Dictionary definitions, Internet evidence, and third-party patents submitted by Examining Attorney Lief Martin, as well as applicant's own specimen of use, led the Board to conclude that "floss loops" is at least highly descriptive of dental floss. Applicant therefore faced a heavy burden to prove acquired distinctiveness.
Applicant pointed to a Master Product List from the Florida Department of Corrections, but that document included "FLOSS LOOPS" in the same group as the generic terms "HAIR BRUSH" and "TOOTHBRUSH." Two newspapers articles were likewise of little help, one using the term "floss loops" generically, and the other making mere passing mention of "Floss Loops."
Applicant's sales amounted to some 285 cases of dental floss, a sum not sufficient to satisfy Section 2(f). It pointed to its other registrations for marks containing or consisting of the word LOOPS, but the Board found those other marks to be different in connotation: e.g., LOOPS FLEXIBLE TOOTHBRUSH HOLDER. [One registration, however, covered the word mark LOOPS for dental floss - ed.].
There was no evidence of sale of the goods to the general public. Because applicant's identification of goods is not restricted as to channels of trade or classes of consumers, the Board considered it appropriate to consider whether the subject mark had acquired distinctiveness with respect to the general public. It had not, and that alone was enough for affirmance of the refusal.
As to the sale of the goods to prisons, applicant provided evidence of its promotional efforts: letters to buyers and trade show exhibitions. The Examining Attorney urged dismissal of this evidence as not being directed to the ultimate purchasers, i.e., the prisoners. The Board, however, noted that correctional facilities themselves may purchase the goods for distribution, rather than sale, to prisoners. So those buyers may also be considered as relevant purchasers.
However, it was not clear that even among those prison purchasers, FLOSS LOOPS or LOOPS has acquired distinctiveness as a source-indicator. The evidence was too ambiguous and scant to permit a finding of acquired distinctiveness.
And so the Board affirmed the refusal.
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TTABlog note: Couldn't applicant make a claim to acquired distinctiveness of the word LOOPS by relying on its registration for LOOPS for dental floss? Trademark Rule 2.41(b) says that a prior registration for the "same mark" may be accepted by the PTO. Here, according to the Board, applicant was making a 2(f) claim only to the word LOOPS, and so, for our purposes, is that not the "same mark" as the prior registration?
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2013.
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