Application of G. Leblanc Corporation

429 F.2d 989, 57 C.C.P.A. 1339
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedAugust 27, 1970
DocketPatent Appeal 8309
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 429 F.2d 989 (Application of G. Leblanc Corporation) 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 G. Leblanc Corporation, 429 F.2d 989, 57 C.C.P.A. 1339 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision 1 of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board sustaining the refusal to register on the Principal Register, as a trademark for trumpets, “the provision of a plate-like configuration with its periphery defining a discernible enlargement on the brace adjacent the main tuning slide” of the trumpet. The drawing submitted with appellant’s application 2 to illustrate the asserted trademark is reproduced below:

It appears from the record that the “plate-like configuration” visible on the brace of the trumpet in the illustration is, as actually used by appellant, a medallion bearing the profile representations of Georges LeBlanc, the founder of appellant corporation, and Leon, his son. It is also clear that appellant considers its trademark to be the provision of a medallion on the brace of the trumpet, although during prosecution it was stated that “[i]t is not particularly important just what the medallion is, since it is the provision of a medallion brace which is the distinguishing feature.” The present characterization of the asserted trademark, in language broad enough to read on a blank disc being used in place of the medallion was inserted in the application by appellant in an attempt to overcome the examiner’s insistence that the drawing be amended in order that the details of the medallion be shown more clearly. Appellant now stresses that:

Trademark rights are asserted in the plate-like enlargement itself, insofar as the present proceeding is concerned, irrespective of whether the indicia on the face of the enlargement are visible or not.

Appellant has included in the record, in an effort to prove that its so-called “medallion - brace’’ * does function as a trademark, a number of letters from customers, prospective customers and dealers, typical of which is the following:

Dear Charley—
The medallion on the brace on the trumpet gives immediate recognition to the viewer (no matter what the distance) that this instrument is a LeBlanc. No other instrument has any identifying mark of that nature and because of this the LeBlanc medallion makes it an easy matter to recognize.
My regards to Vito and everyone, /s/ Al Hirt

In refusing to register appellant’s mark, the examiner first took the position that appellant was attempting to register the “mere location” of a particular medallion on the brace of a trumpet and that a “location,” per se, cannot function as a trademark. 3 Alternatively, he argued that if the trademark is considered to be a “medallion brace,” as it is characterized by appellant, it would still not be registrable since a brace is a purely functional feature of a trumpet and regardless of the fact that its center is somewhat enlarged, appellant’s trumpet brace is primarily functional. The solicitor has essentially repeated these two arguments.

*991 The board affirmed the refusal to register, but for what appear to be entirely different reasons. Evidently rejecting the “functionality” argument, 4 but agreeing that appellant was asserting rights in a “location,” the board went on to concede that, while a particular location on particular goods might be registrable, appellant had not satisfactorily established that it was the particular location rather than the 'medallion itself which was recognized by the public as appellant’s trademark. The following excerpts from the board’s opinion will bear out this interpretation of its holding:

In our opinion, what applicant seeks to register is the location of the background vehicle for applicant’s actual mark, a medallion bearing a specific design, and that it is the latter means by which persons would actually identify applicant’s goods and distinguish them from the goods of others.
Applicant has submitted in evidence several letters by dealers in musical instruments to the effect that the placing of the medallion on the brace for the trumpet was a good means to identify the instruments as to origin, and a large number of letters from customers, prospective customers and dealers, who state in effect that they can recognize the Leblanc medallion on the brace of the trumpet even at a considerable distance.
While it may well be that the aforementioned persons recognize the Leblanc medallion from a distance and know of its location on the trumpet (because they have no doubt previously and frequently viewed the instrument at close range), the letters are not persuasive that the location of a plate-like configuration identifies applicant’s goods and distinguishes them from the goods of others.

The examiner and the board based their respective positions on the holding of this court in In re Kotzin, 276 F.2d 411, 47 CCPA 852 (1960). In that case, the asserted trademark was the location, in a vertical position near the waistband of men’s trousers, of a rectangular, cloth label. The position of the Patent Office had been, as was the examiner’s here, that a “location” can not function as a trademark. We rejected that position, using the following language:

[Wjhile granting that a location per se cannot be a trademark, we do not see why a particular “tag” (which is what the application calls for), particularly located on particular goods, cannot indicate origin.

Having held that the mark there sought to be registered was not inherently incapable of functioning as a trademark, the court went on to affirm the board’s decision because the record did not establish that the mark was, in fact, a trademark. It was pointed out that the label served as the vehicle for some very prominent writing, including a word trademark for the goods there involved. Because of this fact, it was felt that the visual significance of the label, by itself, would far outweigh any trademark significance in its particular point of attachment, “submerging the latter to a point of insignificance.” From this point, the court continued:

If there were no visible writing on the tag so that its presence in the side seam near the waistband seemed to be

arbitrary, we might feel otherwise.

The parallel of the instant case with the facts in Kotzin is striking. Recognizing this parallel, appellant has argued that it has demonstrated that its particular device (the medallion), located in this particular position (on the brace adjacent the tuning slide) on this particular instrument (trumpet), identifies the instrument as being a LeBlanc in *992 strument and does so “even though the indicia thereon cannot be seen.” (Emphasis appellant’s). The board, on the other hand, held, as indicated earlier, that all it could be sure of from appellant’s evidence was that people recognize the LeBlanc medallion as a trademark.

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Bluebook (online)
429 F.2d 989, 57 C.C.P.A. 1339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-g-leblanc-corporation-ccpa-1970.