SV Spirits, Ltd.Download PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardNov 28, 2012No. 85006865 (T.T.A.B. Nov. 28, 2012) Copy Citation Hearing: Mailed: August 30, 2012 November 28, 2012 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board ________ In re SV Spirits, Ltd. ________ Serial No. 85006865 _______ Christopher J. McGeehan of McGeehan Technology Law, Ltd. for SV Spirits, Ltd. Michael P. Keating, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 101 (Ronald R. Sussman, Managing Attorney). _______ Before Zervas, Kuhlke and Shaw, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Zervas, Administrative Trademark Judge: On April 6, 2010, SV Spirits, Ltd. (“applicant”) filed an application to register PORNSTAR (in standard character form) on the Principal Register for the following International Class 33 goods: Alcoholic beverages except beers; Distilled Spirits; Gin; Japanese white liquor (shochu); Liquor; Sake; Tequila; Vodka; Whiskey; Wines and sparkling wines. THIS DECISION IS NOT A PRECEDENT OF THE T.T.A.B. Ser. No. 85006865 2 Applicant seeks registration under the intent-to-use provisions of Section 1(b) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051(b). The examining attorney issued a final refusal under Section 2(e)(1) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(e)(1), on the ground that applicant's mark is merely descriptive of a type of beverage made by combining various types of liquor or alcoholic beverages which are within the scope of applicant’s identification of goods. Brief at unnumbered p. 3. Applicant has appealed the final refusal. After the examining attorney denied applicant’s request for reconsideration, both the examining attorney and applicant filed briefs. We reverse. “A term is merely descriptive if it immediately conveys knowledge of a quality, feature, function, or characteristic of the goods or services with which it is used.” In re Gyulay, 820 F.2d 1216, 3 USPQ2d 1009, 1009 (Fed. Cir. 1987). Whether a particular term is merely descriptive is determined in relation to the goods or services for which registration is sought and the context in which the term is used, not in the abstract or on the basis of guesswork. In re Abcor Development Corp., 588 F.2d 811, 200 USPQ 215 (CCPA 1978); In re Remacle, 66 Ser. No. 85006865 3 USPQ2d 1222 (TTAB 2002). In other words, the question is not whether someone presented only with the mark could guess the products listed in the description of goods. Rather, the question is whether someone who knows what the products are will understand the mark to convey information about them. In re Tower Tech, Inc., 64 USPQ2d 1314 (TTAB 2002); In re Patent & Trademark Services Inc., 49 USPQ2d 1537 (TTAB 1998); In re Home Builders Association of Greenville, 18 USPQ2d 1313 (TTAB 1990); In re American Greetings Corp., 226 USPQ 365 (TTAB 1985). If, on the other hand, a mark requires imagination, thought, and perception to arrive at the qualities or characteristics of the goods, then the mark is suggestive. In re MBNA America Bank N.A., 340 F.3d 1328, 67 USPQ2d 1778 (Fed. Cir. 2003); see also In re Tennis in the Round, Inc., 199 USPQ 496 (TTAB 1978). The examining attorney submitted the following Internet evidence providing recipes or other information for a “pornstar” cocktail: • supercocktails.com (blue curacao liquor and Sour Puss raspberry liquor) (first Office action); • freedrinkrecipes.com (blue curacao liquor and Sour Puss raspberry liquor) (first Office action); Ser. No. 85006865 4 • cookthatfood.com (blue curacao, Sour Puss raspberry liqueur, ice) (final Office action); • drinkoftheweek.com (cherry vodka, blue curacao, and grenadine, Sprite or 7-up) (final Office action), posted by “Meghan”; • 1001cocktails.com (blue curacao and raspberry liquor) (denial of request for reconsideration); • thedrinkmaker.com (blue curacao, Sour Puss raspberry liquor) (denial of request for reconsideration); • barmandrinks.com (blue curacao and raspberry Sour Puss liquor) (denial of request for reconsideration); • thebartend.com (blue curacao and Sour Puss raspberry liquor) (denial of request for reconsideration); and • wikipedia.org (identifying “Pornstar” as a drink with blue curacao under the entry for “cocktails”) (denial of request for reconsideration).1 According to the examining attorney, the recipes are consistent in their ingredients and proportions. He maintains that the drink is “common in the same way as beverages such as the Bloody Mary, Tom Collins, or Screw Driver.” Brief at 5. 1 The examining attorney states that the evidence he submitted into the record “is only a small sample of the evidence available, all of which clearly establishes the existence of the drink and is clear evidence of how the term is being used by the relevant public.” Brief at 4. Because the Board bases its decision on the existing evidentiary record and not on representations by the examining attorney, we give no further consideration to this statement; the better practice is for an examining attorney to place an appropriate amount of evidence in the record to satisfy his or her burden. Ser. No. 85006865 5 For the reasons provided below, not all of this evidence has probative value or is evidence we can consider. First, the wikipedia.org webpages containing an entry for “blue curacao” and listing “pornstar” as a cocktail containing blue curacao were submitted too late for us to consider the webpages. Although Wikipedia entries have inherent limitations because an article at any given time may contain significant misinformation, “the Board will consider evidence taken from Wikipedia so long as the nonoffering party has an opportunity to rebut that evidence by submitting other evidence that may call into question the accuracy of the particular Wikipedia information.” In re IP Carrier Consulting Group, 84 USPQ2d 1028, 1032 (TTAB 2007). See also TBMP § 1208.03 (3d ed. rev. 1 2012). In this case, the examining attorney submitted the Wikipedia entry with his denial of applicant's request for reconsideration. Inasmuch as applicant did not have an opportunity to rebut the Wikipedia evidence, it has no probative value.2 Second, as noted, the examining attorney submitted an “article” from ehow.com with the first Office action 2 This type of evidence is distinct from the Internet evidence submitted with the denial of the request for reconsideration in In re Davey Products Pty Ltd., 92 USPQ2d 1198 (TTAB 2009), which did not allow users to submit content. Ser. No. 85006865 6 providing a recipe for a “pornstar” cocktail. Applicant’s attorney stated in a declaration filed with applicant’s request for reconsideration that he could not locate the “article” on the ehow.com website. In view thereof, and because applicant has not had an opportunity to fully investigate this “article,” we do not further consider the “article.” Third, the webpages from cocktailmaking.co.uk, a United Kingdom website, have no probative value; we are interested in use of the applied-for term in the United States, not abroad. Next, we consider applicant’s objection to any website submitted by the examining attorney that contains “user- generated content,” i.e., where users may upload information to a site such as reviews, comments or text. According to applicant, there is no way to assess how many other people accord the same meaning to a term offered by the person posting information; and a “highly motivated individual or small group could be responsible for posts on multiple sites.” For support, applicant relies on an unpublished Board decision submitted with applicant’s request for reconsideration, In re Future First LLC, Serial Ser. No. 85006865 7 No. 78769110 (TTAB 2008).3 In Future First, the Board found evidence from Internet forums and blogs had little probative value because the Board could not determine whether the websites referenced applicant’s goods; and because the use of a term in lower-case letters on a posting on an Internet forum did not establish that the term is a common commercial name, or evidence that the readers of the posting regard it as such. We are not persuaded that all of this type of website evidence which may have user-generated content must be accorded limited probative value. First, the Board regularly accepts website evidence to demonstrate that a term is merely descriptive. See In re Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., 482 F.3d 1376, 82 USPQ2d 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (third-party websites are competent sources to show what the relevant public would understand a term to mean, and “they provide substantial evidence to support the Board's findings.”). Second, in Future First, the Board did not articulate a blanket prohibition on evidence taken from Internet forums or blogs; the examining attorney offered forum and blog evidence to demonstrate that a term was being used descriptively, and the Board considered that 3 Decisions which are not designated as precedent are not binding on the Board, but may be cited for whatever persuasive weight to which they may be entitled. TBMP Section 101.03 (3d ed. rev. 1 2012). Ser. No. 85006865 8 the term in question was a reference to applicant’s goods. Here, there is no doubt that the use of PORNSTAR in the website evidence is not a reference to applicant’s goods; the application declares an intent to use the mark and the term is used in the context of a drink recipe, with one or more of the ingredients of the drink allegedly encompassed within applicant’s identification of goods. Third, the websites with user-generated content demonstrate how the public uses a term and public exposure to the term. Fourth, not all of the websites allows users to submit recipes and the content on such websites is consistent with the user-generated submissions. We are aware of applicant’s point that a nefarious party may “plant” such evidence on blogs or public forums, but we know of no reason why to automatically exclude such evidence if an applicant has had an opportunity to offer rebutting evidence and there is no evidence that any competitor or other party has “planted” the evidence applicant challenges. The danger to an applicant is mitigated too if a webmaster reviews submissions from the general public, as is the case with the supercocktails.com and the freedrinkrecipes.com websites. See request for reconsideration at 38 and 40. Ser. No. 85006865 9 At this point, we note that the examining attorney submitted wepages from the barmandrinks.com web site with his denial of the request for reconsideration. This web site allows user-generated content,4 and applicant has not had an opportunity to present evidence contesting the probative value of these webpages. We therefore treat this web site evidence in the same manner we treat wikipedia.com evidence submitted with a denial of a request for reconsideration, for the same reasons. The barmandrinks.com webpages therefore have no probative value. In sum, we consider the webpages submitted by the examining attorney, including those webpages with user- generated content submitted prior to the denial of the request for reconsideration, for the fact that the public uses the term “pornstar” to refer to a cocktail and is exposed to the recipes set forth under the name “pornstar.” Turning now to applicant’s arguments on the merits of the refusal, applicant argues that PORNSTAR does not denote a quality, characteristic, function, feature or purpose of the goods and that it does not immediately describe, without conjecture or speculation, a significant feature or 4 Barmandrinks.com contains a link to “submit a recipe,” and there is no indication on the webpages that the drink submissions are reviewed prior to their inclusion on the website. Ser. No. 85006865 10 characteristic of the goods. Further, applicant maintains that it submitted rebuttal evidence demonstrating that the webpages submitted by the examining attorney do not reflect the public