Omega Financial, Inc.Download PDFTrademark Trial and Appeal BoardMar 10, 2010No. 77197184 (T.T.A.B. Mar. 10, 2010) Copy Citation Mailed: March 10, 2010 Bucher UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________ Trademark Trial and Appeal Board ________ In re Omega Financial, Inc. ________ Serial No. 77197184 _______ Jerry L. Watts of Page Scrantom Sprouse Tucker & Ford PC for Omega Financial, Inc. April K. Roach, Trademark Examining Attorney, Law Office 115 (Tomas V. Vlcek, Managing Attorney). _______ Before Bucher, Walsh and Wellington, Administrative Trademark Judges. Opinion by Bucher, Administrative Trademark Judge: Omega Financial, Inc. seeks registration on the Principal Register of the mark MEMBER ACCESS PLUS (in standard character format) for services recited in the application, as amended, as “billing and accounting services” in International Class 35.1 The Trademark Examining Attorney refused registration on the ground that applicant’s specimens of record do not 1 Application Serial No. 77197184 was filed on June 4, 2007 based upon applicant’s claims of first use anywhere and first use in commerce at least as early as January 31, 2002. Applicant makes no claim to the exclusive right to use the words “Member Access” apart from the mark as shown. THIS OPINION IS NOT A PRECEDENT OF THE TTAB Serial No. 77197184 - 2 - show the applied-for mark used in direct connection with the sale or advertising of the recited services. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051, 1052, 1053 and 1127 and 37 CFR §§ 2.56 and 2.76(b)(2). After the Trademark Examining Attorney made the refusal final, applicant appealed to this Board. We affirm the refusal to register. Applicant submitted new evidence for the first time with its brief. The Trademark Examining Attorney’s objection to consideration of that exhibit because it is untimely is well taken and the evidence has not been considered. 37 C.F.R. § 2.142(d); In re Fitch IBCA Inc., 64 USPQ2d 1058, 1059 n2 (TTAB 2002). Similarly, given the timing of applicant’s offering of evidence from the Wikipedia website, the Trademark Examining Attorney did not have sufficient opportunity to rebut this new evidence of limited probative value. In re IP Carrier Consulting Group, 84 USPQ2d 1028 (TTAB 2007). We hasten to add that even if we had considered these submissions, they would not have changed the outcome of our decision herein. Applicant argues that inasmuch as the Trademark Examining Attorney inadvertently failed to refuse registration or to make the requirement for a new specimen in the initial Office action, it was inappropriate for her Serial No. 77197184 - 3 - to raise the requirement for an acceptable specimen in the second Office action because “reasonable minds could easily differ” about this issue, and hence, no “clear error” had been committed with the initial failure to raise this issue. TMEP §§ 706 and 706.01 (6th ed. 2009). While we must make a determination on the correctness of the underlying substantive refusal of registration, timely allegations of clear procedural errors or a Trademark Examining Attorney’s alleged abuse of discretion are reviewed on petition under 37 C.F.R. § 2.146. Accordingly, we do not entertain questions about whether the issuance of the April 28, 2008 Office action was in accordance with the United States Patent and Trademark Office’s internal “clear error” standard. See In re Jump Designs, LLC, 80 USPQ2d 1370 (TTAB 2006). In its application papers, applicant’s recitation of services involves billing and accounting services. We learn from the entirety of the record that under applicant’s business model, its clients are Greek communities in the university setting. The treasurer or other society officer at the local undergraduate fraternity or sorority chapter is the target audience for applicant’s services. Applicant’s compensation is derived from providing billing Serial No. 77197184 - 4 - and accounting services to the governance structure of the local Greek society chapter. Specifically, applicant offers its clients “billing services” – sending billing statements to individual chapter members (or their parents) to collect monies for rent, food, dues and other expenses. Applicant also renders “accounting” services such as maintaining accounts payable and accounts receivable, initiating IRS Form 990’s, etc. These services for the benefit of the official representatives of the local Greek chapter are premised on accountants and other professionals creating commercial-like financial transaction data. In a service mark application filed to cover services of this nature, the recitation of “billing and accounting services” is appropriately-worded and hence, deemed to be definite and acceptable under trademark examination practice. These services, as recited, were placed correctly in International Class 35. The Trademark Examining Attorney takes the position that wording such as “billing and accounting services” in International Class 35 should have real meaning when used in a recitation of services in a service mark application. For example, applicant’s “billings services” are offered to the society chapter, and result in billing statements being Serial No. 77197184 - 5 - mailed to individual members. Similarly, the Trademark Examining Attorney takes the position that if the wording “accounting services” (for others) is to retain any meaning in this context, it must include the recording and reporting of financial transactions and then summarizing them in financial statements. Financial statements such as balance sheets and income statements will likely be of interest to representatives of the national societies as well as alumni advisors and financial contributors to the local chapter. A service mark is used in commerce “when it is used or displayed in the sale or advertising of services and the services are rendered in commerce, or the services are rendered in more than one State or in the United States and a foreign country and the person rendering the services is engaged in commerce in connection with the services.” Trademark Act Section 45, 15 U.S.C. § 1127. “[B]ecause by its very nature a service mark can be used in a wide variety of ways, the types of specimens which may be submitted as evidence of use are varied.” In re Metriplex Inc., 23 USPQ2d 1315, 1316 (TTAB 1992). When used in advertising of services, the service mark must not merely appear in the advertising material that also discusses or offers the services, but must be associated with the services in such a manner as would be sufficient to Serial No. 77197184 - 6 - indicate to potential purchasers or users of the services that the mark identifies the services and their source. See In re Universal Oil Products Co., 476 F.2d 653, 177 USPQ 456, 457 (CCPA 1973) [“The minimum requirement is some direct association between the offer of services and the mark sought to be registered therefor.”] (italics in original), and In re Moody's Investors Service Inc., 13 USPQ2d 2043, 2047 (TTAB 1989) [requirement is for “a direct association between the mark sought to be registered and the services specified in the application, i.e., that [the mark] be used in such a manner that it would be readily perceived as identifying such services”]. In this case, the Trademark Examining Attorney takes the position that while applicant may indeed be rendering billing and accounting services for others under applicant’s house mark, the specimens do not show that these services are being offered under the mark MEMBER ACCESS PLUS. Applicant, on the other hand, contends that the same mark can be used in connection with a variety of different services, and that without the billing and accounting services performed by applicant, none of the valuable member features highlighted on the specimens of record would exist. The Trademark Examining Attorney contends that the feature of applicant’s services shown in the specimens of Serial No. 77197184 - 7 - record in this application is a secure Internet interface to the individual fraternity or sorority member (or parent/guardian) for easy online access to one’s account information, along with the ability to pay one’s bill. However, it is the position of the Trademark Examining Attorney that as one views the four corners of the two specimens of record, there is no association between the proposed mark, MEMBER ACCESS PLUS and applicant’s recited billing or accounting services. When filing this Section 1(a) application, applicant submitted as its initial specimen of use a copy of the promotional material shown below. The specimen contained the following bulleted listing of what fraternity and sorority members are able to do with this online access: Access your account at any time of the day. View an up-to-date, detailed history of your account. View a copy of every statement you have ever received. Connect directly with Omega’s customer services for any questions. Pay your account on-line. The specimen also states, “To log on, go to www.omegafi.com and click on the Member Access Plus link,” above a screenshot of a computer window that includes a mockup of the online portal for the local “Alpha Beta Gamma” chapter located at “State University.” The web page, as depicted, also includes the chapter’s officers and other Serial No. 77197184 - 8 - contact information, the chapter’s chosen hot links on the web, a graph depicting the chapter’s financial health, with additional tabs for “My Account,” “Roster,” etc.: Serial No. 77197184 - 9 - With the second Office action, the Trademark Examining Attorney issued a refusal to register the mark alleging that applicant’s initial specimen of record was unacceptable because it did not show the mark used in connection with the recited services. Applicant responded with a substitute specimen, while also arguing why the original specimen should be deemed to be acceptable. This newly- updated screen-print confirms that Member Access Plus is “the interface designed with the needs of the individual member in mind.” In addition to the informational, updating and payment services listed in the first specimen, this web page describes additional features such as an interactive calendar, a detailed member’s payment trend graph, an online contract signature system, and another mockup image of one member’s personal statement. This web page ends with the following notation: Serial No. 77197184 - 10 - Member Access Plus is a value-added feature of Omega’s Chapter Services, free of additional charge.2 This last sentence seems to summarize the position of the Trademark Examining Attorney. By applicant’s own admission, “Member Access Plus is a value-added feature of Omega’s Chapter [billing and accounting] Services…” That is, these specimens describe a free financial service focusing on electronic payments and other banking-like services offered via the Internet – an International Class 36 service.3 The Trademark Examining Attorney argues that as the name of the computer interface suggests, MEMBER ACCESS PLUS allows the member to access, view and pay accounts. Upon receiving a monthly “billing” (and this is a result of applicant’s billing service provided for the benefit of the chapter), it is only in connection with the online electronic payment feature that the member will encounter this mark. Whether one refers to it as a “value-added,” “collateral” or even “related” feature or activity, this feature or activity is nominally-related to the rendering of “billing and accounting services” provided for the 2 https://www.omegafi.com/apps/homesite/member_access_plus.php 3 Similarly, the United States Acceptable Identification of Goods and Services Manual has a long listing of “bill payment” types of services in International Class 36 not unlike the service described in the dissenting opinion, infra at 15. Serial No. 77197184 - 11 - benefit of the chapters. We find that the fact a chapter member may be able to access a billing in no way means that applicant has shown use of the applied-for mark in connection with billing or accounting services. We agree with the Trademark Examining Attorney that these specimens cannot possibly create in the mind of such a user an association between the adopted mark and the recited service activity. Applicant argues that even if one acknowledges that the term MEMBER ACCESS PLUS is used in connection with a computer interface, it could also be associated with billing and accounting services. In the abstract, it is true that the same mark can be used in connection with a variety of different goods and/or services. However, we agree with the Trademark Examining Attorney that when one views the matter within the four corners of these specimens, this particular mark is not associated with the sale or advertising of the recited services. Applicant also argues that none of the valuable member features highlighted above would exist without the billing and accounting services performed by applicant. While this is also true, it seems to us a classic non-sequitur that does not meet the concerns of the Trademark Examining Attorney. Serial No. 77197184 - 12 - One could analogize these facts to Internet access provided by any variety of vendors, financial institutions or service providers. Increasingly, as consumers, we expect online access to personal accounts maintained on the computerized databases of an individual vendor. The mere existence of the records suggests that a person or entity somewhere is performing accounting functions. The computerized data may even be formatted for the consumer much like that portrayed on applicant’s most recent specimen of record. However, in offering an enumeration of account activity and a current balance, the run-of-the-mill vendor or service provider is not providing “billing and accounting services” for the individual consumer (unless, of course, it is an accounting firm hired specifically to do accounting services). Otherwise, if one waters down the concept of “accounting” to the basest of dictionary meanings (e.g., providing a simple enumeration of recent activity and an updated balance of one’s account), then the word retains no meaning whatsoever when used in a recitation of services. Hence, we find ourselves in agreement with the final refusal of the Trademark Examining Attorney that these specimens do not show that applicant provides the recited “billing and accounting services” in connection with the applied-for mark, MEMBER ACCESS PLUS. Nowhere does the Serial No. 77197184 - 13 - mark MEMBER ACCESS PLUS as shown in these specimens identify those billing and accounting services and distinguish them from the service of others. See In re Walker Research, Inc., 