Hercules Powder Co. v. Newton

266 F. 169, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1660
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1920
DocketNo. 108
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 266 F. 169 (Hercules Powder Co. v. Newton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hercules Powder Co. v. Newton, 266 F. 169, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1660 (2d Cir. 1920).

Opinion

HOUGH, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] The issue tendered by the pleadings herein is shown by an extract from the answer, viz.:

“Defendant denies that the word ‘Infallible’ is registrable as a trade-mark for smokeless powder under the act, * * * and avers that it is * * * precluded from registration by said act.”

Thus the point is, not that registration ought not to be granted because of some proven fact, but that it cannot lawfully be conferred because the statute forbids.

Plaintiff has, we think, somewhat complicated the issue by pressing upon us as a fact proven beyond doubt that dealers and buyers of powder do not associate “Infallible” with that explosive, except as in[171]*171dicative of its origin — “Infallible” means made by Hercules Company. If this be true, it doubtless strengthens plaintiff’s rights against in-fringers or trespassers; it shows the existence of a business to which the mark is appurtenant, and tends to prove rights which should be protected from unfair — i. c., deceptive — competition.

But the only question we have, or can have, presently before us, is the right to register; not the value or, worthlessness of what is registered. The desirability of registration under the act of 1905, to and among those in extensive and especially foreign trade, is very great, and need not be dwelt upon; yet it is too well settled to need citation that a trade-mark is not the creature of registration, but the appendage or growth of a business. The Commissioner cannot base approval or denial of application on an inquiry into the nature of petitioner’s business, or a finding as to how the public regards the product thereof; he can but examine the article and the mark, and declare whether the statute prohibits their registered union.

Therefore the evidence offered by plaintiff is immaterial, and we regard the case as presenting nothing but an inquiry as to the meaning' of a statute. The absence of contradictions of fact, or of contradictory inferences of fact from admitted phenomena, differentiates this case from Gold v. Newton, 254 Fed. 824, 166 C. C. A. 270, and we proceed to consider the legal question above stated.

Our present trade-mark statute (Act 1905, 33 Stat. 724 [Comp. St. § 9485 et seq.]) as amended, does not describe or define what constitutes either a good trade-mark or a registrable trade-mark. It assumes that the word has a meaning sufficiently well known to dispense with statutory definition. Tt docs, however, lay down some rules for the guidance of the Commissioner, and ibis case revolves around the construction of one of those rules, viz. (Act, § 5, Comp. Stat. § 9490):

“No mark which consists ® * * merely in words * * * which are descriptive of the goods with which they are used, or of the character or Quality of such goods, or merely a geographical name or term, shall be registered.”

It has been said of these words that they only declare “the accepted law of trade-marks,” and we agree with this ruling. In re National Phonograph Co., 29 App. D. C. 142.

On one point only did the present statute in effect certainly recognize, if not create, a property right previously doubtful, if not, wholly nonexistent. We refer to the so-called “10-year clause,” also found in section 5 of the act, which as construed in Davids Co. v. Davids Mfg. Co., 233 U. S. 461, 34 Sup. Ct. 648, 58 L. Ed. 1046, and Nashville, etc., Co. v. Coca Co., 215 Fed. 527, 132 C. C. A. 39, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 358, secured, if it did not give, to those who had exclusively used a doubtful mark for 10 years before the passage of the trade-mark statute, rights now undoubted.

But nothing can be found in the act which gives to one who lias succeeded in exclusively using a merely descriptive or geographical or proper name for 10 years expiring after the passage of the act rights, identical with or similar to those validated by the 10-year clause. It seems to us the clear intent of the Legislature to compel those who [172]*172wish registration for their marks, and who could not claim under the 10-year proviso, to suggest to the Commissioner for registration, only those marks recognized by the “accepted law”; i. e., in the absence of further legislation by the rule announced in authoritative judicial decisions.

It is not without interest to note that, cotemporaneously with the passage of our present statute, Great Britain revised its law by passing the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 (for text see Sebastian, Trade-Marks [5th Ed.] p. 368). That act provides (section 9, subsec. 4) that a. mark may be registered which is “a word or words having no direct reference to the character or quality of the goods” to be distinguished. Under this section of the act has grown up the English rule that words which are merely “laudatory epithets” are not registrable as trade-marks. See In re Crosfield [1910] L. R. 1 Ch. 130), disallowing the word “Perfection” as applied to soap; and In re Sharpe, etc., 84 L. J. Ch. 290,, rejecting the word “Classic” as applied to sta-' fionery.

Though often difficult in application, the accepted legal rule for trade-marks suspected of being descriptive or geographic is not difficult to state; and it may be noted that both in the statute and in decisions the faults arising from geographic and descriptive names are treated alike — they are nearly akin. Eor us the authoritative rule was restated in Standard, etc., Co. v. Trinidad, etc., Co., 220 U. S. at page 453, 31 Sup. Ct. at page 457 (55 L. Ed. 536), thus:

“It [the trademark] may consist in any symbol, or in any form of words; but, as its office is to point out distinctively the origin or ownership of the articles to which it is affixed, it follows that no sign or form of words can be appropriated as a valid trade-mark which, from the nature of the fact conveyed by its primary meaning, others may employ with equal truth, and with equal right, for me same purpose.”

The latest ruling (Hamilton, etc., Co. v. Wolf, 240 U. S. 256, 36 Sup. Ct. 269, 60 L. Ed. 629) relies upon the same decisions and applies the same rule to a close case, and, in holding “American Girl” as not descriptive of shoes, points out that “American Shoes” would come within the prohibition.1 It seems clear, therefore, that the Commissioner will'properly act under this section of the statute if he inquires whether under ruling case law the proposed trade-mark is descriptive, unless it can be held that the statute has modified or changed the result of judicial decision by inserting the word “merely.”

[3] “Merely descriptive” means only descriptive, or nothing more than descriptive. It may be that the force of the advérb is satisfied by the addition to the descriptive word of a picture or device, or by qualifying the description through the addition of another word. Thus in Re Crosfield, supra (page 143), it was suggested that, while appellant could not use the word “Perfection” as a trade-mark for soap, if he used “Crosfield’s Perfection, different considerations might arise.”

[173]*173But if the proposed trade-mark consists of a single word, then that word standing alone is merely descriptive, or it is not descriptive at all. It does not conflict with this ruling that, as suggested in Williams v. Mitchell, 106 Fed. 170, 45 C. C. A.

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Bluebook (online)
266 F. 169, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hercules-powder-co-v-newton-ca2-1920.