In order to support a Section 2(e)(3) refusal, the USPTO must prove that:
(1) the primary significance of the mark is a generally known geographic place or location;(2) the goods for which applicant seeks registration do not originate in the geographic place identified in the mark;(3) purchasers would be likely to make a goods-place association; that is, purchasers would be likely to believe that the goods originate in the geographic place identified in the mark; and(4) the misrepresentation regarding the geographic origin of the goods would be a material factor for a significant portion of the relevant consumers deciding whether to buy the goods in question.
Applicant Sibony maintained that the first prong of the test was not met: the primary significance of the mark is not a generally known geographic location because "there is no such place as the 'Republic of London.'" The examining attorney conceded that "REPUBLIC OF LONDON, literally, is fictitious."
Third-party registrations for marks containing the word "LONDON," submitted by the examining attorney and by the applicant, were of little relevance. In any event, the Board pointed out once again that each case must be decided on its own record.
The Board reviewed several prior decisions and found the mark in this case to be like PARIS BEACH CLUB and MT. RAINIER THE MOUNTAIN OF SEATTLE ESPRESSO & MILK & Design. All three marks contain "additional textual matter taking the mark outside the prohibition of Trademark Act Section 2(e)(3)."In the final analysis . . . the Examining Attorney submitted sufficient evidence that London is a generally known geographic place or location known for fashion and apparel manufacture. However, neither “LONDON” nor “the city of London” is the mark at issue. Rather, based on the evidence of record and the applicable authorities, REPUBLIC OF LONDON is a phrase referencing a fictitious place that does not exist, and the addition of “REPUBLIC OF” to “LONDON” shifts the primary significance of the mark away from LONDON proper. Applicant’s mark thus falls outside of the restrictions of Trademark Act Section 2(e)(3).
And so, the Board reversed the refusal to register. Read comments and post your comment here. TTABlogger comment: Looking at applicant's specimen of use (a hangtag), what do think?
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2021.
I thought the PTO was supposed to be cracking down on fake specimens? That "hang tag" is clearly a mock up -- why wasn't the application refused on that ground, as well? They probably could've won on that issue.
ReplyDeleteAnd, what happens when an entity who is in London (and therefore, cannot register its mark because it is geographically descriptive) uses a mark like LONDON APPAREL CO.? Can REPUBLIC OF LONDON sue since it owns a federal registration? Seems like a very inequitable result.
ReplyDeleteIs this consistent with the Board's refusal of NEW YORK WAYS GALLERY for clothing on the same basis?
ReplyDelete