PBM Products, LLCDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardMar 5, 2013No. 77368754re (T.T.A.B. Mar. 5, 2013) Copy Citation THIS OPINION IS NOT A PRECEDENT OF THE T.T.A.B. Mailed: March 5, 2013 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board ________ In re PBM Products, LLC ________ Serial Nos. 77368754 & 77385593 _______ On Request for Reconsideration _______ Theodore A. Breiner of Breiner & Breiner LLC for PBM Products, L.L.C. Simon Teng, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 105 (Thomas G. Howell, Managing Attorney). _______ Before Cataldo, Wellington and Shaw, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Cataldo, Administrative Trademark Judge: Applicant, PBM Products, LLC, filed applications to register on the Principal Register the following marks: VERMONT ORGANICS (standard characters);1 and 1 Application Serial No. 77368754 was filed January 10, 2008, based upon applicant’s allegation of its bona fide intent to use the mark in commerce. During prosecution, applicant filed an amendment to allege use, asserting first use and first use in commerce as of April 2008. Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 2 2 both for “infant formula having organic ingredients” in International Class 5. The trademark examining attorney refused registration of application Serial No. 77368754 under Section 2(e)(2) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(e)(2), on the basis that VERMONT ORGANICS is primarily geographically descriptive of applicant’s goods. The examining attorney refused registration of application Serial No. 77385593 absent a disclaimer of “VERMONT ORGANICS” under Section 6(a) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1056, on the basis that VERMONT ORGANICS is primarily geographically descriptive of applicant’s goods. On April 30, 2012, applicant filed a request for reconsideration of the Board’s March 29, 2012 decision affirming the examining attorney’s refusal of registration 2 Application Serial No. 77385593 was filed January 31, 2008, based upon applicant’s allegation of its bona fide intent to use the mark in commerce. During prosecution, applicant filed an amendment to allege use, asserting first use and first use in commerce as of April 2008. “Color is not claimed as a feature of the mark.” “The mark consists of the wording ‘VERMONT ORGANICS’ and a maple leaf design against a rectangular background.” Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 3 of both of its applied-for marks on the ground that VERMONT ORGANICS is primarily geographically descriptive of the recited goods. As a preliminary matter, we note that applicant’s request for reconsideration is timely inasmuch as it was filed within 30 days of the date of the Board’s decision. See Trademark Rules 2.144 and 2.196. See also Avedis Zildjian Co. v. D. H. Baldwin Co., 181 USPQ 736 (Comm’r 1974). Generally, the premise underlying a motion for reconsideration, modification or clarification under Trademark Rule 2.127(b) is that, based on the facts before it and the prevailing authorities, the Board erred in reaching the order or decision it issued. Such a motion may not properly be used to introduce additional evidence, nor should it be devoted simply to a reargument of the points presented in a brief on the original motion. Rather, the motion normally should be limited to a demonstration that, based on the facts before it and the applicable law, the Board’s ruling is in error and requires appropriate change. See TBMP § 543 (October 2012) and authorities cited therein. Applicant asserts in its request for reconsideration that the Board committed a number of errors in affirming Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 4 the examining attorney’s refusals to register. Each will be addressed in turn. (1) the Board improperly found a presumption of a goods/place association between Vermont and infant formula having organic ingredients ("infant formula") contrary to the Federal Circuit precedent in In re Nantucket, Inc., 677 F.2d 95 (CCPA 1982) ("Nantucket") and its progeny, In re Societe Generale Des Eaux Minerales De Vittel S.A., 824 F.2d 956 (Fed. Cir 1987) ("Vittel"). There is no such presumption under the Board's reviewing Court's authority as set forth in Nantucket; (2) the Board’s Decision relying on, inter alia, In re Handler Fenton Westerns, Inc., 214 USPQ 848 (TTAB 1982) ("Handler") is contrary to the Federal Circuit precedent in Nantucket and Vittel which the Board must follow; (3) the Board incorrectly found that there is a goods/place association between the State of Vermont and infant formula because Vermont is allegedly known for "organic foodstuffs." Applicant's goods are not "organic foodstuffs" but are infant formula. Proof of a goods/place association required under the Federal Circuit precedent in Nantucket does not allow the Board to extend the "association" to "goods" not applied for, and the Board cites no supporting precedent for this holding; (4) the Board incorrectly did not consider the prior allowed registrations and applications for the trademarks VERMONT NATURALS for vitamins; MALIBU ORGANICS for nutritional supplements; BOULDER ORGANICS for dietary supplements; and ARIZONA for iced tea. While not dispositive, each of these allowed trademarks is probative evidence of what is not a primarily geographically descriptive trademark. The fact the VERMONT NATURALS registration has expired or the applicants did not file statements of use for the MALIBU ORGANICS and BOULDER ORGANICS trademarks is irrelevant. The Trademark Office Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 5 allowed this registration and these applications under §2(e)(2) of the Trademark Act, the same law that is being applied in this application. The Board does not address the trademark ARIZONA for iced tea which is currently registered and directly on point; and (5) the Board fails to consider the precedent cited by applicant, including the decision in In re International Minerals & Chemicals Corp., 147 USPQ 262 (TTAB 1965) wherein this Board held that the trademark KENTUCKY TURF for fertilizer is not primarily geographically descriptive under §2(e)(2) of the Trademark Act. This case is directly on point herein. The Board precedent and Federal Circuit precedent is properly considered in determining what is primarily geographically descriptive.3 We turn to applicant’s first and second bases for its request for reconsideration inasmuch as they are related. Applicant’s apparent position is the decisions by the predecessor of our primary reviewing court in Nantucket and the Federal Circuit in Vittel prohibit the TMEO and this tribunal from making a presumption of a goods/place association in our determination of the geographic descriptiveness of the term VERMONT ORGANICS. However, applicant’s reliance upon these decisions is misplaced. As we observed in In re Handler Fenton Westerns, Inc., 214 USPQ 848 (TTAB 1982), issued in the wake of Nantucket, Having set out in some detail what the Court required in Nantucket to support a refusal to register under Section 2(e)(2), we want to take care to distinguish the facts of Nantucket from those presented here. While the refusal to register in this case was, as in Nantucket, under 3 Request for reconsideration, p. 2-4. Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 6 Section 2(e)(2), the present applicant's mark has been held primarily geographically descriptive, rather than primarily geographically deceptively misdescriptive, of the shirts to which the mark is applied. Nantucket gave no specific guidance as to how a goods-place association may be established with respect to marks held primarily geographically descriptive. Id. at 849. Thus, the Board found that where there is no genuine issue that the geographical significance of a term is its primary significance and where the geographical place is neither obscure nor remote, a public association of the goods with the place may ordinarily be presumed from the fact that the applicant's own goods come from the geographical place named in the mark. Id. at 850. We recognize that applicant disagrees with this determination and argues that it should be overruled.4 However, we are not persuaded by applicant’s arguments that Handler or its progeny are in error. Vittel is equally unhelpful to applicant because it turned on whether the record showed that the town of Vittel was sufficiently well-known to American consumers, or was known for its health spas and mineral waters. Vittel, 3 USPQ2d 1453 (“In short, the evidence is insufficient to show the likelihood of [] the public thinking that Vittel refers to a place where the goods come from.”) Here, the State of Vermont, unlike the small town of Vittel, cannot 4 Request for reconsideration, p. 8. Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 7 seriously be considered obscure, and the record shows that it is known for food products. Turning to applicant’s third basis for its request for reconsideration, we again note that our precedent in Handler allows us to make a goods/place association between Vermont and applicant’s goods due to the examining attorney’s showing that Vermont is a place known generally to the public and that applicant’s goods will originate therefrom. We further note that the evidence made of record by the examining attorney suggesting that Vermont is a source for numerous organic foodstuffs including dairy products and baby food, tends to reinforce the presumption of an association between applicant’s goods and Vermont. Turning to applicant’s fourth and fifth bases for its request for reconsideration, it is applicant’s position that the Board erred by not considering as “probative evidence”5 cancelled Registration No. 2813938 for VERMONT NATURALS for “vitamins, dietary supplements;” abandoned applications for MALIBU ORGANICS for “nutritional supplements” and BOULDER ORGANICS for “dietary supplements;” and ARIZONA for “iced tea.” As we noted in our March 29, 2012 determination, cancelled registrations and abandoned applications have no probative value. See 5 Request for reconsideration, p. 3. Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 8 Action Temporary Services Inc. v. Labor Force Inc., 870 F.2d 1563, 10 USPQ2d 1307, 1309 (Fed. Cir. 1989); and Interpayment Services Ltd. v. Docters & Thiede, 66 USPQ2d 1463 (TTAB 2003). Similarly, with regard to the Board’s decision in In re International Minerals & Chemicals Corp., 147 USPQ 262 (TTAB 1965), a determination that an unrelated mark (KENTUCKY TURF) for wholly unrelated goods, namely, fertilizer, is not primarily geographically descriptive does not compel a different result in this case. Even if we were to consider all of the above applications and registrations, we are not privy to the prosecution histories thereof and cannot determine the basis for the decision to allow these marks to registration. Finally, because all of the marks and goods in those applications and registrations are unrelated to those at issue herein, any evidence regarding their approval for registration would have little, if any, probative value herein. As is often noted by the Board and the Courts, each case must be decided on its own merits. See, for example, In re Nett Designs Inc., 236 F.3d 1339, 57 USPQ2d 1564, 1566 (Fed. Cir. 2001). In summary, we find that applicant points to no error in our March 29, 2012 determination, but rather disagrees with the result reached therein and otherwise presents reargument of points previously raised in support of the positions articulated in its briefs on appeal. As a result, we remain of the opinion that our determination Ser. Nos. 77368754 and 77385593 9 affirming the examining attorney’s refusal to register is correct. The request for reconsideration is denied. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation