Skol Co. v. Olson

151 F.2d 200, 33 C.C.P.A. 715, 67 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1945 CCPA LEXIS 516
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 1945
DocketPatent Appeal 4988
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 151 F.2d 200 (Skol Co. v. Olson) 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
Skol Co. v. Olson, 151 F.2d 200, 33 C.C.P.A. 715, 67 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1945 CCPA LEXIS 516 (ccpa 1945).

Opinions

O’CONNELL, Associate Judge.

This appeal presents two questions under Section 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905, 15 U.S.C.A. § 85, to determine whether mineral water classified as a beverage is merchandise of the same descriptive properties as antiseptic sun lotion, antiseptic mouth wash, antiseptic cream, lipstick, deodorant, and Skol sun glasses which are classified as medicinal preparations; and whether “Skol,” the name of appellant corporation, is appropriated as a trade-mark by registration of the mark “Skoal.”

The involved marks, “Skol” and “Skoal,” comprise a single word which is identical in sound, and in appearance the marks differ to the extent that appellee’s mark contains the additional letter “a” and the letter “o” is enlarged and incloses an illustration of a projected hand holding a glass of effervescent liquid.

The two questions grow out of opposition proceedings instituted by appellant in the United States Patent Office in which the Examiner of Interferences sustained the opposition on the ground not only that the merchandise was of the same descriptive properties and the marks were confusingly similar; but also on the ground that registration of the mark “Skoal” was prohibited as an appropriation of appellant’s corporate name.

The Commissioner of Patents, speaking through an Assistant Commissioner, reversed the decision of the examiner and dismissed the opposition on the grounds that since the merchandise was not of the same descriptive properties, the marks were not confusingly similar; and that inasmuch as “skoal” is a word defined in the dictionary and “Skol” is a “fanciful” word without significance except as appellant’s name or trade-mark, the name clause of the statute did not prohibit registration of the mark “Skoal.”

From the final decision of the Patent Office, appellant brings the respective holdings of the Assistant Commissioner before this Court for review.

Section 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905, so far as pertinent to the issues here involved, provides:

“That trade-marks which are identical with a registered or known trade-mark owned and in use by another and appropriated to merchandise of the same descriptive properties, or which so nearly resemble a registered or known trade-mark owned and in use by another and appropriated to merchandise of the same descriptive properties as to be likely to cause confusion or mistake in the mind of the public or to deceive purchasers shall not be registered: Provided, That no mark which consists merely in the name of an individual, firm, corporation, or association not written, printed, impressed, or woven in some particular or distinctive manner, * * * shall be registered under the terms of this Act.”

The decision rendered by the Assistant Commissioner was reported in 59 U.S.P.Q. at pages 70, 71 and in his opinion he makes the following statement:

" * * * applicant’s sales of the product are ‘mostly in saloons,’ where it is used in making highballs. It is essentially a beverage, sold as such; and any real or fancied medicinal properties that it may possess are merely incidental.”

Appellant offered the following testimony relative to the spelling, origin, and meaning of the terms which constitute the involved marks:

“Q. 112 How do you spell the name “Skol” as you use it? A. We spell ‘Skol’ S-k-o-1.

“Q. 113 Are there any other variants of the spelling of this word? A. There are. S-k-o with an umlaut over it -1, and S-k-o-a-1. All words come from the same origin, meaning skull, s-k-u-1-1.

“Q. 114 What is the origin of the word, if you know? A. The wiking word pronounced Skol, S-k-o-1, which means skull, s-k-u-1-1. The Viking warrior, when he [203]*203killed his opponent, would scoop out the skull and use it as a drinking cup, and this became a word used by warriors in drinking to the good health of others.”

The following definition of the word “skoal,” it will be noted, involves the term “skol,” as quoted from Webster’s New International Dictionary:

“skoal (sk5l), interj. [Dan. & Nor. Skoal cup, health, toast, fr ON. skal bowl. See 1st SCALE, n.] An exclamation pledging health in drinking. — n. A salutation or toasting by crying ‘Skoal!’ — skoal, v. t. &i.”

Appellant’s product was first imported from Europe in 1932 and sold in the American market under the mark “Skol.” In 1936 the business was incorporated under the laws of the state of New York as Skol Company, Inc., which corporation succeeded to the ownership of the respective products which had been sold here previously under the registered or unregistered brands known as “Skol.”

From 1936 to June 5, 1942, Skol Company, Inc., spent approximately $300,000 in advertising its products and “In this country alone,” to quote the president of appellant corporation regarding the sale of its Sun Tan Lotion, “We have sold several million bottles to date, and this year [1942] * * * we should sell well over a million bottles.”

The “Skol” products were ordinarily sold in drug stores, five-and-ten-cent stores, beach pavilions, resort hotels, cigar stores, general stores, and in small country towns.

A published article in the magazine, “Mademoiselle,” through mistake, referred to appellant as the owner of appellee’s product “Skoal.”

Appellee Olson runs a bathing beach in Macomb County, Michigan, in the Mt. Clemens District, and is engaged also in bottling mineral water obtained from a nearby well. Visitors to the beach used to go to the well and help themselves. A Dr. Meyer, who had ulcers of the stomach when he was fifteen years old and was cured in Karlsbad, Bohemia, saw an analysis of the water from appellee’s well and urged him “by all means to put it on the market.” That was the inception of the enterprise and the water is now sold at the beach and elsewhere in split and other size bottles. Appellant’s “Skol” Sun Tan Lotion was not sold at appellee’s beach; “the bathers brought it with them.”

In advertising, appellee Olson had spent, at the time of the hearing in the Patent Office, “somewhere between fifteen and twenty thousand dollars.” This endeavor comprised newspaper advertising, display cards, exhibited in saloons and soft drink places; and 25,000 mail order cards addressed to, say, all the people with arthritis, whose names were on a list purchased by appellee. Pamphlets, circulars, and mediums of trade and local representation were also utilized.

The theme of this advertising emphasized the beneficial medicinal qualities of the water and the results effected, or to be effected, by its use. Thus, in appellee’s Exhibit 2, we find this statement with numerous testimonials extolling the curative properties of appellee’s product:

“Rheumatics, persons suffering from kidney or stomach trouble and dropsy had found relief and encouragement from this mineral water. So grateful and enthusiastic were they, that they persuaded Neis L. Olson, the owner of the Well to bottle and market it for national distribution. By this method, people all over the country could secure it whenever they so desired.”"

Appellee Olson testified that he had four or five hundred saloons using his product in the neighborhood of Detroit, that it was also sold in soft drink places, that sick people with arthritis use it and that it was sold in cases for home use. A statement in appellant’s brief to the following effect is supported by the evidence:

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Skol Co. v. Olson
151 F.2d 200 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
151 F.2d 200, 33 C.C.P.A. 715, 67 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1945 CCPA LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skol-co-v-olson-ccpa-1945.