Christian Faith Fellowship v. Adidas Ag , 841 F.3d 986 ( 2016 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP CHURCH,
    Appellant
    v.
    ADIDAS AG,
    Appellee
    ______________________
    2016-1296
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office, Trademark Trial and Appeal Board in No.
    92053314.
    ______________________
    Decided: November 14, 2016
    ______________________
    RICHARD W. YOUNG, Quarles & Brady, LLP, Chicago,
    IL, argued for appellant.
    JOHN ZACCARIA, Notaro, Michalos & Zaccaria P.C.,
    Orangeburg, NY, argued for appellee. Also represented by
    BRADLEY S. CORSELLO, ANGELO NOTARO.
    ______________________
    Before REYNA, HUGHES, and STOLL, Circuit Judges.
    STOLL, Circuit Judge.
    2                  CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    Christian Faith Fellowship Church appeals a final
    judgment of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board that,
    in response to a petition filed by adidas AG, cancelled its
    trademarks for failing to use the marks in commerce
    before registering them.       The Board held that the
    Church’s documented sale of two marked hats to an out-
    of-state resident were de minimis and therefore did not
    constitute use of the marks in commerce under the Lan-
    ham Act. Because the Lanham Act defines commerce as
    all activity regulable by Congress, and because the
    Church’s sale to an out-of-state resident fell within Con-
    gress’s power to regulate under the Commerce Clause, we
    reverse the Board’s cancellation of the Church’s marks on
    this basis and remand for further proceedings.
    BACKGROUND
    I.
    Christian Faith Fellowship Church is located in Zion,
    Illinois, within five miles of the Illinois–Wisconsin border.
    Being located so close to the border, the Church’s parish-
    ioners include both Illinois and Wisconsin residents. In
    January 2005, the Church began selling apparel, both
    caps and shirts, emblazoned with the phrase “ADD A
    ZERO.” The Church sold the “ADD A ZERO”-marked
    apparel as part of a fundraising campaign to pay off the
    debt on its church facility and the associated 40-acre tract
    of land.     Illinois-based Icon Industries supplied the
    Church with the “ADD A ZERO”-marked apparel, which
    the Church sold in its bookstore. 1
    1    The Church also presented evidence to the Board
    that it began offering the “ADD A ZERO”-marked apparel
    for sale on its website in 2010. Like the Board, we do not
    consider this evidence because it concerns activity after
    the critical trademark registration date of March 2005.
    See Couture v. Playdom, Inc., 
    778 F.3d 1379
    , 1381
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG                 3
    The Church sought a federal trademark for the “ADD
    A ZERO” mark at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
    in March 2005. The Church filed two clothing-based
    trademark applications, one for use of “ADD A ZERO” in
    standard characters and another for a stylized design of
    the phrase. The Church’s applications relied on actual
    use of the marks in commerce, not intent to use the marks
    in commerce. The Office granted the Church’s applica-
    tions and registered the marks as U.S. Registration Nos.
    3,173,207 and 3,173,208.
    II.
    In 2009, adidas AG (“Adidas”) sought a clothing
    trademark for the phrase “ADIZERO,” but the Office
    refused the application for likelihood of confusion with the
    Church’s “ADD A ZERO” marks. Adidas brought an
    action before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board to
    cancel the Church’s marks, arguing several grounds for
    cancellation: (1) the Church’s failure to use the marks in
    commerce before registration; (2) the marks’ failure to
    function as trademarks; and (3) the Church’s abandon-
    ment of the marks for nonuse. The Board agreed with
    Adidas’s failure-to-use argument and cancelled the
    Church’s marks, without addressing Adidas’s alternate
    cancellation grounds. The Board considered the Church’s
    proffered evidence—over Adidas’s hearsay and authenti-
    cation objections—of a cancelled check for the sale of two
    “ADD A ZERO”-marked hats for $38.34 in February 2005,
    before the Church applied for its marks. The Church had
    kept the check in its records and cross-referenced it with a
    sales register it maintained for its bookstore. The check’s
    drawer was Charlotte Howard, who had a Wisconsin
    home address pre-printed on her check.
    (Fed. Cir.), cert. denied, 
    136 S. Ct. 88
    (2015) (“Use in
    commerce must be ‘as of the application filing date.’”
