Edward W. VaughanDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardOct 11, 2016No. 86363396 (T.T.A.B. Oct. 11, 2016) Copy Citation THIS OPINION IS NOT A PRECEDENT OF THE TTAB Mailed: October 11, 2016 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board _____ In re Edward W. Vaughan _____ Serial No. 86363396 _____ Michael P. Fortkort of Michael P. Fortkort P.C. for Edward W. Vaughan. Gina Hayes, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 103 (Michael Hamilton, Managing Attorney). _____ Before Wellington, Ritchie and Masiello, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Masiello, Administrative Trademark Judge: Edward W. Vaughan (“Applicant”), a corporation organized under the laws of Virginia and doing business as Electronic Transactions Systems Corporation, filed an application for registration on the Supplemental Register of the proposed mark ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION in standard characters for the services set forth below: Merchant accounts, namely, merchant banking services; credit and debit card processing or handling, authorization and clearing; merchant accounts in the field of finance, namely, provision of monthly financial statements online; financial services, namely, provision of merchant account interchange qualification reporting, Serial No. 86363396 2 chargeback and retrieval information, provision of daily deposit summaries for review, retrieval of requests for sales and credit slips and credit match verification; financial services, namely, processing all types of credit cards and debit cards, in International Class 36.1 Applicant has disclaimed the exclusive right to use CORPORATION apart from the mark as shown. The Examining Attorney refused registration under Section 23 of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1091, on the ground that Applicant’s proposed mark is generic and thus incapable of distinguishing the identified services. When the Examining Attorney made the refusal final, Applicant requested reconsideration and simultaneously appealed to this Board. The Examining Attorney denied the request for reconsideration and this appeal proceeded. Applicant and the Examining Attorney have filed their briefs. In order to qualify for registration on the Supplemental Register, a proposed mark “must be capable of distinguishing the applicant’s goods or services.” 15 U.S.C. § 1091(c). “[G]eneric terms by definition are incapable of indicating a unique source.” In re La. Fish Fry Prods., Ltd., 797 F.3d 1332, 116 USPQ2d 1262, 1267 (Fed. Cir. 2015), citing In re Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, & Smith, Inc., 828 F.2d 1567, 4 USPQ2d 1141, 1142 (Fed. Cir. 1987) (“Generic terms, by definition incapable of indicating source, are the antithesis of trademarks, and can never attain trademark status.”). A mark is generic if it refers to the class or category of 1 Application Serial No. 86363396 was filed on August 11, 2014 under Trademark Act Section 1(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1051(a), based on Applicant’s asserted use of the mark in commerce, stating June 1994 as the date of first use and first use in commerce. Serial No. 86363396 3 goods or services on or in connection with which it is used. In re Dial-A-Mattress Operating Corp., 240 F.3d 1341, 57 USPQ2d 1807 (Fed. Cir. 2001), citing H. Marvin Ginn Corp. v. Int’l Ass’n of Fire Chiefs, Inc., 782 F.2d 987, 228 USPQ 528 (Fed. Cir. 1986) (“Marvin Ginn”). The test for determining whether a mark is generic is its primary significance to the relevant public. In re American Fertility Soc’y, 188 F.3d 1341, 51 USPQ2d 1832 (Fed. Cir. 1999); Magic Wand Inc. v. RDB Inc., 940 F.2d 638, 19 USPQ2d 1551 (Fed. Cir. 1991); and Marvin Ginn, supra. Making this determination “involves a two-step inquiry: First, what is the genus of goods or services at issue? Second, is the term sought to be registered … understood by the relevant public primarily to refer to that genus of goods or services?” Marvin Ginn, 228 USPQ at 530. The Examining Attorney has the burden of establishing by clear evidence that a mark is generic. In re Merrill Lynch, 4 USPQ2d at 1141; In re American Fertility Soc’y, supra; and Magic Wand Inc., supra. “Doubt on the issue of genericness is resolved in favor of the applicant.” In re DNI Holdings Ltd., 77 USPQ2d 1435, 1437 (TTAB 2005). 1. The genus of Applicant’s services. Our first task under Marvin Ginn is to determine, based on the evidence of record, the genus of Applicant’s services. Because the identification of goods or services in an application defines the scope of rights that will be accorded the owner of any resulting registration under Section 7(b) of the Trademark Act, generally “a proper genericness inquiry focuses on the description of services set forth in the [application or] certificate of registration.” Magic Wand, 19 USPQ2d at 1552, citing Serial No. 86363396 4 Octocom Sys., Inc. v. Houston Computer Servs., Inc., 918 F.2d 937, 942, 16 USPQ2d 1783, 1787 (Fed. Cir. 1990). Applicant contends that the genus of services at issue is “merchant banking services.”2 While this expression appears to be a term of art, neither Applicant nor the Examining Attorney has provided a persuasive explanation as to the meaning of “merchant banking.”3 We will instead focus our discussion on the following identified services, which are clearer in meaning: “credit and debit card processing or