228 USPQ 691, 692 (TTAB 1986) [affirming refusal to register where mark used on specimens identifies a software program used in the performance of the services but not the services themselves]. Rather, the term MEMBER ACCESS PLUS refers to a nominal feature of applicant’s main services. The clear import of the mark as used in the specimens is to identify an online computer interface directed to chapter members that comprises, even by applicant’s own admission, a collateral feature of its billing and accounting services. Decision: The refusal to register under Sections 1, 2, 3 and 45 of the Lanham Act is hereby affirmed. - o O o - Opinion by Walsh, Administrative Trademark Judge, dissenting: I respectfully dissent. I find both specimens applicant submitted adequate to show use of the MEMBER ACCESS PLUS mark in connection with “billing and accounting services.” I do not dispute the majority’s statement of the law, but only the application of the law here. Serial No. 77197184 - 14 - Both specimens display the MEMBER ACCESS PLUS mark prominently. “Plus,” the only distinctive element in the mark, suggests that the mark identifies something more than a simple “Member-Access” function. The specimens demonstrate that applicant renders the “accounting and billing services” not just for the benefit of the organizations’ treasurers and other officers, but for the benefit of members and their parents as well. The first specimen states that, among other things, members may view various types of financial information related to their accounts and “pay your account on-line.” The second specimen includes similar references. The specimens also refer to “chapter members” and otherwise demonstrate the relationship between applicant and the chapter/organization to which the member belongs. Thus, the specimens show that applicant is performing services for others, the chapters and their members, and not merely recording, reporting, or collecting accounts owed to applicant. Contrary to the majority’s assertion, this is unlike a situation where “Internet access [is] provided by any variety of vendors, financial institutions or service providers … [where] we expect online access to personal accounts maintained on the computerized databases of an individual vendor.” Here applicant is billing and Serial No. 77197184 - 15 - collecting payments on behalf of the organizations it services and their members. In like manner, a financial institution may offer a bill-paying service for its clients whereby the financial institution pays the client’s utility, phone or other recurring bills. This is a service distinct from other services a financial institution may offer. I part ways with the majority most conspicuously in their construction of what “billing and accounting services” may include. The majority states, “Otherwise, if one waters down the concept of ‘accounting’ to the basest of dictionary meanings (e.g., providing a simple enumeration of recent activity and an updated balance of one’s account), then the word retains no meaning whatsoever when used in a recitation of services.” For the record, Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed. 2003) defines “accounting” as: “the system of recording and summarizing business and financial transactions and analyzing, verifying, and reporting the results” and “bill” (as in “billing”) as: “1 a: to enter in an accounting system: prepare a bill (charges) b: to submit a bill of charges to ….”4 4 The Board may take judicial notice of dictionary definitions. University of Notre Dame du Lac v. J. C. Gourmet Food Imports Co., Inc., 213 USPQ 594 (TTAB 1982), aff'd, 703 F.2d 1372, 217 USPQ 505 (Fed. Cir. 1983). Serial No. 77197184 - 16 - I reject the notion that the simple dictionary definition is somehow inadequate to define what either “accounting” or “billing” mean in an identification of services. Thus, I conclude that the specimens show use of MEMBER ACCESS PLUS in connection with “accounting and billing services” which applicant renders for the benefit of the relevant chapters and their members. The recording and reporting activities referred to in the specimens are part and parcel of basic accounting services and the reference to paying an account is a direct reference to billing services. A reference to either in the specimen would be sufficient for purposes of the specimen requirement in this single- class application. The specimens refer to both. The majority may also be suggesting that a more specific reference to the identified service is needed. I disagree. In re Ralph Mantia Inc., 54 USPQ2d 1284, 1286 (TTAB 2000) [“Here, the word “design” alone is sufficient to create in the minds of purchasers an association between the mark and applicant’s commercial art services.”]. Therefore, I would find the specimens acceptable and would reverse the refusal. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation