The Board affirmed a refusal to register the mark MAGIC SNOWBALL for “plush toy which looks like a snowball and contains a motion-activated LED” [SNOWBALL disclaimed] finding the mark likely to cause confusion with the registered mark SNOWBALL for “plush toys.” Applicant contended that MAGIC is the dominant, and distinguishing, part of its mark. Would You Have Appealed? In re Hallmark Licensing, LLC, Serial No. 86198536 (January 11, 2015) [not precedential].
Since registrant’s good encompass those of applicant, the involved goods must be considered legally identical. They therefore presumably travel in the same normal channels of trade to the same classes of consumers. Moreover, when the involved goods are identical, a lesser degree of similarity between the marks is necessary to support a finding of likely confusion.
As to the word MAGIC, Examining Attorney Toby E. Bulloff maintained that “The wording ‘MAGIC’ (or the related ‘MAGICAL’) is so commonly used within the toy industry, and specifically with respect to plush or stuffed toys, and ‘SNOWBALL’ is so rarely used, that applicant’s argument is unpersuasive.” He submitted seven website excerpts showing plush toys offered under marks that include the word MAGIC, as well as six third-party registrations for marks containing the word MAGIC for plush toys. The Board was impressed.
The Federal Circuit has stated that evidence of third-party registrations is relevant to show that a segment of a mark “may have a ‘normally understood and well-recognized descriptive or suggestive meaning, leading to the conclusion that that segment is relatively weak,’ …” Jack Wolfskin Ausrustung FurDraussen GmbH & Co. KGAA v. New Millennium Sports, S.L.U., 797 F.3d 1363, 116 USPQ2d 1129, 1136 (Fed. Cir. 2015), quotingJuice Generation, Inc. v. GS Enters. LLC, 794 F.3d 1334, 115 USPQ2d 1671, 1675 (Fed. Cir. 2015).
The Board found this evidence “sufficient to show that the term MAGIC has suggestive significance in the field of plush toys, thereby weakening the source-indicating power of that term.” Therefore, even if MAGIC is considered to be dominant in applicant’s mark, it does not sufficiently distinguish the involved mark.
Nor did the Board agree that MAGIC SNOWBALL and SNOWBALL have very different meanings, as applicant claimed. According to applicant, “the likely connotation of MAGIC SNOWBALL is not a traditional snowball. The connotation of MAGIC SNOWBALL in a consumer’s mind is something imaginary or fantastical.” The Board was not persuaded that, in the context of plush toys, addition of the word MAGIC thoroughly transforms the meaning of SNOWBALL.
The Board therefore found confusion likely, and it affirmed the refusal.