Wincharger Corporation v. Rinco, Inc.

297 F.2d 261, 49 C.C.P.A. 849
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6742
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 297 F.2d 261 (Wincharger Corporation v. Rinco, Inc.) 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
Wincharger Corporation v. Rinco, Inc., 297 F.2d 261, 49 C.C.P.A. 849 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, 126 USPQ 65, dismissing appellant’s opposition to appellee’s application for the registration of “RINCO” for goods, apparently designated at the time of filing the opposition as “apparatus and components thereof for supplying and/or measuring electrical characteristics, namely, resistance, capacitance, inductance, reactance, dissipation factor and the reciprocals thereof, voltage, current, phase angle, frequency, power and power factor.” The application was filed on November 14, 1957 and alleges use since February 19, 1957.

The basis for appellant’s opposition is that it has, for over seventeen years before the date of the notice of opposition, used the mark “WINCO” on and in connection with electrical apparatus. It alleges that it has, since a date prior to February 19, 1957, the date of first use asserted by appellee, used that mark on or in connection with motors, generators, dynamotors, inverters, converters, prime-mover-controls, engine driven generators, and control units and measuring instru *262 ment cabinets therefor, wind-driven generators, and parts of the foregoing.

Appellant has been granted registrations of “WINCO” for electrical dynamotors, generators, converters, and motors ; 1 wind-driven power apparatus and parts thereof, particularly wind-driven electric current generator apparatus and parts thereof; 2 engine-driven power apparatus and parts thereof, particularly engine-driven electric current generator apparatus and parts thereof; 3 and dynamo-electric machines, particularly motors, generators, dynamotors, inverters, and converters; prime-mover-driven electric generators, particularly engine-generator combinations and starter-control units therefor; prime-mover controls including engine idling-control units; electric power supplies; wind-electric equipment, particularly wind-driven generator apparatus and components thereof; and parts of any of the foregoing. 4

, . „ , , , It is obvious from the record that appellant, as held by the board, is the prior user'

Subsequent to the taking of testimony by the parties, but before final hearing, appellee moved to amend its application to change the description of goods to “voltage dividing instruments, precision calibrated variable potentiometers and rheostats, and bridge-type impedance measuring instruments.” This motion was denied “without prejudice to any right of the applicant to seek to amend” the application “after determination of this proceeding.”

The board in its decision found as follows:

“The record shows that opposer has, since it was organized in January, 1935, been engaged in the manufacture of wind electric systems, radio, radio and television antenna towers, fractional horsepower motors, portable and standby engine-generators, and • rotary electrical equipment for industrial and military use. These products have been sold under various brand names, of which the principal ones are ‘WIN-CHARGER’ and ‘WINCO’, through°ut the United States and in certain foreign countries through opposer’s sales engineers, manufacturers representatives and wholesale distributors. Opposer has, since about 1941, continuously used the notation ‘WINCO’ as a trademark for its electrical power supply equipment, in-eluding motors, generators, dynamotors, inverters and converters, engine-generator combinations and control units and panels therefore [sic], prime mover controls, wind-driven generators, and parts and components therefor. Opposer’s WINCO generator controls and control units incorporate electronic equipment such as meters and relays, but the record does not show that oppoger manufactures and/or sella these componentg ag such. <WINC0’ dynamotors, alterdynes, altermotors, generators, transistorized power supplies, static power- supplies, motors, and generator sets have been sold by opposer directly to the Armed Forces and certain government agencies and on a sub-contract basis to government contractors for use as components of telemetering, guided missile, transceiver, fire control, homing, communication, and navigation equipment and systems. In addition, opposer through its sales representatives sells ‘WINCO’ universal motors, DC motors, AC and DC generators, and portable generators to manufacturers of consumer goods for use as power components for a wide variety of products such as ealculating machines, power tools, vacuum cleaners, phonographs, farm equipment, and the like. Gross sales of all of opposer’s products, for the *263 period from 1951 through 1958, exceeded thirty-one million dollars, of which approximately ninety-eight percent involved shipments of ‘WIN-CO’ products. ‘WINCO’ electrical power equipment has been extensively advertised and promoted by op-poser in nationally circulated general and technical publications, including ‘Military Electronics’, ‘Electronics’, ‘Electronics Design’, ‘Aviation Week’, ‘Newsweek’, ‘U. S. News and World Reports’, and ‘Thomas Register’, catalogues, brochures, technical bulletins, and mailing pieces, and by opposer, its distributors and manufacturers’ representatives in newspapers. Opposer has, since 1941, spent over one million dollars in advertising its products under all brand names, and it is estimated that, since 1951, a sum in excess of five hundred and fifty thousand dollars has been expended on advertising material featuring its ‘WINCO’ products.
“Applicant, formerly known as Research Instruments Corporation, has, since February, 1957, manufactured and sold under the mark ‘RINCO’ precision electronic instruments, namely, potentiometers, rheostats, voltage dividers, and impedance bridges. These products are precision measuring and testing equipment designed for research and development use in aircraft designing and in electronic, physics, or medical laboratories. They have been sold directly and through manufacturers’ representatives to the Armed Forces and government agencies, to universities, and to commercial concerns, including some government agencies and industrial concerns to whom opposer sells its ‘WINCO’ power supplies. Applicant’s ‘RIN-CO’ precision electronic instruments have been advertised in trade publications including ‘Electronics’, and ‘Electronics Design’, in catalogues, and through direct mailing of descriptive literature.”

These findings of the board are uncontroverted by appellee, which did not file a brief and was not represented at oral argument.

In dismissing the opposition, the board stated that “Power supply equipment such as motors, generators and the like and precision electronic equipment such as potentiometers and rheostats are radically different products intended for completely different purposes.” Referring to “the nature of and the differences in the goods of the parties, together with the fact that these products are of a character which would ordinarily be purchased with care by technically trained people, and the differences between the marks ‘RINCO’ and ‘WINCO’,” the board concluded that “confusion or mistake or deception of purchasers would not be reasonably likely to occur.”

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Bluebook (online)
297 F.2d 261, 49 C.C.P.A. 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wincharger-corporation-v-rinco-inc-ccpa-1962.