
The Board concluded that the parties missed the real issue because "the counterclaim of abandonment is sufficient without reference to Section 18." A counterclaim for partial abandonment "does not require any reference to avoidance of a likelihood of confusion." Such an allegation is needed only when the claim seeks to modify or restrict the identification of goods or services, and not when, as here, a party seeks to have discrete goods or services deleted on a theory of abandonment.
[W]hile Section 18 allows the Board to consider claims it could not entertain in an opposition under Section 13 or a cancellation under Section 14, for example, a restriction in a concurrent use case, or the entry of a modification to an identification of goods where the modification would avoid a likelihood of confusion, it does not change the statutory basis for cancellation where a valid ground for cancellation exists, such as a partial abandonment under Section 14, as is the case here.
And so the Board denied J&J's motion to dismiss the counterclaim.
TTABlog comment: The requirement that a party seeking a modification or restriction of a registration under Section 18 must allege that avoidance of a likelihood of confusion will result, stems from the TTAB's decision in Eurostar, Inc. v. "Euro-Star" Reitmoden GmbH, 34 USPQ2d 1266, 1271 n.3 (TTAB 1994).
Note that cancellation of all or part of a registration under Section 14 on the ground of abandonment requires both proof of both non-use and an intent not to resume use. A Section 18 claim for restriction or modification of a registration does not have to meet those requirements, but it does have to meet the "avoidance of a likelihood of confusion" requirement.
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2012.
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