Archer (UK) LimitedDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardSep 4, 2013No. 79107852 (T.T.A.B. Sep. 4, 2013) Copy Citation THIS OPINION IS NOT A PRECEDENT OF THE TTAB Mailed: September 4, 2013 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board _____ In re Archer (UK) Limited _____ Serial No. 79107852 _____ William J. Seiter of Seiter Legal Studio for Archer (UK) Limited. Daniel F. Capshaw, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 110 (Chris A. F. Pedersen, Managing Attorney). _____ Before Quinn, Masiello, and Hightower, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Masiello, Administrative Trademark Judge: Archer (UK) Limited1 filed an application2 for extension of protection to the United States of its International Registration of the trademark TASK, in standard character form, for goods identified as “Chemicals for dissolving scale in pipelines for use in oil and gas production,” in International Class 1. 1 Applicant has undergone a change of name from Seawell Limited to its current name, Archer (UK) Limited. 2 Application Serial No. 79107852, filed on September 23, 2011 under Trademark Act § 66(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1141f(a), with a priority filing date of March 23, 2011, based on International Registration No. 1103434. Serial No. 79107852 2 The trademark examining attorney refused registration under § 2(d) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(d), on the ground that applicant’s mark, as used in connection with applicant’s goods, so resembles the two marks identified below as to be likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive. The mark above is registered for: Analysis of geological research and surveys related to oil and gas exploration and production, namely, core analysis and testing, structural analysis including borehole imaging; technical research projects and studies related to oil and gas exploration and production in the fields of structural geology, geophysics, sedimentology, seismology, petrography and petrology, in International Class 42.3 The mark above is registered for: Geological computer software which aids analysis of oil- field exploitation, geological prospecting research and surveys, in International Class 9; Design, development, programming, installation, maintenance, repairs, leasing, and renting of geological computer software which aids analysis of oil-field 3 Reg. No. 3405681, issued April 1, 2008; affidavits under Sections 15 and 71 filed. No claim is made to the exclusive right to use GEOSCIENCE apart from the mark as shown. The colors dark blue, green, light blue, white and red are claimed as features of the mark. Serial No. 79107852 3 exploitation, geological prospecting research and surveys, in International Class 42.4 The two cited registrations are owned by different entities. When the refusal was made final, applicant filed a notice of appeal and a request for reconsideration. On reconsideration, the examining attorney maintained his refusal and this appeal resumed. Applicant and the examining attorney have filed briefs. Our determination under Section 2(d) is based on an analysis of all of the probative facts in evidence that are relevant to the factors bearing on the issue of likelihood of confusion as set forth in In re E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 476 F.2d 1357, 177 USPQ 563, 567 (CCPA 1973). In any likelihood of confusion analysis, two key considerations are the similarities between the marks and the similarities between the goods and services at issue. See Federated Foods, Inc. v. Fort Howard Paper Co., 544 F.2d 1098, 192 USPQ 24, 29 (CCPA 1976). In this case, applicant and the examining attorney have also submitted evidence and arguments regarding the relevant classes of customers for the goods and services. 1. The marks. We first address the similarity or dissimilarity of the marks at issue as to their appearance, sound, connotation and commercial impression. Applicant correctly urges us to consider the marks at issue in their entireties. Applicant argues that we “must not focus on certain prominent features that both parties’ 4 Reg. No. 3889272, issued December 14, 2010. No claim is made to the exclusive right to use GEOMODELLING apart from the mark as shown. The colors blue, green, orange, red, yellow, fuchsia and turquoise are claimed as features of the mark. Serial No. 79107852 4 marks have in common, to the exclusion of others which cause the parties’ marks as a whole to create in the minds of consumers different impressions,” quoting Worthington Foods, Inc. v. Kellogg Co., 732 F. Supp. 1417, 1439 (S.D. Ohio 1990). Applicant argues further that “No element of a mark is ignored simply because it is less dominant or even if it would not have trademark significance if used