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`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`Trademark Trial and Appeal Board
`P.O. Box 1451
`Alexandria, VA 22313-1451
`General Contact Number: 571-272-8500
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Mailed: February 1, 2018
`
`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`Plaza Izalco, Inc.
`
`
`v.
`
`Pharmadel LLC
`
`
`Before Kuhlke, Bergsman, and Goodman,
`Administrative Trademark Judges.
`
`By the Board:
`
`
`Petitioner seeks to cancel Respondent’s registration1 for the mark KOFAL for
`
`the following goods:
`
`Adhesive bandages; Adhesive bands for medical purposes;
`Analgesic and muscle relaxant pharmaceutical preparations;
`Analgesic balm; Anti-inflammatory gels; Anti-inflammatory
`salves; Anti-inflammatory sprays; Balms for medical purposes;
`Balms for pharmaceutical purposes; Curare for use as a muscle
`relaxant; Herbal topical creams, gels, salves, sprays, powder,
`balms, liniment and ointments for the relief of aches and pain;
`Medicaments for promoting recovery from tendon and muscle
`injuries and disorders and
`sports
`related
`injuries;
`Multipurpose medicated antibiotic cream, analgesic balm and
`mentholated salve; Muscle relaxants; Sports cream for relief of
`pain; Therapeutic spray to sooth and relax the muscles in
`International Class 5; and
`
`
`
`1 Registration No. 4581604, issued August 5, 2014, claiming June 21, 2013 as the date of
`first use and first use in commerce
`
`
`
`

`

`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`
`Drug delivery patches sold without medication; Elastic
`bandages in International Class 10.
`
`As grounds for cancellation, Petitioner alleges that the mark KOFAL
`
`
`
`
`is primarily merely a surname under Section 2(e)(4) of the Trademark Act
`
`and alleges likelihood of confusion under Section 2(d) of the Trademark Act.
`
`Petitioner pleads ownership of prior common law rights in the mark COFAL
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`for “Analgesic and muscle relaxant pharmaceutical preparations; Analgesic
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`balm; Analgesic preparations; Curare for use as a muscle relaxant;
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`Medicaments for promoting recovery from tendon and muscle injuries and
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`disorders and sports related injuries; Multipurpose medicated antibiotic
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`cream, analgesic balm and mentholated salve; Muscle relaxants.” Petitioner
`
`further asserts that it is the owner of application Serial No. 86029611 for
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`the COFAL2 mark for these same goods and that this pending application
`
`was refused registration under Section 2(d) on the basis of Respondent’s
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`subject registration.
`
`Respondent, in its answer, asserts numerous defenses, including the prior
`
`registration doctrine or “Morehouse”3 defense, namely, that because Respondent
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`already owns an unchallenged registration, for the mark KOFAL-T4, for “the same
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`or similar mark …on the same or similar goods” of the involved registration,
`
`
`2 Filed August 6, 2013, based on an allegation of use under Trademark Act Section 1(a), 15
`U.S.C. 1051(a), alleging February 2006 as the date of first use and first use in commerce.
`3 Morehouse Mfg. Corp. v. J. Strickland & Co., 407 F.2d 881, 56 C.C.P.A. 946, 160
`USPQ 715 (CCPA 1969).
`4 U.S. Reg. No. 3540972, issued December 2, 2008, in connection with “analgesic balm.”
`Sections 8 & 15 affidavit accepted and acknowledged on January 6, 2018.
`
` 2
`
`

