Coporacion Habanos, S.A. and Empresa Cubana del Tabaco, dba Cubatabacov.Cigar King, LTDDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardJun 12, 2013No. 92053245 (T.T.A.B. Jun. 12, 2013) Copy Citation Baxley Mailed: June 12, 2013 Cancellation No. 92053245 Corporacion Habanos, S.A. and Empresa Cubana del Tabaco, dba Cubatabaco v. Cigar King, Ltd. Before Kuhlke, Wolfson, and Masiello, Administrative Trademark Judges. By the Board: In the above-captioned proceeding, petitioners seek cancellation of respondent’s registrations for the marks HAVANA SOUL and HABANA LEON, both for “[c]igars made with Cuban seed tobacco” in International Class 34.1 As grounds for cancellation, petitioners allege: (1) that the involved marks are geographically deceptive under Trademark Act Section 2(a), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(a), and primarily geographically deceptively misdescriptive under Trademark 1 Registration No. 3207740 for the HAVANA SOUL mark issued February 13, 2007, and alleges June 30, 2005 as the date of first use anywhere and date of first use in commerce. The registration includes a disclaimer of HAVANA. Registration No. 3207741 for the HABANA LEON mark issued February 13, 2007, and alleging June 30, 2005 as the date of first use anywhere and date of first use in commerce. The registration includes a disclaimer of HABANA. UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE Trademark Trial and Appeal Board P.O. Box 1451 Alexandria, VA 22313-1451 Cancellation No. 92053245 2 Act Section2(e)(3), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(e)(3), “for lack of the requisite nexus with Havana, Cuba or Cuba;” (2) that the involved marks are deceptive under Trademark Act Section 2(a), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(a), and merely descriptive under Trademark Act Section 2(e)(1), 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(e)(1); (3) that, because the terms “‘Havana’ and ‘Habana,’ when used on or in connection with cigars, are indications of geographical origin or source, which do not correspond to the place in which respondent’s “identified goods are, will be, or lawfully could be, fabricated, manufactured, or produced,” the registrations should be cancelled under Articles 23-28 of the General Inter-American Convention for Trade Mark and Commercial Protection, 46 Stat. 2907 (“IAC”) and Trademark Act Sections 44(b) and (h), 15 U.S.C. Sections 1126(b) and (h);” and (4) fraud based on respondent’s amendments to the identifications of goods in the applications for the involved registrations. Respondent, in its answer, denied the salient allegations of the petition to cancel and set forth affirmative defenses and a counterclaim seeking cancellation of petitioners’ pleaded Registration No. 1970911. The Board dismissed the counterclaim in an August 11, 2011 order. Cancellation No. 92053245 3 In a July 2, 2012 order, the Board granted in part and denied in part petitioners’ motion to compel discovery. In that order, respondent was allowed until August 1, 2012 to: (1) conduct a thorough search of its records for responsive documents that are responsive to all of petitioners’ document requests except request no. 28; (2) serve amended responses to petitioners’ document requests (other than request no. 28), which accurately reflect respondent’s document production, as necessary; (3) serve supplemental responsive documents as necessary upon petitioners with responsive documents labeled or organized to correspond with the request to which each document is responsive; (4) serve new copies of any website printouts that it produced in response to petitioners’ document requests that include both the date on which they were accessed and the URLs of the websites from which they were printed; (5) produce either (a) an index in which it identifies the request to which each document already produced in discovery is responsive or (b) new copies of documents already produced in discovery which indicate the request to which each document is responsive; and (6) serve amended responses under oath and without objection to petitioners’ interrogatories, including complete responses to interrogatory nos. 9-13. Cancellation No. 92053245 4 On August 15, 2012, petitioners filed a motion for sanctions, including entry of judgment, based on respondent’s failure to comply with the Board’s July 2, 2012 order. The motion has been fully briefed. After respondent’s copy of the Board’s August 16, 2012 order was returned as undeliverable by the U.S. Postal Service, the Board, on October 12, 2012, issued an order where it noted respondent’s attorney’s new correspondence address and reset time for briefing the motion for sanctions.2 In support of the motion for sanctions, petitioners contend that judgment should be entered against respondent because it wholly failed to comply with the July 2, 2012 order. In the alternative, petitioners ask that the Board strike respondent’s affirmative defenses, preclude respondent from introducing evidence, and require full compliance with the July 2, 2012 order. The substance of respondent’s brief in response consists in its entirety of the following. 2 In that order, the Board noted that respondent included the new correspondence address in the signature blocks of its motion (filed January 25, 2012) to extend time to respond to petitioner’s motion to compel and its brief in response (filed February 6, 2012) to petitioner’s motion to compel, and that respondent did not properly amend its correspondence address in this proceeding by filing a separate change of correspondence address in this case. The Board further stated that, because the July 2, 2012 order was not returned to the Board as undeliverable, respondent was presumed to have received that order. Cancellation No. 92053245 5 1. Registrant conducted a thorough search of its records for responsive documents. 2. Registrant has no other responsive documents. Registrant voluntarily takes the sanction of having all of its affirmative defenses stricken with the exception of the affirmative defense that Petitioners lack standing.3 Registrant also voluntarily accepts that it will not be able to rely upon certain documents requested but not produced as evidence in this matter relating to the first two elements of Petitioners’ 2(e)(3) claim. Registrant merely requests that it be given the opportunity to post a defense that Petitioners’[sic] lack standing and to defend against the third and final element of the Petitioners’ [Section] 2(e)(3) claim.4 In reply, petitioners contend that respondent still has not complied with four of the six enumerated requirements set forth in the July 2, 2012 order and has offered no explanation for its continuing refusal to 3 “Lack of standing is not an affirmative defense. Standing is an element of petitioners’ claim.” Blackhorse v. Pro Football Inc., 98 USPQ2d 1633, 1637 (TTAB 2011). 4 The elements of a primarily geographically deceptively misdescriptive refusal under Section 2(e)(3) are as follows: (a) the primary significance of the mark is a generally known geographic location; (b) the consuming public is likely to believe the place identified by the mark indicates the origin of the goods bearing the mark (i.e., that a goods-place association exists), when in fact the goods do not come from that place; and (c) the misrepresentation would be a material factor in the consumer's decision to purchase the goods. Corporacion Habanos S.A. v. Guantanamera Cigars Co., 102 USPQ2d 1085 (TTAB 2012) (citing In re California Innovations, 329 F.3d 1334, 66 USPQ2d 1853, 1856-57 (Fed. Cir. 2003)). Cancellation No. 92053245 6 comply; that respondent admits that it should be sanctioned, but makes no arguments as to why its proposed lesser sanctions are appropriate and why entry of judgment is not; and that respondent’s assertion that it has conducted a thorough search of its records and has found no other responsive documents is “dubious.” Trademark Rule 2.120(g)(1) states, in relevant part, as follows: "If a party fails to comply with an order of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board relating to discovery, … the Board may make any appropriate order, including any of the orders provided in Rule 37(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure…." Respondent did not allege that it did not receive the July 2, 2012 order. Under the circumstances herein, it was incumbent upon respondent to comply fully and promptly with that order or to timely file a request for reconsideration thereof. Instead of complying with the July 2, 2012 order in a timely manner, respondent made only a three-months late, de minimis effort to comply with the July 2, 2012 order. In particular, respondent did not: (1) serve amended responses to petitioners’ document requests to the extent required, which accurately reflect respondent’s Cancellation No. 92053245 7 document production, as necessary;5 (2) serve new copies of any website printouts that it produced in response to petitioners’ document requests that include both the date on which they were accessed and the URLs of the websites from which they were printed; (3) prepare and serve either (a) an index in which it identifies the request to which each document already produced in discovery is responsive or (b) new copies of documents already produced in discovery which indicate the request to which each document is responsive; and (4) serve amended responses under oath and without objection to petitioners’ interrogatories, including complete responses to interrogatory nos. 9-13. We construe respondent’s response to the motion for sanctions as affirmatively stating it will not provide the discovery that the Board required in the July 2, 2012 order. While accepting the lesser sanctions, respondent has deliberately prevented petitioner from obtaining information to present its case. Respondent has evaded and frustrated petitioners’ attempts to secure discovery. The parties agree that entry of sanctions against respondent is 5 The record in this case indicates that respondent’s document production consists of eighteen pages of documents from its own records and 127 pages of printouts of website excerpts that were the results of an Internet search made by an unspecified person at an unspecified time. The website excerpts are not identified by either the URLs for the websites at issue or the date(s) on which the websites were accessed. Cancellation No. 92053245 8 warranted in this case. However, respondent’s deliberate failure to comply in full with the Board’s order has secured for respondent the sanction of judgment. Although entry of judgment as a sanction for failure to comply with an order compelling discovery is a harsh remedy, it is justified where no less drastic remedy would be effective, and there is a strong showing of willful evasion. See Unicut Corp. v. Unicut, Inc., 222 USPQ 341, 344 (TTAB 1984). We believe that situation exists here. In this case, respondent was under a Board order to take certain specific actions to supplement its discovery by August 1, 2012. Further, respondent was warned of the possible result of noncompliance with the order. Respondent has been represented by counsel since the filing of its answer in this proceeding. We note that respondent's brief in response to the motion for sanctions did not set forth reasons for respondent's inability to comply with the Board order by August 1, 2012. Respondent's willful noncompliance with the July 2, 2012 order and deliberate action to impair petitioner’s ability to present its case after having been advised of the possible consequences warrants entry of the sanction requested by petitioners. Cancellation No. 92053245 9 In view thereof, the motion for entry of sanctions under Trademark Rule 2.120(g)(1) is granted. The petition to cancel is granted, judgment is hereby entered against respondent, and Registration Nos. 3207740 and 3207741 will be cancelled in due course. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation