Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. McDonnell

163 F.2d 557, 35 C.C.P.A. 719
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1947
DocketNo. 5309
StatusPublished

This text of 163 F.2d 557 (Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. McDonnell) 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
Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. McDonnell, 163 F.2d 557, 35 C.C.P.A. 719 (ccpa 1947).

Opinion

JacksoN, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in a trade-mark opposition proceeding from a decision, 67 USPQ 173, of the Commissioner of Patents, by Leslie Frazer, First Assistant Commissioner, affirming that of the Examiner of Interferences dismissing appellant’s notice of opposition and adjudging that appellee is entitled to the registration for which he made application.

The application, Serial No. 452,310, was-filed April 13, 1942, and alleged January 19, 1939, as the date of first use of appellee’s mark, consisting of “MM” joined together above a chevron-like angular line, the ends of which connect with the outer legs of the letters. The mark is applied to “snap switches.”

The application was tentatively allowed and the mark was published in the Official Gazette of March 16,1943.

The notice of opposition, dated April 12, 1943, relates to the confusion-in-trade clause of section 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 (15 USCA § 85).

[721]*721In the notice of opposition it was alleged'that for a long time appellant has been a well-known manufacturer of many products, among which are electrical supplies, including electrical insulating tape and non-insulating pressure-sensitive adhesive tape, employed in industrial work, including electrical work, and that it manufactured and sold such articles since long prior to January 19,1939.

Appellant relied on eight registered trade-marks, alleging use of said marks prior to January 19,1939, as follows: “3M Co.” for coron-dum, garnet and emery paper and cloth; “Tri-M-Ite” for abrasive paper and cloth; “Three-M” for abrasive cloth and paper; “3-M” for polishing wax for furniture, woodwork, linoleum, rubber or asphalt tiles, and lacquer polishes for automobile finishes; “3-M” for adhesives, adhesive tape, adhesive sheet and fabric material, cement, elastic cement, weather-strip cement and rubber cement; and “3-M” for quartz, quartzite, digester, filter and sandpaper quartz, aggregate, plaster, gravel, sand, sand filler, silica flour, silica, bird, pigeon and chick grit, run of quarry, garnet, corundum and roofing granules.

On August 13, 1943, four, months subsequent to the filing of the notice of opposition, appellant applied for registration of the expression “3-M” as a trade-mark, alleging use of said mark on electrical tape to have been continuous since at least May 1933. The application was granted and the mark was registered on January 11,1944.

Both parties took testimony and several exhibits were received in evidence.

The testimony on behalf of appellant began on August 17, 1943, and was completed on August 18, 1943. The testimony on behalf of appellee was given and completed on March 17,1944.

It may be observed that the application for appellant’s trade-mark, as applied to electrical tape, was filed only four days prior to the taking of testimony on its behalf and that the registration of such mark had been granted two months prior to the taking of testimony on behalf of appellee.

It appears that appellant is a Delaware Corporation with its principal place of business at St. Paul, Minnesota, and that it manufactures a great variety of articles.

Appellee is an individual, doing business in Chicago, Illinois, under the trade-name of McDonnell and Miller, formerly a partnership, and is engaged in manufacturing and selling internationally, feed water regulators, liquid level controllers, low-water controllers, snap action humidifier valves, and snap switches.

Appellant sells its products to supply houses, hardware jobbers, paint jobbers, lacquer specialist jobbers, janitor supply jobbers, and others who are in business to serve the trade with products of the type sold by appellant. Appellee sells to boiler manufacturers, wholesalers [722]*722of pumping and beating supplies, beating and plumbing contractors, stoker manufacturers, oil burner manufacturers, gas burner manufacturers, and equipment manufacturers.

Since January 1939, appellee has supplied snap switches, to which were applied the involved mark, to equipment manufacturers who engineer such switches into their equipment. He supplies equipment manufacturers with specifications of snap switches from which the manufacturer selects the type required and orders it pursuant to specification. It appears those switches must be provided with special tappings and holding blocks. They are not sold to the hardware trade, nor resold as such by equipment manufacturers.

Following what appears to be his standard practice of applying his trade-mark to all his products, appellee has applied the involved mark to custom built snap switches.

The record on behalf of appellant proves without contradiction that it has used the registered marks pleaded in the notice of opposition as alleged and the first use thereof as applied to the articles to which they are affixed is prior to January 19,1939.

Appellant contended below and contends here that its abrasives, cements, sand paper, tapes, polishes, and so forth, are goods of the same descriptive properties as snap switches for the reason that all those kinds of goods are sold in hardware stores. Of course, the application of appellee applies to snap switches in general, but the snap switches he has made and sold are not at the present time sold in the hardware trade. However, there can be no question, in our opinion, that such snap switches could be made and sold in the same stores as the goods of appellant if appellee so desired.

The examiner noted the principle that when goods of contending parties are sold in the same stores, it is a matter to be considered in connection with the descriptive properties of the goods, but is not controlling on that question, citing Pratt & Lambert, Inc. v. Chapman & Rodgers, Inc., 30 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 1228, 136 F. (2d) 909, 58 USPQ 474; and Kraft-Phenix Cheese Corp. v. Consolidated Beverages, Ltd., 27 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 803, 107 F. (2d) 1004, 44 USPQ 41.

The examiner held, and in our opinion properly so, that although the goods to which appellant’s registered trade-marks are applied, as pleaded in the notice of opposition, and snap switches, even though all are sold in hardware stores, are so distinct and dissimilar in their uses and essential characteristics as to be unlikely to cause purchasers to assume that they had a common origin. He observed, and we agree with the observation, that there are sold in hardware stores an almost unlimited variety of unrelated items and that because of the differences between snap switches and appellant’s products, they do not possess the same descriptive properties.

[723]*723The commissioner held that the go'ods named in the registrations pleaded in the notice of opposition were obviously not of the same descriptive properties as appellee’s goods and, cohsequently, the claim of similarity of appellee’s mark to the marks under which appellant sold its goods becomes immaterial. General Mills Inc. v. Freed, 24 C. C. P. A. (Patents) 1171, 89 F. (2d) 664, 33 USPQ 386.

Appellant’s registration of the mark “3-M” for electrical tape, dated January 11, 1944, heretofore referred to, was introduced in evidence as a cross-exhibit of appellant during the cross-examination of appellee.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kraft-Phenix Cheese Corp. v. Consolidated Beverages, Ltd.
107 F.2d 1004 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1939)
Island Road Bottling Co. v. Drink-Mor Beverage Co.
132 F.2d 129 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1942)
Pratt & Lambert, Inc. v. Chapman & Rodgers, Inc.
136 F.2d 909 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1943)
Island Road Bottling Co. v. Drink-Mor Beverage Co.
140 F.2d 331 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 F.2d 557, 35 C.C.P.A. 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-mining-manufacturing-co-v-mcdonnell-ccpa-1947.