Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks
Patent and Trademark Office (P.T.O.)
RE: TRADEMARK APPLICATION OF TOKIWA MFG. CO.,
LTD.
Serial No. 74-068,352 [FN1]
August 27, 1991
*1 Petition Filed: January 4, 1991
For: TOKIWA
Filing Date: June 12, 1990 [FN2]
Attorney for Petitioner
Gordon D. Coplein
Darby & Darby P.C.
Jeffrey M. Samuels
Assistant Commissioner for Trademarks
On Petition
Tokiwa Mfg. Co., Ltd. has
petitioned the Commissioner to grant a filing date of June 12, 1990 to the
above-captioned application. Trademark Rule 2.146(a)(3) provides the authority
for the requested review.
Petitioner filed an
application pursuant to Section 1(a) of the Trademark Act, to register the
above-identified trademark on June 12, 1990. Subsequently, on December 12,
1990, the filing date was cancelled and the papers were returned to the
petitioner. In the Notice of Incomplete Trademark Application, the Supervisor
of the Trademark Application Section stated that the application did not
satisfy all of the requirements set forth in 37 C.F.R. Section 2.21(a)
necessary to receive a filing date. In particular, it was noted that the goods
or services in connection with which the mark is used, or is intended to be
used, had not been identified in accordance with Trademark Rule 2.21(a)(4).
Although Petitioner
utilized its own application format rather than completing the Patent and
Trademark Office form, it appears that Petitioner's application was, in fact,
stylized after the Office form incorporating a fill- in-the-blank type of
format.
One portion of
Petitioner's application reads:
The above-identified
applicant, on information and belief, has adopted and is using the trademark
shown in the accompanying drawing for:
Petitioner, failed to list any information in this section of the
application, leaving a blank where the goods or services were to be identified.
Petitioner filled in all other pertinent portions of its application papers,
including the method of use clause where it specified that "[t]he mark is
used by applying it to Parts and Accessory [sic] of Piano Action (Striking
Mechanism) such as 'shank', 'flange', 'wippen' and 'backcheck' and five (5)
specimens showing the mark as actually used are presented herewith."
Additionally, the heading to the drawing page contains, among other things, the
following statement:
Goods/Services: Parts
and accessory [sic] of piano action (striking mechanism) such as 'shank',
'flange', 'wippen" and 'backcheck'.
The petitioner argues
that "[w]hile the application was informal in that the goods were not
listed in the proper place in the application document, the application
document did at the time of its filing contain all the necessities." The
issue raised by this petition is not whether the petitioner had listed the
goods or services anywhere in the application papers, but rather, whether
Petitioner's failure to list the identification in the appropriate place on its
application form precludes the Application Section from granting the
application a filing date.
*2 The Supervisor of the Application Section, in accordance
with Office policy, ruled that Petitioner's
improper placement of the identification of goods was tantamount to failure to
include an identification in the written application. Trademark Rule 2.146(a)(3),
37 C.F.R. Section 2.146(a)(3) permits the Commissioner to invoke his
supervisory authority in appropriate circumstances. In this case, however, the
rejection of the application as submitted will not be reversed.
The Trademark Examining
Operation receives hundreds of applications to register trademarks and service
marks each day. Each application must pass an initial review to determine
whether the minimum requirements for receiving a filing date, as set forth in
Trademark Rule 2.21, 37 C.F.R. Section 2.21, have been met. The volume of work
that must be handled by the clerical personnel of the Application Section
allows only a brief period for review of each application. It would prove an
administrative burden on the Office to require each employee of the Application
Section engaged in the initial review of applications to search every section
of every paper for any and all items of information that must be included in a
minimally sufficient application.
Further, Office
procedures established by the Director of the Trademark Examining Operation and
set forth in "Examination Guide 1-90: Supplemental Guidelines Concerning
the Trademark Law Revision Act of 1988 and the Revised Rules of Practice in
Trademark Cases" require examining attorneys to "consider only the
identification of goods and services stated in the proper place for the identification in the written application
to determine entitlement to a filing date." Examining attorneys are
precluded by policy from considering "the drawing, the specimens, the
method-of-use clause, the dates-of-use clause or anywhere else in the
application to determine the applicant's entitlement to a filing date."
Additionally Section 1 of
the Trademark Act, as revised on November 16, 1989, sets out the requirements
for filing a trademark application. Specifically, the written application must
include, among other things "the goods on or in connection with which the
mark is used." The drawing is a separate requirement under Section 1, and
is not a component of the written application.
Accordingly, the
procedures followed by the Application Section of the Trademark Examining
Operation, in this case, were consistent with Office policy. While an applicant
may be required occasionally to re-file an application that has not been
properly prepared, the great majority of applicants benefit from enforcement of
a policy that fosters expeditious processing of the hundreds of applications
that reach the Office daily in proper form.
Trademark Rules
2.146(a)(5) and 2.148 permit the Commissioner to waive any provision of the
Rules which is not a provision of the statute, where an extraordinary situation
exists, justice requires and no other party is injured thereby. All three
conditions must be satisfied before a waiver is granted. Applicant did not complete the section of the
written application which sets forth the goods on which the mark is being used.
Oversights that could have been prevented by the exercise of ordinary care or
diligence are not extraordinary situations as contemplated by the Trademark
Rules. In re Bird & Son, Inc., 195 USPQ 586 (Comm'r Pats.1977).
*3 For the
foregoing reasons, the petition is denied. The application papers will be
returned to the petitioner.
FN1. This Serial No. was originally assigned to the application
papers as filed on June 12, 1990. When the filing date was subsequently
cancelled and the application papers returned to the petitioner, this serial
number was declared "misassigned".
FN2. The filing date is the issue on petition.
21 U.S.P.Q.2d 1395
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