Goheen Corp. v. White Co.

126 F.2d 481, 29 C.C.P.A. 926, 53 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1942
DocketNo. 4586
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 F.2d 481 (Goheen Corp. v. White 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
Goheen Corp. v. White Co., 126 F.2d 481, 29 C.C.P.A. 926, 53 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 38 (ccpa 1942).

Opinion

BlaNd, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal involves proceedings in the United States Patent Office wherein the Commissioner of Patents adjudged that a trade-mark of appellant, hereinafter referred to as “Vita-Var,” should be can-[927]*927celecl. Vita-Var has appealed here from the said decision of the commissioner.

The appellee, The White Company, hereinafter referred to as “White,” in 1939 filed in the Patent Office a petition for the cancelation of the registration of Vita-Var’s mark which featured the word “HYDROLITE,” the trade-mark consisting of the word “TIYDRO-LITE” printed in capital letters in front of an ordinary molded hollow block of building material. The mark is used in connection with the sale of a waterproofing compound (a powder) which is mixed integrally with concrete when used. In other words, the waterproofing compound, sold under the trade-mark “HYDROLITE,” is to be mixed when concrete is made for the purpose of making the concrete impervious to water. The mark, according to the record, has been used on the said goods of Vita-Var and its predecessor for about 40 years. The registration of the trade-mark wras on October 17,1922. Vita-Var is also a manufacturer of paint.

White is also a manufacturer of paint and began the use of the identical mark (except its mark consists of the word “Hydrolite” alone without the said background) on casein wall paint “about the year 1935 and not before that year.” White’s paint is, as the term “casein wall paint” implies, a buttermilk product used on such places as the -walls of rooms where it is desirable to have a variety of tints' or shades of color, which coloring is referred to as water colors, water constituting the liquid component.

White’s petition for cancelation of the said registered mark is predicated in part upon its said use of said mark on said casein wall paint. It alleges that the term “HYDROLITE” is descriptive and a misspelling of the word “hydrolyte”; that a waterproofing compound is a hydrolyte; that the registrant did not disclaim the word “HYDROLITE” apart from its composite mark including the concrete block; “that if the public or the petitioner makes the same waterproofing article, they or it is at liberty to call it by the same descriptive name and the existence of the improper registration No. 160,195 acts to inhibit the public and petitioner from exercising their and its rights”; and that “hydrolytes are substances which may be made and sold by anyone including petitioner, and therefore anyone and petitioner is entitled to freely sell hydrolytes by the name which those substances bear.”

There is no allegation in the petition that White uses said term on a waterproofing compound or on anything other than a casein wall paint and it is admitted b.y White that it uses the mark only on casein-wall paint. It alleges that unless said registration of “HYDROJ LITE” is cancelled, its good will and large expenditures will be seriously injured or damaged. There is no allegation in the petition for [928]*928cancelation that White makes or sells, under any trade-mark, a waterproofing compound. White’s Exhibit 13, found in the record (admitted under restrictions not necessary to state here), is an affidavit by one Elmer B. Schuler, technical director of the White Company, and contains the following :

Deponent further states that in the course of his technical experience and his relation to the coating trade he has been made aware of tlfe fact that there are concrete waterproofings on the market, that he knows of such concrete water-proofings and that these concrete waterproofings depend for their action upon hydrolitic decomposition, the reaction products of which form compounds with the calcium of the cement which act as waterproofing agents. Deponent further states that as an example of such concrete waterproofing, ammonium stearate is sold for this purpose. Deponent further states that he knows that The White Company is marketing ammonium stearate for this purpose and further that the Somay Products Company of Miami, Florida, are also marketing a similar product and that there are several other sources for this type of waterproofing, as the action of ammonium stearate in concrete is quite generally known.
' Deponent further states that ammonium stearate being a salt of a weak acid and a strong base is rapidly hydrolized when it is mixed with water, forming an ammonium hydroxide and stearic acid.

It is stipulated in the record that prior to the institution of the present cancellation proceeding Vita-Var gave notice to White of' infringement and requested that White discontinue the use of the mark. This fact, however, was not alleged in the petition for cancellation.

The issues presented, or which were attempted to be presented, by the petition for cancellation, which are necessary for our consideration here, were properly traversed in the answer by Vita-Var.

The Examiner of Interferences held that “HYDROLITE” was not descriptive of the merchandise sold under that trade-mark by Vita-Var and that it had not been made to appear, from the record, that White qualified under section 13 of the Trade-mark act of 1905, by sustaining its burden of proving damage flowing from the registration of said mark, and upon these holdings he dismissed the application for cancellation and recommended that the registration be not cancelled.

Upon appeal to the Commissioner of Patents, he reversed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences and adjudged that the registration be cancelled upon the ground that the mark was descrip- • tive and further said:-

It appearing that petitioner is using the word “Hydrolite” on wall paints and that registrant has given to petitioner notice of infringement of the trademark sought to be canceled and has requested petitioner to discontinue use of the mark, injury to petitioner is considered to have been shown, even though the words “Hydrolyte” or “Hydrolite” may not have been employed in trade" with reference to any concrete waterproofing hydrolyte before registrant’s [929]*929registration thereof for concrete waterproofing compounds, and registrant’s registration antedates petitioner’s use of the mark. Sackrete, Inc. v. Lillard, 501 O. G. 874, 41 U. S. P. Q. 40.

White’s contentions here, with certain exceptions, are substantially those alleged in the petition for cancellation, most of which have heretofore been stated. In addition to anything said in the petition for cancellation White urges in substance that anyone who wishes to engage in the trade of compounds used for waterproofing and the like has the right to petition for cancellation of Vita-Var’s mark, and that since Vita-Var gave notice of infringment to White, and requested that White discontinue the use of the mark, White has shown such interest as would entitle it to qualify under the damage clause of the cancellation statute.

The registrant, Vita-Var, contends that the decisions of the patent tribunals, heretofore made, with reference to a similar mark, “HYDROLITHIC,” should have weight in the present determination and points out that the examiner in 1910 held that the mark “HYDROLITHIC” was descriptive, but that the commissioner reversed his decision and held that it was not descriptive; that when appellant applied for the registration of the instant mark “HYDRO-LITE” it was determined that the mark was not descriptive. Thus appellant argues:

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126 F.2d 481, 29 C.C.P.A. 926, 53 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1942 CCPA LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goheen-corp-v-white-co-ccpa-1942.