Government Genericize? SINGER revisited in ZIPLOCK?
Saturday, November 25th, 2006Listening to the new “3-1-1″ airport public service announcement, the approved phrasing for the rules of what liquid/gels are allowed through security is:
“Three One One means that you can take as many separate three ounces of liquid/gels that fit in one 1 quart ZIPLOCK bag per person”
The trademark ZIPLOCK is owned and registered throughout the world by SC Johnson as applied to “disposable, re-sealable plastic bags and containers”.
But the government approved verbiage is not that the “3-1-1″ analysis will include any ‘disposable, re-sealable, plastic bags’. It states that 1 quart ZIPLOCK bags are required.
Travelling as much as I have since the liquid/gel airport security issue arose on August 10th of this year, I have not seen any resealable bags, not from SC Johnson, turned away. And there are many such nonZIPLOCK bags which are going through security every minute.
Could SC Johnson make a claim that the government use of the mark ZIPLOCK is causing genericide?
One of the chestnuts of trademark lore is that once a trademark falls into the generic, it can not be redeemed back into the more elevated status of being a trademark. The exception that proves the rule, as the idiom goes, is when the U.S. Government was accused of having caused the mark SINGER to fall into generic, and was then found to be a trademark in the case of Singer Mfg. Co. v. Briley, 207 F. 2d 519, 520-21 (5th Cir. 1953). [Compare Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U.S. 169 (1896) (holding that “Singer” a generic term for sewing machines) with Singer Mfg. Co. v. Briley, 207 F.2d 519 (5th Cir. 1953) (holding that “by the constant and exclusive use of the name ‘Singer’ in designating sewing machines and other articles manufactured and sold by it and in advertising the same continuously and widely – [plaintiff] recaptured from the public domain the name ‘Singer’. . . [which] has thus become a valid trade-mark . . . and is entitled to protection as such”). If, as this Court recognized in Singer, it is possible to reclaim from the public domain even a mark held generic by the Supreme Court
Why would SC Johnson not claim that the government is emperiling the validity of that valuable mark, ZIPLOCK? And what is the statute of limitations on trademark infringement, anyway?