alone,” citing B.V.D. Licensing Corp. v. Body Action Design Inc., 846 F.2d 727 (Fed. Cir. 1988). We agree that no element of a mark should be ignored (including generic and descriptive matter). However, there is nothing improper in stating that, for rational reasons, more or less weight has been given to a particular feature of a mark. In re National Data Corp., 753 F.2d 1056, 224 USPQ 749, 751 (Fed. Cir. 1985). The marks at issue are manifestly not identical. However, they all do share the distinctive element TASK, so that to the extent of this shared term they are similar in appearance, sound, and meaning. We agree with the examining attorney in finding TASK to be the dominant portion of each of the two cited marks. In each of the registered marks TASK is presented in taller and bolder lettering than the other wording and has stronger source-identifying potential than the other wording, which has been disclaimed. Disclaimed matter may be given less weight in an analysis of likelihood of confusion. See Cunningham v. Laser Golf Corp., 222 F.3d 943, 55 USPQ2d 1842, 1846 (Fed. Cir. 2000); In re National Data Corp., 224 USPQ at 752. Nonetheless, even disclaimed matter contributes to the overall commercial impression created by the mark, and accordingly we give due consideration to the Serial No. 79107852 5 designations GEOSCIENCE and GEOMODELLING as they appear in the cited marks. Considering applicant’s mark and the cited registered marks in their entireties in terms of appearance, sound, meaning, and overall commercial impression, we find that their similarities outweigh their differences. Accordingly, this du Pont factor weighs in favor of a finding of likelihood of confusion. 2. The goods and services at issue. We turn next to consider the similarity or dissimilarity of the goods and services at issue. We note initially that the goods and services are fundamentally different in nature. Applicant’s goods are a chemical substance. The TASK GEOSCIENCE services are scientific analysis services. The TASK GEOMODELLING goods and services are computer software and services that facilitate the use of such software. All of the goods and services at issue are, as applicant admits, for use in the field of oil and gas exploration and exploitation.5 Applicant argues that the marks of applicant and registrants “represent activities in very different oilfield categories and disciplines.”6 Applicant emphasizes that its own chemical goods are used by “production technologists and well maintenance engineers” and states: … Applicant’s TASK [product] is a chemical that effectively removes all types of scale safely, reliably and rapidly, without harming people, the environment, or well components. … 5 Applicant’s brief at 5-6. 6 Id. at 7, item xii. Serial No. 79107852 6 Importantly, the presence of scale only occurs after a well is put on stream and the appearance of scale can take several months or years to manifest.7 Applicant describes the TASK GEOSCIENCE services as consulting services that provide: data processing, borehole interpretation and reservoir modeling services to the oil and gas industry, specialized in the analysis and integration of core, borehole image, dipmeter, waveform sonic and wireline log data.8 Applicant describes the TASK GEOMODELLING product as software that is used by the providers of the TASK GEOSCIENCE services.9 Applicant argues that the registrants’ respective consulting services and software goods are used “mainly before a well is actually drilled and also during well construction.” These services and goods are used in the process of “developing a common understanding of the geology of a reservoir and [determining] where a well should be drilled geometrically or geologically within the subsurface.”10 Applicant contends that the goods of applicant and the goods and services of registrant are used “at opposite ends of the life of a well.”11 The examining attorney contends that the goods and services of applicant and registrants are commercially similar in that they are all for use by oil and gas well producers and that it is not unusual for a single company to provide such goods 7 Id. at 7-8. 8 Id. at 7, item xii. 9 Id. 10 Id. at 7-8. 