Roux Laboratories, Inc. v. Clairol Incorporated

427 F.2d 823, 57 C.C.P.A. 1173, 166 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 34, 1970 CCPA LEXIS 344
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1970
DocketPatent Appeal 8248
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 427 F.2d 823 (Roux Laboratories, Inc. v. Clairol 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
Roux Laboratories, Inc. v. Clairol Incorporated, 427 F.2d 823, 57 C.C.P.A. 1173, 166 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 34, 1970 CCPA LEXIS 344 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

MeMANUS, Judge.

Roux Laboratories, Inc. appeals from the decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board 1 dismissing its opposition to registration 2 on the Principal Register by Clairol Incorporated of the slogan “Hair Color So Natural Only Her Hairdresser knows For Sure” for a “hair tinting, dyeing and coloring preparation." We affirm.

Roux’s opposition is predicated on the grounds that it, like Clairol, is engaged in the manufacture and sale of hair tinting, dyeing and coloring preparations; that it has used certain “descriptive” language in its advertising 3 of those products both before and after any use by Clairol of the slogan sought to be registered; that it believes the slogan “Hair Color So Natural Only Her Hairdresser Knows For Sure” is a common, laudatory advertising phrase which is “merely descriptive” of the goods — indeed, so highly descriptive of them, particularly of their qualities, characteristics and function, as well as of the result to be obtained from their use — that the slogan does not, and could not, function as a trademark to distinguish Clairol’s goods and serve as an indication of origin; and that it believes it would be damaged by registration of the slogan because Clairol could employ said registration to harass it and its customers who might utilize that phrase 4 or others similar to it in connection with the sale and advertising of similar merchandise.

Clairol’s record is stipulated. It shows that, since 1950, Clairol has marketed products for tinting and dyeing hair under the mark “Miss Clairol” and the notation “Hair Color Bath” 5 to beauty salons and various retail outlets, including drug stores. In 1956, Clairol’s predecessor-in-title embarked on an extensive advertising campaign to promote the sale of its “Miss Clairol” hair color preparations, which included advertisements in national magazines, on outdoor billboards, and on car cards for bus and subway transit systems; mailing pieces; radio and television; and point-of-sale display material designed to be used by beauty salons and retailers as window or counter displays in association with the “Miss Clairol” product. The illus *825 trative exhibits of record reflect a now familiar format for much of that advertising — a large, color photograph of an attractive woman, often accompanied by a young child; the question “Does she * * * or doesn’t she?” prominently imprinted on or above the photograph; the slogan “Hair Color So Natural Only Her Hairdresser Knows For Sure” also conspicuously imprinted on or below the photograph, and set apart from the other portions of the advertisement; the mark “Miss Clairol” in large type and the notation “Hair Color Bath” in smaller type below the photograph; a representation of the packaged “Miss Clairol” hair coloring product; and, optionally, advertising text extolling, not unexpectedly, the virtues and advantages of use of the product.

The record further shows that, in the period 1956-1966, Clairol sold over fifty million dollars worth of its “Miss Clairol” hair coloring product and expended some twenty-two million dollars for the above advertising material which contained the slogan sought to be registered. It is stipulated that, so far as the magazine and television media are concerned:

* * * During the same period, and considering the press runs of all the various periodicals involved, the total number of “impressions” of all the different advertisements in this series in periodicals, all of them prominently displaying the slogan here opposed, have much exceeded 100 million (100,-000,000) (counting as a separate “impression,” each copy of each periodical carrying one such advertisement).
******
* * * Conservatively estimated, there have been more than a billion audio impressions of this slogan on network television in the United States (one impression being one household having a TV set tuned to a given program at a given time).

The record also shows that, with the exception of a single shipment of goods in 1962, the slogan has not been used on the containers in which the hair color preparation has been packaged or on the bottles of hair color preparation themselves.

The appeal presents several issues:

(1) Is the slogan “Hair Color So Nattura] Only her Hairdresser Knows for Sure” “merely descriptive” of Clairol’s hair coloring preparations within the meaning of § 2(e) (1) of the Trademark Act (15 USC 1052(e) (D).
(2) More broadly, is the slogan a “trademark” at all as that term is used in the preamble of § 2 of the Act and is defined in § 45 of the Act (15 USC 1127). In particular, does it function to “identify” the goods as Clairol’s and “distinguish them from those manufactured or sold by others”; and, if once “merely descriptive,” has it nevertheless “become distinctive” of those goods in commerce, 15 USC 1052(f).
(3) Has “use in commerce” been made of the slogan by Clairol as that expression is defined in § 45 of the Act.

We shall deal with each of those issues seriátim.

A principal way of determining whether a particular expression is “merely descriptive” as applied to the goods is to ascertain the reaction of those to whom it is directed — the consumers. In re Colonial Stores, 394 F.2d 549, 55 CCPA 1049 (1968); Blisscraft of Hollywood v. United Plastics Co., 294 F.2d 694 (2d Cir. 1961); Vandenburgh, Trademark Law and Procedure, 2nd Edition § 4.30 (1968). We must point out initially that Roux, though it pleaded the matter, has submitted no direct evidence that Clairol’s slogan has 'merely a descriptive significance to purchasers of hair coloring preparations, to the exclusion of either a suggestive connotation or any origin-indicating significance. 6 It is apparently *826 Roux’s position that the slogan, by reason of its very nature, speaks for itself in that regard.

Concentrating first on whether the slogan is descriptive, Roux maintains that the slogan is simply a laudatory advertising expression — a form of “trade puffery” as it were — used to describe and promote the product sold and identified by the recognized trademark “Miss Clairol”; that “there has been no suggestion as to any meaning which could be attributed to this phrase except the obvious one”; and that:

In the instant case the phrase sought to be registered “HAIR COLOR SO NATURAL ONLY HER HAIRDRESSER KNOWS FOR SURE” tells the purchaser only
(1) what the goods are — hair coloring preparations,
(2) what their function is — to make the colored hair look natural,

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427 F.2d 823, 57 C.C.P.A. 1173, 166 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 34, 1970 CCPA LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roux-laboratories-inc-v-clairol-incorporated-ccpa-1970.