Application of Beatrice Foods Co. Application of Fairway Foods, Inc

429 F.2d 466, 57 C.C.P.A. 1302
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedAugust 6, 1970
DocketPatent. Appeal 8294, 8295
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 429 F.2d 466 (Application of Beatrice Foods Co. Application of Fairway Foods, Inc) 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
Application of Beatrice Foods Co. Application of Fairway Foods, Inc, 429 F.2d 466, 57 C.C.P.A. 1302 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Judge.

This represents the first occasion on which this Court has been asked to review a decision of the Trademark Trial *469 and Appeal Board in a Concurrent Use Proceeding instituted under § 2(d) of the Lanham Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(d). 1 *Both parties to the proceeding below, 2 which involved two copending applications, have taken separate appeals from the board’s several decisions. 3 We have considered each party’s position independently, but since both appeals arise from the same proceeding and the parties have submitted a joint record, we shall dispose of the issues in both appeals in a single opinion.

Many of the facts before us were stipulated in a statement filed jointly by both parties under Rule 25 of this Court. The pertinent facts include the following:

Beatrice Foods Co., appellant in PA 8294, is a Delaware corporation having its home office in Chicago, Illinois. Beatrice is a manufacturer and processor of food products, distributing its goods through sales to wholesalers and retail chain supermarkets. Through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Shedd-Bartush Foods, Inc., of Michigan, Beatrice has marketed, since 1953, one-pound packages of oleomargarine under the brand name “Homestead.”

Fairway Foods, Inc., appellant in PA 8295, is a Minnesota corporation, having its home office in St. Paul, Minnesota. Unlike Beatrice, Fairway is only a wholesaler or distributor of food products, whose stockholders are retailers operating indidually-owned grocery stores or supermarkets under the trade-name “Fairway” or “Super Fair”. Since 1956, it has used the trademark “Homestead” for dairy products, including butter, milk, ice cream and eggs, and, since 1963, for a large variety of baked goods, all produced under its sponsorship.

On June 18, 1962, Fairway (hereinafter referred to as prior applicant) filed an application 4 to register its mark “Homestead” for dairy products on the Principal Register. That application was examined and, in due course, was found to be entitled to registration and published for opposition purposes. Beatrice Foods Co. (hereinafter referred to as prior user), filed an opposition 5 alleging prior use of the identical mark for oleomargarine.

In an attempt to settle their differences each party being satisfied that the other had registrable rights, the parties drew up an agreement geographically dividing the nation into two territories and each agreeing to recognize and hon- or the other’s exclusive rights within its territory. In partial execution of this agreement, the prior applicant amended its application to set forth, as an exception to its right to exclusive use of the mark, the right of Beatrice Foods to the same mark in specified geographical areas of the United States. Prior user, not having previously owned a federal *470 registration or any application therefor on its mark, now filed an application, 6 similarly setting forth, as an exception to its right to exclusive use of its mark, the right of Fairway Foods, Inc. to use the mark in certain specified geographical areas of the United States. This concurrent use proceeding was thereafter instituted and the opposition proceeding was suspended pending its outcome.

The parties at first filed a stipulation waiving the taking of testimony and submitting in lieu thereof their indicated agreement as to their rights to the concurrent registrations as they had geographically restricted them. Prior applicant had restricted its application to embrace the area comprising the states of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, certain counties comprising the eastern portion of Montana, and that area of Michigan, called the Upper Peninsula, which is contiguous with the State of Wisconsin and separated from the rest of the state by the Straits of Mackinac. Prior user claimed the area comprising the remainder of the United States.

The stipulation was not accepted, however, a member of the board, in a separate letter, stating that the parties would have to submit affirmative proofs. “Parties involved in a proceeding of the instant type,” the letter stated, “are adverse parties and they may not by agreement resolve a question which this Office has the responsibility to determine.” The parties were permitted, nevertheless, to submit their evidence by way of verified showings rather than by regular testimony, and they thereafter did so.

The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, in its first opinion, found the evidence submitted by each party to be insufficient “to establish rights in the mark in each and every one of the areas set forth in their respective applications for registration.” With regard to prior applicant, it was noted that while an intention of expanding into the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and the eastern portion of Montana had been expressed, there was no evidence to support an assertion of rights in those areas. Similarly, it was held that, since prior user had only shown evidence to support established rights in some 18 states, it was not entitled to claim rights in the remainder of the United States. Registration to both parties was refused until the parties restricted their applications “to those states with respect to which it is indicated that a satisfactory showing has been made.”

The party Beatrice, the prior user, requested reconsideration, arguing, first, that its proofs had shown actual use of its mark in 23 states and not 18 (three of these states comprised areas in which Fairway had also used its mark and which had been included in the “Fairway Territory” as part of the parties’ agreement), and, second, that its request for the remainder of the United States was supported by prior decisions holding that a prior user is entitled to a registration covering the entire country less the area in which the other party had established rights prior to the earliest filing date.

The board amended its earlier opinion so as to indicate that prior user had established rights in 20 states, 7 but adhered to its decision refusing to permit registration until the application was restricted to those 20 states, holding that the earlier eases upon which prior user had relied were superseded by the decision in Coastal Chemical Co. v. Dust-A Way, Inc., 263 F.Supp. 351 (W.D.Tenn. 1967). That case was stated to have ruled that parties to a concurrent use proceeding are entitled to registrations which must be restricted geographically *471 to those areas in which the marks involved have actually been used.

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Bluebook (online)
429 F.2d 466, 57 C.C.P.A. 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-beatrice-foods-co-application-of-fairway-foods-inc-ccpa-1970.