perception of the mark. Applicant submitted seven declarations from seven individuals residing in Las Vegas, Nevada or Rochester, New York who have had experience in the beverage or hospitality trade and who collectively state, inter alia, that (i) they are not familiar with “pornstar” as the name of a beverage, (ii) that Mr. Boston: Official Bartender’s & Party Guide (November 2008) is the standard reference used in the hospitality industry for cocktail recipes, and (iii) that there is no reference to a PORNSTAR cocktail in any of the standard reference works for cocktail recipes, including Mr. Boston: Official Bartender’s & Party Guide. In addition, one declarant, Mr. Anthony Capomaccio, states he has more than thirty years of experience in the bar/nightclub industry; that he searched the online indexes of recently published works at the top of the Amazon.com sales charts for “bartending”; and that he did not locate any entry for “porn star” or “pornstar” in the indexes of these works available online. The declarations of these individuals, particularly those who have long tenure in the entertainment and Ser. No. 85006865 11 hospitality industries, are probative especially in view of the fact that the individuals reside in different parts of the United States and the length of time some of them have spent in this industry. In light of their relevant experience and time in the industry, they cannot be readily dismissed as self-serving, and as establishing only that these seven individuals are not familiar with a “pornstar” cocktail (as the examining attorney urges us to do) and that the referenced books with cocktail recipes do not contain the term “pornstar.” Thus, we do not completely discount the declarations but give them the probative weight they are due in our deliberations. Applicant also maintains that the examining attorney must demonstrate that a “substantial portion” of the relevant consuming public views the mark as descriptive, citing Rockland Mortgage Corp. v. Shareholders Funding Inc. 835 F.Supp. 182, 30 USPQ2d 1270 (D. Del. 1993)5, and that the examining attorney has not done so. Applicant has not cited any Federal Circuit or relevant Board case in support of its argument that the examining attorney must demonstrate that a “substantial portion” of the relevant consuming public views the mark as descriptive, and we have 5 Applicant also cites In re Recovery, Inc., 196 USPQ 830 (TTAB 1977) but Recovery does not support the proposition that a “substantial portion” of the relevant consuming public must view the mark as descriptive. Ser. No. 85006865 12 not been able to locate one. The Federal Circuit, our primary reviewing court, requires that for purposes of registration, descriptiveness must be determined from the perspective of the relevant class or classes of actual or prospective customers of applicant's goods. See In re Omaha National Corp., 819 F.2d 1117, 2 USPQ2d 1859 (Fed. Cir. 1987). See also In re Nett Designs Inc., 236 F.3d 133, 57 USPQ2d 1564, 1566 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“The perception of the relevant purchasing public sets the standard for determining descriptiveness”); In re Abcor Development Corp., 588 F.2d 811, 814, 200 USPQ 215, 218 (CCPA 1978) (“descriptiveness ... is to be determined from the standpoint of the average prospective purchaser”). The case law reflects that the “substantial portion” requirement is a requirement to establish materiality, and materiality is not a necessary element under Section 2(e)(1). Cf., In re Miracle Tuesday, LLC, 695 F.3d 1339, 104 USPQ2d 1330, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (“The third and final element of a Section 2(e)(3) refusal focuses on materiality and asks ‘whether a substantial portion of the relevant consumers is likely to be deceived’ by the mark's misrepresentation of a goods/place association.”). We hence do not accept applicant’s contention that the examining attorney must demonstrate that a “substantial Ser. No. 85006865 13 portion” of the relevant consuming public views the mark as descriptive. Upon consideration of the evidence of record and the above, we find that applicant has overcome the prima facie case of descriptiveness established by the examining attorney largely through its declarations from seven individuals in the hospitality and entertainment industries. The declarations are from individuals who have had significant experience in the industries, are not limited to one geographic area and are based not only on their experience but also on a review of other reference materials, issued prior to the date of their declarations and at the time of their declarations. In contrast, the examining attorney’s evidence consists largely of a handful of recipes taken from web sites. He has not presented any publications, references in newspapers or magazines, or even recipe books which refer to or contain a recipe for a “pornstar” cocktail. After weighing this evidence, and considering the sources of the examining attorney’s evidence, we have doubts as to whether the average prospective purchaser of applicant’s goods would immediately understand that applicant’s liquor could be used to make a cocktail known as a “pornstar.” Because we have doubt as to the mere descriptiveness of the mark in Ser. No. 85006865 14 connection with the identified goods, we resolve such doubt in applicant's favor and pass the mark to publication. In re The Stroh Brewery Co., 34 USPQ2d 1796, 1797 (TTAB 1994) (“When doubts exist as to whether a term is descriptive as applied to the goods or services for which registration is sought, it is the practice of this Board to resolve doubts in favor of the applicant and pass the mark to publication with the knowledge that a competitor of applicant can come forth and initiate an opposition proceeding in which a more complete record can be established.”). Decision: The refusal to register is reversed. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation