Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers first conducted business from Alford’s apartment and shortly afterwards from a place in Somerville, Massachusetts. In September 1947, Alford moved to Boston, Massachu-etts from which address he has continued to conduct his business. During the years from 1946 through 1948, Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers designed and developed transmitting and receiving antennas and associated equipment for use on aircraft, buses, and the like as well as antennas for color television tests, directional antenna, and similar devices to which were attached nameplates bearing the legend ‘Contractor, Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers’ or ‘Contractor, Andrew Alford’.
“On October 15, 1948, Alford organized the junior party, Alford Manufacturing Company, as a Massachusetts corporation doing business in Boston, Massachusetts at the same address as Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers. The junior party, shortly after its creation, adopted and began using a trademark including the letters ‘AMC’ or ‘AMCF on the background of what is referred to as a ‘Smith Chart’. This mark was prominently displayed on every name plate and catalog employed by the junior party. Beginning at least as early as November or December 1948, when it shipped a television diplex-ing filter from Boston to the Columbia Broadcasting System in New York City, the name plates affixed by the junior party to its goods have also displayed its corporate name ‘Alford Manufacturing Co.’ in block lettering above the address ‘Boston, Mass.’; and since about July 1955, ‘Alford’ has been prominently displayed on the nameplates and in advertising catalogs above the words ‘Manufacturing Co.’, and in a size much more readily discernible than the remaining portion of its corporate name. The junior party, with the exception of two years during the Korean War when its activities which were primarily concerned with commercial needs were curtailed, has been a going concern since its incorporation in the latter part of 1948. It has, since about 1953 or 1954 distributed catalogs describing its equipment to customers and prospective customers, it has advertised its equipment in various trade publications, and it has displayed its products at various conventions and shows, including, the IRE National Convention, the Wes-con Show, the National Electronics Conference, and the convention of the National Association of Broadcasters. ‘Alford’ has been promi[915]*915nently and distinctively featured on all of this material and displays. In addition, its equipment is referred to in invoices by the designation ‘Alford’ and sales contracts refer to ‘Alford Equipment’ and the like. The junior party expends about forty-eight thousand dollars a year in advertising its products, which includes the cost of attending and displaying such goods at conventions and shows. Sales of products by the junior party, which have been made for the most part through Manufacturers’ representatives in the United States and abroad, amounted to sixty-three and one half thousand dollars in 1949 and over six hundred thousand dollars in 1960.
“Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers and Alford Manufacturing Company have over the years existed as two distinctly different legal entities, the former, a sole proprietorship and the latter, a corpora-ion. Andrew Alford owns the controlling interest in the junior party, and Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers or, in fact, Andrew Alford, owns most of the facilities used by the junior party and does the actual manufacturing both for his own customers, and also as a subcontractor for the junior party. Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers is engaged primarily in electronic engineering consultation and development work for the government. The junior party manufactures and sells two principal lines of goods intended primarily for commercial as distinguished from governmental users, one line comprising television transmitting antennas and diplexers, vestigial side brand filters, hybrid diplexers, and miscellaneous hardware that goes with the radiating system of television or FM — AM broadcasting systems, and the other line comprising instruments, components, and allied items for radio frequency measurements and systems. The junior party has also from time to time made and sold special equipment in the same field or fields engaged in by Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers.”

The board rejected the claim of Alford Manufacturing that use of “ALFORD” by Andrew Alford or Andrew Alford Consulting Engineers inures to its benefit to give it use since December 1946. On the basis that Alford Manufacturing can rely on such use of “ALFORD” as it has made in its own behalf, the board found use of “ALFORD” “as the distinguishing feature of its trade name since about November or December 1948 and in the manner of a trademark since about July 1955.”1

The board also dealt in detail with the evidence for Alfred, stating:

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Alfred Electronics v. Alford Manufacturing Company
333 F.2d 912 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1964)

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333 F.2d 912, 51 C.C.P.A. 1533, 142 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 168, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-electronics-v-alford-manufacturing-company-ccpa-1964.