Price Vacuum Stores, Inc. v. Admiral Corp.

223 F.2d 269, 42 C.C.P.A. 976, 106 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 172, 1955 CCPA LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1955
Docket6072
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 223 F.2d 269 (Price Vacuum Stores, Inc. v. Admiral Corp.) 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
Price Vacuum Stores, Inc. v. Admiral Corp., 223 F.2d 269, 42 C.C.P.A. 976, 106 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 172, 1955 CCPA LEXIS 175 (ccpa 1955).

Opinion

*270 JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents, speaking through the Examiner-in-Chief, 97 USPQ 472, affirming the decision of the Examiner of Trade-Mark Interferences which granted appellee’s motion for dismissal of appellant’s petition for cancellation of appellee’s registration No. 409,-912 for the trade-mark “Admiral” on the ground that it failed to state facts upon which relief could be granted.

The basic question for our determination is whether appellant has stated a cause of action in its pleadings. However, before answering this question we deem it desirable to review the facts of the instant litigation in the light of other litigation involving appellee and a subsidiary of appellant.

As stated above, appellee, Admiral Corporation, is the owner of registration No. 409,912 for the trade-mark “Admiral” registered January 11, 1944 for use on “radio receiving sets, loud speakers, amplifiers, vacuum tubes; electrically operated record players, automatic phonograph record players, automatic phonograph record changers, phonograph recorders and reproducers, radio and phonograph combinations; electrically operated phonograph recorders, electrically driven record changers, electric flat irons, electric waffle irons, nontherapeutic electric heating pads, electric desk lamps, nontherapeutic electric heating lamps, electric fans, electrically heated vaporizers, electric curling irons, electric percolators, electric toasters, electric hot plates, electric food mixers.”

Appellant, Price Vacuum Stores, Inc., has a wholly owned subsidiary by the name of Penco, Inc. which engages in the sale of sewing machines and vacuum cleaners under the name “Admiral.”

In previous litigation, Admiral Corporation v. Penco, Inc., D.C., 106 F.Supp. 1015, 1020, decided August 1, 1952, it was held, insofar as of interest here, that there was trade-mark infringement in the use of the mark “Admiral” by Penco, Inc. In its decision the court stated, “The right to protection of good will and reputation in connection with the trade in goods sold under an established mark extends not only to the identical goods but to items of the same general kind or of the same descriptive properties to which the mark would bear a natural trade significance." (Citation of cases omitted.) On appeal, 2 Cir., 203 F.2d 517, the circuit court affirmed the district court’s decision.

A petition for cancellation of appellee’s registration No. 409,912 was filed by appellant, Price Vacuum Stores, Inc., in the United States Patent Office on March 24, 1952. This petition, as amended on May 19, 1952, included the following allegations:

“12. Said Penco, Inc., the defendant in said Civil Action No. 5036, is Petitioner’s wholly-owned subsidiary and Admiral Corporation seeks damages as well as an injunction in said suit.
“13. Admiral Corporation has offered in evidence and is relying upon said Certificate of Registration No. 409,912 in said Oppositions No. 29.846 and No. 29,847.
“14. In said suit for infringement, Civil Action No. 5036, and in said Oppositions No. 29,846 and No. 29.847 said Admiral Corporation bases its action, in part, on the alleged fact that said Certificate of Registration No. 409,912 is evidence of trade-mark use on all of the goods specified in said Registration No. 409,912 which said Admiral Corporation alleges are of the same descriptive properties as Petitioner’s electric sewing machines, vacuum cleaners and parts therefor. [Italics added.]
“15. Petitioner avers on information and belief that Admiral Corporation has never offered for sale electric sewing machines, vacuum cleaners and parts therefor under the mark Admiral or any other trade-mark.
*271 “16. Petitioner avers on information and belief that it has adopted and used the mark Admiral on sewing machines, vacuum cleaners and parts therefor prior to the time Admiral Corporation has adopted and used its mark on the same class of goods.”

Appellee, Admiral Corporation, moved to dismiss appellant’s petition for cancellation on the ground that it failed to state a cause of action. The Examiner of Interferences granted this motion and the Examiner-in-Chief affirmed with the following language:

“It seems clear from a study of the decisions cited by the examiner that his decision dismissing the petition for cancelation on the ground that it was fatally defective because of the omission of an allegation that the goods of the petitioner and those specified in the registration sought to be canceled are such that their sale under the notation ‘Admiral’ would be likely to cause confusion or mistake or deception of purchasers in trade was proper and is affirmed.”

The decision of the Examiner-in-Chief was appealed to this court.

It is well settled that a petition for cancellation of registration of a trade-mark must allege facts upon which injury to petitioner is predicated. Old Monk Olive Oil Co. v. Southwestern Coca-Cola Bottling Co., 118 F.2d 1015, 28 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1091, and cases cited therein. One of the facts which must be alleged is that the goods of the respective parties are similar, or that confusion in the trade is likely, as discussed in detail hereafter.

The case of McIlhenny’s Son v. New Iberia Extract of Tobasco Pepper Company, Limited, 30 App.D.C. 337, was cited in the Old Monk case, supra, for the above point of law. In the McIlhenny’s case, the following is stated at 340 of 30 App.D.C.

“ * * * The petition of the appellee does not contain an averment that it had used the word ‘Tobasco’ as a trademark (sic) for pepper sauce. The averment that it had used the word as a trademark (sic) is not sufficient, for the obvious reason that, unless the word had been used in the same business as that in which it was used by appellant, no injury contemplated by the statute would have resulted and no right to intervene would have followed.
* * * ” [Italics added.]

The demurrer should have been sustained, * * *.

The Mcllhenny’s case, supra, was cited with approval in Goheen Corp., etc. v. White Co., 126 F.2d 481, 484, 29 C.C.P.A., Patents, 926, at page 931, wherein it is stated:

“ * * * White has not alleged in its petition for cancellation that at or before the time it filed its petition it used the mark on any kind of goods similar to those of Vita-Var, *• * *
“If White had alleged in its petition for cancellation, and offered proof establishing that it, at the time of filing the petition, was manufacturing and selling a waterproofing compound similar to that of Vita-Var * * * a different situation with respect to the right to file a petition for cancellation might have been presented. [Italics added.]

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Bluebook (online)
223 F.2d 269, 42 C.C.P.A. 976, 106 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 172, 1955 CCPA LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-vacuum-stores-inc-v-admiral-corp-ccpa-1955.