MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC IND. CO. v. National Steel Constr. Co.

Decision Date10 June 1971
Docket NumberPatent Appeal No. 8527.
Citation170 USPQ 98,442 F.2d 1383
PartiesMATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., Ltd., Appellant, v. NATIONAL STEEL CONSTRUCTION CO., Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA)

Donald A. Gardiner, Jr. (Smith, Michael, Bradford & Gardiner), Arlington, Va., W. Douglas Carothers, Jr. (Carothers & Carothers), Pittsburgh, Pa., attorneys of record, for appellant.

Orland M. Christensen, Gordon R. Sanborn (Christensen, Sanborn, Matthews), Seattle, Wash., attorneys of record, for appellee.

Before RICH, ALMOND, BALDWIN, LANE, Judges, and LANDIS, Judge, United States Customs Court, sitting by designation.

RICH, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent Office Trademark Trial and Appeal Board in cancellation proceeding No. 8,751 granting appellee's petition to cancel three registrations, Nos. 754,002, 769,430, and 769,858, of various forms of the trademark NATIONAL. The goods named in all three registrations are: portable electric space heaters, portable electric percolators, portable electric rice boilers, portable electric bakers, and portable electric blenders.

The board's opinion herein is published in full at 158 USPQ 468. That opinion, however, refers to and relies on the opinion in a companion cancellation, No. 8,562, heard on the same record, published at 158 USPQ 464. Familiarity with these opinions will be assumed.

The three registrations here involved are for composite word and design marks. The marks of registrations No. 754,002 and No. 769,858 are illustrated in the last-mentioned opinion wherein "Mark A" is the mark of `002 and "Mark B" is the mark of `858. The mark of `430 is designated "Mark C" in the opinion below herein and differs from the other two in that the dominant word portion of the mark, which is "NATIONAL" in the other two, is the Japanese written language equivalent written in katakana characters, the design portion of Mark C being otherwise like Mark A.

It is noted, with respect to the design features of the marks, that appellant does not rely on them in arguing lack of a likelihood of confusion, etc., but, on the contrary, seems to concede legal identity between its marks and appellee's mark NATIONAL, registered to it in 1951 for automatic electric water heaters, Reg. No. 539,424, and in 1956 for portable air conditioners, Reg. No. 626,970. Appellee has also alleged, and the board found, prior use of NATIONAL on radiant electric heaters and other related products.

It is not questioned by appellant that appellee is the prior user.

With respect to Reg. No. 769,430, wherein the dominant feature of the mark is the Japanese equivalent of the word NATIONAL, the board held it to be well established that foreign words may not be registered if the English equivalent has been previously used on or registered for products which might reasonably be assumed to come from the same source, citing Ex parte Odol-Werke Wein Gesellschaft M.B.H., 111 USPQ 286 (Commr.1956), and cases cited therein. There registration was refused to "CHAT NOIR" for eau de cologne in view of the prior registration of the English equivalent words "Black Cat" for perfumes and toilet waters, inter alia. Appellant has not contested this principle of law. All three registrations have been dealt with in its brief on...

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    ...to the extent possible, an evaluation of what happens in a real world setting. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. National Steel Construction Co., 442 F.2d 1383, 1385, 170 USPQ 98, 99 (CCPA 1971). The real world segment of the public is limited to the market or universe necessary to circu......
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    ...the business interests of the plaintiff. The mark of the plaintiff is an exceedingly weak one. See Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. National Steel Construction, 442 F.2d 1383 (CCPA 1971); The National Drying Machinery Co. v. Ackoff, 129 F.Supp. 389 (E.D.Pa. 1955), aff'd, 228 F.2d 349 (......
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