In Re REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS ( 2020 )


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  • Case: 20-1282   Document: 36    Page: 1     Filed: 11/05/2020
    NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS, INC.,
    Appellant
    ______________________
    2020-1282
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office, Trademark Trial and Appeal Board in Nos.
    87285383, 87285412.
    ______________________
    Decided: November 5, 2020
    ______________________
    DAVID P. GORDON, Gordon & Jacobson P.C., Stamford,
    CT, for appellant.   Also represented by CHRISTIAN
    MANNINO.
    THOMAS L. CASAGRANDE, Office of the Solicitor, United
    States Patent and Trademark Office, Alexandria, VA, for
    appellee Andrei Iancu. Also represented by CHRISTINA J.
    HIEBER, THOMAS W. KRAUSE, MEREDITH HOPE
    SCHOENFELD.
    ______________________
    Before MOORE, O’MALLEY, and TARANTO, Circuit Judges.
    O’MALLEY, Circuit Judge.
    Case: 20-1282     Document: 36      Page: 2    Filed: 11/05/2020
    2                         IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    Reelex Packaging Solutions, Inc. (“Reelex”) appeals
    from a final decision of the Trademark Trial and Appeal
    Board (“Board”), affirming the examining attorney’s re-
    fusal to register two box designs for electric cables and wire
    on grounds that the designs are functional under Sec-
    tion 2(e)(5) of the Lanham Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 1052
    (e)(5). In
    re Reelex Packaging Solutions, Inc., Nos. 87285383,
    87285412, 2019 BL 481341 (T.T.A.B. Oct. 23, 2019) (Board
    Decision). Reelex also appeals the Board’s determination
    that the designs have not acquired distinctiveness. Be-
    cause substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding
    that the designs are functional, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Reelex describes its “tangle-free technology” as “a pa-
    tented method of winding a filamentary product (such as
    cord, wire, cable or tubing) into a figure-eight coil on a spe-
    cialized coiling machine.” J.A. 229. Reelex licenses pa-
    tents and trademarks associated with this technology to
    wire and cable manufacturers. Reelex explains that
    “[t]hose manufacturers use proprietary winding machines
    that are designed, manufactured, and patented by Reelex,
    and use Reelex knowhow to wind the cable and wire into
    finished coils of cable and wire.” Appellant Br. 10. The
    finished coils are then packaged into a “Reelex Box.” Ac-
    cording to Reelex, its “proprietary winding machines wind
    cable in a figure-eight pattern that allows the cable and
    wire to be dispensed or ‘paid out’ from the box without
    kinking and tangling.” 
    Id.
     at 10–11.
    In December 2016, Reelex filed two applications seek-
    ing to register the box designs shown below for coils of ca-
    bles and wire in International Class 9.
    Case: 20-1282    Document: 36    Page: 3     Filed: 11/05/2020
    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                            3
    Application Serial             Application Serial
    No. 87285383                   No. 87285412
    (the ’383 trade dress)         (the ’412 trade dress)
    The ’383 trade dress includes the following description:
    The mark consists of trade dress for a coil of cable
    or wire, the trade dress comprising a box having six
    sides, four sides being rectangular and two sides
    being substantially square, the substantially
    square sides both having a length of between 12
    and 14 inches, the rectangular sides each having a
    length of between 12 and 14 inches and a width of
    between 7.5 and 9 inches and a ratio of width to
    length of between 60% and 70%, one, and only one
    rectangular side having a circular hole of between
    0.75 and 1.00 inches in the exact middle of the side
    with a tube extending through the hole and
    through which the coil is dispensed from the pack-
    age, the tube having an outer end extending be-
    yond an outer surface of the rectangular side, and
    a collar extending around the outer end of the tube
    on the outer surface of the rectangular side of the
    package, and one square side having a line folding
    assembly bisecting the square side.
    Board Decision, 2019 BL 481341, at *1–2. Reelex refers to
    the box in the ’383 trade dress as the REELEX I box. As
    shown above, the ’383 box includes a plastic “payout tube”
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    4                        IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    with a relatively smaller opening and a collar with a clip to
    hold the end of the wire. Reelex lists this box for use with
    smaller wire and cable, typically with coil diameters of 9–
    16 inches. 
    Id. at *2
    .
    The ’412 trade dress includes the following description:
    The mark consists of trade dress for a coil of cable
    or wire, the trade dress comprising a box having six
    sides, four sides being rectangular and two sides
    being substantially square, the substantially
    square sides both having a length of between 13
    and 21 inches, the rectangular sides each having a
    length of the same length of the square sides and a
    width of between 57% and 72% of the size of the
    length, one, and only one rectangular side having a
    circular hole of 4.00 inches in the exact middle of
    the side with a tube extending in the hole and
    through which the coil is dispensed from the pack-
    age, one square side having a tongue and a groove
    at an edge adjacent the rectangular side having the
    circular opening, and the rectangular side having
    the circular opening having a tongue and a groove
    with the tongue of each respective side extending
    into the groove of each respective side at a corner
    therebetween.
    
    Id.
     Reelex refers to the box in the ’412 trade dress as the
    REELEX II box. As shown above, the ’412 box has a rela-
    tively larger payout opening and has a handle cut-out
    above the payout hole. Reelex lists this box for use with
    structured networking cable, coaxial cable, and other less-
    flexible wire or cable. 
    Id.
    The examining attorney refused registration, finding
    Reelex’s trade dress functional and nondistinctive. The ex-
    amining attorney further found that the designs do not
    function as trademarks to indicate the source of the goods
    identified in the applications. Reelex timely appealed the
    Case: 20-1282    Document: 36      Page: 5    Filed: 11/05/2020
    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                          5
    final refusal to the Board, and the Board conducted an oral
    hearing in August 2019. 1
    On October 23, 2019, the Board issued the decision at
    issue on appeal, affirming the examining attorney’s refusal
    to register on two grounds: functionality and distinctive-
    ness. 2 As to functionality, the Board explained that “[c]er-
    tain features of these boxes are clearly dictated by
    utilitarian concerns,” including: (1) the “rectangular shape
    of the boxes . . . which is useful for shipping and storing;”
    and (2) the built-in handle in the ’412 design, which makes
    it easier to lift and carry the box. 
    Id. at *3
    . The Board
    further found that the “dimensions of the boxes and the
    size and placement of the payout tubes and payout holes
    are dictated by the amount and size of the electric wire and
    cable placed in the box.” 
    Id.
    Next, the Board explained that Reelex’s figure 8 wind-
    ing system, shown below, has a coil that is unwound from
    its center, with the leading edge of the wire or cable
    threaded through a diamond-shaped opening.
    1   Given the common issues of law and fact, the Board
    consolidated the appeals.
    2   Because it affirmed on two independent grounds,
    the Board found it unnecessary to reach the refusal based
    on the third ground—that the designs do not function as
    marks to indicate the source of the goods identified. 
    Id. at *17, n.64
    .
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    6                        IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    
    Id. at *4
    . Given this configuration, the Board found “that
    several features are useful in a box made for a figure 8
    wound coil,” including a payout hole to allow users to take
    advantage of the twist-free dispensing, and a payout tube
    “extending from the payout hole to the center of the
    coil . . . to maintain the radial opening in the coil and to
    maintain the coil in alignment with the payout hole.” 
    Id.
    The Board also found it useful to position the payout hole
    near the vertical center of the front panel “to provide easy
    access and a more direct path for dispensing the cable or
    wire.” 
    Id.
     The Board found these features sufficient to
    show that the box designs were “dictated by the utilitarian
    purpose they serve.” 
    Id. at *5
    .
    Although the Board deemed this evidence sufficient to
    uphold the functionality refusal, it went on to consider the
    four factors from In re Morton-Norwich Products, Inc., 
    671 F.2d 1332
     (CCPA 1982), in finding that the box designs are
    functional. Specifically, the Board found that the first fac-
    tor—the existence of a utility patent disclosing the utilitar-
    ian advantages of the design sought to be registered—
    weighed in favor of finding the designs functional. Reelex
    had submitted five utility patents relating to the applied-
    for marks:
    •   
    U.S. Patent No. 5,810,272
     for a Snap-On Tube and
    Locking Collar for Guiding Filamentary Material
    Through a Wall Panel of a Container Containing
    Wound Filamentary Material (“the ’272 patent”);
    Case: 20-1282    Document: 36      Page: 7    Filed: 11/05/2020
    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                          7
    •   
    U.S. Patent No. 6,086,012
     for Combined Fiber Con-
    tainers and Payout Tube and Plastic Payout Tubes
    (“the ’012 patent”);
    •   
    U.S. Patent No. 6,341,741
     for Molded Fiber and
    Plastic Tubes (“the ’741 patent”);
    •   
    U.S. Patent No. 4,160,533
     for a Container with Oc-
    tagonal Insert and Corner Payout (“the ’533 pa-
    tent”); and
    •   
    U.S. Patent No. 7,156,334
     for a Pay-Out Tube (“the
    ’334 patent”).
