Van Camp Sea Food Co. v. Alexander B. Stewart Organizations

50 F.2d 976, 18 C.C.P.A. 1415, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 209
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1931
DocketPatent Appeal 2708
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 50 F.2d 976 (Van Camp Sea Food Co. v. Alexander B. Stewart Organizations) 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
Van Camp Sea Food Co. v. Alexander B. Stewart Organizations, 50 F.2d 976, 18 C.C.P.A. 1415, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 209 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents, affirming the action of the Examiner of Interferences, dismissing the opposition, and adjudging the applicant, appellee, entitled to the registration for which application had been made.

The applicant seeks to register the term “White Chicken,” used upon canned tuna.

The opposer sets up a prior use of the term “Chicken of the Sea,” as a trade-mark for tuna fish, and shows ownership of registration No. 97,192, granted May 19, 1914, for the mark. According to the reeord, the “Chicken of the Sea” trade-mark has been used by opposer and its predecessors since 1914, and opposer spends approximately $60,000 annually in advertising this brand' of tuna. Its sales, amounting to approximately five million cans annually, are made in all parts of the United States, and in Hawaii and Canada.

Appellee has used the term “White Chicken” on its goods since October 14, 1926. The Commissioner held that the goods of the two parties were identical, and that the only question involved for his decision was the question of confusion. He states:

“ ‘ In the ruling in the adjudicated case of Van Camp Sea Food Co., Inc. v. Westgate Sea Products Co., 28 F.(2d) 957 (C. C. A. 9th Cir.) it was finally determined that the notation ‘Breast o’ Chicken,’ was not confusingly similar to the opposeris mark ‘Chicken of the Sea.’ The court found that the word ‘chicken’ had been widely used in a descriptive sense in connection with various foods, including fish, and that the opposer was not entitled to claim exclusive rights to the use of this word alone. Since the mark of the applicant here .‘White Chicken,’ is obviously no more similar to the opposeris mark than is the mark of the defendant in the adjudicated case, the finding of the court in that case is regarded as determinative of the question of similarity of the’ marks involved in the instant proceeding.”

The reeord shows that the Van Camp Sea Food Company Ine., brought suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California against Westgate Sea Products Company for infringement of its mark “Chicken of the Sea,” and alleged that the defendant’s infringing mark was “Breast o’Chicken.” The District Court dismissed the bill without hearing evidence. Appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, which court held [Van Camp Sea Food Co., Inc., v. Westgate Sea Products Co., 28 F.(2d) 957, 958] that the trial judge had the right to dismiss the bill without taking evidence. The Circuit Court of Appeals stated, evidently inadvertently, that the West-gate Products Company caused its “Breast o’ Chicken” trade-mark to be registered. It is conceded that the term had not been registered. The court then held as follows:

“Were the word ‘chieken,’ common to the two trade-marks, a purely fanciful term, and made equally prominent in both, we might have a case of sufficient doubt to warrant a hearing of evidence. But, as registered, the two combinations are similar neither in appearance nor in sound, and if, as appellant contends, it be conceded that ‘chicken’ is the dominant word in its combination, it cannot be said to have such prominence in that of the defendant. Moreover, ‘chicken,’ as used by the plaintiff, is not a purely fanciful term, but is measurably descriptive. Truei in its primary or most popular meaning, it designates the young of the domestic hen, and less, commonly, the young of wild birds, but it is sometimes used to denote living things of the sea as well as of the land. Its application has been so extended apparently because in a figurative sense it has come to signify something young and tender.
“At page 336 of volume 2 of Murray’s New English Dictionary of the Philological Society it is stated that, since early in the 1700’s, ‘chicken’ has been so used as denoting a young and inexperienced person, and in Farmer and Henley’s Dictionary of Slang and Colloquial English it is said that ‘tender as chicken’ dates backs to the fourteenth century. In the Century Dictionary it is referred to as a name applied with qualifying adjectives to various fishes. In the same work chicken halibut is defined as ‘a halibut weighing from ten to twenty pounds.’ And in the edition published as early as 1889 chicken lobster is said to be ‘an undersized lobster,’ too small to be legally marketable under the laws of some states. It will thus be seen that the term is not only more or less' generally applied to sea life, but, when so used, it is understood to be descriptive of class or quality. We are not to be understood as necessarily holding that plaintiff’s trade-mark is invalid; the combination as a whole may have validity. But, in view of 'the considerations just suggested> appel *978 lant cannot, as in effect it seeks to do, abandon all but tbe word ‘chicken’ and claim that as its trade-mark. ‘Chicken,’ when applied to tuna, would, as when applied to halibut or lobster, denote young and tender meat, and hence would be descriptive of quality. That terms merely descriptive of quality cannot be appropriated as trademarks is too well settled to require citation of authorities. On the point that generally a registered trade-mark is to be considered as an entirety, see John Morrell & Co. v. Hauser Packing Co. (C. C. A.) 20 F.(2d) 713; Ostermoor & Co. v. Rose Spring & Mattress Co., 55 App. D. C. 307, 5 F.(2d) 268; Loughran v. Quaker City, etc. (C. C. A.) 296 F. 822; Beckwith v. Commissioner of Patents, 252 U. S. 538, 40 S. Ct. 414, 64 L. Ed. 705.”

The record shows that, after the decision by the Circuit Court of Appeals, supra, a suit by the Van Camp Sea Food Company was begun against the appellee herein in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, Central Division, and that in September, 1930, that court held in substance, among other things, that there was not sufficient similarity between the alleged trade-marks to produce confusion, and that the mark “White Chicken” did not infringe “Chicken of the Sea,” and that the defendant had not committed acts of unfair competition against the plaintiff. It also held that the term “of the Sea,” when used on a fish product, designated the place from which the product came, and added nothing to the descriptive word “chicken,” and that the legend “Chicken of the Sea” was therefore invalid when used as a trade-mark for tuna. 1

Under the statute, our duties in reviewing decisions of the Commissioner of Patents in trade-mark cases are quite different from those of a District or Circuit Court of Appeals in actions such as have been hereinbefore referred to. We determine the correctness of the Commissioner’s ruling on the registrability of the trade-mark. The District and Circuit Courts of Appeals, in the above cases, were not concerned with this question. Our jurisdiction involves the question of the right to register, while the jurisdiction in the eases above referred to involves the right to use. California Packing Corp. v. Tillman & Bendel, 40 F.(2d) 108, 17 C. C. P. A. 1048; B. F. Goodrich Co. v. Hockmeyer, 40 F.(2d) 99, 17 C. C. P. A. 1068.

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50 F.2d 976, 18 C.C.P.A. 1415, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-camp-sea-food-co-v-alexander-b-stewart-organizations-ccpa-1931.