11 Id. at 8. Serial No. 79107852 7 and services “throughout all stages of an oil and gas well from exploration through production.”12 In order to demonstrate that certain individual companies supply scale-control chemicals, geological analysis consulting services, and software, the examining attorney has submitted screenshots from websites of the following companies offering the following goods and services to oil and gas operations: WEATHERFORD: scale inhibitor chemicals; borehole seismic surveys; subsurface evaluation services; analytic software. HALLIBURTON: electric borehole imaging and visualization; “Six Arm Dipmeter” service; wireline imaging service; “a suite of scale inhibitors including a variety of liquid and solid inhibitors.” SCHLUMBERGER: carbonate scale dissolver; seismic consulting and interpretation; borehole imaging; software for geophysicists. BAKER HUGHES: solid chemical scale inhibitors; borehole seismic services including application design, data processing and interpretation; circumferential borehole imaging; software for reservoir modeling, geomechanics, and hydraulic fracturing simulation.13 The examining attorney also points out that the website located at , apparently associated with applicant, indicates that applicant itself provides “wellbore imaging” services similar to those offered under the TASK GEOSCIENCE mark.14 The examining attorney has submitted several use-based third-party registrations relating to the oil and gas industries that cover both chemicals and 12 Examining attorney’s brief at 8. 13 Internet evidence submitted with the examining attorney’s Office action of August 14, 2012. 14 Id. and examining attorney’s brief at 9. Serial No. 79107852 8 analysis and consulting services.15 Such registrations may have some probative value to the extent that they serve to suggest that the listed goods and services are types that may emanate from the same source. In re Albert Trostel & Sons Co., 29 USPQ2d 1783, 1785-1786; In re Mucky Duck Mustard Co. Inc., 6 USPQ2d 1467, 1470 n.6 (TTAB 1988). We are not persuaded that applicant’s chemical goods are commercially related to the computer software, scientific analysis services, and software services of registrants. It is true that all of the goods and services are for use in the oil and gas industry. However, the goods and services are not directed to the same users and are not used together in the same business processes. The goods and services are utterly disparate in nature, and there can be no doubt that the manufacture of chemicals is technically distinct from the processes for producing computer software or providing scientific analysis services. The evidence showing that the goods and services at issue are offered by four large companies that apparently seek to offer everything to the oil and gas industries does not persuade us that chemical products would be perceived as emanating from the same source as software and scientific analysis services. The third-party registrations offered by the examining attorney are few in number and do not clearly relate to the specific type of goods identified in applicant’s application. Moreover, they are not evidence of actual marketing of the listed goods and services under a single mark. Overall we find them to be of very limited probative value. 15 Evidence submitted with the Office actions of January 30, 2012 and August 14, 2012. Serial No. 79107852 9 Because of the disparate nature of applicant’s chemicals and the software and scientific analysis services of registrants, we think it most likely that relevant customers would expect them to emanate from different sources. Accordingly, the du Pont factor of the similarity or dissimilarity of the goods and services weighs against a finding of likelihood of confusion. 3. Classes of customers. Applicant argues that services under the TASK GEOSCIENCE mark are offered to geologists and geoscientists; and that software under the TASK GEOMODELLING mark is offered to the provider of the TASK GEOSCIENCE services. Applicant argues that “Geologists… typically interface with other complementary disciplines such as reservoir specialists and geophysicists but will rarely, if at all, interface with production technologists or well maintenance engineers.” By contrast, applicant states that its goods are offered to or used by “production technologists or well maintenance engineers” who “spend most of their time dealing with technology and issues related to the design, construction and maintenance of the mechanical parts of a well…” and argues that the respective users of the goods and services of applicant and registrant “are poles apart in their respective technical domain, core activity, and at opposite ends of the life of a well.”16 Applicant argues, “In the unlikely event a geologist who was familiar with Task Geomodeling or Task Geoscience heard or read about [applicant’s goods], it 16 Applicant’s brief at 7-8. Serial No. 79107852 10 would only be from a well maintenance engineer and/or in the context of scale removal….”17 Neither the application nor the cited registrations set forth any limitations as to classes of purchasers in their descriptions of goods or services. Accordingly, we presume that the goods and services are available to all classes of purchasers for those products. See Paula Payne Products Co. v. Johnson Publishing Co., 473 F.2d 901, 177 USPQ 76 (CCPA 1973); Kalart Co. v. Camera-Mart, Inc., 258 F.2d 956, 119 USPQ 139 (CCPA 1958); In re Linkvest S.A., 24 USPQ2d 1716, 1716 (TTAB 1992). Despite the evidence that seemingly indicates that TASK GEOMODELLING software and services are provided only to Task Geoscience Limited,18 the relevant customers would nonetheless include all persons who may need software to assist in geological analysis of oilfield exploitation issues. The customers for TASK GEOSCIENCE services would not necessarily be limited to geologists and geoscientists, but would also encompass persons capable of making use of the types of analytical reports generated as a result of such services. Applicant contends that the relevant customers are “expert consumers” who are “reasonable, well-informed and circumspect” and, accordingly, not likely to suffer confusion.19 We find persuasive applicant’s characterization of the relevant customers as very separate and distinct groups. On the one hand, we see geologists, 17 Id. at 8. 18 Submitted with applicant’s response of July 23, 2012. We do note that, while the registrants are two different entities, Trademark Office records indicate that they are located in the same office park in Aberdeen, Scotland. 19 Applicant’s brief at 6-7. Serial No. 79107852 11 geoscientists, and those who receive their reports working to plan and locate an oil or gas project; on the other hand we see well maintenance engineers and production technologists dealing with issues that arise in the operation of the well, long after the well has been built. We anticipate that personnel who have technical expertise in the highly specialized field of oil and gas exploration would bring a substantial degree of care and a thorough understanding of their field to the selection of goods and services. We appreciate that the geologists, geoscientists, production technologists and well maintenance engineers discussed by applicant might be personnel of a single oil or gas production company. However, the courts have recognized that the separate departments of a complex organization can constitute “different markets for the parties’ respective products.” Astra Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. v. Beckman Instruments, Inc., 718 F.2d 1201, 220 USPQ 786, 791 (1st Cir. 1983). Our principal reviewing court, citing Astra with approval, has stated: [I]t is error to deny registration simply because ‘applicant sells some of its goods in some of the same fields in which opposer provides its services,’ without determining who are the ‘relevant persons’ within each corporate customer. … [T]he mere purchase of the goods and services of both parties by the same institution does not, by itself, establish similarity of trade channels or overlap of customers. Electronic Design & Sales Inc. v. Electronic Data Systems Corp., 954 F.2d 713, 21 USPQ2d 1388, 1391 (Fed. Cir. 1992) (internal citations omitted). The Astra and Electronic Design courts both found that the relevant customers were technical Serial No. 79107852 12 personnel having specialized knowledge with respect to the goods and services, and found that their sophistication would be sufficient to render confusion unlikely. Considering the highly specialized and disparate nature of the goods and services in the case before us, the relevant customers are likely to be separate classes of highly informed, careful, and sophisticated purchasers, so that neither class is likely to have exposure to the goods and services of interest to the other. See Edwards Lifesciences Corp. v. VigiLanz Corp., 94 USPQ2d 1399 (TTAB 2010). For the reasons noted, we find that the du Pont factor relating to the classes of customers weighs against a finding of likelihood of confusion. 4. Channels of trade. Although applicant and the examining attorney briefly mention channels of trade, neither has put forward substantial evidence or arguments on this point. We have considered applicant’s argument that software under the TASK GEOMODELLING mark is offered only to the TASK GEOSCIENCE company. However, as the examining attorney points out, in considering the relevant trade channels we must look to the registration itself and not to extrinsic evidence about the registrant’s actual channels of trade. In re Elbaum, 211 USPQ 639, 640 (TTAB 1981). As we have no other substantial evidence on this point we regard the factor of trade channels to be neutral. 5. Balancing the factors. Having considered all of the evidence and arguments of record and all relevant du Pont factors, including those not specifically discussed herein, we find Serial No. 79107852 13 that applicant’s mark, as applied to applicant’s goods, is not likely to cause confusion, mistake or deception as to the source of applicant’s goods. Decision: The refusal is reversed. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation