J. C. Hall Company v. Hallmark Cards, Incorporated

340 F.2d 960, 52 C.C.P.A. 981
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1965
DocketPatent Appeal 7310
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 340 F.2d 960 (J. C. Hall Company v. Hallmark Cards, Incorporated) 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
J. C. Hall Company v. Hallmark Cards, Incorporated, 340 F.2d 960, 52 C.C.P.A. 981 (ccpa 1965).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

J. C. Hall Company filed application 1 to register “HALLMARK” for blank checks issued in single and book form, alleging use since April 17, 1933. Registration has been opposed 2 by Hallmark Cards, Incorporated, alleging prior and continuous use of the identical term “HALLMARK” as a trademark for a line of goods, hereinafter to appear. From the decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board sustaining the opposition, J. C. Hall Company prosecutes this appeal.

The material facts found by the board from the record, consisting of testimony taken by both parties, appear to be substantially as follows:

“HALLMARK” was first used by appellee-opposer (hereinafter appellee) in 1923 as a trademark for greeting cards, and since that time it has been used with an expanding line of its goods presently including greeting cards, tallies, place cards, invitations, wrapping paper, tape, seals, notes, writing paper, and the like. Appellee’s “HALLMARK” products have been advertised nationwide through magazines, newspapers, radio and television programs, and point-of-sale displays at an annual cost approximating two million dollars. The products are distributed throughout the United States and abroad through approximately twenty-two thousand distributors and dealers, drug, variety, department and book stores, and other related outlets. Approximately fifty million units or packages bearing the mark “HALLMARK” were sold in 1959 and approximately fifty-nine million in 1960. During 1961 appellee produced nearly four and one-half million greeting cards per day. Greeting cards, such as those sold by appellee under its mark, and blank checks issued in single and book form are both sold through office supply and stationery stores.
Appellant’s corporate name has been J. C. Hall Company since 1891. Appellant is a bank stationer engaged in manufacturing and selling, under various brand names or marks, printed forms primarily used by banks, including passbooks, letterheads, deposit tickets, ledger statements and a variety of snap-out forms, which are checks, checkbook covers and binders, signature cards, statement of condition folders and other related material. The trademark “HALLMARK” has been used only with checks and checkbooks sold exclusively to banks since 1933. These “HALLMARK” supplies are ordered directly by banks, completed and furnished by appellant as directed and authorized by the ordering bank. The checks are distributed by the bank to customers for their everyday use. The “HALLMARK” checks have been advertised and promoted by the distribution of calendars to banks; by the distribution of catalogs featuring “HALLMARK” checks to banks for their use in advising their customers of the availability of such checks and to allow customers to make their selection of checks; and by mailing pieces furnished banks to be included in bank statements mailed to their accounts. These fliers prominently feature the slogan “WHEN YOU USE HALLMARK YOU ARE USING THE BEST.” It should be here noted that appellee has also prominently featured the registered trademark “WHEN YOU CARE ENOUGH TO SEND THE VERY BEST.” 3
Appellant’s total sales exceeded a million dollars in 1958 and approximately one and one-half million dollars in 1961, of which 90% was in checks, 30% of this or about three hundred and sixty thousand to four hundred thousand dollars being in checks sold under the mark “HALLMARK.”
*962 The board found no dispute as to appellee’s prior rights in “HALLMARK” for greeting cards. Appellant raised the issue that appellee cannot properly rely on its use of “HALLMARK” on any other product since appellee’s record, including its registration, is insufficient to establish use of “HALLMARK” for such goods at any time prior to 1933, the date of first use established by appellant. In this connection appellant contends that the registration covering the mark “HALLMARK” for writing paper 4 is without avail to appellee because the assignment purporting to transfer ownership of the registration to appellee is devoid of legal substance. Appellant relies on testimony to the effect that appellee employed an intermediary to obtain the assignment of the registration;. that it was assigned to the intermediary who did not receive any records, inventory, customer lists, or anything other than the registration; and that the intermediary, after holding the registration for one day without using the mark covered thereby, assigned same to appellee. The board found that the assignment to appellee’s intermediary recites the transfer of all right, title and interest in and to “HALLMARK” and the registration thereof for writing paper, “together with that part of the goodwill of the business thereto pertaining,” and held that the document constituted a valid assignment, and that the evidence relied on by appellant was “manifestly insufficient to rebut the prima facie presumptions afforded op-poser as the record owner of this registration.”

In an alternative approach to this phase of the matter, the board stated: (citations omitted)

“In any event, the fact that opposer’s ‘HALLMARK’ products other than greeting cards may not have been sold until after applicant commenced selling ‘HALLMARK’ blank checks cannot preclude opposer from relying herein on use of ‘HALLMARK’ for such goods because op-poser’s ‘HALLMARK’ greeting card business was well established prior to the time applicant first started manufacturing and selling ‘HALLMARK’ blank checks, and invitations, note paper, date books and the other goods to which opposer has. subsequently applied the ‘HALLMARK’ mark are all within the natural realm of expansion of opposer’s business; and such goods and greeting cards are products which purchasers generally would expect to-emanate from -the same producer. To hold otherwise would be to consider the question of likelihood of confusion in a vacuum and overlook the fact that the public has, since 1923, been encountering and purchasing in the same stores and often under the same conditions and circumstances not only ‘HALLMARK’ greeting cards but a whole line of ‘HALLMARK’ products produced by opposer.”

We find no error in the board’s disposition of the issue raised relative to the assignment of the mark “HALLMARK” which issued on an application filed July 20, 1914, for writing paper, nor of its assessment of the rights accruing thereunder to the appellee.

A certificate of registration constitutes prima facie evidence of ownership and ownership imparts prima facie evidence of use even though there be no evidence of record relative to such use. The presumption of use emanating from the fact of registration relates back to the filing date of the application on which the registration is predicated. American Throwing Co., Inc. v. Famous Bathrobe Co., Inc., 250 F.2d 377, 45 CCPA 737.

In Gillette Co. v. Kempel, 254 F.2d 402, 45 CCPA 920, it was stated:

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Bluebook (online)
340 F.2d 960, 52 C.C.P.A. 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-c-hall-company-v-hallmark-cards-incorporated-ccpa-1965.