In re Morton-Norwich Products, Inc.

671 F.2d 1332, 213 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1982 CCPA LEXIS 183
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1982
DocketAppeal No. 81-540
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 671 F.2d 1332 (In re Morton-Norwich Products, Inc.) 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
In re Morton-Norwich Products, Inc., 671 F.2d 1332, 213 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1982 CCPA LEXIS 183 (ccpa 1982).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the ex parte decision of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (board), 209 USPQ 437 (TTAB 1980), in application serial No. 123,548, filed April 21, 1977, sustaining the examiner’s refusal to register appellant’s container configuration on the principal register. We reverse the holding on “functionality” and remand for a determination of distinctiveness.

Background

Appellant’s application seeks to register the following container configuration as a trademark for spray starch, soil and stain removers, spray cleaners for household use, liquid household cleaners and general grease removers, and insecticides:

Appellant owns U.S. Design Patent 238,655, issued Feb. 3, 1976, on the above configuration, and U.S. Patent 3,749,290, issued July 31, 1973, directed to the mechanism in the spray top.

The above-named goods constitute a family of products which appellant sells under the word-marks FANTASTIK, GLASS PLUS, SPRAY ’N WASH, GREASE RELIEF, WOOD PLUS, and MIRAKILL. Each of these items is marketed in a container of the same configuration but appellant varies the color of the body of the container according to the product. Appellant manufactures its own containers and stated in its application (amendment of April 25, 1979) that:

Since such first use [March 31, 1974] the applicant has enjoyed substantially exclusive and continuous use of the trademark [i.e., the container] which has become distinctive of the applicant’s goods in commerce.

The PTO Trademark Attorney (examiner), through a series of four office actions, maintained an unshakable position that the design sought to be registered as a trademark is not distinctive, that there is no evidence that it has become distinctive or has acquired a secondary meaning, that it is “merely functional,” “essentially utilitarian,” and non-arbitrary, wherefore it cannot function as a trademark. In the second action she requested applicant to “amplify the description of the mark with such particularity that any portion of the alleged mark considered to be non functional [sic] is incorporated in the description.” (Emphasis ours.) She said, “The Examiner sees none.” Having already furnished two affidavits to the' effect that consumers spontaneously associate the package design with appellant’s products, which had been sold in the container to the number of 132,502,000 by 1978, appellant responded to the examiner’s request by pointing out, in effect, that it is the overall configuration of the container rather than any particular feature of it which is distinctive and that it was intentionally designed to be so, supplying several pieces of evidence showing several other containers of different appearance which perform the same functions. Appellant also produced the results of a survey conducted by an independent market research [1335]*1335firm which had been made in response to the examiner’s demand for evidence of distinctiveness. The examiner dismissed all of the evidence as “not persuasive” and commented that there had “still not been one iota of evidence offered that the subject matter of this application has been promoted as a trademark,” which she seemed to consider a necessary element of proof. She adhered to her view that the design “is no more than a non-distinctive purely functional container for the goods plus a purely functional spray trigger controlled closure * * * essentially utilitarian and non-arbitrary * * *.”

Appellant responded to the final rejection with a simultaneously filed notice of appeal to the board and a request for reconsideration, submitting more exhibits in support of its position that its container design was not “purely functional.” The examiner held fast to all of her views and forwarded the appeal, repeating the substance of her rejections in her Answer to appellant’s appeal brief. An oral hearing was held before the board.

Board Opinion

The board, citing three cases, stated it to be “well-settled” that the configuration of a container “may be registrable for the particular contents thereof if the shape is nonfunctional in character, and is, in fact, inherently distinctive, or has acquired secondary meaning as an indication of origin for such goods.” In discussing the “utilitarian nature” of the alleged trademark, the board took note of photographs of appellant’s containers for FANTASTIK spray cleaner and GREASE RELIEF degreaser, the labels of which bore the words, respectively, “adjustable easy sprayer,” and “NEW! Trigger Control Top,” commenting that “the advertising pertaining to applicant’s goods promotes the word marks of the various products and the desirable functional features of the containers.”

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671 F.2d 1332, 213 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1982 CCPA LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-morton-norwich-products-inc-ccpa-1982.