Martell & Co. v. Societe Anonyme de la Benedictine

116 F.2d 516, 28 C.C.P.A. 851, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 116, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketNo. 4390; No. 4391
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 116 F.2d 516 (Martell & Co. v. Societe Anonyme de la Benedictine) 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
Martell & Co. v. Societe Anonyme de la Benedictine, 116 F.2d 516, 28 C.C.P.A. 851, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 116, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 24 (ccpa 1941).

Opinion

Jackson, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Benedictine Company, so referred to for convenience, organized under the laws of the Republic of France and doing business in France and in the United States, filed in the United States Patent Office its application for registration of a trade-mark as applied to an alcoholic beverage made by the applicant and which consists of equal parts of Benedictine and cognac brandy.

[852]*852Tlie mark wliicli bad been registered in France, and which is here sought to be registered, is in the following form:

The mark was duly examined and allowed and due publication made thereof. Thereafter a notice of opposition to the registration of the said mark was filed by Martell & Co., a firm domiciled in Cognac, France, and there engaged in the business of producing,, packing, and shipping cognac brandy.

The applicant is the owner of the trade-mark “Benedictine” as applied to a liqueur manufactured solely by applicant.

The opposition is directed to the registration of the trade-mark because of the notation “B and B” appearing thereon.

In the notice of opposition it is alleged that the Martell Company has continuously engaged in its business for over one hundred years

that its brandy has been imported into and widely distributed throughout the United States for upwards of fifty years, except during the period of prohibition; that the brandy has acquired a wide and favorable reputation in this country and has been extensively used as a component part of a beverage known as “B and B” (Benedictine and brandy) ; that the term “B and B,” by reason of its long use, has become generic and belongs to the public domain and that it is descriptive of the beverage itself.

The Martell Company sets out its alleged injury as follows:

6. That the Opposer is particularly injured and damaged by any claim of the Applicant to the exclusive use of the term B and B for liqueurs and cognac because the Opposer is engaged in the business of supplying cognac brandy for alcoholic beverages, which cognac brandy, as well as brandy of other manufacturers, is used in the making of B and B, and the granting of any registration to the applicant gives an app'arent sanction, to the claim of the applicant to the exclusive use of the name B and B as applied to liqueurs and cognac; and such apparent sanction by the United States Patent Office would mislead customers of Opposer in the belief that no one but the applicant has the right to use B and B as applied to liqueurs and cognac; and that sellers of beverages for immediate consumption by consumers would refrain from purchasing Op-poser’s brandy for the purpose of making the beverage known as B and B. That such discrimination would be most injurious and damaging to the opposer. That such registration would give to applicant statutory and prima facie trade mark rights to which it is not entitled.
7. The Opposer alleges that applicant well knows that B and B as applied to liqueurs has been in general and extensive use for many years prior to May 16, 1936, in the United States of America as indicating a beverage com[853]*853posed partly of brandy and that no one bas any right to exclusively appropriate B and B as applied to liqueurs and cogn'ac in the United States of America, and has been fully aware of the general and extensive use of the descriptive term and name “B and B”.
8. That on information and belief applicant seeks to obtain registration in the United States Patent Office for the main purpose of obtaining the sanction of the Patent Office to the registration applied for in order to enable the applicant to obtain an exclusive sale of the brandy in the beverage long known as “B and B”.

The Benedictine Company, in its answer to the allegations contained in the notice of opposition, admitted that the term “B and B” is widely and extensively used to designate an alcoholic beverage composed of equal parts of genuine Benedictine and brandy. It alleges that the Martell Company has no rights in the mark “B and B” itself; denies that opposer would be in any way injured by the registration and alleges that it has the exclusive right to manufacture and sell the beverage known as Benedictine “B and B” by reason of its ownership of the trade-mark “Benedictine.” It further alleges that it has the sole and exclusive right to employ the designation “B and B” or Benedictine “B and B” for the reason that it has the sole and exclusive right to furnish one of the ingredients of the beverage, namely, Benedictine. It also denies that opposer has any such interest in the mark “B and B” as to entitle it to file a notice of opposition herein.

It will be observed that the Martell Company sought to draw in the “descriptiveness” clause of section 5 of the trade-mark act of February 20, 1905, as amended, as the statutory ground for denying the right of registration (section 7 of the said act) claimed by the applicant.

Neither party took testimony and the issue w'as presented to the Examiner of Interferences upon an agreed statement of facte as follows:

1. That the tracle-mark BENEDICTINE is a good and valid trade mark, the property of the applicant, Societe Anonyme de la Benedictine, etc., and that it has been used for an alcoholic liqueur abroad since the year 1865 and in the United States since approximately the year 1870.
2. That the opposer, Martell & Co., is a firm having its principal office at Cognac, France, and that including its predecessors in title has been continuously engaged in the manufacture and sale of cognac brandy for over one hundred years, and for more than eighty years has sold cognac brandy in the United States under the brand name of Martell.
3. That the applicant, Societe Anonyme de la Benedictine, etc., has used the trade mark herein applied for, ineluding the letters “B and B” on a bottled alcoholic liqueur in the United States since May 16th, 1936, but not prior to that date.
4. That the term “B and B” as the name for an alcoholic beverage has been popularly and exclusively known in the United States for approximately thirty years to designate a mixture of the liqueur BENEDCTINE of Societe Anonyme [854]*854de la Benedictine, etc. — 50%, and cognac .brandy 50%. That until tbe marketing of the article known as “B and B” and identified by the label of the applicant, Societe Anonyme de la Benedictine, etc., there has not been sold in the United States or elsewhere any bottled beverage labelled “B and B”, but that the term “B and B” used to indicate the “B and B” alcoholic beverage was used in commerce only orally to designate a beverage composed of 50% of BENEDICTINE and 50% of cognac brandy.
5. That said term “B and B” to designate such a mixture of BENEDICTINE and cognac brandy has been used orally at alcoholic beverage bars in the United States, England and France, for approximately thirty years, and that upon a request by a customer of such beverage bars, the attendant at such beverage bars was expected to and actually did fill such order with 50% of BENEDICTINE and 50% of a brandy or cognac brandy designated by the particular attendant or by the particular bar at which the beverage was ordered, except when the consumer designated the specific brand of Cognac which he desired.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F.2d 516, 28 C.C.P.A. 851, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 116, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martell-co-v-societe-anonyme-de-la-benedictine-ccpa-1941.