Golden Gate Salami Company v. Gulf States Paper Corporation

332 F.2d 184, 51 C.C.P.A. 1391, 141 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 661, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 388
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7167
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 332 F.2d 184 (Golden Gate Salami Company v. Gulf States Paper Corporation) 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
Golden Gate Salami Company v. Gulf States Paper Corporation, 332 F.2d 184, 51 C.C.P.A. 1391, 141 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 661, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 388 (ccpa 1964).

Opinions

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board brought by appellant-registrant.

Appellant is the owner of the Supplemental Registration1 of the mark

for packaged luncheon meats in a cellophane tear open package.

Appellee is the owner of the registered marks E-Z,2 E-Z OPENER,3 E-Z PAK,4 E-Z CARI,5 and E-Z LOAD 6 for paper bags and the mark E-Z WRAP for kraft wrapping paper.7 There is testimony that appellee is a closely-held family managed corporation, whose corporate image has grown in the last 75 years to the extent that it is now recognized as a dominant and outstanding corporation in the pulp and paper industries. Roughly one out of every five grocery bags used in the United States today is said to be manufactured in appellee’s plant. Besides paper bags, the record shows that appellee manufactures and sells paperboard containers for a wide variety of food products, a broad line of wrapping paper and butcher’s paper and bleached sulfate pulp board. The record further shows that appellee has recently begun the manufacturing and the distribution of folding paper cartons made from [186]*186bleached sulfate board and has entered the fine paper market, i. e., mimeograph, duplicator, and bond papers. Trademarks employed in identifying appellee’s additional products are E-Z DUPLICATOR, E-Z MIMEOGRAPH, E-Z FOOD-PAK, E-Z TRAYPAK, E-Z MEAT BOARD, E-Z KART-N-PAK, E-Z LOAD, SOFTWOOD E-Z PULP, HARDWOOD E-Z PULP, E-Z OPEN, WHITE GUM E-Z PULP and E-Z FREZ. In addition, appellee also has used E-Z PAK for bleached folding cartons.

Appellee filed a petition to cancel the Supplemental Registration of the mark of appellant-respondent on the basis that the registration of that mark “under the Act of 1946” is specifically barred by Section 2(d) of the Act, inasmuch as said mark so resembles the registered marks of appellee-petitioner “as to be likely to cause confusion or mistake or to deceive purchasers.”

In dismissing appellee’s petition to cancel, from which no appeal has been filed by appellee-petitioner, a majority of the board stated:

While petitioner has used a number of trademarks comprising the notation ‘E-Z’ in connection with its various paper and paperboard products, there is nothing in petitioner’s record which would indicate that such use has created or resulted in purchaser recognition that petitioner possesses a ‘family of marks’ characterized by this term; and the third party registrations made of record by respondent appear to negate such claim. * * * Nevertheless, petitioner’s record is sufficient to establish prior and continuous use of its registered trademarks, including the marks ‘E-Z PAK’ and ‘E-Z OPENER’, which are substantially similar to respondent’s mark ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’. Accordingly, the question to be determined in resolving the issue of likelihood of confusion raised by the pleadings is whether or not the-goods of the parties are of such nature that their sale under the marks-‘E-Z PAK and ‘E-Z OPENER’ on the one hand and ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’ on the other is likely to cause confusion in trade. (7) 8
******
“It is apparent from respondent’s' container, as urged by petitioner, that the registered mark ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’, as used thereon, serves to identify the container rather than, the luncheon meats sold by respondent. The issue involved in a proceeding of this character, however, is whether or not petitioner is damaged by the registration in question and not by the manner in which the registered mark may be used by respondent. Thus, the question of likelihood of confusion and resultant damage to petitioner must be decided on the basis of the goods as identified in the registration sought, to be canceled. In this regard, although reference is made in the registration to a cellophane tear open-package, the goods for which registration was sought and for which the registration was granted are packaged luncheon meats. These-goods and petitioner’s paper bags and/or paperboard containers are vastly different products, and in the absence of any evidence that petitioner has advertised or promoted' its goods to the ultimate consumer who is the purchaser of respondent’s meats or that the average consumer purchasing food products in retail outlets utilizing petitioner’s products is familiar with the marks-appearing on the paper bags or containers, it is our opinion that there is no reasonable likelihood of con[187]*187fusion as to the source of these goods merely because of the substantially similar marks under which they are marketed. Petitioner cannot therefore be damaged by the registration in question.” 9

The majority of the board, however, after dismissing appellee’s petition to cancel, stated:

“The record, however, raises an ex parte question as to respondent’s right to maintain this registration. As indicated above, there is little doubt in our minds in view of the nature of the term ‘E — Z OPEN PAK’ and the manner in which it is used on respondent’s containers that the association of ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’ is with the container rather than with the meat products packaged therein. Under such circumstances, respondent toas not entitled to register the mark ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’ for its meat products at the time it made application therefor. Furthermore, had respondent sought to register ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’ for a cellophane tear open package, such registration would have been precluded under Section 2(d) of the Statute by petitioner’s registrations ‘E-Z PAK’ and ‘E-Z OPENER’ because paper bags and/or paperboard cartons and cellophane packages are products which may well be sold through the same trade channels to the same classes of purchasers; and while respondent’s mark ‘E-Z OPEN PAK’ and petitioner’s marks ‘E-Z PAK’ and ‘E-Z OPENER’ are highly suggestive terms they are nevertheless substantially similar. * * * ”
[Emphasis ours.]

Relying on Section 24 (15 U.S.C. § 109210 ) of the Trademark Act of 1946, the majority of the board then concluded that since it has been found after a hearing before the board that appellant-respondent was not entitled to register its mark in issue at the time of its application for registration thereof, the Supplemental Registration No. 682,704 of such mark “will be canceled in due course.”

Appellant-respondent urges that the “ex parte” ruling of the board, based on “an arbitrary interpretation of the meaning of one sentence in Section 24,” was improper because there was no hearing involving the propriety of the issuance of the registration. It is urged that “there is no evidence to indicate, or even to suggest, that the term E-Z OPEN PAK is being used or has ever been used adversely or by anyone else in connection with packaged meats or related products.” Appellant-respondent further argues that the board in its “ex parte” ruling disregarded a recognized practice and custom. It is contended that in the United States it has become a common practice in business not only to employ [188]

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Golden Gate Salami Company v. Gulf States Paper Corporation
332 F.2d 184 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
332 F.2d 184, 51 C.C.P.A. 1391, 141 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 661, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-gate-salami-company-v-gulf-states-paper-corporation-ccpa-1964.