handling, … financial services, namely, processing all types of credit cards and debit cards.” Although these services represent only a portion of the application’s entire recitation of services, a refusal on the ground of genericness is proper with respect to all of the identified services in an International Class if the mark is generic for any of the identified services in that class. In re Cordua Rests., Inc., 823 F.3d 594, 118 USPQ2d 1632, 1638 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“A registration is properly refused if the word is the generic name of any of the goods or services for which registration is sought.” (quoting 2 MCCARTHY ON TRADEMARKS AND UNFAIR COMPETITION § 12:57)); see also In re Analog Devices, Inc., 6 USPQ2d 1808, 1810 (TTAB 1988), aff’d, 871 F.2d 1097, 10 USPQ2d 1879 (Fed. Cir. 1989) (unpublished). Applicant confirms in its brief that its services “assist merchants in converting credit and debit card payments to funds the merchants may deposit in their bank 2 Applicant’s brief at 6, 7 TTABVUE 7. 3 According to RANDOM HOUSE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1202 (2nd ed. 1987), “merchant bank” is a chiefly British expression meaning “a private banking firm engaged chiefly in investing in new issues of securities and in accepting bills of exchange in foreign trade.” As the dictionary identifies the term as a British one, we cannot be sure that in the United States market the term would be understood to have this meaning. Serial No. 86363396 5 accounts …”4 Applicant argues that the Examining Attorney erred when she “incorrectly identified the genus of Applicant’s Services,”5 making “the profoundly inaccurate finding that ‘the identification, and thus the genus [of Applicant’s Mark], is financial services provided through electronic transaction systems.’”6 This characterization of the Examining Attorney’s position is given without a citation to the record, and is not an accurate one. We note that in her first Office Action, the Examining Attorney clearly contended that the genus at issue was “credit and debit card processing or handling, authorization and clearing” and “financial services, namely, processing all types of credit cards and debit cards.”7 As this language is drawn directly from Applicant’s recitation of services, it was a sound contention. Magic Wand, 19 USPQ2d at 1552. 2. Public understanding of the term ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION. We next consider whether ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION would be understood by the relevant public primarily to refer to the processing or handling of credit and debit cards. Applicant contends that its services “are not consumer services” but would be marketed only to “merchants who use Applicant’s services in serving their own customers”; and that the relevant 4 Applicant’s brief at 7, 7 TTABVUE 8. 5 Id. at 10, 7 TTABVUE 11. 6 Id. at 8, 7 TTABVUE 9. 7 Office Action of December 2, 2014 at 2. Serial No. 86363396 6 public therefore consists of merchants.8 The Examining Attorney does not contest this characterization of the relevant public.9 Therefore, we consider the relevant public to consist of merchants and the personnel of businesses where credit cards and debit cards are presented as a form of payment. The Examining Attorney has analyzed Applicant’s mark in two parts, contending that ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS is generic for Applicant’s services and that CORPORATION is generic for Applicant’s form of entity. We will address both of these contentions before analyzing the mark in its entirety. In our deliberations, we have considered all of the evidence of record. We summarize below and discuss the evidence that we find most highly relevant and probative regarding the public’s understanding of Applicant’s mark. To begin, the Examining Attorney has submitted the following definitions: electronic transaction: An act of buying or selling something or sending money electronically, especially over the internet. CAMBRIDGE BUSINESS ENGLISH DICTIONARY, at .10 system: a set of connected items or devices that operate together … A way of doing things: a method CAMBRIDGE ACADEMIC CONTENT DICTIONARY, at .11 8 Applicant’s brief at 6-7, 7 TTABVUE 7-8. 9 Examining Attorney’s brief, 9 TTABVUE 7. 10 Office Action of December 2, 2014 at 40. 11 Id. at 42. Serial No. 86363396 7 The Examining Attorney has made of record excerpts of news items in which the phrase “electronic transaction system” (or its plural) is used in the context of payments. Among these, we note the following: House Bill 190 Authorizes the Supreme Court to develop and implement an electronic transaction system for submittal of payment to the circuit courts of all fees, penalties and fines and bonds … 12 MyECheck Inc., … provider of alternative payment solutions, reported … … the company said it processed about 2.1 million transactions in 2008, its first full year of operation with its electronic transaction system. Sacramento Bee, January 15, 2009.13 … a 23 percent sales tax on net retail purchases would be far less of an economic burden if we replaced our paper currency with an electronic transaction system. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 19, 2007.14 He also knew the ins and outs of electronic transaction systems through previous positions with gift-card supplier Stored Value Systems and National City Processing, where he developed a smart-card system to handle food stamps and cash benefits in several states. The Courier-Journal (Louisville, KY), August 20, 2007.15 12 Id. at 7. 13 Office Action of July 7, 2015 at 6. 14 Id. at 7. 15 Id. at 8. Serial No. 86363396 8 The company also creates electronic transaction systems to enable online selling. Grocery Headquarters, January 1, 1999.16 Both Chase Manhattan and Citibank, in association with Visa and Mastercard, are launching a smart card program in New York this fall. … Michael Smith, general manager of operations and electronic transaction systems at Schlumberger DANYL, said that the Atlanta and New York tests should create a ripple effect. The Boston Herald, August 5, 1996.17 …the financial habits of both consumers and corporations would have to change. But, because the electronic transaction system was really superior to the paper-based one, it would win out in the end. One of the recommendations was to establish a series of local automated clearing houses (ACHs) to process a large number of both paperless credit and debit transactions. ABA Banking Journal, March 1980.18 Tittle, 54, spent 20 years developing an electronic transaction system for the Minnesota Department of Revenue. He led the design and development of the state’s first electronic tax-filing system and its first electronic tax-payment systems. Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN), November 6, 2006.19 Founded in 1981, VeriFone introduced one of the first check verification and credit authorization devices. … In 1997, HP bought the company … 16 Id. at 14. 17 Id. at 17. 18 Id. at 19. 19 Id. at 28. Serial No. 86363396 9 HP was attracted by the possibilities of taking the company’s electronic-transaction systems onto the Internet … San Jose Mercury News, July 10, 2006.20 The Examining Attorney has also submitted an excerpt from the commercial website , which “provides debit card, credit card and gift card processing services for our merchants” and offers “an electronic transaction system which utilizes the NACHA (National Automated Clearing House Association) network to provide … processing …”21 She has also submitted excerpts of the descriptions of certain patents: Electronic transaction system capable of improving transaction security … When the user wants to proceed a shopping transaction, a sale end operation device of a sale end reads the electronic certificate and personal radio frequency identification, respectively, … 22 A CRYPTOGRAPHIC SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS … 1. An electronic transaction system comprising at least one first subscriber interface … The current electronic commerce and payments through the Internet are partially unprotected … 20 Id. at 29. 21 Id. at 41 22 Id. at 54. Serial No. 86363396 10 In this manner, the present electronic transaction system increases the real security ICC-type guarantees of commerce over IP (Internet Protocol). 23 SECURE ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEM … … a system and method for the secure processing of electronic transactions comprises: receiving … information for a financial transaction card; … 24 Finally, the Examining Attorney submitted additional evidence showing use of “electronic transaction system” in connection with a wider range of transfers (other than payments), such as transfers of information, documents, title in stocks and bonds, real estate transactions, and bank-to-bank transfers of money. While this evidence shows that “electronic transaction system” is a term of wide applicability, its relevance is less than that of evidence showing use of the term specifically in connection with payments. The documentary evidence submitted by Applicant consists of an “Order and Entry of Default Judgment” issued by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, permanently enjoining a defendant named Prodigy Partners Ltd., Inc. from using various trade names, including “Electronic Transaction Services.”25 We do not interpret this order as constituting an adjudication of whether Applicant’s proposed mark is or is not generic. 23 Id. at 44-48. 24 Id. at 49. 25 Applicant’s response of June 2, 2015 at 11-12. Serial No. 86363396 11 The Examining Attorney has presented clear evidence of the generic use of the term “electronic transaction systems” or “electronic transaction system” to identify a process for dealing with various kinds of payments in a manner that does not require the physical transfer of cash or commercial documents such as checks. The evidence demonstrates use of the term in a number of contexts, including online buying and selling; payment of taxes; payment of court fees; processing of gift cards and smart cards; credit authorization; and “paperless credit and debit transactions” in general. “Credit and debit card processing,” as identified in Applicant’s recitation of services, is indeed such a process of effectuating payments. With respect to the term CORPORATION in Applicant’s mark, the Examining Attorney points out that “‘corporation’ is applicant’s business type.”26 This is confirmed by the application, as filed on August 11, 2014, in which Applicant stated that it is “a corporation of Virginia.”27 Moreover, the specimen of use filed with the application is an advertisement in which Applicant describes itself as “an international corporation headquartered in Virginia, with satellite offices in Germany, Canada, and Ireland.”28 A “corporation” is: An artificial person or legal entity created by or under the authority of the laws of a state or nation … [It] is regarded in law as having a personality and existence distinct from that of its several members, and … is, by the same authority, vested with the capacity of continuous succession, …either in perpetuity or for a limited term of years, and of acting as a unit or single individual …within 26 Examining Attorney’s brief, 9 TTABVUE 9. 27 Application at 4. 28 Id. at 7. Serial No. 86363396 12 the scope of the powers and authorities conferred upon such bodies by law. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 307 (Fifth ed. 1979).29 We take judicial notice of the fact that a very substantial portion of the entities that do business in U.S. commerce are organized as “corporations.” On this record, it is clear that ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS is the generic name of a key aspect of Applicant’s credit and debit card processing services. It is also clear that CORPORATION is generic with respect to Applicant’s form of business entity. We must now consider Applicant’s mark as a whole to determine whether ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION would be understood by the relevant public primarily to refer to the genus of credit and debit card processing services. In an early case, the U.S. Supreme Court addressed the effect of adding a generic business entity designation to another generic term: The addition of the word ‘Company’ only indicates that parties have formed an association or partnership to deal in such goods, either to produce or to sell them. Thus parties united to produce or sell wine, or to raise cotton or grain, might style themselves ‘Wine Company,’ ‘Cotton Company,’ or ‘Grain Company,’ but by such description they would in no respect impair the equal right of others engaged in similar business to use similar designations, for the obvious reason that all persons have a right to deal in such articles, and to publish the fact to the world. Names of such articles cannot be adopted as trade-marks, and be thereby appropriated to the exclusive right of any one; nor will the incorporation of a company in the name 29 The Board may take judicial notice of dictionary definitions. Univ. of Notre Dame du Lac v. J.C. Gourmet Food Imp. Co., 213 USPQ 594 (TTAB 1982), aff’d, 703 F.2d 1372, 217 USPQ 505 (Fed. Cir. 1983). Serial No. 86363396 13 of an article of commerce, without other specification, create any exclusive right to the use of the name. Goodyear’s Rubber Manuf’g Co. v. Goodyear Rubber Co., 128 U.S. 598, 602-603 (1888) (emphasis added). The Federal Circuit characterized this pronouncement as “the per se rule in Goodyear that ‘Corp.’, etc. never possess source-indicating significance …” In re Oppedahl & Larson LLP, 373 F.3d 1171, 71 USPQ2d 1370, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (declining to extend the per se rule to top-level domain indicators). Professor McCarthy explained the effect of combining a generic entity designation with another generic term as follows: Company Designation Combined with a Generic Name. Tacking a company organizational designation such as “Company,” or “Inc.” or “Partners” cannot transform a generic name into a protectable trademark. Such company designations or their abbreviations are themselves generic and have no trademark significance. [Citations omitted.] Thus, one cannot append a generic company designation and magically transform a generic name for a product or service into a trademark, thereby giving a right to exclude others. Such composites cannot be trademarks. For example: “Color Television, Inc.”; “Laptop Computers, Ltd.”; or “Restaurant Food Services Company.” MCCARTHY ON TRADEMARKS § 12:39. See also Welding Services, Inc. v. Forman, 509 F.3d 1351, n.4, 85 U.S.P.Q.2d 1233 (11th Cir. 2007) (The addition of “Inc.” to “Welding Services” for servicing welding equipment does not turn a generic name into a protectable trademark.). We find the Supreme Court’s guidance, as amplified by the other authorities, relevant to the present case, where the term CORPORATION has been added to ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS. The Federal Circuit has several times Serial No. 86363396 14 warned of the dangers inherent in analyzing multi-word marks by reference to the meanings of their component words. See In re American Fertility Soc’y, 51 USPQ2d at 1835-6; and Princeton Vanguard, LLC v. Frito-Lay N. Am., Inc., 786 F.3d 960, 114 USPQ2d 1827, 1831-3 (Fed. Cir. 2015). The Court has explained: [E]ven in circumstances where the Board finds it useful to consider the public’s understanding of the individual words in a compound term as a first step in its analysis, the Board must then consider available record evidence of the public’s understanding of whether joining those individual words into one lends additional meaning to the mark as a whole. Princeton Vanguard, 114 USPQ2d 1832-33. The Examining Attorney has not submitted evidence of generic use by third parties of the entire phrase ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION. However, she has shown generic usage of closely similar phrases (emphasis added): The Phoenix-based electronic transaction systems company reported a $2.74 million … net loss for the quarter …30 Roswell-based IVI Checkmate is an electronic transaction systems provider.31 To the relevant public, Applicant’s mark would be understood as designating an electronic transaction systems business, just as “electronic transactions systems company” and “electronic transaction systems provider” would be so understood. In a commercial context, the term CORPORATION can be adopted by any business that chooses to incorporate itself. Thus, this term may be applied to virtually any 30 Office Action of February 18, 2016 at 27. 31 Id. at 32. Serial No. 86363396 15 kind of business name with equal effect. In a commercial context, we find that the addition of the word CORPORATION to the phrase ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS does not “lend[ ] additional meaning to the mark as a whole.” Princeton Vanguard, 114 USPQ2d 1832-33. It does not “magically transform a generic name for a product or service into a trademark…” MCCARTHY ON TRADEMARKS § 12:39. Applicant argues that its mark refers to a product and therefore cannot be generic for services: “Financial services” are services, while “electronic transaction systems” are goods. To identify the “genus” of Applicant’s Services as services provided by means of goods not only fails to support a finding of genericness, it actually supports a finding in favor of the descriptiveness (or suggestiveness) of Applicant’s Mark insofar as it describes the means by which Applicant’s [sic] does or could provide its services to consumers.32 Applicant’s suggestion that the generic name of goods cannot be generic for services is not tenable: [A] term can be generic for a genus of goods or services if the relevant public … understands the term to refer to a key aspect of that genus—e.g., a key good that characterizes a particular genus of retail services. “A generic name of goods may also be a generic name of the service of selling or designing those goods.” In re Cordua Rests., Inc., 118 USPQ2d at 1637 (quoting MCCARTHY ON TRADEMARKS § 12:23). See also In re Hotels.com LP, 573 F.3d 1300, 91 USPQ2d 1532 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (HOTELS.COM is generic for “providing information for others about temporary lodging” and “travel agency services” because the term “hotels” “names a 32 Applicant’s brief at 8-9, 7 TTABVUE 9-10. Serial No. 86363396 16 key aspect” of such services.) In this case, the very essence of Applicant’s card processing business is to operate and make available to customers a system for making electronic payments. As the Examining Attorney’s evidence shows, people in the relevant market use the expression ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS to refer to such a system. Applicant criticizes the Examining Attorney’s evidence as “an array of random and irrelevant blurbs and other references from the Internet…”33 Evidence of the ways in which members of the public use language to discuss relevant fields of business is exactly the type of evidence that will reveal whether the relevant public would use the proposed mark to refer to the services at issue. While some items of the Examining Attorney’s evidence are more relevant than others, much of the evidence is directly on point, as is shown above, clearly associating the term ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS with credit and debit payment transactions and clearly associating the term CORPORATION with Applicant’s admitted form of business entity. Finally, Applicant argues that the Examining Attorney has “impermissibly dissected Applicant’s Mark in an effort to make the Internet evidence a better fit.”34 We disagree. The Examining Attorney presented evidence of use of the term “electronic transaction systems” as a whole by members of the relevant public; and the record contains ample evidence (including Applicant’s admissions) to demonstrate that Applicant is the type of business entity known as a “corporation.” 33 Id. at 10, 7 TTABVUE 11. 34 Id. Serial No. 86363396 17 This is sufficient evidence to allow the Board to squarely address Applicant’s proposed mark as a whole. It shows that Applicant’s proposed mark as a whole would be readily understood by the relevant public to refer to a business that offers automated payment services. The fact that the Examining Attorney submitted dictionary definitions of the individual terms “electronic transaction” and “system” does not detract from the correctness of her approach. “Evidence of the public's understanding of the mark may be obtained from ‘any competent source, such as … dictionaries ….’” In re Cordua Rests., Inc., 118 USPQ2d at 1634, citing Princeton Vanguard, 114 USPQ2d at 1830. Thus ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION is generic as applied to Applicant’s credit and debit card processing services. Having reviewed all the evidence and arguments of record, we find that clear evidence shows that the relevant public would understand the term ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION primarily to refer to the business of credit card and debit card processing as identified in the application. Accordingly, we affirm the Examining Attorney’s refusal to register Applicant’s proposed mark on the Supplemental Register on the ground that it is incapable of distinguishing the recited services. Decision: The refusal to register Applicant’s mark is AFFIRMED on the ground that ELECTRONIC TRANSACTION SYSTEMS CORPORATION is generic and thus incapable of distinguishing Applicant’s services. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation