Colony Foods, Inc. v. Sagemark, Ltd.

735 F.2d 1336, 222 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 185, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 15023
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 1984
DocketAppeal 84-562
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 735 F.2d 1336 (Colony Foods, Inc. v. Sagemark, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colony Foods, Inc. v. Sagemark, Ltd., 735 F.2d 1336, 222 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 185, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 15023 (Fed. Cir. 1984).

Opinion

NIES, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board dismissing a petition to cancel Registration No. 1,027,607 owned by Sagemark, Ltd., for the mark HUNGRY HOBO for restaurant services, based on asserted likelihood of confusion with marks of Colony Foods, Inc. Colony seeks reversal of this holding, and also of the refusal of the board to allow amendment of its petition for cancellation to raise an issue of abandonment of the HUNGRY HOBO mark. We affirm.

Background

Colony Foods, Inc., appellant, filed a petition to cancel Registration No. 1,027,607, issued December 16, 1974, for the mark HUNGRY HOBO for restaurant services, a registration now owned by Sagemark, Ltd. The petition for cancellation alleged that HUNGRY HOBO restaurant services were likely to be attributed to Colony because of likelihood of confusion of that mark with Colony’s prior use of a family of HOBO marks. Specifically, Colony relied on ownership of the marks HOBO JOE’S, Registration No. 995,103, issued October 8, 1974, and HOBO JOE’S COFFEE SHOPS and design, Registration No. 859,466 issued October 29, 1968, both for restaurant services; HOBO JOE’S and design, Registration No. 827,137, issued April 11, 1967, for dolls and ceramic coffee mugs; and HOBO JUNCTION, Registration No. 1,030,322, issued January 13, 1976, for restaurant services. The registration for HOBO JUNCTION was cancelled for failure to file a declaration of use under 15 U.S.C. § 1058(a), and Colony no longer relies on rights in this mark. The design associated with some displays of HOBO JOE’S and claimed in the two registrations is a draw *1338 ing of a heavy-set tramp carrying his belongings on a stick over his shoulder.

The evidence on behalf of appellant established that Colony acquired rights in the mark HOBO JOE’S by acquisition of a chain of coffee shops, which had been in operation under that name in Phoenix, Arizona, since 1965. The “hobo” motif has been utilized by Colony in its decor and advertising. Its business has expanded from the eight or nine shops in the Phoenix area to 58 locations primarily in the southwest (including Texas). At least two locations have had cocktail lounges, called HOBO HIDEAWAY and HOBO HANGOUT, respectively, since prior to Sage-mark’s date of first use. Colony asserts that its purported family of HOBO marks also includes unregistered names used on menu items, e.g., HOBO STEW, HOBO BOY HAMBURGER, HOBO BURGER, HOBO BUTTERMILK PANCAKES.

Sagemark began use of HUNGRY HOBO for restaurant services in 1974 at which time it was aware of the HOBO JOE’S registration. Sagemark’s business has also enjoyed success, expanding from three restaurants in 1974 to seven company-owned and nine franchised restaurants which are located in Illinois and Iowa. After its registration issued, Sagemark discovered a Texas concern was also operating restaurants under the name HUNGRY HOBO, albeit in a territory outside the area in which Sagemark was using the mark, and had rights prior to Sagemark’s. These parties resolved the inchoate conflict by an agreement under which the Texas company’s rights were recognized in the five-state area comprising Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico.

The registration sought to be cancelled is for the word mark per se. However, the evidence includes displays of HUNGRY HOBO with a slender man in a top hat and patched tuxedo leaning on a cane. Sage-mark also introduced four registrations and some evidence of use of third-party marks incorporating the term “hobo” for foods and restaurant services. Colony apparently made some objection to Sagemark in February 1976 respecting its registration of HUNGRY HOBO, but did nothing more until almost five years later when it filed the subject petition to cancel.

On the issue of likelihood of confusion the board found that the services of the parties were competitive in nature but that the marks were sufficiently different to avoid the confusion of source alleged by Colony.

Late in the cancellation proceeding, Colony sought to amend its petition to assert that Sagemark had abandoned its mark. As grounds for abandonment, Colony put forth the concurrent use agreement entered by Sagemark with the Texas concern as negating Sagemark’s right to the unrestricted registration. The board refused to allow the amendment, holding that the issue of abandonment had not been tried by the parties, and that in any event, only the concurrent user could challenge Sage-mark’s right to a territorially unrestricted registration, citing Giant Food, Inc. v. Malone & Hyde, Inc., 522 F.2d 1386, 187 USPQ 374 (CCPA 1975).

Colony appeals from the decision on the issue of likelihood of confusion and from the board’s refusal to accept its motion.

Analysis

Colony contends that the board, in finding no likelihood of confusion, erroneously based its decision on differences in the respective hobo designs or on differences in the motifs of the respective restaurants. Our reading of the board’s decision indicates, contrary to Colony’s view, that the board properly considered only the marks at issue. While the board noted, as part of its background discussion, that the parties associated their word marks with distinctively different designs, and operated in their own particular styles, neither factor is relied on in the board’s analysis of the issue of likelihood of confusion. The specific holding of the board is that:

Comparing the most pertinent of petitioner’s marks, “HOBO JOE’S” and “HOBO JOE’S” with a hobo design, with respondent’s mark “HUNGRY HOBO”, *1339 we note that in each mark the word, “HOBO”, plays an important and it may be said, a dominant role. Therefore, resolution of the matter hinges on what, if any, distinction is afforded by the additional matter found in each mark. Comparing them in their entireties, we find petitioner’s mark [HOBO JOE’S] to designate a particular person of the itinerant or vagrant persuasion while respondent’s mark [HUNGRY HOBO] gives the impression of an anonymous person of that kind in need of a meal. Thus, customers would leave petitioner’s restaurants with an image of a particular individual hobo named Joe, as opposed to the concept of an anonymous hobo whose distinguishing characteristic is that he happens to be hungry, as would be the case with respondent’s mark. Stated otherwise, the fact that both marks play on the hobo theme is not enough to make confusion likely, in light of the differences in the marks as a whole.

Colony also asserts that the board erred in failing to consider Colony’s “family” of HOBO marks. That Colony has a number of marks combining HOBO with another word does not establish any rights of Colony in the word HOBO as a “family” name. Witco Chemical Co. v. Whitfield Chemical Co., 418 F.2d 1403, 1406, 164 USPQ 43, 45, 57 CCPA 804, 808 (1969); Polaroid Corp. v. Richard Mfg. Co., 341 F.2d 150

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735 F.2d 1336, 222 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 185, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 15023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colony-foods-inc-v-sagemark-ltd-cafc-1984.