American Security Bank v. American Security & Trust Co.

571 F.2d 564, 197 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 1978 CCPA LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1978
DocketPatent Appeal No. 77-517
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 571 F.2d 564 (American Security Bank v. American Security & Trust Co.) 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
American Security Bank v. American Security & Trust Co., 571 F.2d 564, 197 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 1978 CCPA LEXIS 315 (ccpa 1978).

Opinions

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent and Trademark Office Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB), 190 USPQ 271 (1976), dismissing an opposition to the registration of AMERICAN SECURITY BANK on application serial No. 461,146, filed June 25, 1973, opposition No. 56,251. The TTAB made its decision on the basis of the pleadings and exhibits attached thereto, a stipulation of facts, and the papers in the application file. We affirm.

The rather simple facts are not in dispute and the appeal presents only questions of law. The facts are as follows:

Appellee, American Security and Trust Company, a District of Columbia corporation, located at 15th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., has used the mark AMERICAN SECURITY for banking services continuously since 1900. October 28, 1958, it obtained Principal Register registration No. 669,094 of AMERICAN SECURITY for “banking services,” claiming first use “at least as early as 1900.” June 27, 1967, appellee obtained Principal Register registration No. 831,232 of a composite mark consisting of a shield under which are the words AMERICAN SECURITY in large capital letters, beneath which in much small capital letters are the words AND TRUST COMPANY, for “banking [566]*566services.” Use of this mark since March 29, 1966, was alleged. The opposed application at bar alleges first use by applicant-appellee of AMERICAN SECURITY BANK for banking services on April 1, 1973. It also recites ownership of registrations No. 669,-094 and No. 831,232. It is stipulated that appellee has used its full corporate name continuously since at least 1900 “throughout ordinary domestic and foreign banking channels” and has advertised extensively throughout the metropolitan Washington area.

Opposer, American Security Bank, is a corporation of the state of Hawaii, located in the city of Honolulu. It has used its name continuously since 1935 in connection with banking services advertised extensively in Hawaii, and used it “throughout ordinary domestic and foreign banking channels.” American Security Bank has been insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), an agency of the United States Government, continuously since 1935. Opposer relies only on its use of its name, which is identical to the mark appellant seeks to register, and has not pleaded or alleged 'ownership of any registration.

Thus, to summarize the salient facts, applicant-appellee first used AMERICAN SECURITY for banking services, commencing in 1900, and thirty-five years later opposerappellant commenced the use, as its corporate name, of AMERICAN SECURITY BANK. Thirty-eight years thereafter, appellee commenced the use of AMERICAN SECURITY BANK for banking services. Such services are rendered by both parties “throughout ordinary domestic and foreign banking channels,” the meaning of which is not further elucidated by the record. However, it is clear that, whatever the outreach of the domestic and foreign services, opposer operates out of Honolulu and applicant out of Washington, D.C.

On these facts, the TTAB held that appellee “possesses superior rights in the mark for which it seeks registration,” citing our decisions in Hollowform, Inc. v. Delma Aeh, 515 F.2d 1174, 185 USPQ 790 (Cust. & Pat.App.1975), and American Novawood Corp. v. U. S. Plywood-Champion Papers Inc., 426 F.2d 823, 57 CCPA 1276, 165 USPQ 613 (1970), on which basis it dismissed the opposition. In reaching the conclusion of superior rights in appellee, the TTAB reasoned that it had used AMERICAN SECURITY long prior to opposer’s first use of its name and that “the addition of the purely descriptive term ‘BANK’ to its long-used mark has [not] in any way altered the trademark significance thereof.” This we take to be one way of saying that AMERICAN SECURITY and AMERICAN SECURITY BANK are legal equivalents for the purposes of this case, taking into consideration the fact that both are used for banking services. Later in the TTAB opinion it was stated that the marks before it are “legal equivalents.”

In support of its view that AMERICAN SECURITY BANK is the “legal equivalent” of AMERICAN SECURITY, which gives appellee the right to regard its use of the latter as equivalent to the Use of the former and to carry that use back to 1900, the board cited the following decisions: Vacuum-Electronics Corp. v. Electronic Engineering Co. of California, 150 USPQ 215 (TTAB 1966), an opposition to registration of EECO in block letter form based on opposer’s use of VEECO since 1955, wherein it was held that applicant had the benefit of the use of EECO since 1953, the letters being “arranged in a diagonally descending line with a circle”; Architectural Catalog Co. v. F. W. Dodge Corp., 1136 F.2d 1008, 30 CCPA 1215, 58 USPQ 405 (1943), an opposition to registration of “Architecture and Design” as a periodical title based on several titles used by opposer and containing dictum that it is the words themselves rather than their type style or arrangement that must be considered on the question of confusion; and Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Sekisui Chemical Co. Ltd. of Japan, 165 USPQ 597, 605 (TTAB 1970), oppositions in which the TTAB held Sekisui to be the prior user on the basis that S-LON and ESLON are “legal equivalents,” citing Vacuum-Electronics, supra, S-Lon being the form in which the mark was originally used, later changed to ESLON.

[567]*567Appellant’s arguments, in summary, are that it was the first user of AMERICAN SECURITY BANK, that that mark is not the legal equivalent of the mark AMERICAN SECURITY, that it would be damaged by issuance of the requested registration of its name to appellee, and that appellee is not entitled to registration because it is not entitled to the exclusive use of AMERICAN SECURITY BANK in commerce.

Appellee argues simply that the “trademark significance” resides entirely in the words AMERICAN SECURITY, of which it is the prior and registered user, and that the addition of the purely descriptive word “Bank” is no change at all, leaving the marks legally identical or equivalent. Assuming the validity of this legal proposition, appellee then says that our decision in Hollowform, supra, is controlling, standing, as it does, for the proposition that when an applicant possesses superior rights in a mark, an opposer who innocently adopts the “same” (meaning legally equivalent) mark at a later date cannot be damaged by registration to the applicant. It says its rights are “vastly superior” to those of appellant who is a “late-comer.”

OPINION

Our ruling in Hollowform indicates that this court, unless dealing with a concurrent use proceeding, approves the issuance of an unrestricted registration to an applicant having “superior” rights in a mark acquired through prior use vis-a-vis an opposer, notwithstanding the opposer may have acquired some rights through subsequent innocent adoption and use. However, in Hollowform, the marks before us were TOPKAT and TOP KAT. We said that “in contemplation of law” those marks were “identical.” That is, of course, not the situation here. Appellee appreciates this limitation on the significance of Hollow-form as a precedent in urging that the marks here are “legally identical” and that we are dealing with “legal equivalency of the two marks.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
571 F.2d 564, 197 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 1978 CCPA LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-security-bank-v-american-security-trust-co-ccpa-1978.