Corr v. Oldetyme Distillers, Inc.

118 F.2d 919, 28 C.C.P.A. 1057, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 187, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1941
DocketNo. 4438
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 118 F.2d 919 (Corr v. Oldetyme Distillers, 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
Corr v. Oldetyme Distillers, Inc., 118 F.2d 919, 28 C.C.P.A. 1057, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 187, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 62 (ccpa 1941).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The instant appeal is from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents, reversing a decision of the Examiner of Trade-mark Interferences who had held in a trade-mark interference proceeding that the appellee, Oldetyme Distillers,.Inc. (hereinafter called Oldetyme), the senior party, was not the owner of the mark involved and not entitled to registration of the same, and that the junior party John Laoghaire Corr (J. C. Yochim & Co., Inc., assignee substituted) (hereinafter called Corr and Yochim, respectively), was entitled to registration of the involved mark.

Although the interference as now constituted is between a single application of Yochim to register the words “THREE FEATHERS” associated with a pictorial representation of three feathers, and five applications of Oldetyme to register the words “THREE FEATHERS,” the word “FEATHERS,” a pictorial representation of three feathers, the. words “THREE FEATHERS” associated with a pictorial representation of three feathers, and the words “THREE FEATHERS” associated with a shield design, respectively, all being-used on distilled alcoholic beverages such as whiskey and gin, the issue is referred to by both parties and the tribunals below as involving but one mark, “THREE FEATHERS,” and we shall hereinafter so refer to it.

When the interference was originally set up, Corr was the junior party, having filed two applications, each of which was for the registration of a THREE FEATHERS mark, on May 27, 1935, slightly more than two months subsequent to the earliest filing date of the senior party Oldetyme. Corr filed a motion to dissolve on the ground that at the time of filing his two applications in controversy he was not using his mark in interstate commerce. After the motion -of Yochim to be substituted in place of Corr had been granted, the interference was dissolved as to Corr’s said applications on the ground that no valid registration could issue on them because of Corr’s admission that he had not used, in interstate commerce, the trade-mark sought [1059]*1059to be registered. The interference proceeded on the application of Yochim which was filed on July 21,1936, which was 16 months after the earliest filing date of Oldetyme — March 20, 1935. Since the burden-rested on the junior party, Yochim, to prove its right to priority and registration, it proceeded to take testimony, and subsequent thereto Oldetyme also took testimony.

As before stated, the Examiner of Interferences rendered a decision in favor of the junior party, and upon appeal to the commissioner the decision was reversed, and in the instant appeal appellant seeks a reversal of the commissioner’s decision.

At one time, each party, by showing transfers or attempted transfers, sought to trace its chain of title to the original owner and user of the mark, H. & H. W. Catherwood of Philadelphia, a firm consisting of Wilson Catherwood and Magnus H. Brown. In this court, Oldetyme does not contend that it has successfully proved a chain of title to the involved mark back to the said H. & H. W. Catherwood firm, but relies entirety upon ownership and use by it and its immediate predecessor, while Yochim attempts to antedate the said date relied upon by Oldetyme by proving a chain of title to the mark running back to a date prior to any established date to which Oldetyme is entitled.

We think, in view of our conclusion and in order that the facts of record relating to the proof of Yochim may be more readily understood, that it will be advantageous to first state the facts upon which Yochim predicates its claim of priority. It will be remembered that Corr originally filed applications for registration of the mark on'May 27,1935, at which time he had not made use of the same in interstate commerce, and the record discloses that he at no time made any use of the mark in interstate, commerce. Corr was, however, for seventeen years prior to the date national prohibition went into effect (January 16,1920) engaged as a salesman for THREE FEATHERS whiskey, being for a portion of that time in the employ of J. C. Campbell, who was the agent of the H. & H. W. Catherwood firm. Said agency handled sales in the city of New Orleans and vicinity. Campbell died in December 1915, and Corr took charge of the territory, where he remained in such charge until December 1918, at which time the business of TI. & H. W. Catherwood was discontinued, which discontinuance will be more particularly referred to hereinafter. The record does not disclose that Corr, while acting as said agent of the said Catherwood firm, ever claimed or asserted title to the trade-mark used, or ownership of the business with which he was connected.

The record shows that as early as 1900 the said Catherwood firm was a partnership composed of Wilson Catherwood and Magnus H. Brown; that Brown died in 1922 and Catherwood died in 1925. The Corn [1060]*1060Exchange National Bank and Trust Company of Philadelphia was the executor of the estate of Wilson Catherwood, and Winifred A. Brown and Francis H. Shields were executors of the estate of Magnus H. Brown. The trade-mark THREE FEATHERS was registered in the Patent Office by said Catherwood firm under certificates of registration Nos. 38,540 and 60,829, dated January 2,1906, and February 19, 1907, respectively, which certificates expired on January 2, 1926, and February 19, 1927, respectively, and were not renewed.

The record further shows that in November 1918, more than fourteen months prior to the advent of national prohibition, the Catherwood firm notified Corr, who was the New Orleans representative, as aforesaid, not to accept any orders for THREE FEATHERS whiskey for delivery after December 31, 1918. The said notification also stated that the firm had only sufficient THREE FEATHERS whiskey on hand to last for sixty days after January 1, 1919, in the home territory. After Corr had received the notification in November 1918 not to accept orders for delivery after December 31, 1918, he sent the Catherwood firm an order for fifty cases of THREE FEATHERS whiskey accompanied by a certified check. The check was returned with the statement that the order could not be filled due to the fact that the supply of THREE FEATHERS whiskey had been exhausted.

About one year prior to the advent of prohibition the Catherwood ■firm dispensed with the services of its manager, Paul Shuman. It gave him a letter of recommendation in which it was stated that “Due to our retiring from business we are compelled to dispense with his services.”

The Catherwood firm left its premises in Philadelphia soon after January 31, 1919, and in the early part of that month it addressed a circular letter, dated January 1, 1919, to each of its customers informing them that the firm intended to abandon its whiskey business. •At that time, fifteen states had ratified the Eighteenth Amendment of the Constitution relating to prohibition. In the said letter of •January 1, 1919, appeared the following:

On and after January 1, 1919, we will discontinue our branch offices, and will have no representatives.
Owing to the growth of prohibition legislation, and the impossibility of obtaining old whiskeys to keep up the high standard of our famous Three Feather Whiskey Blend, we have decided when our present stock is exhausted to retire from business.
It is with the utmost regret that we are forced to make this decision, and abandon a business which we have condiicted continuously since 1811, a period of 108 years.

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118 F.2d 919, 28 C.C.P.A. 1057, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 187, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corr-v-oldetyme-distillers-inc-ccpa-1941.