MacEachen v. Tar Products Corporation

41 F.2d 295, 17 C.C.P.A. 1264, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 314
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1930
DocketPatent Appeal 2342
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 F.2d 295 (MacEachen v. Tar Products 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
MacEachen v. Tar Products Corporation, 41 F.2d 295, 17 C.C.P.A. 1264, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 314 (ccpa 1930).

Opinions

GARRETT, Associate Judge.

Appellant, MaeEaehen, on .December 13, 1926, filed application No. 241,429 for registration of the word “Hexol” as a trade-mark for disinfectants; the product being in Patent Office class 6, “Chemiéals, Medicines and Pharmaceutical Preparations.” Continuous use was alleged since September 2, 1926.

On December 31, 1926, the Examiner in the Patent Office rejected the application “in view of registered trade-mark No. 217,109, Tar Products Corporation, Providence and East Providence, R. I., Aug.,24, 1926.”

Thereupon applicant on February 3,1927, filed application for reconsideration.

On March 17, 1927, appellee, Tar Products Corporation, filed notice of opposition, alleging, among other things, that it (appellee) had for many years been engaged in the sale of a varied line of goods, including products in class 6; that among these were disinfectants “which opposer has sold under the trade marks Hex and Hexeide prior to September 2, 1926”; that the word “Hex” was registered as a trade-mark by opposer August 24, 1926, by registration No. 217,199, and the word “Hexeide” on July 14,1925, by registration No. 200,938, and that it was believed' registration of “Hexol” by applicant would result in serious confusion in the trade, “with great and irreparable damage to op-poser’s long-established business in the sale of disinfectants and other goods in class 6.”

Applicant made answer in which the registrations of “Hex” and “Hexeide” by op-poser were admitted, and general denial was made of the other allegations in the notice of opposition.

In its answer, applicant alleged that “the word ‘Hex’ alone, which constitutes the only similarity, if any, between applicant’s trade mark and the alleged trade marks set forth in the notice of opposition, has been so commonly used in connection with trade marks for pharmaceutical and medicinal preparations that it is not subject to exclusive appropriation for such goods by the opposer or any one,” and that it has been registered “in many separate and distinct registrations” for such goods by persons other than opposer. A list of registrations of words of which “Hex” forms the first syllable is given. All of these are alleged to have been registered prior to the registration by • appellee of “Hex” and “Hexeide.”

No proof was taken in the case. The record does not disclose any formal written action by an Examiner other than that of Examiner McCracken, noted supra, as having occurred on December 31, 1926, until January 21, 1928, when the Examiner of Interferences rendered his decision. His opinion recites:

“Since the final hearing the examiner of trade-marks has orally informed the examiner of interferences that he is of the opinion that no error was made by him in passing this application to publication. The practice requires that the latter resolve all reasonable doubt in favor of the prior user (Ex parte Conner & Co., 293 O. G. 878, 1921 C. D. 97).

“The circumstances set forth above, together with the fact that the examiner of interferences is believed to merely have concurrent jurisdiction with the examiner of trademarks to determine the ‘right of registration/ requires that the conclusion of the examiner of trade-marks should be adopted as correct by the examiner of interferences unless clear error therein is perceived. No such error is perceived by the examiner of interferences, who believes that confusion in trade would not be likely.”

The case was then appealed to the Commissioner and decided by him August 13, 1928. He reversed the Examiner, and sustained the opposition, in an opinion wherein he said in part:

“It would seem the opposer was permitted to register this notation ‘hex’ long after the other marks were used including as portions of them this same syllable because the opposer applied the mark to goods possessing different characteristics. The applicant proposes to apply the mark which includes that of the opposer in its entirety with the additional letters ‘ol’ to goods possessing the identical descriptive properties. It. would seem confusion in trade would be probable and there being at least a grave doubt, this should be, following the usual practice, resolved against the newcomer.

“In view of the number of prior registrations of marks including the letters ‘hex/ it is not believed confusion would arise in trade if the applicant’s mark and the opposeNs mark ‘Hexeide’ appeared upon the goods of the respective parties in the same market.”

The appeal was then taken which brings the matter before us.

[297]*297We find ourselves somewhat out of accord with the Assistant Commissioner’s reasoning.

Hex is a dictionary term, meaning, literally, six. It is derived from, or rather it is, the Greek word composed of the Greek letters or characters €, g (Epsilon and Xi). The New English Dictionary (Oxford) is authority for the statement that in Greek it was not used in combination, except as .standing for •€, 5, CL (Epsilon, Xi, Alpha)- — pronounced Hexa — before a vowel, “but used as a combining element in modem formation, chiefly in chemistry (where Hexa is more regular), in sense ‘containing six atoms, or molecules of the radical or substance’; as hexbenzoate, hexbromide,” etc.

In the Standard and other dictionaries, as well as in the chemical authorities, there are many words beginning with the syllable “Hexa,” and each of these words seem to have associated with it the idea conveyed by the word or number “six.”

It is noted that the Assistant Commissioner’s decision upon the issue between “Hex” and “Hexol” is predicated wholly upon appellee having acquired registration of the word “Hex.” He says, “If this registration be given' any weight or consideration at all, then the applicant has incorporated this entire trade mark of the opposer in his mark and has merely added thereto the suffix ‘ol,’ ” and then holds that under this aspect of the case the matter falls within the rule of certain cases cited, to wit, Carmel Wine Co. v. California Winery, 174 O. G. 586, 38 App. D. C. 1; Fishbeck Soap Co. v. Kleeno Mfg. Co., 216 O. G. 663, 44 App. D. C. 6; E. Myers Lye Co. v. Sinclair Mfg. Co., 241 O. G. 1157, 46 App. D. C. 55; and Canterbury Candy Makers’ v. Brecht Candy Co., 320 O. G. 3, 54 App. D. C. 82, 294 P. 1013.

The rule of these eases, he states, is “to the effect that it is not permissible for anyone to incorporate another’s mark in its entirety and add to it merely additional features.”

We have examined the cited cases with care and have fully considered the rule as quoted above from the Commissioner’s decision. In three of the cases the contesting marks appear to have involved pictorial rather than verbal elements. In the Pishbeek Case the coined word “Kleeno” was involved. Within the proper limits, the rule is applicable, but we do not think it should be carried to the extent of holding that, by use and registration of a word in common use, one can acquire such rights therein as to enable him to prevent registration thereof by another simply and solely because the latter’s word may contain the word of the former. This is particularly true in eases where the" prior registered mark consists merely of a word, in common use as a prefix, as is true of the mark “Ilex.”

We feel, in other words, that the rule is not applicable unless the contesting marks also present such features of resemblance as to be likely to cause confusion or deceive purchasers.

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MacEachen v. Tar Products Corporation
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40 F.2d 997 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.2d 295, 17 C.C.P.A. 1264, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maceachen-v-tar-products-corporation-ccpa-1930.