    (quoting 37 C.F.R. § 2.34(a)(1)(i))).
    4                  CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    The Board disagreed with the Church that the sale to
    Ms. Howard evidenced the requisite “use in commerce”
    under the Lanham Act. The Board concluded:
    [T]he sale of two ADD A ZERO caps at a minimal
    cost within the state of Illinois to Ms. Howard,
    who resides outside the state, does not affect
    commerce that Congress can regulate such that
    the transaction would constitute use in commerce
    for purposes of registration.
    . . . This sale is de minimis and, under the cir-
    cumstances shown here, is insufficient to show
    use that affects interstate commerce.
    adidas AG v. Christian Faith Fellowship Church, Cancel-
    lation No. 92053314, 
    2015 WL 5882313
    , at *7 (T.T.A.B.
    Sept. 14, 2015) (Board Op.) (footnote omitted).
    The Church appeals, and we have jurisdiction under
    28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(B).
    DISCUSSION
    The Lanham Act provides that “[t]he owner of a
    trademark used in commerce may request registration of
    its trademark.” 15 U.S.C. § 1051(a)(1) (emphasis added).
    Section 1051(a)’s “use in commerce” requirement distin-
    guishes it from § 1051(b), which offers protection for “[a]
    person who has a bona fide intention, under circumstanc-
    es showing the good faith of such person, to use a trade-
    mark in commerce.” 
    Id. § 1051(b).
    The Lanham Act
    explains the “use in commerce” requirement as it relates
    to goods:
    The term “use in commerce” means the bona
    fide use of a mark in the ordinary course of trade,
    and not made merely to reserve a right in a mark.
    For purposes of this chapter, a mark shall be
    deemed to be in use in commerce—
    (1) on goods when—
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG                 5
    (A) it is placed in any manner on the
    goods or their containers or the displays
    associated therewith or on the tags or la-
    bels affixed thereto, or if the nature of the
    goods makes such placement impractica-
    ble, then on documents associated with
    the goods or their sale, and
    (B) the goods are sold or transported
    in commerce . . . .
    
    Id. § 1127
    (emphases added). Further, the Lanham Act
    defines “commerce” as “all commerce which may lawfully
    be regulated by Congress.” 
    Id. Thus, to
    register a mark
    under § 1051(a), one must sell or transport goods bearing
    the mark such that the sale or transport would be subject
    to Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause, which
    includes its power to regulate interstate commerce. Larry
    Harmon Pictures Corp. v. Williams Rest. Corp., 
    929 F.2d 662
    , 664 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (citing U.S. Const., art. I, § 8);
    see also In re Silenus Wines, Inc., 
    557 F.2d 806
    , 808–12
    (CCPA 1977).
    The dispute between the parties in this case is limited
    to whether the Church, which filed its applications under
    § 1051(a)’s “use in commerce” subsection, made a sale of
    marked goods in commerce regulable by Congress before
    applying for its marks.
    I.
    As a threshold matter, we address whether the Board
    erred in admitting Ms. Howard’s check into evidence and
    in finding that Ms. Howard resided in Wisconsin. Adidas
    argues that the Board should not have admitted the check
    because Ms. Howard’s pre-printed address on the check
    constitutes inadmissible hearsay and because the check
    was not authenticated. We review the Board’s admission
    of the check for abuse of discretion. Coach Servs., Inc. v.
    Triumph Learning LLC, 
    668 F.3d 1356
    , 1363 (Fed. Cir.
    6                  CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    2012) (citing Crash Dummy Movie, LLC v. Mattel, Inc.,
    
    601 F.3d 1387
    , 1390 (Fed. Cir. 2010)). “We will reverse
    only if the Board’s evidentiary ruling was: (1) ‘clearly
    unreasonable, arbitrary, or fanciful’; (2) ‘based on an
    erroneous conclusion[] of law’; (3) premised on ‘clearly
    erroneous findings of fact’; or (4) the record ‘contains no
    evidence on which the Board could rationally base its
    decision.’” 
    Id. (quoting Crash
    Dummy 
    Movie, 601 F.3d at 1390
    –91).
    No party disputes that Ms. Howard’s pre-printed ad-
    dress on the check is a hearsay statement, which is typi-
    cally not admissible into evidence. The Federal Rules of
    Evidence provide, however, an exception to the bar on
    hearsay evidence for business records of regularly con-
    ducted conduct kept in the ordinary course. Fed. R.
    Evid. 803(6). The Board relied on this exception in admit-
    ting Ms. Howard’s check. A Church pastor, whose duties
    included Church recordkeeping, testified that the check
    was maintained in the Church’s records in the normal
    course of Church bookstore sales, along with the corrobo-
    rating entry in the bookstore ledger of sales. Adidas
    argues that the pre-printed address on the check had
    nothing to do with Church business, and therefore, the
    check should not have been admissible under the business
    records exception. We disagree.
    The business records exception “does not require that
    the document actually be prepared by the business entity
    proffering the document.” Air Land Forwarders, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    172 F.3d 1338
    , 1343 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
    When a business relies on a document it has not itself
    prepared, two factors bear on the admissibility of the
    evidence as a business record: “[1] that the incorporating
    business rely upon the accuracy of the document incorpo-
    rated[;] and [2] that there are other circumstances indi-
    cating the trustworthiness of the document.” 
    Id. We hold
    that the Board did not abuse its discretion in determining
    that the Church relied on the check, a bank-issued nego-
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG                 7
    tiable instrument, as accurate and trustworthy. We also
    hold that the check is self-authenticating as commercial
    paper under Federal Rule of Evidence 902(9). See United
    States v. Pang, 
    362 F.3d 1187
    , 1192 (9th Cir. 2004) (“[A]
    check is a species of commercial paper, and therefore self-
    authenticating” (citing Fed. R. Evid. 902(9))).
    Based on the admitted check and a Church pastor’s
    testimony that many Church parishioners reside in
    Wisconsin, the Board found that Ms. Howard resided in
    Wisconsin. Adidas argues this factual conclusion was
    unsupported. We review the Board’s factual determina-
    tions under a substantial evidence standard. In re Chip-
    pendales USA, Inc., 
    622 F.3d 1346
    , 1350 (Fed. Cir. 2010)
    (citing In re Pacer Tech., 
    338 F.3d 1348
    , 1349 (Fed. Cir.
    2003); 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(E)). We conclude that the admit-
    ted check and the Church pastor’s testimony constitute
    substantial evidence to support the Board’s determination
    regarding Ms. Howard’s residence.
    II.
    Having resolved that the Board properly admitted the
    Church’s evidence of an intrastate sale to an out-of-state
    resident, we now consider whether such a sale is regula-
    ble by Congress, satisfying the Lanham Act § 1051(a) “use
    in commerce” requirement. We review de novo the
    Board’s legal conclusions, including “its interpretations of
    the Lanham Act and the legal tests it applies in measur-
    ing registrability.” In re Viterra Inc., 
    671 F.3d 1358
    , 1361
    (Fed. Cir. 2012) (quoting In re Save Venice N.Y., Inc., 
    259 F.3d 1346
    , 1351–52 (Fed. Cir. 2001)); cf. Taylor v. United
    States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2074
    , 2080 (2016) (holding the meaning
    of “commerce” element in a different federal statute, the
    Hobbs Act, to be a question of law).
    A.
    Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause is
    broad. Larry 
    Harmon, 929 F.2d at 664
    (citing Silenus
    8                  CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    
    Wines, 557 F.2d at 809
    –10). The Supreme Court’s con-
    temporary Commerce Clause decisions illustrate Con-
    gress’s legislative abilities under this enumerated power.
    Beginning in the modern era with Wickard v. Filburn, the
    Supreme Court has interpreted the Commerce Clause as
    vesting in Congress the power to regulate activities that
    have a substantial effect on interstate commerce, explain-
    ing:
    [E]ven if . . . activity be local and though it may
    not be regarded as commerce, it may still, what-
    ever its nature, be reached by Congress if it exerts
    a substantial economic effect on interstate com-
    merce and this irrespective of whether such effect
    is what might at some earlier time have been de-
    fined as “direct” or “indirect.”
    
    317 U.S. 111
    , 125 (1942). In Wickard, a farmer grew
    wheat for commercial sale, but also for personal and farm
    use. 
    Id. at 114.
    Congress passed a statute imposing
    quotas on the amount of wheat that farmers could har-
    vest, with penalties assessed for harvesting wheat in
    excess of the quota level, even if the wheat was for per-
    sonal use and not for sale. 
    Id. at 114–15,
    119. The
    farmer challenged the statute’s application to him as
    exceeding Congress’s Commerce Clause powers, claiming
    his wheat harvesting was local in nature and had, at
    most, only an indirect effect on interstate commerce. 
    Id. at 119.
    The Court disagreed with the farmer’s argu-
    ments, holding that the activity must be viewed not in
    isolation, but in the aggregate: “That [the farmer’s] own
    contribution to the demand for wheat may be trivial by
    itself is not enough to remove him from the scope of
    federal regulation where, as here, his contribution, taken
    together with that of many others similarly situated, is
    far from trivial.” 
    Id. at 127–28.
        The Supreme Court reaffirmed Wickard’s “substantial
    effects” doctrine in Gonzales v. Raich, in which one of the
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG                   9
    parties grew marijuana on her property for personal,
    medicinal use and did not sell or transport the drug. 
    545 U.S. 1
    , 6–8 (2005). She argued that her local and de
    minimis cultivation and possession of marijuana should
    not be subject to federal drug laws passed under the
    Commerce Clause. 
    Id. at 15.
    The Supreme Court framed
    her argument as a request to “excise individual applica-
    tions of a concededly valid statutory scheme.” 
    Id. at 23.
    But the Supreme Court held the statute’s application to
    individuals was a valid exercise of Congress’s powers
    under the Commerce Clause, indicating that its “case law
    firmly establishes Congress’s power to regulate purely
    local activities that are part of an economic ‘class of
    activities’ that have a substantial effect on interstate
    commerce.” 
    Id. at 17
    (citing Perez v. United States, 
    402 U.S. 146
    , 151 (1971); 
    Wickard, 317 U.S. at 128
    –29). The
    Court did not believe that the case turned on the intra-
    state nature of the marijuana cultivation and possession
    at issue, explaining “[t]hat the regulation ensnares some
    purely intrastate activity is of no moment.” 
    Id. at 22.
    The
    Court “refuse[d] to excise individual components of th[e]
    larger scheme,” 
    id., because, “where
    the class of activities
    is regulated and that class is within the reach of federal
    power, the courts have no power ‘to excise, as trivial,
    individual instances’ of the class,” 
    id. at 23
    (quoting 
    Perez, 402 U.S. at 154
    (alteration omitted)). Thus, the Court
    held that when “a general regulatory statute bears a
    substantial relation to commerce, the de minimis charac-
    ter of individual instances arising under that statute is of
    no consequence” and Congress has the power to regulate
    it under the Commerce Clause. 
    Id. at 17
    (quoting United
    States v. Lopez, 
    514 U.S. 549
    , 558 (1995)).
    The Supreme Court most recently addressed the
    Commerce Clause’s “substantial effects” doctrine in
    Taylor, which involved a man federally convicted of
    robbery under a provision of the Hobbs Act for his partici-
    pation in two home invasions involving marijuana deal-
    10                 CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    
    ers. 136 S. Ct. at 2077
    –78 (citing 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a)).
    The Hobbs Act criminalizes robberies and attempted
    robberies that affect any commerce “over which the Unit-
    ed States has jurisdiction.” 
    Id. at 2077
    (quoting 18 U.S.C.
    § 1951(b)(3)). Citing Raich, the Court held that Congress
    legislated within its Commerce Clause powers when
    enacting the provision at issue. 
    Id. at 2077
    –78, 2080. As
    applied, the Court reiterated that, under the aggregation
    approach to the substantial effects test, “proof that the
    defendant’s conduct in and of itself affected or threatened
    commerce is not needed.” 
    Id. at 2081.
    Rather, the Court
    instructed that “[a]ll that is needed is proof that the
    defendant’s conduct fell within a category of conduct that,
    in the aggregate, had the requisite effect” on commerce.
    
    Id. The Court
    emphasized that, in the case before it, “the
    Government need not show that the drugs that a defend-
    ant stole or attempted to steal either traveled or were
    destined for transport across state lines. . . . And it makes
    no difference under our cases that any actual or threat-
    ened effect on commerce in a particular case is minimal.”
    Id. (citing 
    Perez, 402 U.S. at 154
    ).
    B.
    Our past Lanham Act “use in commerce” cases equally
    reflect the broad scope of Congress’s Commerce Clause
    powers. For example, in Larry Harmon, the appellant
    argued that the Lanham Act’s “use in commerce” re-
    quirement could not “be satisfied by a single-location
    restaurant . . . that serves only a minimal number of
    interstate 
    travelers.” 929 F.2d at 663
    . The appellant did
    not dispute “that there ha[d] been some use in commerce
    of [registrant]’s mark,” and indeed, the record established
    that the “mark ha[d] been used in connection with ser-
    vices rendered to customers traveling across state bound-
    aries.” 
    Id. at 666.
    Yet, the appellant petitioned this court
    to adopt a standard relating to the percentage of services
    furnished to interstate travelers to determine whether a
    mark had been used in commerce under the Lanham Act.
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG                 11
    
    Id. We refused
    to do so. Recognizing that “[t]he Lanham
    Act by its terms extends to all commerce which Congress
    may regulate,” 
    id., and that
    “Congress has broad powers
    under the commerce clause,” 
    id. at 664,
    we “reject[ed]
    [appellant]’s argument that a certain increased threshold
    level of interstate activity is required before registration
    of the mark used by a single-location restaurant may be
    granted,” 
    id. at 666.
    Likewise, our predecessor court
    explained in Silenus Wines that because Congress passed
    the Lanham Act in the wake of Wickard and because the
    Act expansively defines commerce as “all commerce which
    may lawfully be regulated by Congress,” it “clearly in-
    volves a broadening of jurisdiction” from earlier federal
    trademark 
    statutes. 557 F.2d at 809
    –10. The court held
    that, under this broad jurisdiction, the intrastate sale of
    imported French wine constitutes “use in commerce”
    under the Act. 
    Id. at 809.
                                 C.
    Moving to the facts of this case, it is clear in light of
    the foregoing precedent that the Church’s sale of two
    “ADD A ZERO”-marked hats to an out-of-state resident is
    regulable by Congress under the Commerce Clause and,
    therefore, constitutes “use in commerce” under the Lan-
    ham Act. We reach this conclusion without defining the
    outer contours of Congress’s Commerce Clause powers
    because the transaction at issue falls comfortably within
    the bounds of those powers already sketched for us by the
    Supreme Court. The Lanham Act is a comprehensive
    scheme for regulating economic activity—namely the
    marking of commercial goods—and the “use in commerce”
    pre-registration requirement is an “essential part” of the
    Act. 
    Lopez, 514 U.S. at 561
    . Further, it cannot be doubt-
    ed that the transaction at issue—the private sale of goods,
    particularly apparel, to an out-of-state resident—is “quin-
    tessentially economic.” 
    Raich, 545 U.S. at 25
    ; see United
    States v. Morrison, 
    529 U.S. 598
    , 611 (2000) (“[I]n those
    cases where we have sustained federal regulation of
    12                  CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    intrastate activity based upon the activity’s substantial
    effects on interstate commerce, the activity in question
    has been some sort of economic endeavor.”). This transac-
    tion, taken in the aggregate, would cause a substantial
    effect on interstate commerce and thus it falls under
    Congress’s Commerce Clause powers. 
    Taylor, 136 S. Ct. at 2080
    –81; 
    Raich, 545 U.S. at 17
    ; 
    Wickard, 317 U.S. at 125
    . The Church did not need to present evidence of an
    actual and specific effect that its sale of hats to an out-of-
    state resident had on interstate commerce. Nor did it
    need to make a particularized showing that the hats
    themselves were destined to travel out of state. See
    
    Taylor, 136 S. Ct. at 2081
    .
    The Board’s rationale that the sale to Ms. Howard
    was “de minimis” and thus “insufficient to show use that
    affects interstate commerce” is squarely at odds with the
    Wickard progeny of Commerce Clause cases. Board Op.
    at *7. In particular, the Board’s reasoning contravenes
    Raich, which expressed that “the de minimis character of
    individual instances” arising under a valid statute enact-
    ed under the Commerce Clause “is of no 
    consequence.” 545 U.S. at 17
    . “[I]t makes no difference under our cases
    that any actual or threatened effect on commerce in a
    particular case is minimal.” 
    Taylor, 136 S. Ct. at 2081
    (citing 
    Perez, 402 U.S. at 154
    ); see also Larry 
    Harmon, 929 F.2d at 666
    . Adidas’s argument that the Church must
    present actual proof that its sale to Ms. Howard directly
    affected commerce also contradicts precedent. “[P]roof
    that the defendant’s conduct in and of itself affected or
    threatened commerce is not needed. All that is needed is
    proof that the defendant’s conduct fell within a category of
    conduct that, in the aggregate, had the requisite effect.”
    
    Taylor, 136 S. Ct. at 2081
    .
    Adidas would like us to cabin Raich and Taylor to
    their particular facts, namely to cases involving the
    market for illegal drugs. But the Supreme Court’s eluci-
    dation of the Constitutional reach of the Commerce
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG               13
    Clause in those cases applies to more than just federal
    drug regulation. Raich and Taylor apply, and indeed rest
    on, principles derived from Wickard, which involved the
    national market for wheat, not illegal drugs. And Taylor
    is particularly applicable because, similar to the present
    case, it involves the construction of a statutory provision
    that defines “commerce” as including “all . . . commerce
    over which the United States has jurisdiction,” 18 U.S.C.
    § 1951(b)(3). Moreover, there is nothing in these cases
    themselves to limit the Constitutional precepts and legal
    tests discussed therein to their facts. The Supreme Court
    has advised that, as a court of appeals, we must not
    “confus[e] the factual contours of [a Supreme Court deci-
    sion] for its unmistakable holding” in an effort to reach a
    “novel interpretation” of that decision. Thurston Motor
    Lines, Inc. v. Jordan K. Rand, Ltd., 
    460 U.S. 533
    , 534–35
    (1983) (per curiam); see also Rivers v. Roadway Express,
    Inc., 
    511 U.S. 298
    , 312 (1994) (“[O]nce the Court has
    spoken, it is the duty of other courts to respect that un-
    derstanding of the governing rule of law.”); Ariad Pharm.,
    Inc. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 
    598 F.3d 1336
    , 1347 (Fed. Cir.
    2010) (en banc) (“As a subordinate federal court, we may
    not so easily dismiss [the Supreme Court’s] statements as
    dicta but are bound to follow them.”). We find that the
    principles discussed in Raich and Taylor apply here
    regardless of the factual differences at play.
    D.
    Finally, we note that the Board erred by not properly
    applying our holdings in Larry Harmon and Silenus
    Wines, which bear on the Lanham Act’s “use in commerce”
    requirement specifically rather than on the Commerce
    Clause in the abstract. Had it done so, it would not have
    concluded that a sale it characterized as de minimis was
    therefore insufficient to satisfy the “use in commerce”
    requirement.
    14                 CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG
    In Larry Harmon, we refused to adopt a de minimis
    test for the “use in commerce” 
    requirement. 929 F.2d at 666
    . We further held that the Lanham Act by its terms
    extends to all commerce which Congress may regulate.
    
    Id. Although Larry
    Harmon involved a service mark and
    the marks here are for goods, the “in commerce” require-
    ment is the same regardless of the type of mark and thus
    Larry Harmon applies to this case. True enough, § 1127
    provides distinct tests for the type of use that must occur
    for goods versus services to satisfy the “use in commerce”
    requirement. For example, the statute requires that
    marked goods be “sold or transported” in commerce, while
    service marks must be “used or displayed in the sale or
    advertising of services and the services [must be] ren-
    dered” in commerce. But this distinction goes to the
    meaning of “use” in the “use in commerce” requirement,
    not to whether a use is “in commerce,” which we analyze
    under the same rubric regardless of the delineation be-
    tween goods and services.
    Our predecessor court made this very point in Silenus
    Wines, 
    557 F.2d 806
    . In that case, the court rejected the
    argument that an earlier decision, In re Gastown, Inc.,
    
    326 F.2d 780
    (CCPA 1964), was limited to service marks.
    Silenus 
    Wines, 557 F.2d at 808
    . Gastown held that an
    applicant’s operation of marked auto service stations on
    an interstate highway satisfied the “use in commerce”
    requirement. 
    Gastown, 326 F.2d at 784
    . Silenus Wines
    explained that “Gastown’s rationale is not limited to
    services” because its “result depended on the Trademark
    Act definition of ‘commerce’” rather than on the Act’s
    prescribed uses for service marks. Silenus 
    Wines, 557 F.2d at 808
    .
    The Board also erred to the extent it relied on In re
    Cook, United, Inc., 188 U.S.P.Q. 284 (T.T.A.B. 1975), and
    In re The Bagel Factory, Inc., 183 U.S.P.Q. 553 (T.T.A.B.
    1974), for the proposition that an intrastate sale of goods
    can never be a sale “in commerce” without the trademark
    CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP   v. ADIDAS AG                15
    applicant doing something more, such as knowingly
    directing the movement of goods across state lines. Cook,
    188 U.S.P.Q. at 287–88; Bagel Factory, 183 U.S.P.Q. at
    554–55. These Board cases have been the source of
    confusion in our “use in commerce” doctrine. Doubt has
    been cast on the vitality of the Bagel Factory holding,
    with commentators noting that “under the modern inter-
    pretations of the Commerce Clause . . . it would appear
    that a sale or delivery does not have to cross a state line
    in order to affect ‘commerce.’” 3 J. Thomas McCarthy,
    McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition
    § 19:123 (4th ed.) (footnote omitted). Others have similar-
    ly explained that, in Cook, “the PTO was operating under
    a different standard” than the one provided in the Su-
    preme Court’s Commerce Clause precedent and have
    concluded that, especially after Larry Harmon, “not only
    is the PTO’s perspective [as stated in Cook] no longer
    appropriate nor correct, it is no longer the law.” Peter C.
    Christensen & Teresa C. Tucker, The “Use in Commerce”
    Requirement for Trademark Registration After Larry
    Harmon Pictures, 32 IDEA 327, 332, 341 (1992).
    To the extent Cook and Bagel Factory assert that the
    Lanham Act requires commercial activity, whether for
    goods or services, beyond that which is sufficient for
    Congress to regulate commercial activity under the Com-
    merce Clause, they are incorrect. It is beyond dispute
    that “the definition of commerce in the Lanham Act
    means exactly what the statute says, i.e. ‘all commerce
    which may lawfully be regulated by Congress.’” Larry
    
    Harmon, 929 F.2d at 666
    (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1127); see
    also 
    Gastown, 326 F.2d at 784
    (quoting Bulova Watch Co.
    v. Steele, 
    194 F.2d 567
    , 571 (5th Cir.), aff’d, 
    344 U.S. 280
    (1952)); cf. 
    Taylor, 136 S. Ct. at 2079
    (construing provi-
    sion of Hobbs Act—which defines “commerce” as including
    “all . . . commerce over which the United States has
    jurisdiction,” 18 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(3)—as extending to full
    reach of Congress’s Commerce Clause powers). Because
    16                  CHRISTIAN FAITH FELLOWSHIP     v. ADIDAS AG
    one need not direct goods across state lines for Congress
    to regulate the activity under the Commerce Clause, there
    is likewise no such per se condition for satisfying the
    Lanham Act’s “use in commerce” requirement. See 
    Raich, 545 U.S. at 22
    (“That the regulation [passed under the
    Commerce Clause] ensnares some purely intrastate
    activity is of no moment.”); 
    Wickard, 317 U.S. at 125
    (“[E]ven if . . . activity be local . . . it may still, whatever
    its nature, be reached by Congress if it exerts a substan-
    tial economic effect on interstate commerce . . . .”). In so
    holding, we comport with our own precedent, which
    disavows the bright line approach taken in Cook and
    Bagel Factory. See Larry 
    Harmon, 929 F.2d at 666
    (“It is
    not required that such services be rendered in more than
    one state to satisfy the use in commerce requirement.”
    (citing 
    Gastown, 326 F.2d at 782
    –84)); Silenus 
    Wines, 557 F.2d at 810
    –811 (“[The PTO] stated that ‘commerce’ did
    not cover intrastate transactions regardless of affect on
    interstate and foreign commerce. . . . We reject the PTO
    position.”).
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Board’s
    cancellation of the Church’s “ADD A ZERO” marks for not
    using them in commerce before federally registering them
    and remand for the Board to address Adidas’s other
    cancellation grounds.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    COSTS
    Costs to Appellant.