TTAB Upholds Genericness Refusal of SOCIAL SECURITY LAW GROUP for . . . . Guess What?
The Board squelched Applicant Victor Arruda's attempt to register the proposed mark SOCIAL SECURITY LAW GROUP (in standard character form) for "“Legal services for individuals seeking social security disability and supplemental security income claims. Legal document preparation, legal research and legal consultancy in the context of social security disability and supplemental security income claims.” Finding the term generic for Arruda's services, the Board declined to reach the Office's mere descriptiveness refusal. In re Arruda, Serial No. 98083575 (April 27, 2026) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Cheryl S. Goodman).
As to the genus of the services, Examining Attorney Lee-Anne Berns maintained that the appropriate genus is "Social Security legal services," but the Board found the genus to be "adequately defined by Applicant’s recitation of services."
In this case, the specific identification of services in the application is a subcategory (social security disability and supplemental income legal service) of a broader spectrum of social security legal services. Furthermore, reliance on the identification of services to identify the genus of the services at issue “is based on the premise that the recitation accurately reflects actual conditions of use of the involved term.” In re DNI Holdings Ltd., No. 76331011, 2005 TTAB LEXIS 515, at *9.
The next question was "whether the term sought to be registered is understood by the relevant public primarily to refer to that genus of goods or services." In light of Applicant Arruda's recitation of services, the Board found the relevant consuming public to be individuals "who seek legal services to assist with social security disability and supplemental security income claims, as well as long term disability insurers who engage attorneys for their insureds who pursue Social Security Disability claims with the Social Security Administration."
It is appropriate, as a first step, to "analyze the constituent terms." Not surprisingly, the Board found that SOCIAL SECURITY refers to “a U.S. government program established in 1935 to include old-age and survivors insurance, contributions to state unemployment insurance, and old-age assistance.”
Considering the evidence as a whole, we find the term SOCIAL SECURITY is a unitary generic term identifying a category of legal services. The dictionary evidence, the treatise and CLE evidence, the law directory evidence, the third-party use evidence, as well as Applicants own use and statements (yellow pages, brochure, website and declaration testimony) demonstrate that Social Security is generic for a legal practice area or legal category.
The evidence also showed that LAW GROUP is "a unitary generic term for a group of lawyers that provide legal services together."
As to the public's understanding of the term SOCIAL SECURITY LAW GROUP as a whole, based in part on third-party declarations submitted by Applicant Arruda, the Board concluded that when the terms SOCIAL SECURITY and LAW GROUP are combined, "they retain their generic significance, and the combination provides no additional difference in meaning."
Applicant Arruda argued that none of the evidence showed that the proposed mark SOCIAL SECURITY LAW GROUP can be immediately recognized as a service related to “disability and supplemental income claims." However, if that were the test, "then no word or term would be found to be generic provided that applicant submitted a highly detailed description of its goods and services." Moreover, a word or term that names a category is generic for more narrowly identified goods or services.
[A]lthough applicant contends SOCIAL SECURITY LAW GROUP is not the term the relevant public would use to describe the genus, the record evidence reflects that the relevant public would nonetheless understand SOCIAL SECURITY LAW GROUP to refer to a law firm that practices Social Security Law, which would include practicing law in the more specific area of Social Security Disability Supplemental Security Income claims.
And so, the Board affirmed the refusal to register.
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TTABlogger comment: WYHA? The "refer to" language comes from Marvin Ginn, 782 F.2d at 989-990.
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2026.


