    The Board found that the patents revealed several ben-
    efits of various features of the two boxes. Specifically, the
    Board found that many of the patents “bear directly” on the
    “tube extending through the hole” and “the tube having an
    outer end extending beyond an outer surface of the rectan-
    gular [front] side, and a collar extending around the outer
    end of the tube on the outer surface of the [front] rectangu-
    lar side of the package,” which are part of the ’383 trade
    dress, and “with a tube extending in the hole,” which is part
    of the ’412 trade dress. 
    Id. at *6
    .
    For example, the ’533 patent discloses that the payout
    tube should be aligned with the payout hole, and teaches
    the usefulness of a cutout handle opening to facilitate car-
    rying and transporting the box. 
    Id.
     The ’272 patent like-
    wise discloses a payout tube aligned with the hole in the
    box, and further teaches a “payout tube and locking collar
    which can be snap-fastened together on opposite sides of
    the wall of a container, remain in a permanent locked po-
    sition and provide a smooth radius between the edge of the
    payout tube and the locking collar” to prevent damage to
    the wire or cable when it is withdrawn from the container
    through the payout tube. ’272 patent, col. 2, ll. 13–19.
    The ’012 patent describes the REELEX II package, and
    discloses information about the purpose and advantage of
    the box design. Specifically, the payout tubes described in
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    8                        IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    the ’012 patent feature “oversized” openings to facilitate
    “kinkless unwinding from the inner coil to the outer coil” of
    certain types of cables. ’012 patent, col. 1, ll. 24–29. The
    ’012 patent explains that the box “is dimensioned in accord-
    ance with the diameter of the wound coil that is to be con-
    tained therein and may be manufactured in standard sizes
    to accommodate standard diameters of wound coils.” 
    Id.
     at
    col. 5, ll. 7–10. As an example, the patent provides that
    “the container 60 shown in Fig. 10A may be 9.5 inches x
    13.5 inches to accommodate a 12 inch diameter coil.” 
    Id.
     at
    col. 5, ll. 10–12. The ’012 patent further discloses a cut-out
    for a “hand hold” that “enables container 60 to be carried
    from site to site.” 
    Id.
     at col. 5, ll. 2–3.
    The ’741 patent teaches the advantages of larger pay-
    out holes, like those in the ’412 trade dress application. It
    explains that certain types of cables have “inherent resid-
    ual twist characteristics” that “require a much larger pay-
    out hole and payout tube to avoid kinking and interference
    with payout of the cable when would in a Fig. 8 configura-
    tion.” ’741 patent, col. 2, ll. 8–12.
    And the ’334 patent, which relates to a payout tube
    used within a cable container for directing cable from the
    container, notes that figure 8 coils are “customary in the
    manufacturing and preparation for shipment and subse-
    quent handling of cable.” ’334 patent, col. 1, ll. 12–13. It
    teaches that, ‘[t]o facilitate storage, shipping, and han-
    dling, such windings are typically housed within a card-
    board or similar container which has an opening formed in
    one wall.” 
    Id.
     at col. 1, ll. 22–24. The opening receives a
    perpendicular pay-out tube extending through the coil to
    allow dispensing of the wire. 
    Id.
     at col. 1, ll. 31–45. These
    pay-out tubes ”are commonly used in the cable industry”
    and “function[] as a guide that facilitates the uncoiling of
    the cable loops so that the cable may be dispensed in a fash-
    ion ready for application.” 
    Id.
     at col. 1, ll. 42–46.
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    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                           9
    The Board found that the disclosures and preferred em-
    bodiments in the patents revealed the functionality of sig-
    nificant aspects of the claimed designs. In particular, the
    Board found that “the specific size of the boxes and size and
    location of the payout holes is dictated by their function to
    house and dispense electric wire and cable of specific sizes.”
    Board Decision, 2019 BL 481341, at *9.
    Next, the Board found that the second Morton-Norwich
    factor—advertising by the applicant that touts the utilitar-
    ian advantages of the designs—also weighed in favor of a
    functionality finding. For example, Reelex’s advertising
    materials repeatedly tout that its figure 8 winding and
    packaging system provides better dispensing of cable or
    wire by preventing kinking or tangling. 
    Id.
     The Board also
    found that Reelex’s advertising touts the recyclability,
    stacking, shipping, and storage advantages of the claimed
    boxes. 
    Id.
    Turning to the third Morton-Norwich factor, regarding
    the availability of alternative deigns, the Board explained
    that, where, as here, patents and advertising demonstrate
    that the designs are functional, there is no need to consider
    alternative designs. 
    Id. at *10
    . The Board nevertheless
    considered Reelex’s evidence regarding alleged alternative
    designs, which consisted of a declaration from Frank
    Kotzur, a long-time employee of Reelex. The Board ulti-
    mately found Reelex’s evidence lacking, primarily because
    the declaration was speculative and contained conclusory
    statements that were contradicted by Reelex’s own adver-
    tising and patents.
    Finally, as to the fourth Morton-Norwich factor—as-
    sessing whether the designs resulted from a comparatively
    simple or inexpensive method of manufacture—the Board
    found no evidence of record regarding the cost or complex-
    ity of manufacturing the claimed trade dress. 
    Id. at *12
    .
    On this record, the Board found that the overall design
    of Reelex’s trade dress is “essential to the use or purpose of
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    10                       IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    the device” as used for “electric cable and wires.” 
    Id.
     As
    such, the Board affirmed the refusal to register on func-
    tionality grounds. The Board also found, as an independ-
    ent ground for denying registration, that Reelex failed to
    prove that the box designs had acquired distinctiveness un-
    der Section 2(f) of the Lanham Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 1052
    (f).
    Reelex timely appealed to this court. We have jurisdic-
    tion pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(4)(B).
    DISCUSSION
    We review the Board’s legal determinations de novo
    and its factual findings for substantial evidence. In re
    Pacer Tech., 
    338 F.3d 1348
    , 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2003). Func-
    tionality is a question of fact. Valu Eng’g, Inc. v. Rexnord
    Corp., 
    278 F.3d 1268
    , 1273 (Fed. Cir. 2002). Accordingly,
    we must uphold the Board’s functionality finding unless it
    is unsupported by substantial evidence. 
    Id.
     Substantial
    evidence requires “more than a mere scintilla” and is “such
    relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as ad-
    equate to support a conclusion.” Biestek v. Berryhill, 
    139 S.Ct. 1148
    , 1154 (2019) (internal citations omitted). “[T]he
    threshold for such evidentiary sufficiency is not high.” 
    Id.
    On appeal, Reelex argues that the Board erred in its
    functionality analysis “because the totality of record evi-
    dence shows that the trade dresses at issue provide no real
    utilitarian advantage to the user.” Appellant Br. 18.
    Reelex also argues that the Board erred in failing to con-
    sider competent evidence of alternative designs in render-
    ing its functionality decision. 3 Neither argument has
    merit.
    3  As noted, Reelex also challenges the Board’s dis-
    tinctiveness analysis. Because substantial evidence sup-
    ports the Board’s functionality determination, we need not
    reach acquired distinctiveness. Reelex further challenges
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    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                          11
    First, we find no error in the Board’s functionality anal-
    ysis. The Lanham Act precludes registration of an alleged
    mark that “comprises any matter that, as a whole, is func-
    tional.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 1052
    (e)(5). A feature is “functional
    when it is essential to the use or purpose of the device or
    when it affects the cost or quality of the device.” TrafFix
    Devices, Inc. v. Mktg. Displays, Inc., 
    532 U.S. 23
    , 33 (2001).
    The Supreme Court has explained that “[t]he function-
    ality doctrine prevents trademark law, which seeks to pro-
    mote competition by protecting a firm’s reputation, from
    instead inhibiting legitimate competition by allowing a
    producer to control a useful product feature.” Qualitex Co.
    v. Jacobson Prods. Co., 
    514 U.S. 159
    , 164 (1995). A mark
    is not registrable if the design described is functional, be-
    cause “[i]t is the province of patent law, not trademark law,
    to encourage invention by granting inventors a monopoly
    over new product designs or functions for a limited
    time.” 
    Id.
    “To support a functionality rejection in proceedings be-
    fore the Board, the PTO examining attorney must make a
    prima facie case of functionality, which if established must
    be rebutted by ‘competent evidence.’” In re Becton, Dickin-
    son & Co., 
    675 F.3d 1368
    , 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (quoting In
    re Teledyne Indus., Inc., 
    696 F.2d 968
    , 971 (Fed. Cir. 1982)).
    The relevant inquiry is whether the designs sought to be
    registered, each taken as a whole, are functional. 
    Id.
     (con-
    sideration of whether “an overall design is functional
    should be based on the superiority of the design as a whole,
    rather than on whether each design feature is ‘useful’ or
    the examining attorney’s finding that the marks fail to
    function as an indication of source. The Board declined to
    address this issue, finding it unnecessary to do so. We
    agree.
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    12                        IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    ‘serves a utilitarian purpose.’” (quoting Textron, Inc. v. Int’l
    Trade Comm’n, 
    753 F.2d 1019
    , 1026 (Fed. Cir. 1985)).
    To determine whether a particular design is functional,
    the Board considers the Morton-Norwich factors: (1) the ex-
    istence of a utility patent that discloses the utilitarian ad-
    vantages of the design sought to be registered;
    (2) advertising by the applicant that touts the utilitarian
    advantages of the design; (3) facts pertaining to the avail-
    ability of alternative designs; and (4) facts indicating that
    the design results from a comparatively simple or inexpen-
    sive method of manufacture. Valu Eng’g, 
    278 F.3d at
    1274
    (citing Morton-Norwich, 671 F.2d at 1340–41).
    Here, the Board identified multiple useful features pre-
    sent in the ’383 and ’412 boxes that combine to define box
    designs “dictated by the utilitarian purpose they serve.”
    Board Decision, 2019 BL 481341, at *5. These features in-
    clude, among other things: (1) the rectangular shape of the
    boxes, which allows for stacking and makes for easier ship-
    ping and storing; (2) the built-in handle in the ’412 appli-
    cation, which makes it easier to lift and carry the box;
    (3) the dimensions of the boxes and the size and placement
    of the payout tubes and payout holes, which are “dictated
    by the amount and size of the electric wire and cable placed
    in the box;” (4) the payout hole positioned near the center
    of the front panel and the payout tube extending from the
    payout hole, which aid in twist-free dispensing from the
    figure 8 coil; and (5) the panel shape and size dictated by
    the shape of the figure 8 wound coil of cable or wire. Id. at
    *4–5. The Board found that these “combined features” are
    “essential to the use or purpose of the article or affect[] the
    cost or quality of the article.” Id. at *5 (quoting Inwood
    Labs., Inc. v. Ives Labs., Inc., 
    456 U.S. 844
    , 850 n.10
    (1982)). As such, although Reelex argues that the Board
    improperly dissected the designs of the two trade dresses
    into discrete design features, review of the Board’s decision
    reveals that it analyzed the features as a whole and in com-
    bination.
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    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                          13
    The Board then analyzed the four Morton-Norwich fac-
    tors, and found that they, too, weighed in favor of a func-
    tionality finding. With respect to the first factor—the
    existence of a utility patent disclosing the utilitarian ad-
    vantages of the design—the Board engaged in a detailed
    analysis of the patents Reelex submitted, and found that
    they demonstrate the functionality of significant aspects of
    the box designs. As set forth above, the Board discussed
    the disclosures and preferred embodiments in the patents,
    which reveal that these boxes are designed to protect the
    figure 8-wound coils and to allow for kinkless and tangle-
    free unwinding of cable through the payout tube. The
    Board explained that “the specific size of the boxes and size
    and location of the payout holes is dictated by their func-
    tion to house and dispense electric wire and cable of specific
    sizes.” Board Decision, 2019 BL 481341, at *9. Likewise,
    the Board found that “[t]he size and nature of the cable dic-
    tates the size of the hole, the size of the coil dictates the
    dimensions of the box, including the fact that it is square
    on two sides and rectangular on other panels.” 
    Id.
     Sub-
    stantial evidence supports the Board’s analysis with re-
    spect to the first Morton-Norwich factor.
    Turning to the second Morton-Norwich factor, the
    Board found that statements in Reelex’s advertising ma-
    terials tout the utilitarian advantages of the box designs.
    For example, the Board looked to Reelex’s website, which
    alleges that its figure 8 winding and packaging system pro-
    vides better dispensing of the cable or wire. 
    Id.
     Reelex
    repeatedly touts that these box designs make payout easier
    and faster, without kinking or tangling, and that they are
    lower cost, easier to stack and transport, less prone to dam-
    age, and are recyclable.
    Reelex argues that the Board erred in its assessment
    of the advertising evidence because certain of the alleged
    utilitarian advantages—namely recyclability, stackability,
    and ease of shipping and storage—“apply to almost any
    cardboard box.” Appellant Br. 48. But the Board’s analysis
    Case: 20-1282    Document: 36     Page: 14    Filed: 11/05/2020
    14                       IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    was not so limited. Instead, the Board identified numerous
    statements promoting the utilitarian advantages of the
    boxes, including specific statements touting the benefits of
    the payout tube in the designs, which prevent kinks and
    twists in the cable. We therefore find substantial evidence
    supporting the Board’s assessment of Reelex’s advertising.