`

`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`Petitioner will not be further damaged by the subject registration (Answer, Aff. Def.
`
`No. 4).
`
`This case now comes up for consideration of Respondent’s motion (filed
`
`September 27, 2017) for summary judgment on its asserted Morehouse defense. A
`
`copy of Respondent’s prior registration certificate and a recent printout from the
`
`USPTO TSDR database regarding its status is attached to Respondent’s motion as
`
`an exhibit. The motion is fully briefed.
`
`Summary judgment is appropriate only when there is no genuine dispute as
`
`to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
`
`law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The Board may not resolve issues of material fact; it may
`
`only ascertain whether a genuine dispute regarding a material fact exists. See
`
`Lloyd’s Food Products, Inc. v. Eli’s, Inc., 987 F.2d 766, 25 USPQ2d 2027, 2029 (Fed.
`
`Cir. 1993); Olde Tyme Foods, Inc. v. Roundy’s, Inc., 961 F.2d 200, 22 USPQ2d 1542
`
`(Fed. Cir. 1992). A factual dispute is genuine if, on the evidence of record, a
`
`reasonable fact finder could resolve the matter in favor of the non-moving party.
`
`Opryland USA Inc. v. Great Am. Music Show Inc., 970 F.2d 847, 23 USPQ2d 1471,
`
`1472 (Fed. Cir. 1992); Olde Tyme Foods, Inc., 22 USPQ2d at 1544. The non-moving
`
`party may not rest on the mere allegations of its pleadings and assertions of
`
`counsel, but must designate specific portions of the record or produce additional
`
`evidence showing the existence of a genuine dispute of material fact for trial. In
`
`general, to establish the existence of disputed facts requiring trial, the non-moving
`
`party “must point to an evidentiary conflict created on the record at least by a
`
` 3
`
`

`

`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`counterstatement of facts set forth in detail in an affidavit by a knowledgeable
`
`affiant.” Octocom Systems Inc. v. Houston Computers Services Inc., 918 F.2d 937, 16
`
`USPQ2d 1783, 1786 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (citing Barmag Barmer Maschinenfabrik AG v.
`
`Murata Machinery, Ltd., 731 F.2d 831, 221 USPQ 561, 564 (Fed. Cir. 1984)).
`
`To prevail on its motion for summary judgment on the Morehouse defense,
`
`Respondent must show that Petitioner cannot be further damaged by the
`
`registration of the mark in the involved registration because there already exists a
`
`registration for essentially the same mark for essentially the same goods that are
`
`the subject of the involved application. See Morehouse Mfg. Corp., 160 USPQ at 717;
`
`O-M Bread Inc. v. United States Olympic Comm., 65 F.3d 933, 36 USPQ2d 1041,
`
`1045 (Fed. Cir. 1995); and Green Spot (Thailand) Ltd. v. Vitasoy Int'l Holding Ltd.,
`
`86 USPQ2d 1283, 1285 (TTAB 2008). Here, there is no dispute that Respondent
`
`owns U.S. Reg. No. 3540972 for the mark KOFAL-T for “analgesic balm.” Whether the
`
`Morehouse defense is available, however, depends upon whether the mark in the
`
`registration at issue is substantially the same as the previously registered mark
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`and whether the goods in both are substantially the same. Id.
`
`Respondent contends that the pre-existing registration for KOFAL-T renders
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`the instant case futile; that Petitioner cannot be harmed as a matter of law because
`
`of its pre-existing registration; that the marks KOFAL and KOFAL-T are
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`substantially identical because they share the same commercial impression and the
`
`differences between them are insignificant; and the goods listed in the subject
`
`registration for KOFAL are substantially identical and related to those listed in the
`
` 4
`
`

`

`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`prior registration for KOFAL-T so as to prevent Petitioner’s mark for COFAL to
`
`register.
`
`Petitioner responds contending that the KOFAL-T and KOFAL marks are not
`
`the same and are not the legal equivalents; that the subject registration for KOFAL
`
`is devoid of nearly thirty-percent of the characters of the KOFAL-T mark because of
`
`the missing dash and the capital letter “T” and the commercial impression is
`
`different; and that the additional scope of goods in the subject registration, KOFAL,
`
`precludes Respondent from asserting the Morehouse defense because it has multiple
`
`different goods in two separate classes, whereas Respondent’s prior registration for
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`KOFAL-T contains just one product, namely, “analgesic balm.”
`
`Respondent filed a reply, which we have considered, in which it argues that
`
`Petitioner has cited no authority that undermines or prevents entry of summary
`
`judgment in this action.
`
`In comparing Respondent’s KOFAL-T mark with the mark in the subject
`
`registration for KOFAL, we find that there is a genuine dispute as to whether the
`
`marks are “substantially identical” and if the marks evoke the same, continuing
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`commercial impression. The question is whether the marks in their entireties are
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`substantially identical. See O-M Bread, 36 USPQ2d at 1045.5 Even though the
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`addition of a hyphen and a letter “T” may seem insignificant when added to the
`
`
`5 Note that the Morehouse standard is not the same as that used when comparing marks
`for purposes of a likelihood of confusion analysis. While the latter test requires balancing of
`a variety of factors, see In re E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 476 F.2d 1357, 177 USPQ 563,
`567 (Fed. Cir. 1973), it is clear that a likelihood of confusion may be found even when the
`marks at issue are not “essentially the same.”
`
`
` 5
`
`

`

`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`shared term KOFAL, there is a genuine dispute as to whether these additional
`
`literal elements when added to the term KOFAL create a different commercial
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`impression with a slightly different sound and appearance.
`
`In addition, a genuine dispute of material fact exists as to whether the goods
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`identified in Respondent’s KOFAL-T registration are identical to or substantially
`
`the same as the goods identified in its subject registration for KOFAL. See, for
`
`example, TBC Corp. v. Grand Prix, 12 USPQ2d 1311 (TTAB 1989) (“. . . goods in the
`
`five registrations opposer relies upon for its prior registration defense are related to
`
`and within the natural scope of expansion of a producer of the goods listed in the
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`three registrations applicant seeks to cancel. Nevertheless, the goods in the
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`registrations are different. Therefore, opposer’s ownership of the five other
`
`registrations cannot serve to preclude applicant from contesting opposer’s right to
`
`maintain the three registrations applicant seeks to cancel.”); La Fara Importing Co.
`
`v. F. Lle de Cecco di Filippo Fara S. Martino S.p.A., 8 USPQ2d 1143 (TTAB 1988),
`
`(goods in the prior registration relied upon by applicant, “alimentary pastes,” were
`
`found not to be identical to or substantially the same as the goods sought to be
`
`registered by applicant, which were “not only for alimentary pastes, but also
`
`includes a wide variety of additional items such as coffee, sugar, rice, cakes and
`
`sauces, excluding cranberry sauce and applesauce”); and Missouri Silver Pages
`
`Directory Publishing Corp., Inc. v. Southwestern Bell Media, Inc., 6 USPQ2d 1028
`
`(TTAB 1988), (goods in the prior existing registration asserted by applicant, “a
`
`telephone and discount directory addressed to senior citizens,” were not found to be
`
` 6
`
`

`

`Cancellation No. 92065406
`
`substantially the same as the services sought to be registered, “compiling a
`
`telephone directory; promoting the goods and services of others through placing
`
`advertisements and
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`listings
`
`in directories; and publication of telephone
`
`directories.”).
`
`For the above reasons, Respondent’s motion for summary judgment is denied
`
`on its affirmative defense under Morehouse.6
`
`Proceedings herein are resumed. Dates are reset as follows:
`
`Expert Disclosures Due
`Discovery Closes
`Plaintiff's Pretrial Disclosures Due
`Plaintiff's 30-day Trial Period Ends
`Defendant's Pretrial Disclosures Due
`Defendant's 30-day Trial Period Ends
`Plaintiff's Rebuttal Disclosures Due
`Plaintiff's 15-day Rebuttal Period Ends
`
`
`
`3/31/2018
`4/30/2018
`6/14/2018
`7/29/2018
`8/13/2018
`9/27/2018
`10/12/2018
`11/11/2018
`
`In each instance, a copy of the transcript of testimony, together with copies of
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`documentary exhibits, must be served on the adverse party within thirty days after
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`completion of the taking of testimony. Trademark Rule 2.125.
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`Briefs shall be filed in accordance with Trademark Rules 2.128(a) and (b). An oral
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`hearing will be set only upon request filed as provided by Trademark Rule 2.129.
`
`
`6 The parties should note that the evidence submitted in connection with the motion for summary
`judgment is of record only for consideration of the motion. To be considered at final hearing, any
`such evidence must be properly introduced in evidence during the appropriate trial period. See Levi
`Strauss & Co. v. R. Josephs Sportswear Inc., 28 USPQ2d 1464 (TTAB 1993). In addition, the fact
`that we have identified and discussed only a few genuine disputes of material fact as a sufficient
`basis for denying the motion for summary judgment should not be construed as a finding that these
`are necessarily the only disputes which remain for trial.
`
` 7
`
`

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