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“I used to say that my dad invented the breakfast burrito,” Nick Maryol, owner of Tia Sophia’s restaurant in Santa Fe, told the Santa Fe New Mexican, “but he didn’t. You know, New Mexicans have been putting bacon and eggs and potatoes and cheese into tortillas and eating it forever: He was just the first to call it a breakfast burrito and put it on a menu in the ’70s.”
Claiming ownership over the breakfast
burrito, as Maryol points out, is like saying you invented a cheese
sandwich when just about anyone who’s seen bread and cheese has thought
to combine them. And yet someone is attempting to trademark “breakfast
burrito,” a dish that has gone from a southwestern delicacy to a
national favorite and brunch menu staple.
According to the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office, the petition for “breakfast burrito” was
filed on November 27. Eater has reached out to the person listed on the
application, and the address listed matches that of a personal injury
law firm in LA. (Eater did not hear back on requests for comment made
over email and the phone by press time, but will update if and when
there’s a response.) According to the application, “the signatory
believes that the applicant is entitled to use the mark in commerce,”
and “the applicant has a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce
on or in connection with the goods/services in the application.”
The
potential trademark seems to qualify as a descriptive trademark, which
Justia describes as essentially an adjective. Descriptive marks “do not
identify and distinguish the source of products or services,” whereas
suggestive marks “require imagination, thought, or perception to
determine the nature or quality of the goods, whereas descriptive marks
allow someone to draw those conclusions without putting any effort into
it.” Justia uses the example of the surname McDonald. Even if it’s your
surname, you can’t open a restaurant called “McDonald’s,” as the general
public now associates that name with a specific brand. It all seems a
bit subjective, but the question is whether “breakfast burrito” is a
general descriptor, or if the applicant can prove that, when people
think “breakfast burrito,” there is a secondary, brand-specific meaning.
For
me, “breakfast burrito” conjures images of salsa-drenched eggs and
cheese wrapped in a warm flour tortilla, not a specific restaurant or
brand’s offering. But who knows? Trademarks are weird. LeBron James
tried to trademark “Taco Tuesday,” and Paris Hilton succeeded in
trademarking “That’s Hot.” So maybe you’ll have to order a “nonspecific
morning meal tortilla wrap” from now on. Mouthwatering.
Source:www.eater.com
Author:Jaya Saxena
Editor:Vapor