    Reelex’s primary argument on appeal is that the
    Board’s Morton-Norwich analysis was flawed because it ig-
    nored “competent evidence of alternative designs.” Appel-
    lant Br. 45. As the Board correctly noted, however, if
    functionality is found based on other considerations, “there
    is ‘no need to consider the availability of alternative de-
    signs, because the feature cannot be given trade dress pro-
    tection merely because there are alternative designs
    available.’” Becton, 
    675 F.3d at 1376
     (quoting Valu Eng’g,
    
    278 F.3d at 1276
    ); see also In re Bose Corp., 
    772 F.2d 866
    ,
    872 (Fed. Cir. 1985) (“That another type of enclosure would
    work equally as well does not negate that this enclosure
    was designed functionally to enhance or at least not detract
    from the rest of the system.”). “But that does not mean that
    the availability of alternative designs cannot be a legiti-
    mate source of evidence to determine whether a feature is
    functional in the first place.” Valu Eng’g, 
    278 F.3d at 1276
    .
    Here, despite Reelex’s suggestion otherwise, the Board
    expressly considered Reelex’s evidence of alternative de-
    signs, which consisted of a declaration from Frank Kotzur,
    a long-time employee of Reelex and named inventor on sev-
    eral of the patents Reelex identified as related to these de-
    signs. Board Decision, 2019 BL 481341, at *10–11. The
    Board declined to “give much weight” to Kotzur’s declara-
    tion, finding that he provided “no evidence to support his
    speculation,” and that several of his assertions were con-
    tradicted by other evidence. Id. at *10. For example, alt-
    hough Kotzur alleged that any box “large enough to house
    the coil” would work, Reelex’s own packaging guidelines
    state that the box should fit the coil “snugly.” Id. at *11.
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    IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS                          15
    And, although Kotzur stated that the shape of the package,
    as well as the shape, size, and location of the payout hole,
    were merely ornamental, the Board explained that the util-
    ity patents repeatedly refer to the utilitarian advantages of
    the two box designs. 4
    Accordingly, although Reelex contends that the Board
    “ignored” Kotzur’s declaration, it is clear that the Board ex-
    plicitly addressed it. The Board is entitled to assess credi-
    bility and has broad discretion to weigh the evidence
    presented. Real Foods Pty Ltd. v. Frito-Lay N. Am., Inc.,
    
    906 F.3d 965
    , 979–80 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (“The TTAB is enti-
    tled to weigh the evidence.”); see also Inwood Labs., 
    456 U.S. at 856
     (“Determining the weight and credibility of the
    evidence is the special province of the trier of fact.”). We
    find no error in the Board’s consideration of alternative de-
    signs, and we decline Reelex’s request to reweigh the evi-
    dence on appeal. Nor do we find any error in the Board’s
    conclusion that the boxes at issue are “simple, basic boxes
    that provide numerous utilitarian advantages for figure 8
    or otherwise wound coils of cable and wire designed for dis-
    pensing from the center of the coil. That means the boxes
    are functional, and [Reelex’s] competitors need not look for
    other possible alternative designs.” Board Decision, 2019
    BL 481341, at *11.
    4   The Board acknowledged that third parties some-
    times use spools of wire rather than figure 8 wound coils.
    And they sometimes use shrink-wrap or hard plastic pack-
    aging. But the Board noted that those alternatives “are
    different options with a different set of advantages and dis-
    advantages,” and that “only similar boxes designed for use
    with figure 8 wound or otherwise reel less coils are relevant
    alternatives to the claimed trade dress.” Board Decision,
    2019 BL 481341, at *11.
    Case: 20-1282   Document: 36     Page: 16    Filed: 11/05/2020
    16                      IN RE: REELEX PACKAGING SOLUTIONS
    On this record, we find substantial evidence supporting
    the Board’s factual determination that the ’383 and ’412
    box designs, each taken as a whole, are functional.
    CONCLUSION
    We have considered Reelex’s remaining arguments re-
    garding functionality and find them unpersuasive. Be-
    cause we find no legal error in the Board’s functionality
    analysis, and because substantial evidence supports the
    Board’s findings that Reelex’s box designs are functional,
    we affirm the Board’s final decision refusing registration.
    AFFIRMED