Meredith MadsenDownload PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardSep 24, 201987054308 (T.T.A.B. Sep. 24, 2019) Copy Citation This Opinion is Not a Precedent of the TTAB Mailed: September 24, 2019 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board _____ In re Meredith Madsen _____ Serial No. 87054308 _____ Barry L. Haley of Malin Haley DiMaggio & Bowen, P.A., for Meredith Madsen. Odessa Bibbins, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 118, Michael W. Baird, Managing Attorney. _____ Before Heasley, Dunn and Hudis, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Hudis, Administrative Trademark Judge: Meredith Madsen (“Applicant”) seeks registration on the Principal Register of the mark PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR (in standard characters) for Education services in the nature of courses at the university level; Education services, namely, providing tutorial sessions in the field of business and entrepreneurship; Education services, namely, providing tutoring in the field of business and entrepreneurship; Business education and training services, namely, developing customized leadership and executive development programs, providing executive coaching services, and providing business education programs to employees and executives; Continuing education services, namely, providing live and on-line continuing professional education seminars in the field of business and entrepreneurship; Leadership development training in the field of business and entrepreneurship Serial No. 87054308 - 2 - in International Class 41.1 The Examining Attorney refused registration under Trademark Act Sections 1, 2, 3, and 45, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051-1053, 1127, on the ground that Applicant’s mark PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR, as shown in Applicant’s specimen of use, is used only as the title of a single creative work, namely, the title of a specific live presentation, an educational course. Therefore, contends the Examining Attorney, PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR does not function as a service mark to identify and distinguish Applicant’s services from those of others and to indicate the source of Applicant’s services. After the Examining Attorney made the refusal final, Applicant appealed to this Board. Applicant and the Examining Attorney filed briefs. We reverse the refusal to register. I. Procedural History Applicant filed her intent-to-use application to register the PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR mark for the listed educational services on May 31, 2016. In an Examiner’s Amendment issued on September 18, 2016, the Examining Attorney added the disclaimer upon authorization from Applicant’s counsel to: “No claim is made to the exclusive right to use ‘Entrepreneur’ apart from the mark as shown.” 1 Application Serial No. 87054308 filed on May 31, 2016, under Trademark Act Section 1(b), 15 U.S.C. § 1051(b), based upon Applicant’s allegation of a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce. Serial No. 87054308 - 3 - The PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR application was published for potential opposition on November 8, 2016, and thereafter the Office issued a Notice of Allowance on July 4, 2017. Applicant filed her Statement of Use pursuant to Trademark Act Section 1(d), 15 U.S.C. § 1051(d), on January 3, 2018, claiming a date of first use and first use in commerce of the mark of August 23, 2016. With her Statement of Use, Applicant submitted a specimen of use described as a “course flyer,” appearing as follows: Serial No. 87054308 - 4 - In the first Office Action of February 5, 2018, refusing registration, the Examining Attorney stated: “the applied-for … mark, PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR, as used Serial No. 87054308 - 5 - on the specimen of record, is used only as the title of a single creative work, namely, the title of a specific live presentation, a course; it does not function as a service mark to identify and distinguish applicant’s services from those of others and to indicate the source of applicant’s services.”2 In support of the refusal, in addition to Applicant’s specimen, the Examining Attorney made of record the following online press release3 from Florida Atlantic University, where Applicant is a course instructor: 2 Office Action of February 5, 2018 at TSDR 2. Page references to the application record refer to the online database of the USPTO’s Trademark Status & Document Retrieval (“TSDR”) system – to the downloadable .pdf versions of the documents. References to the briefs on appeal refer to the Board’s TTABVUE docket system. Before the TTABVUE designation is the docket number; coming after this designation are the page references, if applicable. 3 Id. at TSDR 4-6. Serial No. 87054308 - 6 - When making this online press release a part of the record, the Examining Attorney was required to provide complete information as to the date the evidence was published or accessed from the Internet, and its source (e.g., the complete URL address of the website). Because the Examining Attorney did not do so, this material normally would not have been considered. In re I-Coat Co., 126 USPQ2d 1730, 1733 (TTAB 2018). However, Applicant failed to object to this evidence. We thus consider Serial No. 87054308 - 7 - this online press release for whatever probative value it may have. See In re Mueller Sports Medicine, Inc., 126 USPQ2d 1584, 1587 (TTAB 2018). In her August 6, 2018 response to the first Office Action, Applicant states: Applicant has provided at least seven different lectures covering different subject matter in each lecture using the mark for educational services. The different course content for seven different lectures indicates that the mark is used for educational services and is a series, not a single work.4 Applicant followed up her response on August 16, 2018 by filing a Declaration under oath stating: 2. I make this declaration in support of the above-referenced application in the belief that my educational services listed in the application were not for a single work. 3. As Applicant, I provided at least seven different lectures for the educational services recited in this application with different subject matter for each lecture relating to the mark Predictive Entrepreneur. [T]he different course content indicates that the educational services provided by applicant is a series.5 In the final Office Action of October 8, 2018, the Examining Attorney maintained the refusal, but neither added more to the record nor inquired further as to the nature of the services offered in connection with the mark. II. Applicable Law Trademark Act Section 2, 15 U.S.C. § 1052, provides that “[n]o trademark by which the goods of the applicant may be distinguished from the goods of others shall be refused registration on the principal register on account of its nature unless” the 4 Response of August 6, 2018 at TSDR 4. 