NOW Health Group, Inc.Download PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardJun 14, 2013No. 85407659 (T.T.A.B. Jun. 14, 2013) Copy Citation THIS OPINION IS NOT A PRECEDENT OF THE TTAB Mailed: June 14, 2013 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE _____ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board _____ In re NOW Health Group, Inc. _____ Serial No. 85407659 _____ Mark I. Feldman of DLA Piper LLP (US) for NOW Health Group, Inc. Alyssa Paladino Steel, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 107 (J. Leslie Bishop, Managing Attorney). _____ Before Holtzman, Ritchie, and Masiello, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Masiello, Administrative Trademark Judge: NOW Health Group, Inc. has applied to register on the Principal Register the mark set forth below for “Natural sweeteners; Low-calorie natural sweeteners,” in International Class 30.1 1 Application Serial No. 85407659, filed on August 25, 2011 on the basis of use of the mark in commerce under Trademark Act § 1(a), 15 U.S.C. § 1051(a), with a claim of first use and first use in commerce of December, 2010. Serial No. 85407659 2 Applicant has disclaimed the exclusive right to use STEVIA and ZERO CALORIE SWEETENER apart from the mark as shown. The colors blue, white and purple are claimed as features of the mark. The trademark examining attorney refused registration under Section 2(e)(1) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052(e)(1), on the ground that applicant’s mark merely describes the goods. When the refusal was made final, applicant filed two requests for reconsideration, in the second of which applicant amended the application to seek registration on the Supplemental Register in the alternative, i.e., only in the event that the Board affirms the examining attorney’s refusal under Section 2(e)(1). Upon review of the second request for reconsideration, the examining attorney indicated that she would allow registration on the Supplemental Register if her refusal under Section 2(e) is affirmed. We now consider applicant’s appeal from that refusal. Applicant and the examining attorney have filed appeal briefs, and applicant has filed a reply brief. 1. Refusal under Section 2(e)(1). The question before the Board is whether applicant’s mark, viewed in its entirety, including the design elements, merely describes the goods identified in the application. “A term is merely descriptive if it immediately conveys knowledge of a quality, feature, function, or characteristic of the goods or services with which it is used." In re Gyulay, 820 F.2d 1216, 3 USPQ2d 1009, 1009 (Fed. Cir. 1987). The descriptiveness of the wording of the mark is established by the dictionary definitions made of record by the examining attorney, setting forth the Serial No. 85407659 3 meanings of “better,” “stevia,” “zero,” “calorie” and “sweetener.”2 Applicant, in its brief, does not argue the issue of whether the wording of the mark is merely descriptive, stating, “Applicant neither admits nor disputes whether the words within its Mark are descriptive because Applicant’s design alone creates a distinct commercial impression.”3 There is little question that the wording of the mark is merely descriptive within the meaning of Section 2(e)(1). The word “stevia” is defined as “a South American perennial shrub” and “a noncaloric, powdered sweetener made from glycoside extracts of the leaves of this shrub.”4 That the addition of the laudatory term BETTER does not render the mark registrable is well established. “Better” is a comparative adjective meaning “of superior quality or excellence” and “of superior suitability, … desirability.”5 Terms that merely attribute quality or excellence to goods or services are merely descriptive under Section 2(e)(1). See In re Best Software Inc., 58 USPQ2d 1314 (TTAB 2001) (BEST and PREMIER); In re Phillips-Van Heusen Corp., 63 USPQ2d 1047, 1052 (TTAB 2002) (SUPER); In re Nett Designs Inc., 236 F.3d 1339, 57 USPQ2d 1564 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (ULTIMATE); Target Brands Inc. v. Hughes, 85 USPQ2d 1676, 1680 (TTAB 2007) (ULTIMATE); In re Dos Padres Inc., 49 USPQ2d 1860 (TTAB 1998) (SUPREME). The wording ZERO CALORIE SWEETENER, which applicant has 2 Office action dated December 15, 2011. 3 Applicant’s brief at 1. 4 Definition from Dictionary.com, submitted with the Office action of December 15, 2011. 5 Definition from Dictionary.infoplease.com, submitted with the Office action of December 15, 2011. Serial No. 85407659 4 disclaimed, merely provides information regarding the nature and characteristics of the goods. We turn then, to applicant’s argument that the design elements of its mark are sufficiently distinctive to render the mark registrable. Applicant argues that its mark has “a high level of stylization with distinctive, thick, bubbly letters which are distinctively colored and shaded in varying shades of light to darker blue. Furthermore, the Mark’s text is surrounded in thick white outlines and thinner blue outlines with various design elements such as shadowing and drop-down boxes.6 Applicant points out the “gentle upward curve” of the lettering in the mark; that the color gradient “provide[s] a three-dimensional gel-like appearance”; and that the outlines and shadows “create separation of the letters (‘positive space’) from their surroundings (‘negative space’).7 In addition to these features, applicant points out: -- the stacking of the words; -- the banner-like drop-down box; -- the distinction in style between the small, white, “edgy” lettering of ZERO CALORIE SWEETENER and the differently stylized, larger, blue lettering of BETTER STEVIA; -- the purple shadow of differing widths beneath the drop-down box and elsewhere in the mark, which creates a three-dimensional effect;8 -- the “hierarchy and scale” among the words of the mark (STEVIA being in larger type than BETTER, and both being in substantially larger type than the remainder of the wording); -- the “stamp-like appearance” of the mark created by the overall outline;9 -- the “repetition” of the arch of the larger words in the arch of the banner; 6 Applicant’s brief at 5. 7 Id. 8 Id. at 7. 9 Id. at 9. Serial No. 85407659 5 -- the fact that the banner is “pulled up” behind the word STEVIA, causing this word to “pop” at the viewer;10 -- the highly unusual shape that is defined by the bottoms of the letters in BETTER and the tops of the letters of STEVIA:11 “When words which are merely descriptive, and hence unregistrable, are presented in a distinctive design, the design may render the mark as a whole registrable, provided that the words are disclaimed….” In re Clutter Control Inc., 231 USPQ 588, 589 (TTAB 1986). However, “It is settled that a display of descriptive or otherwise unregistrable matter is not registrable on the Principal Register unless the design features of the asserted mark create an impression on the purchasers separate and apart from the impression made by the words themselves, [absent a showing of acquired distinctiveness].” In re Guilford Mills Inc., 33 USPQ2d 1042, 1043 (TTAB 1994). There is no question that many choices went into the design of applicant’s mark. Applicant has ably analyzed and pointed out the many graphic devices that are present in the mark. However, these devices are conventional typographical devices whose primary purpose is to increase the legibility and coherence of the words and to induce viewers to properly navigate and comprehend the words. When well deployed, such typographical devices do not draw attention to themselves so as 10 Id. at 11. 11 Id. at 10. Serial No. 85407659 6 to create and deliver a message or impression separate from that of the wording of the mark; rather, they draw attention to the wording and otherwise do not distract from the message of the words. The stacking of words, as seen in applicant’s mark, is a very common typographical device that is merely an extension of the western convention of reading text from top to bottom. The hierarchized lettering aids the viewer’s comprehension of the words, drawing attention to the large wording BETTER STEVIA and giving subordinate importance to the remainder of the wording, which appears in much smaller lettering. In other words, the graphic elements of applicant’s mark serve the wording, without creating a separate impression that would be noted by customers as an indicator of source. Customers would not rely upon the outlining or the subtle shadowing of the letters as a sign that the goods originate with applicant, because those graphic elements are in widespread use in the commercial world. Neither is the blue-and-white coloring of the mark, with subtle purplish gray shadows, inherently distinctive. While it is true that the unusual shape appearing between the words BETTER and STEVIA could function as a distinctive trademark if it were used in isolation, when viewed in the context of the mark as a whole it is not likely to be noticed by viewers. Its real purpose in the mark is to improve the legibility of the letters of BETTER STEVIA. We have considered applicant’s mark in its entirety, including the combined impact of all of the graphic elements apparent to us and pointed out by applicant. We find that the design elements of the mark are not sufficient to render applicant’s Serial No. 85407659 7 mark inherently distinctive. Accordingly, we agree with the examining attorney that applicant’s mark is merely descriptive within the meaning of Section 2(e)(1). As noted above, applicant has requested, in the alternative, registration on the Supplemental Register, and the examining attorney has expressed no objection to such registration. Decision: The refusal to register the mark on the Principal Register on grounds that it is merely descriptive of applicant’s goods within the meaning of Trademark Act Section 2(e)(1) is affirmed. Applicant’s amendment of the application to seek registration on the Supplemental Register is noted and will be entered into the record, whereupon the application will be forwarded for registration on the Supplemental Register. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation