Gulf States Paper Corp. v. Crown Zellerbach Corp.
This text of 417 F.2d 795 (Gulf States Paper Corp. v. Crown Zellerbach Corp.) 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.
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This is an appeal from the decision1 of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, adhered to on reconsideration, dismissing an opposition by Gulf States Paper Corporation to an application 2 by Crown Zellerbach Corporation for registration of the mark CZ, for use in connection with printing paper. Use of the mark since February 11, 1964 was asserted.
Appellant, Gulf States Paper Corporation, opposed on the ground of likelihood of confusion, based upon its use and prior registration of the mark E-Z 3 in connection with paper products.
The record shows that the opposer in this case is engaged in the manufacture and sale of paper and related products. Apparently, prior to 1960, opposer was a “coarse” paper products manufacturing and distributing concern.4 Since 1960, however, opposer has expanded its business into what is known as the “fine” paper products field, which includes such products as school and office supplies and tissue towels. It had been the practice of opposer and its corporate predecessors since about 1902 to identify all of its manufactured products by trademarks comprising the designation “E-Z” either alone or in combination with various suffixes (generally descriptive), and since expanding its line of merchandise, opposer has continued this practice. Ownership of the registrations for the marks E-Z FILE FOLDERS, E-Z MIMEOGRAPH and E-Z DUPLICATOR in the fine paper field has been established in" the' record along with registrations for the mark E-Z alone for several different products in the coarse paper field.
Applicant, Crown Zellerbach Corporation, is also engaged in the manufacture and sale of paper products, both “coarse” and “fine”. Since 1953, Crown has used as its corporate symbol and as a trademark for all its products, a composite crown device with the letters C and Z. Applicant’s registration of this mark5 has been included in the record to establish applicant’s entry into the fine paper field in 1953 and, prima facie, its continuance in the field since that time.
A reproduction of applicant’s composite crown mark, along with the mark which is the subject of this opposition and the opposer’s E-Z mark is shown below:
[797]*797In dismissing the opposition, the board initially determined that although op-poser had established use of its “E-Z” mark prior to the use by applicant of either the letters “CZ” alone or the composite registered mark, it was only since 1959 or 1960, when opposer extended its activities into the soft paper products and fine paper field, that the “general public or persons who would generally be customers for mimeograph paper, bond paper, duplicating paper, and other fine papers” would have been aware of the mark in a trademark sense. In addition, the board apparently credited applicant with the benefit of the 1953 date of registration for the composite mark, reasoning that the fine paper goods for which use of that mark was claimed were “closely related to the printing papers here claimed”, and “that the letters ‘CZ’ are equally if not more prominent than the crown design and might be utilized by some segment of the purchasing public to call for and identify the goods sold thereunder.” This was tantamount to a holding that applicant was the prior user in the contested field of use.
Additionally, the board pointed out that “none of opposer’s existing registrations for ‘E-Z’ alone or in association with a particular design covers fine paper such as duplicating paper, bond paper, and the like.”
Nevertheless, the board went on to specifically hold, as the basis of its decision, that:
the differences between “CZ” and “EZ” alone or in association with such words as “Duplicating”, “Mimeograph”, “Bond”, and “File Folders” are sufficient to preclude a likelihood of confusion or mistake in trade as to the source of the products of the parties.
In addition to its principal argument that the marks are confusingly similar, opposer has argued on appeal that the board was in error in holding that the letters CZ in the composite trademark are equally, if not more, prominent than the crown design and thus establish prior use of the mark CZ alone. Opposer also argues that the board’s holding of no likelihood of confusion was inconsistent with statements in earlier opinions dealing with other oppositions between the same two parties.
Applicant argues, inter alia, that the transition from use of its composite mark to use of the letters CZ alone was a legitimate extension of its already existing trademark rights in the fine paper field, and that opposer cannot rely on the “E-Z” portion of its series of marks alone for abstract comparison with other marks.
Regarding opposer’s latter argument, we find it not only without substance, but also irrelevant to the case at bar. The other arguments of the parties have been considered but require no further discussion since we have decided to sustain the board’s ultimate holding that there is no likelihood of confusion or mistake in trade as to the source of the products of the parties.
In doing so, we have considered, as we must, the particular area of commerce in which the marks are used and the discriminating type of purchaser at which they are aimed. It appears to us that, viewed in this light, the marks are not confusingly similar. Although they differ by a single letter when opposer’s suffixes are ignored and they are somewhat similar in sound, we think the marks would tend to stimulate a different response in the mind of the purchaser. The mark E-Z sounds like “easy” and thus generates the idea of an attribute of the goods. On the other hand, the mark CZ can only represent initials of some sort, and one seeing or hearing the mark would probably presume that that [798]*798is what it indicates. The decision of the board is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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417 F.2d 795, 57 C.C.P.A. 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-states-paper-corp-v-crown-zellerbach-corp-ccpa-1969.