Aesthetic Functionality: Applicant Bottega Veneta described its mark as "a configuration of slim, uniformly-sized strips of leather, ranging from 8 to 12 millimeters in width, interlaced to form a repeating plain or basket-weave pattern placed at a 45-degree angle over all or substantially all of the goods." The Examining Attorney maintained that exclusive appropriation of this design would put competitors at a significant non-reputation related disadvantage, and therefore it is aesthetically functional and barred from registration pursuant to Section 2(e)(5).
The Examining Attorney submitted an "inordinate amount" of evidence, much of which was not persuasive because it showed various weave patterns, all different from the specific pattern of applicant's applied-for mark. The Board noted that applicant was not "seeking exclusive rights to all weave designs" for its goods. Although there may be a competitive need to use a weave design for leather, granting a registration to applicant would not deprive competitors from adopting a different design. Moreover, applicant's applied-for mark does not cover use of grasses, reeds, or wood strips, or other non-leather materials.
The Board noted that the Examining Attorney did an "extremely thorough job" in collecting evidence of third-party use of weave designs, some similar to that of applicant. However, "the very limited number of weave designs that approximate applicant's weave design, at the very least, raises a question as to whether there is a competitive need for the design that applicant seeks to register." Moreover some of the third-party products may be intended to copy or mimic applicant's design in order to profit from the popularity or cachet of applicant's design. At a minimum, there is some doubt as to whether there exists a competitive need to use applicant's particular weave design.
In cases involving other refusals to register (e.g., surnames, mere descriptiveness), there is a policy that any doubt regarding a refusal should be resolved in favor of publication of the mark. The Board concluded that the same policy applies particularly well here, since publication of the mark will allow competitors to assert and prove that they indeed do have a competitive need to use the design at issue.
Therefore the Board reversed the Section 2(e)(5) refusal, noting again the narrowness in scope of the applied-for mark.
Ornamentation and Acquired Distinctiveness: The PTO's evidence demonstrated that woven leather designs are often used for handbags and shoes. Consequently, consumers are not likely to view such designs as source identifiers unless there has been significant promotion of the design as a trademark. In short, applicant had a "heavy burden" to prove acquired distinctiveness. However, applicant's evidence was "significant" in amount.
Applicant first used its weave design on handbags in 1975. Its sales during the period 2001-2007 were $275 million, and the weave design appeared on more than 80% of its goods. Advertising expenditures during this period totaled $18 million. Its catalogs and advertisements have featured products having the weave design, and many of the advertisements, as well as media editorials, refer to the "intrecciato wave design." Numerous newspaper and magazine articles refer to applicant's "signature" weave design. Numerous declarations from people in the fashion industry testified to the recognition of the weave design as a source indicator. And perhaps most persuasive were customer comments referring to or describing third-party products as looking like applicant's weave.
The Board concluded that the evidence amply demonstrated that the applied-for design had acquired distinctiveness and was not merely ornamental.
Read comments and post your comment here.
TTABlog note: Applicant sought registration under Section 2(f), thereby, according to the Board, admitting that its design was not inherently distinctive. But a product configuration can never be inherently distinctive (Wal-Mart), so did applicant "admit" anything by relying on Section 2(f)?
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2013.
Post a Comment