G. H. Packwood Mfg. Co. v. Cofax Corporation (Three Cases)

183 F.2d 196, 37 C.C.P.A. 1195
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1950
DocketPatent Appeal 5709-5711
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 F.2d 196 (G. H. Packwood Mfg. Co. v. Cofax Corporation (Three Cases)) 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
G. H. Packwood Mfg. Co. v. Cofax Corporation (Three Cases), 183 F.2d 196, 37 C.C.P.A. 1195 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Judge.

There are here three appeals from decisions of the Commissioner of Patents rendered by him in three opposition proceedings. The goods involved consist of certain office supplies. One appeal is from the commissioner’s decision, 77 U.S.P.Q. 329, in opposition No. 24,197, where the identical mark “Pax” was used on the goods by both parties; the other appeals are from the commissioner’s decision, 77 U.S.P.Q. 331, in oppositions Nos. 24,665 and 24,666, where the basic feature of the mark “Pax” was incorporated in appellee’s two marks, “Paxite” and “Paxomat,” and used in the sale of its goods. All three oppositions were dismissed by the commissioner.

The subject matter of the different controversies is closely related and but one record containing all the evidence has been submitted, much of which is overlapping. It is deemed appropriate therefore to consolidate the three appeals and discuss them in but one opinion.

These appeals involve the confusion in trade clause of section 5 of the TradeMark Act of 1905, 33 Stat. 725, as amended. The commissioner in reaching his final conclusion in the opposition No. 24,197, 77 U.S.P.Q. 329, stated he was influenced therein to some extent by the closely related features of the companion oppositions, Nos. 24,665 and 24,666, 77 U.S.P.Q. 331.

Both parties took testimony and submitted in evidence the several contested marks. At the hearings, the parties were represented by respective counsel who cross-examined witnesses.

G. H. Packwood, Jr., testified he had been president of appellant, a St. Louis organization, since its incorporation in 1926; that the principal products sold by appellant were industrial skin cleansers, or crystallized soaps, cleansing cream for removing hectograph ink stains from the hands, soap dispensing equipment, and a liquid cement to be used in the attachment of the soap dispensing equipment to walls or other surfaces.

Appellant’s first registered trade-mark adopted for use with its hand and skin cleanser “Pack’s” was issued February 14, 1928; the second registered mark adopted and used by appellant for its soaps, “Pax,” was issued on February 19, 1929. On August 12, 1941, appellant again registered “Pax” for use with its dispensers of powdered or granulated soap. Appellant in its advertising and on printed labels also used the notation “Pax-C-Ment” in the sale of the liquid cement hereinbefore described.

In short, appellant since the beginning of 1929 had owned and continuously used “Pax,” and subsequently the notation “PaxC-Ment,” on products manufactured and sold by appellant, including plastic cement, or. liquid adhesive in small bottles, in the nature of glue, as a general purpose adhesive. Appellant also manufactured and sold crystallized soap for use either separately or in soap dispensers. Appellant also manufactured and sold the soap dispensers, each of which bore on the attached label both the appellant’s registered trade-mark “Pax” and the notation “Pax-C-Ment.”

The record discloses that long subsequent to the date of appellant’s adoption and first use of its mark “Pax,” appellee formed a New York corporation, the “Pax Writing Paper Co., Inc.,” for the sale of stationery consisting of note paper and envelopes; that in March of 1943, the nature of appellee’s business changed, and to conform therewith, appellee changed its corporate name to “Pax Plastics, Inc.” and engaged in the manufacture and sale of pressure adhesive tape; that in May of 1943, appellee again changed its corporate name to the one it now bears: “The Colfax Corporation.”

Appellee on May 26, 1943, sought to register “Pax” as a trade-mark, alleging that it had been continuously used in appellee’s business since May 24, 1943, a period of two days, as a trade-mark “for pressure ad *199 hesive tape for sealing package wrappings, paper and stationery and similar purposes” and for “adhesive tape dispensers.” Appellee’s application to register “Pax” was allowed and passed for publication by the Patent Office, March 20, 1945. Appellant on April 19, 1945, filed the notice of opposition, No. 24,197, relying on the prior use of the mark “Pax,” as twice registered, and to some extent, on the prior registration of “Pack’s” hereinbefore described.

Appellee’s applications for registration, Nos. 484,242 and 484,244, were both filed June 7, 1945, and included the respective words “Paxite” and “Paxomat”; the former for “plastic tape dispensers,” the latter for “sealing tape dispensers.” In the respective applications, appellee alleged continuous use of the marks since May 16, 1945, a period of approximately three weeks. Appellant filed an opposition to each of the two applications for registration. Those are oppositions Nos. 24,665 and 24,666.

It was not questioned before the tribunals of the Patent Office that appellant’s proof of prior use by several years was conclusive as to its marks “Pax,” and “Pack’s,” together with the notation, “Pax-C-Ment.”

Appellant during twenty years of use of “Pax” as a trade-mark has spent large sums of money advertising “Pax” products not only in nationally circulated magazines among dealers in the stationery trade but also in the distribution by direct mail on a nationwide basis of hundreds of thousands of circulars, folders, catalogues, and catalogue sheets to customers and potential customers. In 1944 and 1945, alone, appellant spent more than $50,000 for such advertising.

Without recounting the extent of appellee’s advertising of “Pax” dry seal tape, or the amount expended therefor, the president of the Cofax Corporation stated that the product had been advertised in various magazines or periodicals circulated among stationers, the paper trade, and the packaging industry. When asked for what purpose the “Pax” dry seal tape was used, he replied: “A. It is used for mending paper; for protecting the edges of paper by binding around it; for adhering signs to windows; it can be used in place of surgical tape for holding bandages; because of its transparency it can be used in mending books, the type being visible through the tape; it can be used, and it is used, for electrical insulation; it is used for identifying lines in the assembly of radio sets and other electrical equipment.”

Appellee’s product is used generally and particularly in offices, libraries, hospitals, and in manufacturing plants for Tadio and electrical equipment. The tape can be used separately without a dispenser, but in most cases, a dispenser is used. The dispensers are of different sizes and types; either manually operated or automatic. The dispensers, among other things, bear the trademarks “Pax,” “Paxite,” or “Paxomat” The operation of the automatic type of dispenser, like appellant’s automatic dispenser, is performed by depressing a lever.

When the Cofax Corporation decided in 1945 to use “Pax” as a trade-mark for the dry seal tapes, the president of the corporation had a search made among the records of the Patent Office. The search disclosed that between 1885 and 1945, “Pax” had been registered as a trade-mark for some seventeen different articles, including wheelbarrows, rugs, drills, saws, feed, fertilizers, medicine, etc.

Such collateral registrations were offered in evidence not to attack the validity of appellant’s mark, but to show diversity in its use. It is thereby conceded that the term “Pax” is not merely descriptive of the goods of either party.

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Bluebook (online)
183 F.2d 196, 37 C.C.P.A. 1195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-h-packwood-mfg-co-v-cofax-corporation-three-cases-ccpa-1950.