UC Law Journal
Abstract
We take it largely for granted today that the Trademark Act of 1946 permits the registration of trade dress on the principal register, but it has not always been the rule. Until 1958, the Patent and Trademark Office, following Congress's intent expressed in the Act's plain language and legislative history, excluded trade dress from the principal register as a matter of law. In 1958, Assistant Commissioner Daphne Robert Leeds changed the rule and allowed the registration of a product package as a trademark on the principal register. Unable to find any legitimate basis for reading the Trademark Act to permit trade dress on the principal register, Leeds simply asserted her desired result as conclusion, willfully replacing Congress's decision on the issue with her own. In this Article, Professor Lunney argues that time has largely erased our memories of trade dress's dubious claim to the principal register. And courts, over the last twenty years, have crafted an extensive regime of federal trade dress protection out of Leeds's erroneous interpretation. Yet, even today, a fair-minded review of the Trademark Act of 1946 and its legislative history reveals that there is no lawful basis for allowing trade dress on the principal register. As with the Emperor and his new clothes, the only real question is whether, following its revelation, courts and the Patent and Trademark Office are willing to recognize this naked truth.
Recommended Citation
Glynn S. Lunney Jr.,
The Trade Dress Emperor's New Clothes: Why Trade Dress Does Not Belong on the Principal Register,
51 Hastings L.J. 1131
(2000).
Available at: https://repository.uclawsf.edu/hastings_law_journal/vol51/iss6/2