Vick Chemical Co. v. Thomas Kerfoot & Co.

80 F.2d 73, 23 C.C.P.A. 752, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 296
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 1935
DocketPatent Appeal 3532
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 F.2d 73 (Vick Chemical Co. v. Thomas Kerfoot & Co.) 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
Vick Chemical Co. v. Thomas Kerfoot & Co., 80 F.2d 73, 23 C.C.P.A. 752, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 296 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

LENROOT, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents, affirming a decision of the Examiner of Interferences which dismissed appellant’s petition to cancel trade-mark registration No. 181,259, dated March 18, 1924, issued to appellee, for the word “Vapex.” The said mark was registered for use upon an “inhalant for the relief of cold in the head and the like.” The proceeding is under section 13 of the Trade-Mark Act of February 20, 1905 (15 U.S.C.A. § 93), which section reads as follows: “Sec. 13. That whenever any person shall deem himself injured by the registration of a trade-mark in the Patent Office he may at any time apply to the Commissioner of Patents fo cancel the registration thereof. The commissioner shall refer such application to the examiner in charge of interferences, who is empowered to hear and determine this question and who shall give notice thereof to the registrant. If it appear after a hearing before the examiner that the registrant was not entitled to the use of the mark at the date of his application for registration thereof, or that the mark is not used by the registrant, or has been abandoned, and the examiner shall so decide, the commissioner shall cancel the registration. Appeal may be taken to the commissioner in person from the decision of examiner of interferences.”

Appellant in its petition for cancellation alleges: that since prior to 1894, it has used the word “Vicks” as a trade-mark applied to various medicinal, pharamaceutical, and chemical preparations, naming a number of such preparations, including “salve,” and that “at the present time the trade-mark Vicks is applied to liver pills, cough drops, nose and throat drops, and a rubifacient salve used in the treatment of colds * * * ”; that said mark was duly registered on November 19, 1918, registration No. 123,667; that since about 1911 petitioner (appellant) has also used as a trade-mark for said salve the word “Vaporub,” and that said last-named mark, together with the mark “Vicks,” has since 1911 been conspicuously applied to packages containing said salve; that the said mark “Vaporub” was registered on April *74 6, 1915, registration No. 103,601. Petitioner alleges that the goods upon which its marks are used and the goods upon which the said mark “Vapex” is used are of the same descriptive properties; that the word “Vapex” so nearly resembles both of petitioner’s registered marks, “Vicks” and “Vaporub,” as to be likely to cause confusion in the minds of the public and to deceive purchasers, and that said mark “Vapex” has in fact caused such confusion.

The petition for cancellation further alleges that said mark “Vapex” “is not now used, and for several years preceding this time has not been used in inter-state commerce in the United States by the Registrant, Thos. Kerfoot & Co., Limited, but is used by some firm or person other than said Registrant.”

The petition further sets out the usual allegations of injury and damage.

The answer of appellee denies that the goods to which the mark “Vapex” is applied are of the same descriptive properties as are the goods to which appellant’s marks are applied; denies the allegation of the petition with regard to the similarity of the respective marks; and alleges that there never has been any confusion in the mind of the public growing out of the use of the said marks by the respective parties; denies that it was not using or had not used the said mark “Vapex” for several years preceding the filing of appellant’s petition; alleges that it is the present owner of said mark; and denies petitioner’s allegations of injury and damage.

Both sides took voluminous testimony. Appellee objected to certain letters offered by appellant as incompetent and hearsay and not duly authenticated, to which reference will be made hereinafter. Appellee also objected to certain rebuttal testimony offered by appellant upon the ground that such testimony should have been part of appellant’s case in chief, and was not proper rebuttal. This also we shall advert to later herein.

Most of the testimony offered by appellant was in support of its claim of actual confusion in the mind of the public respecting the marks “Vapex,” “Vicks,” and “Vaporub,” and most of the testimony offered by appellee was in support of its contention that no such confusion existed.

The Examiner of Interferences held that, from an inspection-of the marks as a whole, confusion in trade was not likely, and that the evidence in the case, apparently including the letters to which appellee had objected as aforesaid, did not possess sufficient probative force to change or vary his conclusion arrived at from an inspection of the marks. The Examiner of Interferences declined to consider the evidence producéd by appellant in rebuttal relating to confusion in trade, holding that such evidence was a part of the case in chief for appellant.

It appears also that it was contended before the Examiner of Interferences that the question of confusion was res adjudicata by reason of' a previous opposition proceeding in the Patent Office between the parties hereto, wherein appellee sought the registration of the word “Vapex” inclosed within a triangle, which application for registration was opposed by appellant, setting up the marks “Vicks” and “Vaporub” and a triangle. In said proceeding the opposition of appellant was sustained and the application of appellee for said registration refused. The Examiner of Interferences held that the decision in said proceeding was not res adjudicata upon the question here involved for the reason that the marks there involved were not the same as are the marks in issue here.

Appellant apparently did not press this contention before the Commissioner, and in this court makes no claim that the decision in said former proceeding is res adjudicata of the issue here involved.

Upon appeal to the commissioner, the decision of the Examiner of Interferences was affirmed, whereupon appellant took the appeal now before us.

The Commissioner in his decision, while holding that the letters hereinbefore referred to were not competent evidence, and affirming the holding of the Examiner that appellant’s evidence in rebuttal was improper, stated that, even considering all the foregoing as proper' evidence, and all the other evidence in the record, he was of the opinion that confusing similarity between the marks of the respective parties had not been established. He also held that appellant’s contention that appellee was not using the mark “Vapex” had not been established, stating that the statute is “not susceptible to the narrow interpretation contended for.”

Before us appellant makes two contentions, as follows:

(1) That the record establishes that the mark “Vapex” is confusingly similar to the marks “Vicks” and “Vaporub,” when applied to the goods of the respee *75 tive parties, or at least there is such doubt upon this question that, under the familiar rule, it should be resolved against the newcomer.

(2) That the record establishes that the mark “Vapex” was not used by appellee at the time this proceeding was initiated.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F.2d 73, 23 C.C.P.A. 752, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vick-chemical-co-v-thomas-kerfoot-co-ccpa-1935.