Marco Industries, Inc.v.Mark WhiteDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardMay 6, 201992065963 (T.T.A.B. May. 6, 2019) Copy Citation This Opinion is Not a Precedent of the TTAB Mailed: May 6, 2019 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board _____ Marco Industries, Inc. v. Mark White _____ Cancellation No. 92065963 _____ Christopher J. Day of Day Law Firm for Marco Industries, Inc. Amy J. Everhart of Everhart Law Firm PLC for Mark White. _____ Before Wellington, Heasley, and Larkin, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Larkin, Administrative Trademark Judge: Mark White (“Respondent”) owns Registration No. 4880452 on the Principal Register of the mark VITABUD GROW in standard characters for “fertilizers,” in International Class 1.1 Marco Industries, Inc. (“Petitioner”) seeks cancellation of the 1 Respondent’s registration issued on January 5, 2016 from an application filed on May 8, 2015. Respondent has disclaimed the exclusive right to use GROW apart from the mark as shown. The mark is shown in the registration as Vitabud Grow, but because the mark is a standard character mark, we will depict it in this opinion as VITABUD GROW. See In re Calphalon Corp., 122 USPQ2d 1153, 1154 n.1 (TTAB 2017). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 2 - registration under Section 2(d) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(d), on the ground that the mark so resembles Petitioner’s claimed common law mark VITA GROW for plant foods as to be likely, when used in connection with the goods identified in the registration, to cause confusion, to cause mistake, or to deceive.2 Petitioner and Respondent have filed briefs. We grant the petition to cancel. I. Evidentiary Record The record consists of the pleadings,3 the file history of Respondent’s registration, by operation of Trademark Rule 2.122(b)(1), 37 C.F.R. § 2.122(b)(1), and the following evidence made of record by the parties: A. Petitioner’s Evidence Petitioner filed a Notice of Reliance on (1) pages from the Trademark Search & Document Retrieval (“TSDR”) database of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) regarding Petitioner’s suspended Application Serial No. 87202707 to 2 Petitioner’s Petition to Cancel also contains a claim for relief on the ground that the registration is void because “Registrant’s VITABUD GROW mark is not in lawful use in commerce because the goods are primarily intended or designated for use in the producing of [marijuana,] a controlled substance which is unlawful under the Controlled Substances Act.” 1 TTABVUE 5 (Pet. to Cancel ¶¶ 14-16). Petitioner did not pursue that claim in its brief, however, and it has thus been waived. Krause v. Krause Publ’ns, Inc., 76 USPQ2d 1904, 1906 n.2 (TTAB 2005). 3 Respondent’s Answer to the Petition to Cancel denies the material allegation of the Petition and avers that “Petitioner’s claims are barred by the doctrines of laches, acquiescence, waiver, estoppel, and unclean hands.” 5 TTABVUE 4 (Ans. to Petition to Cancel Fifth Additional Defense). As discussed below, Respondent made of record pages from third-party websites that Respondent claims show use of Petitioner’s VITA GROW goods to fertilize marijuana plants, claiming that these pages were relevant to his unclean hands defense. 12 TTABVUE 3, 34-56. Respondent listed these pages in his summary of the record in his brief, 15 TTABVUE 7, but did not otherwise pursue his unclean hands defense, or his other equitable defenses, and they have thus been waived. Harry Winston, Inc. v. Bruce Winston Gem Corp., 111 USPQ2d 1419, 1422 (TTAB 2014). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 3 - register VITA GROW in standard characters for “horticultural products, namely, plant food, plant hormones in the nature of a rooting compound to stimulate root production, preparations for fortifying plants in the nature of plant sprays to prevent wilting in plants; and chemical soil conditioners in the nature of pH adjusters,” in International Class 1, 7 TTABVUE 5-7, an office action issued during prosecution of the application in which Respondent’s registration is cited as a bar to registration under Section 2(d), id. at 8-14, and a notice of suspension of further examination of the application, id. at 24-27; (2) definitions of “plant food” from the MERRIAM- WEBSTER DICTIONARY (merriam-webster.com), id. at 15-21, “fertilizer” from THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY (ahdictionary.com), id. at 22-23, and the MERRIAM- WEBSTER DICTIONARY, id. at 28, and “bud” from the MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY (merriam-webster.com), id. at 52-59; (3) pages from the website at vitagrow.com, id. at 29-32, and pages from that website and the website at americanag.com archived on archive.org, id. at 33-35; and (4) a Wikipedia entry regarding fertilizer. Id. at 36- 52.4 B. Respondent’s Evidence Respondent filed his testimony declaration, 13 TTABVUE 4-6,5 and a Notice of Reliance on (1) webpages showing the use of third-party marks containing the words 4 Petitioner also filed a testimony declaration, with exhibits, of Gordon Redman, its Vice President. 6 TTABVUE 4-58. Respondent moved to strike the declaration on the ground that Petitioner did not disclose Mr. Redman in pretrial disclosures. 9 TTABVUE 2. When Petitioner did not respond to the motion, the Board granted it as conceded, and struck the declaration and the attached exhibits from the record. 11 TTABVUE 1. We have given them no consideration in our decision. 5 Respondent’s declaration is addressed primarily to Petitioner’s waived unlawful use claim, but we have considered the declaration for whatever probative value it may have on Cancellation No. 92065963 - 4 - VITA, VIDA, or VITAL coupled with the words GROW or GRO, in connection with fertilizers and plant foods, 12 TTABVUE 6-33; (2) webpages showing what Respondent claims to be “the use of what appears to be Petitioner’s mark VITA GROW as a fertilizer for marijuana plants,” id. at 3, 34-56; (3) a copy of the certificate of registration for Registration No. 2396977 of the mark REVITAGRO for “horticultural agents for agricultural and domestic use, namely, plant growth regulators and plant food for the promotion of healthy plant growth and to activate composting,” in International Class 1, and a copy of a Notice of Acceptance of a Section 8 and 15 filing for the registration, id. at 57-58, and (4) a translation of “vita” as “life” from THE LATIN DICTIONARY (latindictionary.com), id. at 59; and definitions of “bud” and “grow” from the OXFORD DICTIONARIES (oxforddictionaries.com). Id. at 60-70. II. Standing A threshold issue in every inter partes case is the plaintiff’s standing to challenge registration. See Empresa Cubana Del Tabaco v. Gen. Cigar Co., 753 F.3d 1270, 111 USPQ2d 1058, 1062 (Fed. Cir. 2014); John W. Carson Found. v. Toilets.com Inc., 94 USPQ2d 1942, 1945 (TTAB 2010). Petitioner must show that it possesses a real interest in the proceeding beyond that of a mere intermeddler, and that it has a reasonable basis for its belief of damage resulting from the registration, or continued registration, of the subject mark. Ritchie v. Simpson, 170 F.3d 1092, 50 USPQ2d 1023, 1025-26 (Fed. Cir. 1999). Petitioner’s Section 2(d) claim. We will cite the declaration by paragraph number (i.e., “White Decl. ¶ 3”). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 5 - As noted above, Petitioner made of record evidence that the PTO has refused registration of the VITA GROW mark shown in Petitioner’s pending application on the basis of Respondent’s registration of VITABUD GROW, and Respondent admitted as much in his Answer to Petitioner’s Petition to Cancel. 5 TTABVUE 2 (Ans. ¶¶ 4- 5). The citation of Respondent’s registration against Petitioner’s application gives Petitioner standing to petition to cancel the cited registration. See, e.g., Empresa Cubana, 111 USPQ2d at 1062; WeaponX Performance Prods. v. Weapon X Motorsports, Inc., 126 USPQ2d 1034, 1040 (TTAB 2018).6 III. Likelihood of Confusion Section 2(d) of the Trademark Act prohibits the registration of a mark that “[c]onsists of or comprises a mark which so resembles a mark registered in the Patent and Trademark Office, or a mark or trade name previously used in the United States by another and not abandoned, as to be likely, when used on or in connection with the goods of the applicant, to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive.” 15 U.S.C. § 1052(d). To prevail on its Section 2(d) claim, Petitioner must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that it has priority with respect to its asserted mark VITA GROW vis-à-vis Respondent’s mark VITABUD GROW, and that Respondent’s use of his mark in connection with the goods identified in his registration is likely to 6 The portions of Petitioner’s application in the record have little other significance, however, because the existence of the application “is not evidence that [Petitioner] actually has proprietary rights in or use of the [VITA GROW] mark.” WeaponX, 126 USPQ2d at 1041 (citing Nike Inc. v. WNBA Enters. LLC, 85 USPQ2d 1187, 1193 n.8 (TTAB 2007) (pending applications are evidence only that the applications were filed on a certain date; they are not evidence of use of the marks)). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 6 - cause confusion, mistake, or deception as to the source or sponsorship of those goods. Cunningham v. Laser Golf Corp., 222 F.3d 943, 55 USPQ2d 1842, 1848 (Fed. Cir. 2000); WeaponX, 126 USPQ2d at 1040. A. Priority In a Section 2(d) case, the plaintiff “must show proprietary rights in the mark that produces a likelihood of confusion.” Herbko Int’l Inc. v. Kappa Books Inc., 308 F.3d 1156, 64 USPQ2d 1375, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (citing Otto Roth & Co. v. Universal Foods Corp., 640 F.2d 1317, 209 USPQ 40, 43 (CCPA 1981)). “These proprietary rights may arise from a prior registration, prior trademark or service mark use, prior use as a trade name, prior use analogous to trademark or service mark use, or any other use sufficient to establish proprietary rights.” Herbko, 64 USPQ2d at 1378. Because Petitioner asserts an unregistered VITA GROW mark, it must “establish proprietary rights in that pleaded common-law mark.” RxD Media, LLC v. IP Application Dev. LLC, 125 USPQ2d 1801, 1808 (TTAB 2018) (citing Otto Roth, 209 at 43); WeaponX, 126 USPQ2d at 1040-41. Petitioner must show that its claimed common-law mark “is distinctive of [its] goods, whether inherently or through the acquisition of secondary meaning or through ‘whatever other type of use may have developed a trade identity.’” Towers v. Advent Software Inc., 913 F.2d 942, 16 USPQ2d 1039, 1041 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (quoting Otto Roth, 209 USPQ at 43). Petitioner’s “acquisition of proprietary rights in its purported [VITA GROW] mark must precede [Respondent’s] actual or constructive use of [his] mark.” RxD Media, 125 USPQ2d at 1808. “In other words, because unregistered marks are not entitled to the Cancellation No. 92065963 - 7 - presumptions established by Sections 7(b)-(c) of the Trademark Act, it is [Petitioner’s] burden to demonstrate that it owns a trademark that was used prior to [Respondent’s] first use or constructive use of [his] mark and not abandoned.” Id. 1. Respondent’s Date of First Actual or Constructive Use of His Mark In the May 8, 2015 application that matured into Respondent’s registration, Respondent claimed first use “[a]t least as early as April 20, 2015,” but “[t]he allegation . . . in a registration of a date of use is not evidence on behalf of the . . . registrant; a date of use of a mark must be established by competent evidence.” Trademark Rule 2.122(b)(2), 37 C.F.R. § 2.122(b)(2). Respondent testified at trial that he “began using the Mark in commerce in 2015 in connection with a general plant fertilizer product I had developed with a friend.” White Decl. ¶ 3. This testimony does not establish exactly when use began “in 2015,” and we cannot determine the earliest date of Respondent’s actual use of the registered mark prior to the filing date of his application. See WeaponX, 126 USPQ2d at 1041. In the absence of competent evidence of actual use, Respondent “may rely upon the filing date of the underlying application that matured into [his] involved registration” for priority purposes. Kemi Organics, LLC v. Gupta, 126 USPQ2d 1601, 1604 (TTAB 2018). Accordingly, Petitioner must show that it acquired proprietary rights in its common-law VITA GROW mark before Respondent’s May 8, 2015 constructive use filing date. RxD Media, 125 USPQ2d at 1808-09. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 8 - 2. The Existence of Proprietary Rights in Petitioner’s Claimed VITA GROW Mark The parties dispute only chronological priority of use, 14 TTABVUE 10-11; 15 TTABVUE 12, and neither addresses the issue of whether Petitioner’s claimed common-law VITA GROW mark was inherently distinctive, or had acquired distinctiveness, prior to Applicant’s filing date. We find, however, that Respondent has admitted that the claimed common-law VITA GROW mark exists and that it is, or has become, distinctive. In his brief, Respondent repeatedly refers to “Petitioner’s Mark” in arguing, among other things, that “Petitioner’s mark is VITA GROW for ‘Horticultural products, namely, plant food, rooting compound to stimulate root production, foliar plant spray to prevent wilting in plants, and pH adjusters’ in Class 001,” 15 TTABVUE 5; that “Petitioner’s Mark, VITA GROW, is relatively weak as used in connection with its applied-for categories of goods,” id. at 12; that “[b]ecause Petitioner’s Mark is weak, it is entitled to only a narrow scope of protection,” id. at 16; and that “the addition of the term ‘BUD’ further distinguishes Registrant’s mark from Petitioner’s Mark.” Id. at 17. Because Respondent has admitted the existence and validity of Petitioner’s claimed common-law VITA GROW mark, we turn now to the issue of whether Petitioner proved its use prior to Respondent’s May 8, 2015 constructive use filing date. 3. Use of the VITA GROW Mark Prior to May 8, 2015 Petitioner argues that it has priority based on “undisputed evidence of [its] use of VITA GROW prior to 2015.” 14 TTABVUE 10. Petitioner cites two “archived copies of websites showing Petitioner’s use of VITA GROW.” Id. We reproduce them below: Cancellation No. 92065963 - 9 - 7 TTABVUE 35 (webpage harvested by archive.org on July 16, 2007). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 10 - Id. at 34 (webpage harvested by archive.org on February 9, 2008). The record also includes pages from the website at vitagrow.com bearing a 2018 copyright notice and showing products bearing a VITA GROW mark, 7 TTABVUE 29-32,7 and an archived page from the website at americanag.com that mentions “Vita Grow’s Ready to Use Rooting Compound.” We reproduce the latter page below: 7 These pages are not probative of Petitioner’s priority because they do not purport to state anything about use of Petitioner’s mark prior to Respondent’s May 8, 2015 filing date. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 11 - 7 TTABVUE 33 (webpage harvested by archive.org on February 9, 2011). Petitioner argues that these webpages prove “priority by a preponderance of the evidence.” 14 TTABVUE 11 (citing Kohler Co. v. Baldwin Hardware Corp., 82 USPQ2d 1100, 1108 (TTAB 2007)). Respondent’s argument on priority is perfunctory. In the Introduction section of his brief, Respondent summarizes his argument as follows: “Petitioner has failed to prove priority over Registrant’s Mark, submitting only what appears to be Internet archive evidence for certain ‘snapshots’ of use of Petitioner’s Mark in certain past Cancellation No. 92065963 - 12 - years.” 15 TTABVUE 5. In the Argument section of his brief, Respondent claims that “Petitioner has relied on Internet archive printouts purporting to show use of Petitioner’s Mark in certain prior years: 2007 and 2008,” but “has failed to prove that the mark has been used in the periods between snapshots and thus has failed to prove priority.” Id. at 12. Although “Internet evidence is only admissible for what it shows on its face, and because it does not fall within an exception to the hearsay rule, will not be considered to prove the truth of any matter stated therein,” WeaponX, 126 USPQ2d at 1041 (citing Couch/Braunsdorf Affinity, Inc. v. 12 Interactive, LLC, 110 USPQ2d 1458, 1467 n.30 (TTAB 2014)), and webpages submitted under notice of reliance generally cannot be used to demonstrate priority without corroborating testimony, id. (citing Safer, Inc. v. OMS Invs. Inc., 94 USPQ2d 1031, 1040 (TTAB 2010)), there is an exception to that rule that “to the extent that a party has accepted as fact any portion of this Internet evidence submitted by the adverse party, we deem such portions of the submitted Internet evidence stipulated into the record for the truth of any matters asserted therein.” Id. at 1038. We deem Respondent to have accepted as fact that Petitioner used its claimed VITA GROW mark in connection with plant food in 2007 and 2008 based on the archived webpages submitted by Petitioner. Respondent does not address, much less dispute, the admissibility or sufficiency of Petitioner’s archived webpages “purporting to show use of Petitioner’s Mark in certain prior years: 2007 and 2008,” id.,8 as he 8 In that regard, we note that the archived webpages satisfy the requirements for admissibility of Internet evidence under Safer because they show the pertinent URLs, as well Cancellation No. 92065963 - 13 - does not cite WeaponX or Safer, or invoke the rule against hearsay that would preclude the Board from considering the truth of matters asserted in the webpages in the absence of corroborating testimony. Instead, Respondent’s argument is based solely on Petitioner’s failure to prove continuity of use. He does not argue, even in the alternative, that Petitioner proved no prior use of its mark, but only that Petitioner “has failed to prove that the mark has been used in the periods between snapshots and thus has failed to prove priority,” id. (emphasis added), an argument that necessarily accepts as fact that Petitioner’s archived webpages show that it used its mark “in certain prior years: 2007 and 2008.” Id. Respondent’s acceptance as fact that Petitioner’s webpages show use of the VITA GROW mark in 2007 and 2008 in connection with plant foods is sufficient to establish Petitioner’s priority. Contrary to Respondent’s argument that Petitioner must “prove that the mark has been used in the periods between snapshots,” id., “continuous use is not required to establish Petitioner’s priority.” Kemi Organics, 126 USPQ2d at 1607. “Section 2(d) ‘does not speak of ‘continuous use,’ but rather of whether the mark as the date that they were harvested by archive.org and the date on which they were downloaded from that website, and that it appears that they could also serve as specimens of use of the VITA GROW mark for at least some of the goods identified in Petitioner’s pending application, in the form of an electronic display associated with the goods, because they show the name of the claimed owner of the mark, contain a picture or textual description of the goods, show the VITA GROW mark in association with the goods, and provide a means of ordering them through the “VIEW CART” icon at the top of each page. 7 TTABVUE 34-35. See generally TRADEMARK MANUAL OF EXAMINING PROCEDURE (“TMEP”) Section 904.03(i) (Oct. 2018) and cases cited therein. We further note that Respondent itself filed a Notice of Reliance on “Internet websites accessed on August 10, 2018, referencing the use of what appears to be Petitioner’s mark VITA GROW as a fertilizer for marijuana plants.” 15 TTABVUE 7 (citing 12 TTABVUE 34-57). One of the webpages contains a post referring to “Vita Grow Rooting Compound” that is dated January 18, 2014, a date prior to Respondent’s constructive use priority filing date. 12 TTABVUE 49. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 14 - or trade name has been ‘previously used in the United States by another and not abandoned.’” Id. (quoting West Fla. Seafood, Inc. v. Jet Rests., Inc., 31 F.3d 1122, 31 USPQ2d 1660, 1665 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (holding that Board erred in finding that the petitioner had failed to prove priority under Section 2(d) because the petitioner did not prove use during the period prior to the filing of its petition for cancellation and thereafter, where the petitioner proved use prior to the filing date of the application that matured into the subject registration)). Petitioner “is only required to show ‘proprietary rights in its pleaded common law mark that precede [Respondent’s] actual or constructive use of its involved mark,’” id. (quoting Executive Coach Builders, Inc. v. SPV Coach Co., 123 USPQ2d 1175, 1180 (TTAB 2017)), which rights “were not thereafter abandoned.” Id. “Petitioner bears the burden of proving that its mark was ‘previously used in the United States’ before Respondent’s constructive use priority date,” id. at 1605 (citing Executive Coach Builders, 123 USPQ2d at 1180), but “[w]ith respect to Section 2(d)’s requirement that Petitioner’s mark be ‘not abandoned,’” id., Respondent bears the burden of proof. Id. (citing West Fla. Seafood, 31 USPQ2d at 1666). Respondent makes no argument and offers no evidence that Petitioner’s mark was abandoned after its use in 2007 and 2008. Petitioner has established its priority by virtue of Respondent’s admission of the existence and validity of the VITA GROW mark and Respondent’s acceptance as fact that the mark was used by Petitioner in 2007 and 2008 in connection with plant foods. We turn now to the issue of likelihood of confusion. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 15 - B. Likelihood of Confusion Our determination of the issue of likelihood of confusion is based on an analysis of all probative facts in evidence that are relevant to the factors set forth in In re E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 476 F.2d 1357, 177 USPQ 563, 567 (CCPA 1973). See Zheng Cai v. Diamond Hong, Inc., 901 F.3d 1367, 127 USPQ2d 1797, 1800 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (du Pont “articulated thirteen factors to consider when determining likelihood of confusion”). “‘Not all of the DuPont factors are relevant to every case, and only factors of significance to the particular mark need be considered,’” id. (quoting In re Mighty Leaf Tea, 601 F.3d 1342, 94 USPQ2d 1257, 1259 (Fed. Cir. 2010)), but all factors “‘must be considered’ when [they] are of record.” In re Guild Mortg. Co., 912 F.3d 1376, 129 USPQ2d 1160, 1162-63 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (quoting In re Dixie Rests, Inc., 105 F.3d 1405, 41 USPQ2d 1531, 1533 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (internal quotation omitted)). Two key factors in every § 2(d) case are the similarity or dissimilarity of the marks and goods or services, the first and second du Pont factors, respectively, because the “fundamental inquiry mandated by § 2(d) goes to the cumulative effect of differences in the essential characteristics of the goods and differences in the marks.” Federated Foods, Inc. v. Fort Howard Paper Co., 544 F.2d 1098, 192 USPQ 24, 29 (CCPA 1976). Petitioner argues that the “only du Pont factors for which the record contains probative evidence” are the first and second du Pont factors, and the third du Pont factor, the similarity of the channels of trade. 14 TTABVUE 11. Respondent focuses on the first du Pont factor and the sixth du Pont factor, the nature and number of Cancellation No. 92065963 - 16 - similar marks in use on similar goods. 15 TTABVUE 13.9 Because Respondent’s core argument is that “the weakness of Petitioner’s Mark coupled with differences in the two marks negates any likelihood of confusion,” id. at 17-18, we turn first to the sixth du Pont factor on which this argument is based. 1. The Number and Nature of Similar Marks in Use on Similar Goods The sixth du Pont factor “considers ‘[t]he number and nature of similar marks in use on similar goods.’” Omaha Steaks Int’l Inc. v. Greater Omaha Packing Co., 908 F.3d 1315, 128 USPQ2d 1686, 1693 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (quoting du Pont, 177 USPQ at 567). “The purpose of introducing evidence of third-party use is ‘to show that customers have become so conditioned by a plethora of such similar marks that customers have been educated to distinguish between different [such] marks on the bases of minute distinctions.’” Id. (quoting Palm Bay Imps., Inc. v. Veuve Cliquot Ponsardin Maison Fondee En 1772, 396 F.3d 1369, 73 USPQ2d 1689, 1694 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (internal quotation omitted)). Respondent argues that if the “evidence establishes that the consuming public is exposed to third-party use of similar marks on similar goods and services, this evidence is relevant to show that a mark is ‘relatively weak and entitled to only a narrow scope of protection.’” 15 TTABVUE 13 (quoting Palm Bay Imps., 73 USPQ2d at 1693).10 He relies on webpages, a third-party 9 Respondent never addresses the second du Pont factor, the similarity or dissimilarity of the goods, but as discussed below, he has conceded that the goods identified in his registration are at least related to the goods with which he acknowledges Petitioner uses its mark. 10 Petitioner does not address the sixth du Pont factor, or Respondent’s cited evidence. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 17 - registration, and dictionary definitions of the Latin word “vita” as “life,”11 and the word “grow” as “(of a plant) germinate and develop.”12 Id. at 14-17. We turn first to Respondent’s registration evidence. Respondent submitted a plain copy of the certificate of registration of Registration No. 2396977 of the mark REVITAGRO for “horticultural agents for agricultural and domestic use, namely, plant growth regulators and plant food for the promotion of healthy plant growth and to activate composting,” in International Class 1, which issued in October 2000, and a copy of the PTO’s notice of renewal of the registration in November 2010.13 This was sufficient to make the registration of record, Rocket Trademarks Pty Ltd. v. Phard S.p.A., 98 USPQ2d 1066, 1070 n.11 (TTAB 2011), but this single registration, which contains the RE-prefix before variants of the words in Petitioner’s mark, has little, if any, probative value regarding the conceptual weakness of Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark. In re Inn at St. John’s, LLC, 126 USPQ2d 1742, 1746 (TTAB 2018); Tao Licensing, LLC v. Bender Consulting Ltd., 125 USPQ2d 1043, 1058-59 (TTAB 2017). Respondent’s third-party use evidence consists of pages from seven websites, 12 TTABVUE 6-33, which display plant foods and fertilizers in connection with what Respondent describes as the marks VITAGROW, VITAGROW H, VITA-GRO, VITAGRO (two), PURA VIDA GROW, and VITALGROPRODUCTS. 15 TTABVUE 9- 11 12 TTABVUE 59 (THE LATIN DICTIONARY). 12 Id. at 65 (OXFORD DICTIONARIES). 13 Id. at 57-58. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 18 - 10. A review of these webpages reveals that there are five pertinent third-party marks. On the website displaying the putative PURA VIDA GROW mark, the company offering the product for sale displays the words PURA VIDA as a mark and the word GROW as a descriptor of one of its products. The website’s text states that the company offers two different products, “Pura Vida™ Grow & Bloom,” and that “Pure Vida™ Grow specifically targets the vegetative growth phase rapidly creating lush green foliage, while Pura Vida™ Bloom is formulated to promote and maximize the flowering and fruiting performance of plants during the reproductive stage.”14 The website display a bottle of the “Grow” product that displays PURA VIDA as a mark and GROW as a product descriptor: 15 We do not consider this use of PURA VIDA (or even use of the putative PURA VIDA GROW mark) to be probative of the weakness of Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark. Inn at St. John’s, 126 USPQ2d at 1746; In re FabFitFun, Inc., 127 USPQ2d 1670, 1673- 14 Id. at 27. 15 Id. at 26. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 19 - 74 (TTAB 2018) (discussing probative value of “third-party uses of SMOKIN’ HOT formatives” on weakness of cited mark SMOKIN’ HOT SHOW TIME). With respect to the putative VITALGROPRODUCTS mark, it is unclear whether and to what extent the words are used a mark as opposed to a domain name, 12 TTABVUE 30-33, but even if VITALGROPRODUCTS (or VITAL GRO alone) is used as a mark, this third-party mark, like the registered mark REVITAGRO and the putative mark PURA VIDA GROW, contains different elements, VITAL and PRODUCTS, that reduce its probative value regarding the weakness of Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark. Inn at St. John’s, 126 USPQ2d at 1746. Accordingly, we find that Respondent showed the use of five third-party marks that are probative of the weakness of VITA GROW. We reproduce below the relevant portions of the five websites: 16 16 Id. at 6. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 20 - 17 18 17 Id. at 7-8. “Plant Hormones Canada” appears to be the name of a Canadian company. The website on which the product is displayed, however, is that of a company located in Florida. The company’s domain name is sunshinegardenfl.com, and it has a phone number in the 941 area code, which we judicially notice is a Florida area code. 18 Id. at 12. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 21 - 19 20 19 Id. at 17. 20 Id. at 22. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 22 - “‘Evidence of third-party use of similar marks on similar goods is relevant to show that a mark is relatively weak and entitled to only a narrow scope of protection.’” FabFitFun, 127 USPQ2d at 1674 (quoting Palm Bay Imps., 73 USPQ2d at 1693). “Internet printouts, such as those offered by [Respondent], ‘on their face, show that the public may have been exposed to those internet websites and therefore may be aware of the advertisements contained therein.’” Id. (quoting Rocket Trademarks, 98 USPQ2d at 1072). “In determining the degree of weakness, if any, of the shared terms [VITA and GROW], we must ‘adequately account for the apparent force of [third-party use and registration] evidence,’ regardless of whether ‘specifics’ pertaining to the extent and impact of such use have been proven.” Inn at St. John’s, 126 USPQ2d at 1746 (quoting Juice Generation, Inc. v. GS Enters. LLC, 794 F.3d 1334, 115 USPQ2d 1671, 1674-5). As the Federal Circuit has explained, “extensive evidence of third- party registration and use is ‘powerful on its face,’ even where the specific extent and impact of the usage has not been established.” Jack Wolfskin Ausrustung Fur Draussen GmbH & Co. KGAA v. New Millennium Sports, S.L.U., 797 F.3d 1363, 116 USPQ2d 1129, 1136 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (citing Juice Generation, 115 USPQ2d at 1674). The third-party use evidence here reflects a far “more modest amount of evidence than that found convincing in Jack Wolfskin and Juice Generation wherein ‘a considerable number of third parties’ use [of] similar marks was shown.’” FabFitFun, 127 USPQ2d at 1674 (quoting Juice Generation, 115 USPQ2d at 1674).21 Indeed, 21 In Jack Wolfskin, there were at least 14 third-party registrations and uses, 116 USPQ2d at 1136 n.2, and in Juice Generation, there were at least 26. 115 USPQ2d at 1673 n.1. Respondent never mentions these seminal Federal Circuit cases. He relies instead on a Fourth Circuit case, Care First of Md., Inc. v. First Care PC, 434 F.3d 263, 77 USPQ2d 1577 Cancellation No. 92065963 - 23 - there are only half as many relevant third-party marks here as in FabFitFun, where 10 such marks led the Board to find that the shared phrase in the involved marks was only “somewhat weak.” 127 USPQ2d at 1675. Five third-party uses are too few in number to be evidence of weakness that is “powerful on its face,” Jack Wolfskin, 116 USPQ2d at 1136, and they are unaccompanied by any evidence regarding their duration or extent of exposure that might enhance their probative value. Respondent’s dictionary definitions showing that the word VITA is suggestive and the word GROW is quite weak, if not altogether unprotectable, with respect to the involved goods, suggest that Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark is somewhat weak conceptually, but Respondent’s use evidence is insufficient to show that the mark is so weak either commercially or conceptually that it is “entitled to only a narrow scope of protection.” 15 TTABVUE 13. The sixth du Pont factor thus weighs only very slightly in favor of a finding of no likelihood of confusion. (4th Cir. 2006), for the proposition that the third-party uses here “illustrate[ ] the lack of conceptual strength of Petitioner’s Mark.” 15 TTABVUE 15. We are not bound by the Care First decision, but in that case the court found that the plaintiff’s CARE FIRST mark was both commercially and conceptually weak on the basis of the sort of “extensive evidence” of third-party use that our primary reviewing court considered in Jack Wolfskin and Juice Generation. The Care First court held that “the record undeniably reveals substantial third- party use of the words ‘Care,’ ‘CareFirst,’ ‘First,’ and “First Care’ in the health care industry” because the plaintiff’s own trademark search reports “state[d] that many health-care-related businesses across the country use these marks” and the defendant “submitted dozens of web page print-outs from health-care-related businesses named CareFirst or First Care, as well as an investigator’s report confirming that many businesses with these names are currently active.” Care First, 77 USPQ2d at 1582. There is no comparable quantity of evidence in the record here. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 24 - 2. The Similarity or Dissimilarity of the Marks The first du Pont factor is “‘the similarity or dissimilarity of the marks in their entireties as to appearance, sound, connotation and commercial impression.’” Palm Bay Imps., 73 USPQ2d at 1691 (quoting du Pont, 177 USPQ at 567). “Similarity in any one of these elements may be sufficient to find the marks confusingly similar.” In re Davia, 110 USPQ2d 1810, 1812 (TTAB 2014) (citing In re White Swan Ltd., 8 USPQ2d 1534, 1535 (TTAB 1988)). “The proper test is not a side-by-side comparison of the marks, but instead whether the marks are sufficiently similar in terms of their commercial impression such that persons who encounter the marks would be likely to assume a connection between the parties.” Coach Servs. Inc. v. Triumph Learning LLC, 668 F.3d 1356, 101 USPQ2d 1713, 1721 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (quotation omitted). “The proper perspective on which the analysis must focus is on the recollection of the average customer, who retains a general rather than specific impression of marks.” In re i.am.symbolic, 127 USPQ2d 1627, 1630 (TTAB 2018) (citations omitted). The marks must be considered in their entireties, but “‘in articulating reasons for reaching a conclusion on the issue of confusion, there is nothing improper in stating that, for rational reasons, more or less weight has been given to a particular feature of a mark, provided the ultimate conclusion rests on consideration of the marks in their entireties.’” In re Detroit Athletic Co., 903 F.3d 1297, 128 USPQ2d 1047, 1051 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (quoting In re Nat’l Data Corp., 753 F.2d 1056, 224 USPQ 749, 751 (Fed. Cir. 1985)). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 25 - Petitioner argues that Respondent’s VITABUD GROW mark “contains Petitioner’s entire VITA GROW mark—Registrant has merely added the descriptive word ‘BUD’ to the middle of Petitioner’s mark VITA GROW.” 14 TTABVUE 12. Petitioner claims variously (and inconsistently) that “[b]ecause the word BUD is placed in the center of Petitioner’s two-word mark, the dominant portion of the VITABUD GROW mark is still the beginning of the first word, or ‘VITA’ and the second word ‘GROW,’ which is identical to Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark,” id.; that “VITA and VITABUD [are] the dominant portion of the marks,” id. at 13; and that “the dominant portions of the marks—VITA—are identical in sight, sound and meaning. Id. Respondent does not dispute that his mark contains Petitioner’s entire mark, but argues that he “includes the term ‘BUD’ in its [sic] mark—VITABUD GROW— distinguishing it from Petitioner’s Mark, VITA GROW.” 15 TTABVUE 17.22 According to Respondent, in view of the third-party uses discussed above, “the addition of the term ‘BUD’ further distinguishes Registrant’s mark from Petitioner’s Mark,” id., because “the determination that a mark is weak means that consumer confusion has been found unlikely because the mark’s components are so widely used that ‘the public can easily distinguish slight differences in the marks, even if the 22 Throughout his brief, Respondent treats Petitioner’s mark as a standard character mark, and we will do so as well. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 26 - goods are related.’” Id. (emphasis supplied by Respondent) (quoting Gen. Mills, Inc. v. Kellogg, 824 F.2d 622, 3 USPQ2d 1442, 1445 (8th Cir. 1987)).23 As Petitioner notes, its entire mark is subsumed within Respondent’s mark, and “[l]ikelihood of confusion often has been found where the entirety of one mark is incorporated within another.” Hunter Indus., Inc. v. Toro Co., 110 USPQ2d 1651, 1660 (TTAB 2014) (finding PRECISION and PRECISION DISTRIBUTION CONTROL to be confusingly similar); see also Stone Lion Capital Partners, LP v. Lion Capital LLC, 746 F.3d 1317, 110 USPQ2d 1157, 1160-61 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (affirming Board’s finding that STONE LION CAPITAL was confusingly similar to LION CAPITAL AND LION). The two-word VITA GROW and VITABUD GROW marks both begin with VITA and end with GROW, rendering them quite similar to the eye and ear, particularly taking into account that the “‘marks must be considered . . . in light of the fallibility of memory’ and ‘not on the basis of side-by-side comparison.’” In re St. Helena Hosp., 774 F.3d 747, 113 USPQ2d 1082, 1085 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (quoting San Fernando Elec. Mfg. Co. v. JFD Elecs. Components Corp., 565 F.2d 683, 196 USPQ 1, 2 (CCPA 1977)). 23 The Gen. Mills court found that the trial court was correct in finding, on the basis of “evidence of third-party use and of the mark’s descriptive nature,” that the plaintiff’s APPLE RAISIN CRISP mark was “likely a relatively weak mark.” 3 USPQ2d at 1445. We are not bound by the Eighth Circuit’s decision, but the Federal Circuit has adopted the same general analysis with respect to the impact, in the analysis of similarity, of a showing that a mark is weak. See, e.g., Omaha Steaks, 128 USPQ2d at 1693. As discussed above, however, Respondent’s third-party use evidence does not show that the elements of Petitioner’s mark are “so widely used” that ‘the public can easily distinguish slight differences in the marks’” when they are used on similar goods. 15 TTABVUE 17 (quoting Gen. Mills, 3 USPQ2d at 1445). Cancellation No. 92065963 - 27 - The marks are also similar in meaning when considered in their entireties. Petitioner correctly notes that consumers are likely to “focus on the first word or portion in a trademark.” 14 TTABVUE 13 (citing Presto Prods., Inc. v. Nice-Pak Prods., Inc., 9 USPQ2d 1895, 1897 (TTAB 1988) and Palm Bay Imps., 73 USPQ2d at 1692). That general principle applies here because while GROW, the second word in each mark, gives each mark the same connotation—that the goods sold under each mark will enable plants to thrive—the word has little or no source-identifying significance, and has been disclaimed in Respondent’s registration and in Petitioner’s pending application. 7 TTABVUE 5. The dominant first words VITA and VITABUD in the marks do not differ enough to give the marks different meanings when they are viewed in their entireties. The addition of the word BUD to the word VITA in Respondent’s mark does not create a significantly different connotation and commercial impression from VITA alone.24 Like the word GROW, the word BUD is descriptive and non-source identifying because it “means ‘[a] compact growth on a plant that develops into a leaf, flower, or shoot.’” 15 TTABVUE 17 (MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY). As Respondent explains, such a “growth on a plant” is the desired end result of the use of 24 Respondent argues that when VITA is used “in connection with plant fertilizers, plant food, and related products,” it connotes “vitality.” 15 TTABVUE 15 (citing a translation of the Latin word “vita” as “life” (12 TTABVUE 59)). He claims that Petitioner’s mark VITA GROW “describe[s] plant food and related products [used] to enhance the growth and vitality of plaints . . . .” 15 TTABVUE 16. At the same time, however, he appears to attribute a different meaning to VITA when it appears in his mark, as he testified that he “chose the mark VITABUD GROW for the product because it describes the use for the different growing phrases of the plants, vitamin-enriched fertilizer to help plants grow and then to bloom.” White Decl. ¶ 4. The record does not support a finding that VITA means one thing when it appears in Respondent’s mark and another thing when it appears in Petitioner’s mark. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 28 - Respondent’s fertilizer, which are used “to help plants grow and then to bloom.” White Decl. ¶ 4. If consumers notice and recall the difference between VITA and VITABUD in the marks, Respondent’s VITABUD GROW mark could easily be understood by consumers familiar with Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark to be a variant of that mark identifying a particular type of fertilizer of the sort described by Respondent. The VITA GROW and VITABUD GROW marks as a whole are quite similar in all means of comparison. Cf. FabFitFun, 127 USPQ2d at 1677 (marks I’M SMOKING HOT and SMOKIN’ HOT SHOW TIME for cosmetics found to be “more dissimilar than similar” in appearance, sound, and meaning). The first du Pont factor supports a finding of a likelihood of confusion. 3. The Similarity or Dissimilarity of the Goods The second du Pont factor “considers ‘[t]he similarity or dissimilarity and nature of the goods or services as described in an application or registration.’” Detroit Athletic, 128 USPQ2d at 1051 (quoting du Pont, 177 USPQ at 567). The goods identified in Respondent’s registration are “fertilizers.” Because Petitioner relies on common-law use rather than a registration, it must prove use of the mark on the goods on which it alleges that it “has used the mark VITA GROW and related marks,” 1 TTABVUE 5 (Pet. to Cancel ¶ 11),25 as a prerequisite to our determination of their similarity to the “fertilizers” identified in Respondent’s registration. Cf. WeaponX, 126 USPQ2d at 1042 (noting that because “Opposer has not presented any evidence that it has sold any of its pleaded goods or rendered any of the pleaded services in its 25 These goods track the goods identified in Petitioner’s pending application. 7 TTABVUE 5. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 29 - notice of opposition under its pleaded mark,” the Board “cannot weigh the relationship of the parties’ respective goods and services as well as other du Pont factors”). Petitioner argues that the goods are identical because the “fertilizers” identified in Respondent’s registration “subsume and are identical to Petitioner’s plant foods,” 14 TTABVUE 14,26 but the only proof of Petitioner’s use of its mark with plant foods takes the form of Respondent’s acceptance as fact that Petitioner used the mark in 2007 and 2008 for those goods, discussed above in connection with priority, and possibly evidence made of record by Respondent that he claims “referenc[es] the use of what appears to be Petitioner’s mark VITA GROW as a fertilizer for marijuana plants.”27 In his brief, Respondent does not address the second du Pont factor or Petitioner’s argument that the goods are legally identical, but Respondent effectively concedes that Petitioner uses its mark in connection with goods that are at least related to the fertilizers identified in Respondent’s registration. Respondent’s brief describes Petitioner’s goods as “[h]orticultural products, namely, plant food, rooting compound to stimulate root production, foliar plant spray to prevent wilting in plants, and pH 26 Petitioner made of record a definition of “fertilizer” as “[a]ny of a large number of natural and synthetic materials, including manure and nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium compounds, spread on or worked into soil to increase its capacity to support plant growth.” 7 TTABVUE 23 (AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY). On its face, this definition appears to encompass plant foods, and Respondent does not contend otherwise. 27 As noted above, this evidence bears on Respondent’s acceptance of Petitioner’s priority, but its primary significance involves Respondent’s statement that Petitioner’s plant foods are, or can be used as, fertilizers. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 30 - adjusters,” 15 TTABVUE 5; characterizes those goods as “plant food and related products,” id.; states that the elements of Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark “describe the goals of the plant food and related products for which Petitioner’s Mark is used,” id. at 12, and that “Petitioner’s own categories of goods describe these goals: ‘plant food, rooting compound to stimulate root production, foliar plant spray to prevent wilting in plants, and pH adjusters,” id. at 16 (emphasis supplied by Respondent); describes uses of third-party marks with plant food, plant hormones, fertilizers, and related goods as uses “on similar goods,” id. at 15; claims that Petitioner uses its mark “as a fertilizer for marijuana plants,” id. at 7; and argues that the parties’ marks are sufficiently differ for confusion to be unlikely “even if the goods are related.” Id. at 17 (emphasis supplied by Respondent) (quoting Gen. Mills, 3 USPQ2d at 1445). In view of Respondent’s multiple statements regarding the nature of the goods with which Petitioner uses its mark, we find that Respondent has admitted that those goods are at least related to, if not identical to, the fertilizers identified in Respondent’s registration. Cf. DC Comics v. Pan Am. Grain Mfg. Co., 77 USPQ2d 1220, 1224 n.8 (TTAB 2005) (statements in briefs can operate as admissions that authenticate documents and make them of record). The second du Pont factor thus supports a finding of a likelihood of confusion.28 28 The third du Pont factor “considers ‘[t]he similarity or dissimilarity of established, likely- to-continue trade channels.” Detroit Athletic, 128 USPQ2d at 1052 (quoting du Pont, 177 USPQ at 567). Petitioner argues that the channels of trade and classes of purchasers for the parties’ goods are identical because there are no restrictions or limitations on the trade channels or purchasers in Respondent’s registration, that “the Board must presume that Registrant’s goods are marketed in all normal channels of the identified goods and to all normal classes of purchasers of them,” 14 TTABVUE 14, and that “[t]hese trade channels and classes of purchasers would therefore be identical to the trade channels in which Cancellation No. 92065963 - 31 - 4. Balancing the du Pont Factors The VITA GROW and VITABUD GROW marks are quite similar and Respondent has admitted that the goods are at least related if not identical. Although Petitioner’s mark is somewhat weak conceptually and there is modest third-party use of its constituent elements, the record does not show that Petitioner’s mark is so weak that consumers are able to distinguish the marks, when they are used with similar goods, based on the slight differences between them. On the basis of the record as a whole, including Respondent’s admissions regarding the existence and prior use of Petitioner’s mark, and the similarity of the parties’ goods, we find that Petitioner proved, by a preponderance of the evidence, that consumers familiar with Petitioner’s VITA GROW mark for plant food are likely to believe mistakenly that fertilizers sold under Respondent’s VITABUD GROW mark originate with, or are sponsored or authorized by, the owner of the VITA GROW mark for plant foods. Decision: The petition to cancel is granted and Registration No. 4880452 will be cancelled in due course. ***** Wellington, Administrative Trademark Judge, dissenting: I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision. Specifically, I disagree with the majority’s finding that Respondent has “accepted as fact that Petitioner used its Petitioner markets its plant foods and Registrant’s customers are also therefore identical to the customers to which Petitioner’s markets its goods.” Id. There is no record evidence regarding the trade channels and customers for Petitioner’s goods, however, and no admissions by Respondent to establish them. Accordingly, we find that the third du Pont factor is neutral. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 32 - claimed VITA GROW mark in connection with plant food in 2007 and 2008 based on the archived webpages submitted by Petitioner.” In his Answer, Respondent clearly denied each of Petitioner’s allegations involving priority.29 Thus, Petitioner was on notice that it must prove priority by a preponderance of the evidence. Petitioner failed in meeting this burden inasmuch as it relies entirely on the archived webpages without any corroborating testimony of record. The Board’s precedential WeaponX decision is directly on point -- internet evidence by itself, such as the archived webpages submitted by Petitioner, can only be used to demonstrate what it shows on its face and thus is not acceptable for purposes of demonstrating priority.30 Although Respondent referred to the archived webpages and made a misguided argument regarding the necessity of “continuous use” proof, I would not construe this argument or Respondent’s treatment of the archived webpages as “accepting as fact” Petitioner’s priority of use. Indeed, Respondent carefully characterized the archived webpages as “only what appears to be Internet archive evidence” or as only “purporting to show use …” Such equivocation, especially when considered in 29 5 TTABVUE 2-3 (Answer ¶¶ 2, 11). 30 The majority points out (in Note 8) that the archived webpages satisfy the Safer requirements and that they may be used as specimens of use in an uninvolved application; however, these two points are irrelevant to the question of Petitioner carrying its burden of proving priority of use in this case. Likewise, the other internet evidence referenced in the same note (consisting of printouts submitted by Respondent “referencing the use of what appears to be Petitioner’s mark”) also fail for purposes of establishing Petitioner’s priority of use. Cancellation No. 92065963 - 33 - conjunction with Respondent’s clear denials of priority in his Answer, should not be treated an admission that the archived webpages establish Petitioner’s priority. Because I do not believe that Petitioner has proven priority nor do I find that Respondent “accepted as fact” Petitioner’s priority, I would ultimately conclude that Petitioner could not prevail on the likelihood of confusion claim. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation