Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Black & Decker Mfg. Co.

39 F.2d 684, 17 C.C.P.A. 962, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 10, 1930
DocketPatent Appeal 2300
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 F.2d 684 (Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Black & Decker Mfg. 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
Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Black & Decker Mfg. Co., 39 F.2d 684, 17 C.C.P.A. 962, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 236 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

GARRETT, Associate Judge.

This proceeding involves a petition by appellee for the cancellation of the trademark “Hicycle” registered by appellant under the Trade-Mark Act of February 20, 1905 (15 USCA §§ 81-109 as amended), in the United States Patent Office, the date of its registration being June 30, 1925, No. 200,387.

Appellant is a New Jersey corporation engaged largely in the manufacture of portable power tools, including electrical tools and devices. Petitioner is a Maryland corporation similarly engaged.

The history of the proceedings appears to be that appellant learned that appellee was using the words “High Cycle Tool” upon the name plates of certain of the tools of the latter’s manufacture. These words were not registered, nor had appellee offered to register them. Upon obtaining the information as to their use by appellee, appellant on August 25, 1926, gave notice to the former to cease immediately the use of “ ‘High Cycle’ and of all other words or expressions identical with or closely simulating the registered trade-mark of Chicago Pneumatie Tool Company, which may deceive or confuse the public as to the origin of the goods.”

The Black & Decker Manufacturing Company thereupon filed its petition in the Patent Office, praying that the certificate of registration of the word “Hicycle” to Chicago Pneumatie Tool Company be canceled.

Petitioner alleged that the word “Hieycle” was a misspelled descriptive word, not entitled to registration for use on the goods for which’ it was registered, that it was not in any sense a trade-mark by which “the goods of the registrant may be distinguished from other goods of the same class” and that it was not entitled to registration under section 5 of the Trade-Mark Act (15 USCA § 85). It further alleged that it deemed itself to be injured and damaged.

*685 Appellant admits that its registered trademark “Hicyele” is formed “by combining and phonetically spelling the words 'High Cycle,’ ” but denies that it is descriptive of its goods or of the character and quality thereof; insists that it was and is entitled to the registration, and denies that petitioner has been injured in its business as alleged.

The Examiner of Interferences sustained the petition, and upon appeal his decision was affirmed by the Commissioner. From this latter decision the matter is brought before us by further appeal.

Other allegations and assertions contained in the petition and answer are omitted from our statement because not material to the issue upon which the ease must turn, viz. Is the word “Hicyele” a descriptive word, as applied to the goods involved, and so barred by the statute? It is conceded that the goods to which the respective words are applied are of the same descriptive properties, practically identical in some instances, and that? “Hicyele” is a phonetic spelling of a combination of the two words “High” and “Cycle.”

The pertinent portion of section 5 of the 1905 Trade-Mark Act (15 USCA § 85) reads:

“Provided, That no mark which consists merely * *' “ in words * * which are descriptive of the goods with which they are used, or of the character or quality of such goods, * * * shall be registered under the terms of this subdivision of this chapter.”

The goods upon which the respective words at issue are applied consists of articles such as portable drills, screwdrivers, socket wrenches, and grinding machines, so manufactured as to contain electrically operated motors for motivating the tool part, or machine. Appellant claims use of its word on the generator sets also.

The particular tools to which the respective words are applied are tools operating at a frequency in excess of 60 cycles per second.

In electrical nomenclature, a cycle, ás defined by the Examiner of Interferences, who seems to have followed the definition given in a work on General Physics filed as one of petitioner’s exhibits in the ease, is that it “consists of two successive reversals of directions of the electromotive force or current.”

Funk & Wagnalls’ New Standard Dictionary defines .“cycle”:

“Elec. A full period of an alternating current, beginning at the zero line, going to maximum in one sense, returning to zero, going to maximum in the other sense, and then returning to zero.”

What is known as “frequency” depends upon the number of cycles per second; that is, the “number of cycles is called the frequency."

To express the matter in common parlance, as best we can, we understand that the number of revolutions or the speed of operation of the tool, say of the drill, in these “Hieycle” and “High Cycle” devices, is dependent upon the frequency of the alternations of the electric current in the motors which constitute their propelling power, and this frequency depends upon the number of cycles per second- — -that is, upon the number of times per second which the current makes two successive reversals of direction. The electromotive force passing from the starting point to maximum in one sense, thence hack by the starting point' to maximum in another sense, and thence hack to starting point, constitutes a cycle, and the number of cycles per second determines “frequency,” which in turn governs the number of revolutions or the speed of the tool as it operates.

Appellant seems to have been first in the field in the manufacture of the particular articles to which the respective words are applied. It began to place its goods upon the market in the latter part of 1924 or early in 1925. Appellee began to place drills on the market in February, 1926, and other classes in March, April, and July, 1926, respectively. In each instance the actual development of the tools in their respective plants had preceded these respective dates; appellant being the earlier in development as well as in marketing.

Much testimony was taken in the ease by both parties; portions of it being quite technical in character and dealing with the meaning of electrical terms and phraseology. Many exhibits were filed, and the case was ably presented by both briefs and oral arguments.

To review the evidence in minute detail would unduly lengthen this opinion. It has received our very careful study and analysis.

We think it may be taken as conceded that the phonetically spelled word “Hicyele” has whatever meaning attaches to the two words “High Cycle.” If the phrase is descriptive, then the word is equally so and vice versa. In other words, if appellant was *686 entitled to register “Hicyele” it might have registered “High Cyele” also; they mean the same thing, and “Hicyele” is not a coined word except as it is phonetically spelled. We therefore treat the word and the phrase as being synonymous.

Appellant’s insistence is that the evidence of the experts in the electrical art who were called shows that “High Cyele” is hot synonymous with “High Frequency” and that the phrase from which it made its word is not, when “High” and “Cyele” are considered in the light of théir respective definitions, descriptive of its goods or their qualities and characteristics.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.2d 684, 17 C.C.P.A. 962, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-pneumatic-tool-co-v-black-decker-mfg-co-ccpa-1930.