Hover Energy, LLCDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardSep 6, 2017No. 86781656 (T.T.A.B. Sep. 6, 2017) Copy Citation This Opinion is Not a Precedent of the TTAB Mailed: September 6, 2017 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board _____ In re Hover Energy, LLC _____ Serial No. 86781656 _____ Raymond Van Dyke, Van Dyke Law, for Hover Energy, LLC. Alex Seong Keam, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 114, K. Margaret Le, Managing Attorney. _____ Before Kuhlke, Lykos, and Larkin, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Larkin, Administrative Trademark Judge: Hover Energy, LLC (“Applicant”) seeks registration on the Principal Register of the claimed mark HOVER ENERGY in standard characters (ENERGY disclaimed) for goods and services identified as “Power generators, namely, wind energy turbines; wind compressors for use with wind energy turbines,” in International Class 7; “Technical consultation for others with regard to power generation, namely, producing wind energy,” in International Class 40; and “Research, development, and Serial No. 86781656 - 2 - engineering services for others with regard to power generation, namely, producing wind energy,” in International Class 42.1 The Trademark Examining Attorney has refused registration in all three classes under Section 2(e)(1) the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(e)(1), on the ground that HOVER ENERGY is merely descriptive of the goods and services identified in the application. When the Examining Attorney made the refusal final, Applicant appealed and requested reconsideration, which was denied. The case is fully briefed. We affirm the refusals to register. I. Record on Appeal The record on appeal includes the following: ● Internet webpages and articles regarding wind energy turbines, including airborne wind turbines;2 ● Internet webpages and articles regarding “hover technology,” objects that hover above the ground through various means, including magnetic levitation, and the possible future use of magnetic levitation with respect to buildings and means of transportation;3 ● A Wikipedia entry and articles regarding magnetic levitation;4 1 Application Serial No. 86781656 was filed on October 8, 2015 under Section 1(b) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051(b), on the basis of Applicant’s allegation of a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce for the identified goods and services. 2 February 4, 2016 Office Action; August 10, 2016 Office Action. 3 August 10, 2016 Office Action. 4 August 10, 2016 Office Action. Serial No. 86781656 - 3 - ● Pages from Applicant’s website at hoverenergy.com;5 ● Definitions of the word “hover” from the COLLINS DICTIONARY and the AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY;6 and ● Pages from United States Patent No. 7129596 for a “Hovering Wind Turbine,” which claims a “tethered hovering wind turbine.”7 II. Analysis of Mere Descriptiveness Refusal Section 2(e)(1) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(e)(1), prohibits registration on the Principal Register of “a mark which, (1) when used on or in connection with the goods of the applicant is merely descriptive . . . of them,” unless the mark has acquired distinctiveness under Section 2(f) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(f).8 A term is “merely descriptive” within the meaning of § 2(e)(1) if it “‘immediately conveys knowledge of a quality, feature, function, or characteristic of the goods or services with which it is used.’” In re Chamber of Commerce of the U.S., 675 F.3d 1297, 102 USPQ2d 1217, 1219 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (quoting In re Bayer Aktiengesellschaft, 488 F.3d 960, 82 USPQ2d 1828, 1831 (Fed. Cir. 2007)). See also In re TriVita, Inc., 783 F.3d 872, 114 USPQ2d 1574, 1575 (Fed. Cir. 2015). The quality, feature, function, or characteristic of the goods or services “must be conveyed forthwith with a ‘degree of particularity.’” Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Continental Gen. Tire Inc., 70 USPQ2d 1067, 1069 (TTAB 2003) (citations omitted). 5 February 4, 2016 Office Action; August 10, 2016 Office Action. 6 February 4, 2016 Office Action. 7 February 4, 2016 Office Action; August 10, 2016 Office Action. 