The Board wasted little time in finding SIMMONS to be primarily merely a surname. Applicant conceded same, and the record evidence confirmed the concession. Simmons was the 103rd most common surname in the 2000 Census. It is the surname of applicant's founder. There was no evidence that Simmons has anything other than surname significance. and it has the "look and sound" of a surname.
Applicant's argument turned on the fifth Benthin factor: whether the stylization of the mark is sufficiently distinctive to cause the mark "not to be perceived primarily merely as a surname."
The Board, however, found the stylization to be minimal, and did not "result in a mark separate and apart from the literal elements." Moreover, applicant owns a Supplemental Registration for the same stylized mark. Since Section 23 prohibits registration of inherently distinctive marks on the Supplemental Register, this was an admission by applicant (at the time of registration) that the mark was not distinctive.
And so the Board concluded that the applied-for mark is primarily merely a surname under Section 2(e)(4).
Applicant claimed, alternatively, that the mark had acquired distinctiveness. The Board observed that applicant "bears a heavy burden" in establishing acquired distinctiveness for a surname in the field of legal services:
[L]awyers and law firms typically are identified by surnames. Thus, registration of a surname for legal services “could hinder the creation of new law firms . . . and the ability of individuals to practice law in their chosen field without changing their names” – a result that would not be in the public interest. J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 13:2 (4th ed. 2012).
Applicant's evidence under Section 2(f) was "minimal." In fact it was less that the unsuccessful evidence in the Miller case. For example, there was no evidence regarding gross revenues, marketing expenditures, advertisements, articles or publications by or about the firm or its attorneys, speaking events, newsletters, or any of the other stuff that law firms churn out.
Moreover, as in Miller, opposer and others have an interest in using, and do use, the surname Miller in connection with their legal services. There are four other law firms using the surname Simmons, and 60 attorneys in California and 20 in Illinois with that surname. In short, applicant failed to prove, as required by Section 2(f), that its use of SIMMONS has been substantially exclusive.
The Board concluded that the surname SIMMONS had not acquired distinctiveness for applicant's legal services.
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Text Copyright John L. Welch 2013.
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