Case ID: f2d_135/html/1017-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "HATFIELD, Associate Judge.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

30 C.C.P.A. (Patents)
    In re CONTINENTAL MOTORS CORPORATION.
    Patent Appeal No. 4674.
    Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.
    May 3, 1943.
    
      Byron B. Codings, of Washington, D. C., for appellant.
    W. W. Cochran, of Washington, D. C. (R. F. Whitehead, of Washington, D.- C., of counsel), for Commissioner of Patents.
    Before GARRETT, Presiding Judge, and BLAND, HATFIELD, LENROOT, and JACKSON, Associate Judges.
   HATFIELD, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents affirming the decision of the Examiner of Trade-Marks denying appellant’s application for registration, under the Trade-Mark Act of February 20, 1905, 15 U.S.C.A. § 81 et seq., of the trade-mark “Continental” for use on engine-driven lighting and power plants.

Appellant alleges in its application that it has used its mark on its goods since December 31, 1937.

The rejection of appellant’s application was based upon registration No. 187,900, issued to Continental Electric Company, Inc., August 12, 1924, on an application filed February 5, 1924, for the trade-mark “Continental Electric,” the word “Electric” being disclaimed apart from the mark as shown, for use on electric motors, electric generators, alternators, rotary converters, motor-generator sets, dynamotors, and switchboards.

It is conceded by counsel for appellant that the dominant feature of the registered mark of the Continental Electric Company, Inc., is the word “Continental,” and that the mark for which appellant seeks registration and the mark of the Continental Electric Company, Inc., are confusingly similar if the goods upon which they are-used possess the same descriptive properties. Accordingly, the sole issue in the case is whether appellant’s engine-driven-lighting and power plants upon which its-mark is used possess the same descriptive-properties as the electric motors, electric generators, alternators, rotary converters,, motor-generator sets, dynamotors, and! switchboards covered by the registration-of the Continental Electric Company, Inc.

In holding that the goods of appellant and those of the Continental Electric Company, Inc., possess the same descriptive properties, the Examiner of Trade-Marks said:

“It can hardly be denied that electric motors, generators, and dynamos function as parts of lighting and power plants.

“The applicant states that it is recognized in the industry as an engine manufacturer and that the electrical equipment comprised in its ensemble is manufactured for it. This would not seem to lessen the similarity of applicant’s goods to those of the registrant, since applicant’s goods include in considerable part at least the goods of the registrant.”

In support of his statement, the examiner cited the case of United Battery Manufacturing Co., Ltd., v. United Metal Box Co., Inc., 90 F.2d 260, 24 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1220, wherein it was held that storage batteries and electric switches possess the same descriptive properties.

In his decision affirming the decision of the Examiner of Trade-Marks, the Commissioner of Patents stated, among other things, that — “Engine driven power plants include generators which are driven by an engine to produce electric power. Both the engine and the generator are major parts of the plant. In my opinion such power plants are assemblies of the same descriptive properties as the motor-generator sets named in the cited registration. In such sets a generator is driven by an electric motor to produce electric power and the generator is an important part.” In a decision in response to appellant’s petition for reconsideration, the Commissioner of Patents adhered to the views expressed in the quoted excerpt from his original decision.

It is contended here by counsel for appellant that although the function of appellant’s engine-driven lighting and power plants and the motor-generator sets of the registrant “is the conversion of potential energy into kinetic energy,” electric motors, such as are used in the registrant’s motor-generator sets, and internal combustion engines, such as are used in appellant’s power plants, are not classified in the same class in the Patent Office and do not possess the same descriptive properties, and that, therefore, the decision of the Commissioner of Patents must have been based upon the theory that the electric generators employed in appellant’s power plants and also in the registrant’s motor-generator sets constitute “the common denominator which determines whether the two products are goods having the same descriptive properties.”

Counsel for appellant concedes in his brief that appellant’s power plants and the registrant’s motor-generator sets “include a generator as an essential element, since the general object in each case (an output of electric current) demands a device capable of translating mechanical energy into electrical energy, whether such mechanical energy be supplied by a prime mover such as appellant’s internal combustion engine or by an electric motor such as in registrant’s case.” It is contended by counsel, however, that motor-generator sets are used to convert electric current generated in one form by an electric generating plant into an electric current of another form; that such generator sets are used for industrial purposes, such as “electric welding, electroplating, and for converting alternating current to direct current or vice versa”; that as the motive power of such motor-generator sets is an electric motor, they are of use only where electric current is available, whereas appellant’s engine-driven lighting and power plants are used to produce electric current for domestic use, such as light and power where commercial current is not available; and that the registrant’s motor-generator sets are sold to industrial concerns for the purpose hereinbefore stated, whereas appellant’s power plants are sold to a different class of purchasers, that is, to individuals who are unable to secure electricity from generating plants of municipal or privately owned power companies.

In support of his argument that appellant’s goods do not possess the same descriptive properties as those of the registrant, counsel for appellant relies, to some extent at least, upon the decision of this court in the case of Winchester Repeating Arms Company, Etc. v. Wincharger Corp., 124 F.2d 189, 29 C.C.P.A., Patents, 753, wherein it was held that dry-cell batteries, incapable of being recharged, used in radio receivers were not goods of the same descriptive properties as wind-driven and engine-driven electric generator combinations which are used principally to charge storage batteries.

In our decision in that case we stated that, so far as the record there was concerned, it did not appear that the wind-driven or engine-driven electric generator combinations included batteries. In the instant case, however, appellant’s engine-driven lighting and power plants, as well as the registrant’s motor-generator sets, include electric generators as major parts thereof. Furthermore, the registrant’s trade-mark registration for the mark “Continental Electric” covers generators as well as motor-generator sets. It is evident that our decision in the Winchester Repeating Arms Company case, supra, does not support the contentions made here by counsel for appellant.

It may be, as argued by counsel for appellant, that the registrant’s motor-generator sets and appellant’s engine-driven lighting and power plants are not sold to the same class of purchasers, although there is no evidence of record to establish that fact. Nevertheless, the generators upon which the registrant uses its mark may be, and probably are, sold to the same class of purchasers as are appellant’s power plants.

It is suggested in the brief of counsel for appellant that as appellant and its predecessors have used the mark “Continental” on internal combustion engines since 1902, such mark having been registered September 25, 1917, in the United States Patent Office for use on such engines (registration No. 118,628, renewed September 25, 1937), and as such engines are essential parts of appellant’s power plants, the anomalous situation would be presented of appellant having the right to use its mark on its engines but not on those which form a part of its engine-driven lighting and power plants, should it be held that because of the registration of the Continental Electric Company, Inc., of its trade-mark “Continental Electric,” appellant is not entitled to register its mark for use on its power plants. It is further suggested by counsel that in view of appellant’s prior use and registration of its mark, the trademark registration of the Continental Electric Company, Inc., was improvidently issued.

The validity of the trade-mark registration of the Continental Electric Company, Inc., is not an issue in this proceeding. So, regardless of the anomalous situation in which appellant finds itself, we are unable to hold on the record presented that the goods of appellant do not possess the same descriptive properties as those covered by the trade-mark registration of the Continental Electric Company, Inc. Accordingly, the decision of the Commissioner of Patents is affirmed.

Affirmed.