8 Applicant does not seek registration on the basis of acquired distinctiveness. Serial No. 86781656 - 4 - A term “may be merely descriptive even if it does not describe the ‘full scope and extent’ of the applicant’s goods or services.’” In re Oppedahl & Larson LLP, 373 F.3d 1171, 71 USPQ2d 1370, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (quoting In re Dial-A-Mattress Operating Corp., 240 F.3d 1341, 57 USPQ2d 1807, 1812 (Fed. Cir. 2001)). A term need only describe “one significant attribute, function or property of the goods” or services to be descriptive. In re Fat Boys Water Sports LLC, 118 USPQ2d 1511, 1513 (TTAB 2016). To refuse registration of Applicant’s claimed mark in Class 7 in its entirety, the Examining Attorney must show that the claimed mark is merely descriptive of at least one of the two goods in that class. Chamber of Commerce, 102 USPQ2d at 1219 (citing In re Stereotaxis Inc., 429 F.3d 1039, 77 USPQ2d 1087, 1088-89 (Fed. Cir. 2005)).9 “The determination of whether a mark is merely descriptive must be made in relation to the goods or services for which registration is sought, not in the abstract.” Id.; Bayer, 82 USPQ2d at 1831. “In other words, we evaluate whether someone who knows what the goods [and services] are will understand the mark to convey information about them.” Fat Boys, 118 USPQ2d at 1515 (citing Duo ProSS Meditech Corp. v. Inviro Med. Devices Ltd., 695 F.3d 1247, 103 USPQ2d 1753, 1757 (Fed. Cir. 2012)). This requires consideration of the context in which the mark is used or intended to be used in connection with the goods or services, and the possible significance that the mark would have to the average purchaser of the goods or 9 Like Applicant and the Examining Attorney, we will focus on the goods identified as “wind energy turbines.” Serial No. 86781656 - 5 - services in the marketplace. Chamber of Commerce, 102 USPQ2d at 1219; Bayer, 82 USPQ2d at 1831; In re Omaha Nat’l Corp., 819 F.2d 1117, 2 USPQ2d 1859, 1861 (Fed. Cir. 1987). We must assess the descriptiveness of Applicant’s claimed mark HOVER ENERGY as a whole, DuoProSS, 103 USPQ2d at 1756, but we begin by determining whether its individual elements have descriptive significance with respect to the identified goods and services. Fat Boys, 118 USPQ2d at 1515-16. Applicant explains the nature and operation of its HOVER ENERGY wind energy turbines as follows: Applicant’s apparatuses are complex and very large terrestrially-bound structures, and the apparatuses are configured to capture wind, e.g., along with wind compressors, and channel that ambient wind through a turbine. Overall, the wind-capture configuration converts mechanical energies of that ambient wind captured to electrical energy based upon the rotation of a large rotor component. Through an understanding of physics, the rotation of the rotor induces electricity, providing electrical power. As a further aid in the generation of that power, the use of powerful opposing magnets in particular configurations allows the rotor to rotate better, e.g., when in operation, the opposing magnets are large enough and strong enough to provide magnetic repulsion sufficient to levitate or lift the quite heavy rotor very slightly (an inch or less) so that when rotating the surface of the rotor does not engage or touch other surfaces, which would cause drag and friction. This additional opposing magnetic structure added to the wind capturing configuration allows the generation of more electricity since the conversion of mechanical-to-electrical energy is better facilitated. 7 TTABVUE 5. Applicant acknowledges that each element of the claimed mark provides information about its turbines: “[T]he first term HOVER very generally indicates that Serial No. 86781656 - 6 - hovering is involved, e.g., some form of hovercraft comes to mind,” and that “something hovers, but nothing in particular is forthwith or immediate,” and “[l]ooking at the second term ENERGY, this indicates that energy is somehow involved or produced.” 7 TTABVUE 6. Applicant further acknowledges that “when consumers think of the word ‘hover,’ they envision floating in the air or otherwise raised, as noted by the cited evidence.” 7 TTABVUE 15. Applicant has disclaimed the word “energy,”10 which has self-evident descriptive significance within the claimed mark.11 Energy is what is produced through the use of “wind energy turbines,” and wind energy production is the subject matter of the identified “technical consultation” and “research, development, and engineering” services. The word “hover” means “to remain floating, suspended, or fluttering in the air.” THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY (February 4, 2016 Office Action at 16-17). The record shows that a feature of some wind energy turbines (including Applicant’s) is that they produce energy while floating or suspended in the air. Some such turbines 10 In its main brief, Applicant argued that its claimed mark is a unitary mark, “making disclaimer unnecessary,” and “request[ed] that the term ENERGY not be disclaimed,” 7 TTABVUE 16, but withdrew that request in its reply brief. 10 TTABVUE 4. 11 The Examining Attorney argues that Applicant “has disclaimed the generic wording ENERGY and therefore, the issue is whether HOVER is merely descriptive of the goods/services.” 9 TTABVUE 4 n.1. That is an incomplete statement of the relevant inquiry. If we determine that the word HOVER also has descriptive significance with respect to the identified goods and services, see Fat Boys, 118 USPQ2d at 1515, we must then “consider the mark as a whole and ask whether the combination of the component words of Applicant’s mark ‘conveys any distinctive source-identifying impression contrary to the descriptiveness of the individual parts.’” Id. at 1516 (quoting Oppedahl & Larson, 71 USPQ2d at 1372). Serial No. 86781656 - 7 - are elevated high in the air to take advantage of the stronger winds that blow at higher altitudes. A photograph of one such turbine is reproduced below: February 4, 2016 Office Action at 2. The operation of one such hovering turbine is described in the record excerpts from United States Patent No. 7129596, entitled “Hovering Wind Turbine.” August 10, 2016 Office Action at 47-55. Applicant dismisses this evidence, claiming that it “shows various uses of floating devices that are ‘suspended in air’ or otherwise capture wind energies high up in the atmosphere,” while “the hover aspect employed [by Applicant] is in the fractions of an inch or so to just overcome friction – not floating or suspensions in the atmosphere or other high altitude uses of the like set forth in the evidence.” 7 TTABVUE 12-13. Applicant “objects to the equating of very lightweight atmospheric floating systems Serial No. 86781656 - 8 - to the massive terrestrially-based systems with a small lift done to Applicant’s rotor in the wind system by large opposing magnets, two quite different and distinct features and capabilities.” 7 TTABVUE 13. These arguments are unavailing for two reasons. First, “[w]hether a mark is merely descriptive is determined in relation to the goods or services for which registration is sought.” TriVita, 114 USPQ2d at 1575. The identified goods are broadly described as “wind energy turbines,” without limitation to Applicant’s self-styled “massive terrestrially-based” ones, and the identified goods are thus deemed to include all “wind energy turbines,” including those that operate while airborne. Similarly, both of the identified services are directed to “producing wind energy,” without limitation to production only through “massive terrestrially- based” turbines. The record shows that the word “hover” has descriptive significance with respect to wind energy turbines, and technical consultation and research, development, and engineering services involving wind energy turbines, because it describes a feature or characteristic of wind energy turbines that produce energy while hovering in the air. Second, the word “hover” has descriptive significance within the proposed mark even as applied to the subset of the identified goods comprising Applicant’s particular turbines. Cf. In re Amer. Soc’y of Clinical Pathologists, Inc., 442 F.2d 1404, 169 USPQ 800, 801 (CCPA 1971) (REGISTRY OF MEDICAL PATHOLOGISTS descriptive of certain claimed services that were implicitly subsumed within service of providing registry of medical pathologists and of additional claimed services that were Serial No. 86781656 - 9 - “supporting, ancillary or auxiliary to the primary function” of applicant’s registry services); Chamber of Commerce, 102 USPQ2d at 1220 (NATIONAL CHAMBER descriptive because “substantial evidence supports the TTAB’s determination that the designated business and regulatory data analysis services are within the scope of traditional chambers of commerce activities” of “promoting the interests of businessmen and businesswomen.”). We agree with the Examining Attorney that “[b]y the applicant’s own description of its goods, the wind turbines hover.” 9 TTABVUE 8. Applicant explains that its turbines use magnetic levitation technology, which causes “the rotor to raise up and hover by magnetic repulsion,” 7 TTABVUE 12, when its turbines produce energy from wind. 10 TTABVUE 3 (discussing “the hovering” that is “created by the opposing magnets.”). We further agree with the Examining Attorney that “[w]hether the wind turbines hover high in the air or a few inches off the surface using magnetic levitation, the fact remains that the wind turbines hover, and therefore, [the word HOVER] is descriptive of the goods/services.” 9 TTABVUE 8.12 Having found that both HOVER and ENERGY have descriptive significance with respect to the identified goods and services, we now “consider the mark as a whole and ask whether the combination of the component words of Applicant’s mark 12 Applicant argues in its reply brief that the “hovering” of its turbines “runs counter to the expectations indicated by the various citations [of evidence], i.e., for use at high altitudes.” 10 TTABVUE 3. “[D]escriptiveness is determined from the viewpoint of the relevant purchasing public.” TriVita, 114 USPQ2d at 1576. According to Applicant, consumers of its “wind turbine devices and services are sophisticated alternative energy professionals.” 