A great example of why trademark owners are nervous about facing eBay.
Wells Fargo and Co. v. ABD Insurance and Financial Services,
Inc., 2014 WL 4312021, No. C 12–3856 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 28, 2014)
The district court previously
denied Wells Fargo’s motion for preliminary injunction against ABD (since
Wells Fargo absorbed another entity previously known as ABD, and then a bunch
of former-ABD employees left to form new ABD) on the ground that Wells Fargo had
probably abandoned the mark. The
Ninth Circuit reversed, finding that Wells Fargo continued to use the mark
in customer presentations and solicitations.
Wells Fargo renewed its motion on remand, and this time the district
court found likely success on the merits but no irreparable harm as per Herb Reed.
First, some housekeeping: the court denied a motion to
exclude the report of one of ABD’s experts, who conducted a survey. Wells Fargo made a number of meritorious
arguments, the key one being that the survey improperly focused on the
likelihood of confusion between the “ABD” brand and the “Wells Fargo” brand,
instead of focusing on the likelihood of confusion between the two different
uses of the “ABD” mark—one by ABD, and one by Wells Fargo. Plus, ABD didn’t adequately
establish that the survey participants were, as claimed, “corporate executives
that purchase or have influence over the purchase of corporate insurance or
employee benefits plans for their company.” The survey expert apparently “relied
on unverified self-reports from the participants regarding their role in
purchasing corporate insurance or benefit plans, and given that survey
participants were offered certain incentives for participating, the court finds
reason to doubt the veracity of those self-reports.” However, this went to weight rather than to
admissibility.
Turning to the renewed motion for preliminary injunction,
the court first found that the Ninth Circuit’s ruling on abandonment was
dispositive, because it had found that “Wells Fargo continued its bona fide use
of the mark in the ordinary course of business,” “most notably in customer
presentations and solicitations.” This was in essence a finding of fact, and, because
even a “single instance of use is sufficient against a claim of abandonment of
a mark if such use is made in good faith,” the Ninth Circuit’s finding precluded
an abandonment defense. [Only at the preliminary injunction stage? A jury
usually finds facts. Or did the Ninth Circuit grant summary judgment on this
point?]
Likely confusion: the ABD mark was conceptually strong and
had “a ton of brand equity,” per the ABD defendants themselves. While Wells Fargo did very little to maintain
that, failing to promote the brand and merging the ABD company into Wells
Fargo, “that non-maintenance of the mark did not completely deteriorate its
commercial strength.” Plus, the parties
competed to offer the same services, and the similarity was high taking as the
comparison “the mark of the ABD company purchased by Wells Fargo, and the mark
used by the ABD defendants.” Similar
marketing channels also favored Wells Fargo, though the defendants contested
the weight to be given to this.
However, “outside of the period immediately following ABD’s
launch, Wells Fargo has failed to show any examples of confusion among the
consumers of the insurance products both companies provide.” Wells Fargo argued
that a March 8, 2014 email to defendants from a “potential client” asking “I am
curious—are you part of the old ABD that merged with Wells or Woodruf—I can’t
remember and then exited[?]” ABD argued
that this was from an accounting consultant, not a client (and anyway, it
evinces an ability to make a distinction, not confusion). Wells Fargo also pointed to an incident in
June 2014, when “an insurer providing the workers’ compensation coverage for
one of Wells Fargo’s accounts refused to provide loss information to Wells
Fargo because the insurer’s records listed ABD as the broker of record.” But
this wasn’t consumer confusion either.
The Ninth Circuit had reversed in part because “a motion for
preliminary injunction normally occurs early in litigation,” and “at that point
parties rarely have amassed significant evidence of actual confusion.” But this
was an atypical case, including its pendency for over two years and the fact
that Wells Fargo “issued subpoenas to over 150 of the ABD defendants’ clients,
resulting in over 28,000 documents produced through discovery.” Wells Fargo had ample opportunity to find
confusion; given that all confusion occurred in July-August 2012 and that ABD
took measures to remedy it, the court found that the actual confusion factor
favored ABD.
But that’s just one of the factors. The degree of care also favored ABD: “The
evidence shows that defendants’ customers are highly sophisticated, and made
purchasing decisions based on their relationships with individual brokers, not
based solely on the name ‘ABD.’” For example, when a Wells Fargo customer (a VP
at Pixar) learned that a Wells Fargo broker left to join a new company, she
sent an unsolicited email to his personal email address, explaining that she
had learned of his departure and would “love to talk with [him] to hear about
the new organization” and his “interest in remaining a consultant to Pixar.” She
made clear that Pixar “value[d]” him and another broker who left to join ABD
“much more as individuals than as Wells Fargo employees.” Defendants provided declarations from two
other customers explaining that they moved their business to ABD based on the
individuals involved, not on the name.
This factor favored defendants.
However, intent favored Wells Fargo, in that ABD “chose the
mark to signal some sort of link with the original ABD company.” Likely
expansion of product lines is a factor designed to apply when there’s not
already direct competition; it was neutral.
The court found that Wells Fargo had shown likely confusion
despite the lack of actual confusion and the high degree of care exercised by
purchasers. “[T]he fact that the marks
and the goods are identical—not just similar—combined with defendants’ intent
in selecting the mark, tip the balance towards Wells Fargo.”
Because of this finding, the court didn’t spend much time on
Wells Fargo’s false affiliation claim (which the court said was “similar to a
trademark infringement claim, but does not require proof of a valid trademark,”
language that I’m sure will never come back to haunt legitimate competition). As for false advertising, the court assumed
that ABD’s statements about the “relaunch” of ABD were false statements of
fact. The court didn’t find any actual
deception, but given its finding of likely confusion it also found “a tendency
to deceive.” But Wells Fargo provided no evidence of materiality, given the
sophistication of the customers and their reliance on relationships with
individual brokers. Thus, Wells Fargo didn’t show likely success on the merits
of its false advertising claim. (Another reason we need materiality for
trademark.)
But it wasn’t over.
In its order remanding the case, the court of appeals quoted Herb Reed, holding that “[e]vidence of
loss of control over business reputation and damage to goodwill could
constitute irreparable harm.” So, what constitutes “evidence”? The Herb
Reed court found that the district court improperly relied on “unsupported
and conclusory statements regarding harm” in granting the injunction, and that
its analysis was “cursory and conclusory, rather than being grounded in any
evidence or showing.” While evidence of loss of control over
reputation and damage to goodwill could be enough, the district court’s ruling
there was “grounded in platitudes rather than evidence.” The closest evidence in the record was “an
email from a potential customer complaining to [defendant’s] booking agent that
the customer wanted Herb Reed’s band rather than another tribute band.” But the
Ninth Circuit found that such evidence “simply underscores customer confusion,
not irreparable harm.”
Here, Wells Fargo’s arguments were the same as those
rejected in Herb Reed. It submitted a declaration from Krista Holt
purporting to provide evidence of irreparable harm. That declaration stated that “it would be
difficult to fully capture the amount of economic damages caused by the
defendants in this case.” It further stated that “[b]y attempting to subvert
the ABD brand for its own purposes, the defendants are diminishing the value
that this brand conveys to Wells Fargo.” Moreover, the declaration continued,
“[t]he association Wells Fargo forged with this valuable mark has been
undermined by the existence of a competing company with the same name and will
likely cause severe and irreversible damage to the consumer perception of the
ABD mark and, by extension, to Wells Fargo.” ABD’s description of itself as the
reincarnation of the former ABD, Holt said, “devalues the Wells Fargo ABD mark
and makes it seem inauthentic.” And Holt said that defendants’ use of the ABD
name “does not just attempt to associate the defendants with the valuable ABD
brand, but taints Wells Fargo’s association with the mark.” “Through promoting
itself as the ‘authentic’ ABD, the defendants have disassociated the mark from
its rightful owner, which directly diminishes the trademark’s value to Wells
Fargo.” Finally, the declaration says, “defendants weakened the association of
the [ABD] mark to Wells Fargo, diminishing the value of the brand and making it
less instructive to potential clients who rely on Wells Fargo’s reputation for
quality service.”
My reaction: that’s a lot of sentences that say the same
thing. The court agreed. First, an expert witness can’t give a legal
conclusion, so Holt’s opinion on the ultimate issue of irreparable harm was inadmissible. The rest of her statements about harm to
Wells Fargo’s brand, reputation, and goodwill were the type of “unsupported and
conclusory statements regarding harm” rejected in Herb Reed. Saying without evidence that ABD’s actions have
“diminished,” “undermined,” “devalue[d],” and “taint[ed]” Wells Fargo’s association
with the ABD brand was not enough:
In order to establish harm to its
reputation or its goodwill, Wells Fargo must do more than simply submit a
declaration insisting that its reputation and goodwill have been harmed. Ms.
Holt’s assertions would apply in any case where a trademark holder had
established a likelihood of success on a claim of infringement, and thus, do
not constitute the type of evidence required by Herb Reed. The Herb Reed court
acknowledged that it may be difficult for parties to obtain such evidence at
the preliminary injunction stage of the case, which is why it made clear that
“the rules of evidence do not apply strictly to preliminary injunction
proceedings.” However, even under this relaxed evidentiary burden, Wells Fargo
offers no evidence of any harm to its reputation, brand, or goodwill, and
instead offers only “platitudes” of the type rejected in Herb Reed.
Herb Reed
specifically rejected a presumption of irreparable harm based on a strong case
of infringement. But “[i]f the court
were to accept Wells Fargo’s conclusory assertions of harm to its reputation
and goodwill, it would effectively re-insert that now-rejected presumption of
irreparable harm. A plaintiff in a trademark infringement case cannot obtain an
injunction simply by showing a likelihood of success on the merits of its
claim, and then asserting (without evidence) that the alleged infringement ‘devalues’
and ‘taints’ the mark.” Such a process
would collapse likely success and irreparable harm, and would have the “practical
effect” of resurrecting the presumption of irreparable harm.
Wells Fargo said it wasn’t seeking an automatic finding of
irreparable harm, but proved unable to explain why its arguments wouldn’t always
apply any time a plaintiff established likely confusion. The court presented counsel with the
proposition that, if there’s likely confusion, the trademark owner has “lost
control” of the mark, and asked whether proof of lost control was sufficient to
establish damage to goodwill. Wells
Fargo’s counsel said yes. Herb Reed
requires more: “evidence that the
loss of control is likely to cause harm to the trademark holder” (emphasis
added).
Wells Fargo also argued that it had lost “scores of customers representing millions of
dollars in lost revenue,” but didn’t show any connection between that lost
business and defendants’ use of the ABD name. Defendants’ submissions showed
customers who understood quite well what had happened—people who used to work
for Wells Fargo moved to ABD. This wasn’t
dispositive; if Wells Fargo had found even one customer who had switched under the mistaken impression
that ABD was associated with Wells Fargo (a weird proposition for an actual switch of an ongoing relationship), that
would show harm even if many other customers weren’t confused. But 150 subpoenas later, Wells Fargo hadn’t
come up with such evidence. Irreparable
harm may be hard to show, but that doesn’t relieve Wells Fargo entirely of its
burden to do so. Anyway, expert
testimony could quantify money damages, making them reparable.
Holt’s declaration also said that ABD’s use of the mark
contributed to the loss of its brokers, causing a loss of Wells Fargo’s
investment in its staff and forcing it to hire new brokers. But Wells Fargo presented no evidence that
ABD’s use of the ABD mark caused the brokers to leave Wells Fargo. Such costs
were compensable by money damages anyway.
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