PANERA Fails to Prove Fame Before Applicant's First Use Date, TTAB Dismisses Opposition to PANERALUX for Unrelated Products
In an 83-page opinion, the Board dismissed this three-pronged opposition to registration of the mark PANERALUX for various goods in class 9 (e.g., database management software) and class 11 (including cooking ranges), ruling that Opposer Pumpernickel Associates, owner of the registered mark PANERA for restaurant services and food products, failed to prove its claims of likelihood of dilution (Section 43(c)), likelihood of confusion (Section 2(d)), and false suggestion of a connection (Section 2(a)). One might be tempted to call this opposition "half-baked," but I will refrain from doing so. Pumpernickel Associates, LLC v. Ningbo Panera Lighting Co., Ltd., Opposition No. 91272857 (March 18, 2025) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Christopher C. Larkin).
Dilution-by-Blurring: Pumpernickel claimed that its mark PANERA became famous before Applicant first used its mark in 2019, but the evidence mostly concerned post-2019 activities. And so, the Board found that "the first fame factor does not support a finding that the PANERA mark had achieved dilution-level fame by 2019."
As of 2019, the PANERA mark had been in use for 22 years, but that compared "unfavorably" to two famous competitors: McDonalds (60 years as of 2014) and STARBUCKS (35 years as of 2004), as did their respective geographic footprints. Pumpernickel's sales figures lacked industry context.
With respect to "[p]erhaps the most significant" fame factor - "actual public recognition of the mark as a source-indicator for the goods or services in connection with which it is used" - Pumpernickel relied on awards and media coverage, the number of visitors to its websites and mobile apps, and a consumer survey.
The Board found that none of the media articles referred to the mark as well-known, famous, or a household name. The various awards were of limited probative value. The data regarding website and mobile visits was post-2019, providing no insight as to the fame of the mark before applicant's first use date.
A fame survey conducted by survey expert Hal Poret indicated that 91.3% of the general consuming public recognize the PANERA mark. The Board first noted that the survey was conducted in 2022, and thus did not bear on the fame of the mark as of applicant's first use date. Second, the survey tested “aided” rather than “unaided” awareness of the PANERA mark and therefore was deemed non-probative by the Board.
We find that Opposer failed to show that by 2019, the PANERA mark had “become a ‘household term [with] which almost everyone is familiar,” TiVo Brands, 2018 WL 6921323, at *12 (quotation omitted), and had earned entry into “the select class of marks – those with such powerful consumer association that even non-competing uses can impinge on their value. . . .” Advance Mag. Publishers, 2023 WL 4261426, at *17.
Likelihood of Confusion: The Board found the PANERA mark to be conceptually and commercially strong for restaurant services, and the marks PANERA and PANERALUX to be "quite similar in appearance, sound, and connotation and commercial impression."
With respect to the many items listed in the opposed applications, Pumpernickel focused on applicant's data management software and its cooking-related products, but its proofs of relatedness were woefully inadequate. There was no evidence that Pumpernickel or other restaurants sell (or even use) database management software, and no evidence that consumers could perceive applicant's cooking-related goods as emanating from Pumpernickel.
We find that none of Opposer’s cited goods or services are related to any of the Class 9 and Class 11 goods specifically discussed by Opposer, or to any of the other identified goods. The second DuPont factor weighs heavily in favor of a conclusion that confusion is not likely with respect to both applications. *** Opposer did not show that the channels of trade for the involved goods and services overlap or are otherwise at all related, and the third DuPont factor weighs heavily in favor of a conclusion that confusion is not likely with respect to both applications.
Concluding that the second and third DuPont factors outweighed the first and fifth factors, the Board dismissed the Section 2(d) claim.
Section 2(a) False Connection: The Board observed that in assessing the fame of the PANERA mark for purposes of the fourth element of the Section 2(a) test - whether Opposer is of sufficient fame or reputation that, when Applicant’s mark is used in connection with its goods, a connection with Opposer would be presumed - it is appropriate to consider whether applicant's goods "are similar to goods or services associated with the party complaining of a false association."
Here, the Board found that the involved goods and services "are entirely dissimilar" for the reasons discussed in connection with Pumpernickel's Section 2(d) claim.
While Opposer proved that its PANERA mark is very strong in connection with restaurant services, we find that Opposer is not of sufficient fame that consumers of any of the entirely dissimilar Class 9 and Class 11 goods identified in the two applications would presume a connection with Opposer when they view the PANERALUX mark used for those goods.
And so, the Board dismissed the Section 2(a) claim.
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TTABlogger comment: I'll bet this decision will be appealed. BTW: I don't think the marks are confusingly similar.
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2025.