7 TTABVUE 9. Any such consumers would understand “hover” to describe a feature of Applicant’s particular goods and services other than that they are “use[d] at high altitudes.” Serial No. 86781656 - 10 - ‘conveys any distinctive source-identifying impression contrary to the descriptiveness of the individual parts.’” Fat Boys, 118 USPQ2d at 1516 (quoting Oppedahl & Larson, 71 USPQ2d at 1372). “If, instead, each component retains its merely descriptive significance in relation to the goods [and services], the combination results in a composite that is itself merely descriptive.” Id. Applicant acknowledges that “tying the two marks [sic] together [in] HOVER ENERGY, the combination somehow relates to hovering and energy,” but argues that “it is a stretch to automatically assume a particular connection between the two terms, and leap to the conclusions asserted in the Action, e.g., that Applicant’s mark is directed to the capturing of wind energies in the upper atmosphere instead of firmly on the ground.” 7 TTABVUE 6. We find that the whole of the claimed HOVER ENERGY mark is not greater than the sum of its descriptive parts. “[T]he public’s understanding of a mark can be evidenced by ‘[a]ny competent source,’” In re North Carolina Lottery, ___ F.3d ____, ___ USPQ2d ____, 2017 WL 3427723, *2 (Fed. Cir. August 10, 2017) (quoting In re Nett Designs Inc., 236 F.3d 1339, 57 USPQ2d 1564, 1566 (Fed. Cir. 2001)), including “[w]ebsites, publications, and use ‘in labels, packages, or in advertising material directed to the goods.’” Id. (quoting In re Abcor Dev. Corp., 588 F.2d 811, 200 USPQ 215, 218 (CCPA 1978)). In North Carolina Lottery, the Federal Circuit held that the Board had properly considered the contents of the applicant’s specimen of use (reproduced in pertinent part below) in finding that the applicant’s claimed mark FIRST TUESDAY was merely descriptive of lottery cards, scratch cards for playing lottery games, and Serial No. 86781656 - 11 - lottery services because it described lottery games offered on the first Tuesday of every month. Id. The court held that the “commercial context here demonstrates that a consumer would immediately understand the intended meaning of FIRST TUESDAY.” Id. at 3. Pages from Applicant’s website, October 11, 2016 Office Action at 40-42, reflect the commercial context of Applicant’s use of its claimed HOVER ENERGY mark, and they demonstrate the relevant purchasing public’s understanding of its meaning. The banner of Applicant’s website is reproduced below: HOVER ENERGY is displayed in stylized form with the letter O in HOVER rendered as a device that appears to rotate while suspended above a horizontal surface. When viewed in the context of the text that appears beneath the banner (discussed immediately below), the tagline CHANGE IS IN THE AIR alludes at least in part to the suspension of the rotating device in the air. The website’s text describes the features of Applicant’s turbines as follows: Serial No. 86781656 - 12 - The website further claims that Applicant’s website explains verbally, and depicts visually, how its turbines hover in the air while producing wind energy. Indeed, Applicant touts this feature of its turbines in claiming that “[o]ur magnetically levitated wind turbine overcomes the primary challenges facing the wind industry today,” and that Applicant’s “[m]agnetically levitated turbine has no lubricated parts and low mechanical stress, Serial No. 86781656 - 13 - resulting in double the life of a standard turbine.”13 Applicant’s own use of its claimed HOVER ENERGY mark shows that each component of the claimed mark retains its descriptive significance when they are combined in the claimed mark, “result[ing] in a composite that is itself merely descriptive.” Fat Boys, 118 USPQ2d at 1516. HOVER ENERGY would be understood by consumers of the identified goods and services to describe immediately an important feature of wind energy turbines, and related consulting, research, development, and engineering services involving wind energy turbines, namely, that the turbines produce energy from wind while hovering in the air. Applicant argues that “as used in connection with Applicant’s services,14 Applicant’s mark is a suggestive coined term, employs an incongruity, and is not merely descriptive.” 7 TTABVUE 3. None of these arguments is persuasive. Applicant argues that HOVER ENERGY “in no way conveys an immediate or particular impression of the precise nature of Applicant’s products, and is instead a bit nebulous – not immediately describing a significant feature or characteristic of the wind turbine devices with the required degree of particularity.” 