GOLD PALM Confusable with SILVER PALM for Wine, Says TTAB
The Board sustained an opposition to registration of the mark GOLD PALM on the ground of likelihood of confusion with the registered mark SILVER PALM, both for wine. The second and third DuPont factors (identical goods and presumed same channels of trade) heavily favored opposer, the marks are "overall similar," and none of the other factors favored the applicant. Jackson Family Farms, LLC v. Dylan Fairweather, Opposition No. 91291000 (January 30, 2026) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Thomas W. Wellington).
Opposer Jackson Family Farms argued that, although the terms “gold” and “silver” are different in appearance and sound, they may actually increase the likelihood of confusion because consumers "will mistakenly believe that Applicant’s GOLD PALM mark is a variation of Opposer’s mark that Opposer has adopted for use on a higher quality product line extension of its SILVER PALM wine." In support, opposer pointed to the tiered system for medal awards given out in the Olympic Games.
More specifically, opposer relied on evidence showing that this tiered system is frequently applied in the context of wine, including quality awards from competitions, brand labelling, and wine purchasing clubs. Screenshots from retail and winemakers’ websites showed how a winemaker may tout its wine as “gold” and “silver” for purposes of representing certain qualities. The Board found that this evidence "offers some credence to Opposer’s argument that the tiering system, in general and particularly as used in the context of wine, helps bring the marks together."
That is, should consumers be familiar with Opposer’s SILVER PALM wine and then encounter Applicant’s GOLD PALM wine, it is likely these consumers may attribute the initial terms in each mark as merely indicating a quality or status for a series of wines emanating from the same source or the same line of wines from the same winemaker. In other words, the evidence demonstrates that it would be reasonable for the consumers to mistakenly believe that the Opposer’s SILVER PALM wine is second, or has different qualities, in a line of PALM wines that includes Applicant’s GOLD PALM wine.
Opposer asserted that its SILVER PALM mark “has achieved moderate commercial strength,” pointing to its sales, advertising, social media exposure, and the length of time of use of the mark on wine. However, its sales figures covered only the years 2020-2024 and were not placed in context, so the Board was unable to determine their relative significance. There was no evidence regarding opposer’s advertising and promotional expenditures.
In sum, Opposer’s evidence shows its SILVER PALM mark has enjoyed recent success, but the record is not so persuasive to move the commercial strength dial in a meaningful manner. Accordingly, the fifth DuPont factor is neutral in our analysis of the likelihood of confusion.
In an effort to show the weakness of the cited mark (sixth DuPont factor), applicant submitted 235 third-party registrations and evidence of 53 common law uses of marks containing the words "gold," "silver," or "palm." The Board found only ten of the registrations, containing the word "palm," to be probative, and there was no evidence regarding actual use of these marks.
We thus cannot find any commercial weakness. Indeed, in terms of showing that Opposer’s SILVER PALM mark or that the shared term PALM itself is weak, the record before us falls into a category often characterized as being a “far cry” from the type and amount of evidence deemed significant or meaningful in other cases.
The Board concluded that applicant's evidence makes "no meaningful impact" on the strength of opposer's mark.
The Board briefly addressed the fourth (purchaser care), seventh (lack of actual confusion), eighth (opportunity for confusion), ninth (variety of goods with which opposer's mark is used), twelfth (extent of potential confusion), and thirteenth (other relevant facts) DuPont factors and found them to be neutral.
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TTABlogger comment: How about BRONZE PALM for beer?
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2026.



