5 Applicant’s Declaration filed by way of Post-Publication Amendment of August 16, 2018 at TSDR 4. Serial No. 87054308 - 8 - refusal is based on an applicable statutory ground. Trademark Act Section 3, 15 U.S.C. § 1053, states that “[s]ubject to the provisions relating to the registration of trademarks, so far as they are applicable, service marks shall be registrable, in the same manner and with the same effect as are trademarks ….” Further, “[t]he Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) bears the burden of establishing that a proposed mark is [unregistrable].” Cf. In re Cordua Rests., Inc., 823 F.3d 594, 600, 118 USPQ2d 1632, 1635 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see also In re Arnold, 105 USPQ2d 1953, 1956 (TTAB 2013) (Reversing refusal on grounds that proposed mark was the title of a single work: “Because the record does not clearly indicate that the content of the two [specimens] is the same, we give the applicant the benefit of the doubt that they contain different content.”). The title of a single creative work, such as a book, is not considered a trademark, and is therefore unregistrable. Trademark Act Sections 1, 2, and 45, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051, 1052, and 1127; In re Cooper, 254 F.2d 611, 117 USPQ 396, 400 (CCPA 1958). “The policy for this is clear. Because a trademark can endure for as long as the trademark is used, at the point that copyright protection ends and others have the right to use the underlying work, they must also have the right to call it by its name.” Mattel, Inc. v. Brainy Baby Co., LLC, 101 USPQ2d 1140, 1144 (TTAB 2011). The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals has confirmed, “this court’s case law prohibits proprietary rights for single book titles.” Herbko Int’l, Inc. v. Kappa Books, Inc., 308 F.3d 1156, 64 USPQ2d 1375, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2002), and the Board has followed suit. E.g., In re Arnold, 105 USPQ2d at 1954 (“It is well settled that the title Serial No. 87054308 - 9 - of a single creative work is not considered a trademark and is, therefore, unregistrable….”); Mattel, Inc. v. Brainy Baby Co., LLC, 101 USPQ2d at 1144 (“The case law is clear that parties cannot gain trademark rights in titles of [individual] works….”); In re Hal Leonard Publ’g Corp., 15 USPQ2d 1574 (TTAB 1990) (INSTANT KEYBOARD unregistrable as the title of single book featuring musical keyboard instruction). In In re Posthuma, 45 USPQ2d 2011, 2014 (TTAB 1998), we affirmed the Office’s extension of the “title of a single work” refusal from applying only to books to applying to a live theatrical production, and thus the refusal to register the mark PHANTASM for a live theater production. After reviewing relevant precedent upholding the denial of registration for single book titles, we said: The materials of record all identify PHANTASM as the name of the live theater production, and the purchasing public likely would perceive it as the title of the play, as opposed to perceiving it as a service mark identifying source or origin. In this connection, we believe that the title of a play is perceived in the same manner as is the title of a book which, as [we] discussed …, is unregistrable. * * * We recognize that the nature of live theater dictates that changes will occur from time to time in a stage production. Nonetheless, …, the essential story of the play remains, by and large, intact. Whatever the changes made to this live theater production, it still remains a single work, thus, these often subtle changes do not transform the show into a “series” of shows, thereby turning the unregistrable title into a registrable service mark. * * * To allow registration of play titles and not book titles would lead to the anomalous result of registering … titles … for a single theatrical production, but not allowing registration when these same titles are used as book titles. [W]e see no reason why they should be treated differently by the Office. (Emphasis added). Id. 45 USPQ2d at 2013-14. Serial No. 87054308 - 10 - III. Analysis Relying on Posthuma and Applicant’s specimen of use, the course flyer, the Examining Attorney asserts the educational course that Applicant is offering in connection with the Florida Atlantic University School of Business under the mark PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR is but one course in a series of other courses (e.g., DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY and HOW TO ESTABLISH FOREIGN BUSINESS), on the broader topic of entrepreneurship, and will be perceived as the title of a single work.6 We disagree with the Examining Attorney’s premise that Applicant’s educational services comprise a single creative work. Single creative works include works in which the content does not change, whether that work is in printed, recorded, or electronic form. A theatrical performance is a single creative work because the content of the play, musical, opera, or similar production does not significantly change from one performance to another. In re Posthuma, 45 USPQ2d at 2014; TRADEMARK MANUAL OF EXAMINING PROCEDURE (TMEP) §1202.08(a) (2019). Educational services such as university courses are different from scripted theatrical performances. In fact, the TMEP specifies that “[l]ive performances by musical bands, television and radio series, and educational seminars are presumed to change with each presentation and, therefore, are not single creative works.” TMEP § 1202.08(b) (emphasis added). 6 Examining Attorney’s Brief, 6 TTABVUE 4. Serial No. 87054308 - 11 - In this case, Applicant avers that she has “provided at least seven different lectures for the educational services recited in this application with different subject matter for each lecture relating to the mark Predictive Entrepreneur.”7 This averment is unchallenged. In sum, we find that the Examining Attorney did not meet her burden regarding the refusal to register on the ground that the mark is used only as the title of a single creative work. IV. Decision The refusal to register Applicant’s mark PREDICTIVE ENTREPRENEUR pursuant to Trademark Act Sections 1, 2, 3, and 45, is reversed. 7 Applicant’s Declaration filed by way of Post-Publication Amendment of August 16, 2018 at TSDR 4. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation