Application of Myers

201 F.2d 379, 40 C.C.P.A. 747
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1953
DocketPatent Appeals 5904
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 201 F.2d 379 (Application of Myers) 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 Myers, 201 F.2d 379, 40 C.C.P.A. 747 (ccpa 1953).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of an Examiner-in-Chief, 1 acting for the Commissioner of Patents by delegation under Reorganization Plan No. 5 of 1950, 5 U.S. C.A. § 133Z-15 note, 15 Fed.Reg. 3174, affirming the refusal by the Primary Exam-er to register a composite mark consisting of a silhouette of a human female figure holding a drawn bow and arrow and having above the figure the words “Sure Shot” in curved arrangement, the words being printed with somewhat fanciful black-faced type, as a trade-mark for a “Topical Liquid Preparation For Treatment of Dandruff.” A topical liquid is one for local application, according to Webster’s New International Dictionary.

The mark is one which was in use by applicant’s predecessor in business (her hus- and, Harry H. Myers) and by herself as his successor, on merchandise of the identical kind described, over a long period of years. Its use is alleged in the application to have begun November 15, 1929 and it was registered (Registration 273,954) on August 19, 1930, to Harry H. Myers, doing business as Mobile Barber and Beauty Supply House of Mobile, Alabama, as a trade-mark for identical goods. It was republished July 13, 1948 under the Act of 1946, 15 U.S.C.A. § 1051 et seq., but application was not made for its renewal on the date it was due to expire (August 19, 1950), as normally might have been done before, or within three months after, that date by complying with Patent Office Trade-Mark Rules 35.2 and 35.3.

The failure to make such application has been explained in the briefs of appellant in this case and in another proceeding before the court, to which latter proceeding it is necessary to refer in order properly to decide this case. 2 The proceeding alluded to is one for cancellation of appellant’s registration 273,954, instituted in the Patent Office by Polk Miller Products Corporation on December 20, 1948 — cancellation No. 5316 — which this court decided concurrently herewith. See Myers v. Polk Miller Products Corporation, 201 F.2d 373, 40 C.C.P.A., Patents, —.

In that case the Polk Miller Products Corporation pleaded ownership of a mark (Registration No. 226,819) consisting of the words “Sure Shot” printed in black-faced capital letters, used as a trade-mark for “Capsules and a liquid preparation for dogs.” The president of the corporation testified that the trade-mark “is applied to a soft gelatin capsule containing.an anthelmintic drug;” that is, a drug used for the destruction of worms in animals. The petition for cancellation made the customary allegations as to similarity of the respective marks; similarity of the properties of the respective goods; likelihood of confusion as to origin with resultant injury to petitioner, etc. (matters more fully discussed in our decision in the cancellation proceeding, supra), and prayed for cancellation of Myers’ registration.

As may be seen from our decision in that oase, the Examiner-in-Chief reversed *381 the decision of the Examiner of [TradeMark] Interferences and held in the decision, 87 USPQ 224, that the registration 273,954 to Harry H. Myers “should he can-celled.” This, it will be observed, was subsequent to the expiration date of the registration of August 19, 1950, but was within the time in which renewal normally might have been obtained by compliance with the Trade-Mark Rules, above-named. No reference to the expiration was made in the decision of the Examiner-in-Chief, and a petition for reconsideration was denied by him on November 22, 1950, which was two days after the date (November 20th) on which application for renewal might have been made under the Patent Office TradeMark Rules.

Notice of appeal to this court from the decision of the Examiner-in-Chief was filed in the Patent Office December 16, 1950, as a result of which notice jurisdiction of the interference proceeding passed from the Commissioner of Patents to this court. In re Allen, Jr., 115 F.2d 936, 28 C.C.P.A., Patents, 792, and cases therein cited.

However, on February 27, 1951, appellee Polk Miller Products Corporation filed in the Patent Office a motion to dismiss the appeal alleging that “Said appeal is now moot in view of the expiration of said Registration 273,954,” and on March 12, 1951, appellant Myers filed a “Memorandum opposing motion to dismiss,” in which it was assented that “the issues to be decided in said appeal are not moot, even though said registration, No. 273,954 has expired.”

In the memorandum it was also stated:

“4. That Appellant has filed in the Patent Office an application for the mark shown in said registration and for the same goods, under Serial No. 608,-844, on January 22, 1951; and that such application is being specially examined in order to merge the matters relating to said application with the record of said cancellation and to thereby provide subject matter having substantially the same issues as those relating to' the cancellation of Registration No, 273,954.”

The application so alluded to is the one here before us on appeal. It is, of course, made under the Trade-Mark Registration Act of 1946.

The subsequent actions in the cancellation proceedings are related in our decision in that case, and need not be repeated here in detail.

For the reasons stated in our decision in the cancellation proceeding, we were of opinion and held that the Examiner-in-Chief, who acted for the Commissioner in that case, erred in reversing the decision of the Examiner of [Trade-Mark] Interferences.

For substantially the same reasons given for the reversal of the decision of the Examiner-in-Chief there, we feel constrained to reverse the decision of the Examiner-in-Chief 3 who acted in this ex parte case and affirmed the decision of the Primary Examiner. 4

As a matter of fact,' the decision of the Examiner-in-Chief in the cancellation proceeding was the basis of the rejection of appellant’s application'by the respective tribunals of the Patent Office in the instant ex parte proceeding.

In his first office action on the application on February 9, 1951, the Primary Examiner said only:

In view of the decision in cancellation No. 5316 Registration is refused on:

“226,819 — Polk Miller Products Corporation Registered April 19, 1927 (Renewed Polk Miller Products Corp.)” and in his statement following the appeal to the Commissioner he said:

“The word feature of both marks is identical and it is the opinion of the Examiner that concurrent use of the marks on the goods of record would be likely to' result in confusion, mistake or the deception of purchasers.
*382

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201 F.2d 379, 40 C.C.P.A. 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-myers-ccpa-1953.