7 TTABVUE 7. Applicant posits that “when an average consumer encounters Applicant’s HOVER ENERGY mark in connection with wind systems, they are left to wonder what, if anything, might involve hovering, and what is the connection between that hovering 13 Applicant’s emphasis on the benefits of its hovering turbines belies its claim on appeal that the “‘hover’ aspect is thus not at all the main aspect employed in this endeavor, but is instead a more ancillary aspect.” 7 TTABVUE 12. 14 As it does here, Applicant sometimes refers in its main brief to both the identified goods and the identified services as its “services.” Serial No. 86781656 - 14 - and energy.” 7 TTABVUE 7. Applicant further argues that the claimed mark is suggestive because “the primary aspect of the use of the mark is related to wind energy capture using turbines to convert the captured wind energy to electrical energy by devices anchored to the Earth.” 7 TTABVUE 12. According to Applicant, determining the meaning of its claimed mark “clearly requires a multi-stage reasoning process” because the mark “generally suggests energy somehow involved with or produced by something that hovers – with zero direct impression of the particulars for making that so.” 7 TTABVUE 13. The record shows that the words HOVER and ENERGY each have a specific descriptive significance with respect to the identified goods and services. Their descriptive significance when combined in Applicant’s claimed mark is made apparent on Applicant’s website. As noted above, Applicant claims that the “average consumers” of its goods and services “are sophisticated alternative energy professionals.” 7 TTABVUE 9. Accepting that claim at face value, Applicant’s consumers would readily understand “the connection between th[e] hovering [of its turbines] and energy,” 7 TTABVUE 7, without being “left to wonder what, if anything, might involve hovering, and what is the connection between that hovering and energy.” 7 TTABVUE 7. HOVER ENERGY describes a key feature of Applicant’s goods, wind energy turbines, without ambiguity or the need for multi-stage reasoning. Similarly, HOVER ENERGY describes a key feature of Applicant’s consulting, research, development and engineering services, as wind energy turbines are the subject matter of those services. See In re Taylor & Francis [Publishers] Inc., Serial No. 86781656 - 15 - 55 USPQ2d 1213, 1215 (TTAB 2000) (PSYCHOLOGY merely descriptive of the subject matter of the applied-for books). Finally, Applicant argues that the claimed mark is incongruous because “of the odd juxtaposition of” HOVER and ENERGY. 7 TTABVUE 16. According to Applicant, “[t]here is neither a straightforward or automatic indication to combine the two terms [HOVER and ENERGY], nor a clear associated meaning for the juxtaposed combination,” 7 TTABVUE 16, because “when consumers think of the word ‘hover,’ they envision floating in the air or otherwise raised, as noted by the cited evidence. However, energy being derived from this hovering does not follow. Energy does not hover, it is not physical. Hover is a state or position. Energy is a thermodynamic measure.” 7 TTABVUE 15. The claimed mark describes the hovering of Applicant’s wind turbines when they produce energy. There is nothing incongruous about the juxtaposition of the words HOVER and ENERGY in the claimed mark because it does not evoke “an immediate association with something unrelated to the goods or services.” In re Calphalon Corp., 122 USPQ2d 1153, 1163 (TTAB 2017). See In re Tennis in the Round, Inc., 199 USPQ 496, 498 (TTAB 1978) (TENNIS IN THE ROUND for providing tennis courts and ball machines and offering instruction in tennis found to be incongruous because it immediately evoked association with well-known phrase “theater in the round,” but applicant’s tennis facilities were not analogous to those used in such theater); In re Shutts, 217 USPQ 363, 364 (TTAB 1983) (SNO-RAKE mark for snow removal hand tool found to be incongruous because while it evoked raking snow, “the idea of a ‘rake’ Serial No. 86781656 - 16 - or ‘raking’ does indeed sit strange in terms of application to snow and, at best, is suggestive of a capacity for gathering up snow with an implement or using an action that hardly fits any of the common conceptions of ‘rake’ or ‘raking.’”); cf. Borden, Inc. v. Topps Chewing Gum, Inc., 173 USPQ 447 (TTAB 1972) (ICE CREAM incongruous and registrable for chewing gum); In re Colonial Stores Inc., 394 F.2d 549, 157 USPQ 382, 385 (CCPA 1968) (combination of descriptive terms in SUGAR & SPICE mark for bakery goods not merely descriptive because mark evoked nursery rhyme “sugar and spice and everything nice.”). We find that the record shows that HOVER ENERGY immediately describes a feature of wind energy turbines, and related consulting, research, development, and engineering services involving wind energy turbines, namely, that the involved turbines produce energy from wind while hovering in the air. Decision: The refusals to register in Classes 9, 40, and 42 are affirmed. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation