The Coca-Cola Company v. Victor Syrup Corporation

218 F.2d 596, 42 C.C.P.A. 751
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1955
DocketPatent Appeal 6075
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 F.2d 596 (The Coca-Cola Company v. Victor Syrup Corporation) 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
The Coca-Cola Company v. Victor Syrup Corporation, 218 F.2d 596, 42 C.C.P.A. 751 (ccpa 1955).

Opinion

COLE, Judge.

The Victor Syrup Corporation of New York filed two applications in 1947 to register “Nutri.Cola” on the principal register of the United States Patent Office as a trade mark applied to goods consisting of syrups, concentrates, and extracts for carbonated, non-alcoholic, non-cereal, maltless beverages, sold as soft drinks, one application being based on a claim to distinctiveness of the notation under section 2(f) of the Trade Mark Act of 1946,15 U.S.C.A. § 1052(f), and the other, filed without reference to section 2(f), being for registration of “Nutri.Cola” in association with an ancillary ornamental background, i. e., a red and green rosette. The Coca-Cola Company, prior user and registrant by many years of the widely known and highly valuable trade mark “Coca-Cola,” as applied to tonics, syrups, and beverages substantially similar to those of the applicant, entered its opposition to each of the aforesaid applications to register “Nutri.Cola” on the ground that applicant’s marks so resembled opposer’s mark that confusion in trade would likely result if applicant’s marks were registered and, in addition, that applicant has been guilty of inequitable conduct and unclean hands in applying for several years past the words “Reg.U.S.Pat.Off.” to the labels of its products carrying the marks now sought to be registered.

Testimony was taken by opposer and offered in the opposition proceeding instituted in the Patent Office. Applicant did not introduce any evidence or appear at the hearing. On the basis of the record before him, the Examiner-in-Chief affirmed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences, dismissing the opposition, and, in relation to the points raised in opposer’s notices of opposition, held (1) that the marks in controversy, when considered in their respective entireties, were not confusingly similar either in appearance, sound, or meaning, nor (2) did the evidence satisfactorily indicate that confusion and deception of purchasers actually resulted because of similarity between the marks, and (3) that the use by applicant of the registration notice was not sufficiently unfounded to warrant rejection of the applications. The Examiner-in-Chief further held that opposer’s allegation to the effect that applicant had deliberately engaged in a course of conduct to encourage and facilitate passing off its product for the products of opposer was not substantiated by the evidence of record, and that in any event such issue related exclusively to the law of unfair competition and was not material in an opposition proceeding. Coca-Cola Company v. Victor Syrup Corporation, 97 U.S.P.Q. 478.

In appealing from the decision of the Examiner-in-Chief, the opposer states in its brief that “the single and precise question involved is whether the unfair, deceptive and fraudulent use of ‘Nutri.Cola’ in commerce prior to and during the pendency of the application for registration is a legal defense to the application to register.” While the question thus presented is primarily directed to a determination of the availability of a defense to opposer based on applicant’s alleged unclean hands and other inequitable conduct in promoting the sale of “Nutri.Cola” by intentionally passing off, and inducing others to pass off, said product on customers ordering “Coca-Cola,” the issue so framed is a considerable enlargement on the only ground of opposition set forth in the formal pleadings filed in the Patent Office to which it could possibly refer. That ground, supra, reads as follows:

“4. Applicant is guilty of inequitable conduct and unclean hands in that long prior to the filing of this application to register its alleged mark applicant’s labels carrying the mark have borne the words ‘Reg.U.S.Pat.Off.’ and said labels are presently being so marked as evidenced by the drawings filed in the application.” [Italics ours.]

*599 Although we are somewhat reluctant to permit the opposer to unduly broaden the scope of its opposition, and might construe the above ground of opposition as limiting the sought after application of equitable principles to the alleged misuse of the registration notice, and thus limit our discussion herein, we will give brief expression to our views concerning the entire record as presented.

Considering first the alleged misuse by applicant of the registration notice, it appears that applicant owns registrations consisting principally of the notation “Nutri”, as applied to the same class of goods as those for which it now seeks registration, and has used such notation with the words “Reg.U.S.Pat. Off.” and with the further word “Cola,” the combination of which it did not •own, the notice being centered beneath the compound word, “Nutri.Cola.” Applicant’s explanation for such use was that to otherwise use the notice with its registered marks would render its labels asymmetrical in appearance. No showing of bad faith or intention to mislead the public was evidenced by the record. On the basis of the foregoing facts, the Patent Office accepted applicant’s explanation, and we are in agreement with that holding. See A. F. Part, Inc., v. Sormani, 80 F.2d 78, 23 C.C.P.A., Patents, 773.

Secondly, it is now clear to us that the word “Cola” is descriptive of a type of drink and is not subject to •exclusive appropriation. Dixie-Cola Laboratories, Inc., v. Coca-Cola Company, 4 Cir., 117 F.2d 352. That “Nutri” and “Coca” are manifestly distinguishable in appearance, sound, and meaning cannot seriously be disputed, and when the marks are viewed in their entireties, as they must be in the ultimate determination, it does not seem likely that “Nutri.Cola” and “Coca-Cola” (no other features of similarity being present) will be confused by purchasers.

Opposer urges that the record convincingly demonstrates that actual confusion and deception of purchasers has resulted because of the similarity between the marks, and attention is drawn to the testimony of witnesses within its employ who conducted extensive surveys of retail outlets. Specifically, it is the opposer’s position that the testimony of its own investigating witnesses establishes that a large number of attendants in soda fountains, bars, and taverns actually confused “Nutri.-Cola” with “Coca-Cola” by serving the former beverage in response to calls for the latter. It is also asserted by opposer that in a further survey conducted by its investigating witnesses a number of retail dealers admitted that employees in their stores similarly confused the two products in serving customers.

Without attempting detailed review of this evidence, or directing comment as to the basic unreliability of the eviden-tiary aspects of ex parte surveys, or to the shortcomings inherent in the hearsay evidence offered and received in the record, it is sufficient to say that we are not satisfied that the alleged actual confusion has been proved. Among other reasons therefor, opposer’s witnesses testifying that numerous counter attendants had served “Nutri.Cola” in response to orders for “Coca-Cola” merely assumed, without factual determination, that such service was the result of actual confusion between the marks, and no allowance was made for the distinct possibility that the substitution was willfully made, or else, the store not handling “Coca-Cola,” served “Nutri.Cola” and did not inform of that fact.

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Bluebook (online)
218 F.2d 596, 42 C.C.P.A. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-coca-cola-company-v-victor-syrup-corporation-ccpa-1955.