Solar Sun Rings, Inc. v. Secard Pools, 2016 WL 6138294, No.
EDCV14-2417 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 20, 2016)
Illustrating the principle that those who sue competitors should be sure to have their own house (or in this case, pool) in order: The parties compete in the market for heated pool covers. SSR
sued Secard for trademark infringement, leading to false advertising/unfair
competition counterclaims based on SSR’s allegedly false statements about the
effect of “mini magnets” used on its products and the water and chemical
savings caused by its products. The “coverage calculator” on SSR’s website also
allegedly deceived consumers into thinking that choosing SSR’s products would
be cost-effective because it falsely advised consumers to purchase less product
than they would eventually need to heat their pools.
The court found that, even assuming falsity, there were
disputed issues about materiality and harm. Secard’s expert report opined that
3.33% of SSR customers were deceived by SSR’s allegedly false statements and would
have purchased Secard’s competing product had the false statements not been
made. Although Downey, the expert, had 35 years’ experience in the swimming
pool industry, he had no other expertise about consumer behavior and related
fields. Still, that was okay because he had relevant experience catering to the
preferences of pool product consumers. He conducted discussions with “swimming
pool industry leaders” and estimated that roughly twelve percent of consumers
are familiar with SSR’s product, while roughly one percent of consumers were
familiar with Secard’s product. He then conducted phone and personal
conversations with “leaders in the swimming pool industry, people who work in
swimming pool stores, mass distributors and manufacturers, industry legal
counsel, pool service technicians, pool builders, buying groups and pool
remodeling companies.” He estimated that roughly 40% of consumers who bought
from SSR had been diverted from competing products, such as Secard’s, yielding
3.3% diversion. Survey evidence “should ordinarily be found sufficiently
reliable under Daubert” because “unlike
novel scientific theories, a jury should be able to determine whether asserted
technical deficiencies undermine a survey’s probative value.” This survey might
be “technically lacking,” given that “his sample size is limited and it is not
entirely clear how he derives his estimates from the data he provides,” but the
court declined to exclude it.
Solar Sun Rings, Inc. v. Secard Pools, No. EDCV14-2417, 2016
WL 6139615 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 13, 2016)
This is a trademark ruling in the same case. SSR began
selling passive solar heating products for pools and spas under the name “Solar
Sun Rings” in 2003. Secard has been selling pool products since 1958. In 2011, Secard’s
CEO created Solar Sun Squares, which he designed to compete with Solar Sun
Rings, and registered solarsunsquares.com. In 2013, SSR caught wind of Secard’s
intent and attempted to register a trademark for “Solar Sun Square,” then sent
Secard a C&D that prompted Secard to change the name of Solar Sun Squares
to “Solar Heat Squares.” SSR then began selling Solar Sun Squares the month
after Solar Heat Squares launched in 2014.
Solar Sun Rings |
Solar Heat Squares |
Solar Sun Squares |
Secard argued that, as the senior user of Solar Heat
Squares, it couldn’t infringe on Solar Sun Squares. However, SSR argued that it
should be able to tack its rights and claim priority. This is usually a matter
for a jury. Given that Solar Sun Rings and Solar Sun Squares were written in
the same font and the same color, on the same sized package, over the same four
images encased in the shape described in the mark, and that the products were
identical except for shape, a jury could find that the marks had the same
connotation. Plus, a jury could find that the “aural appearance” of the marks –
“three short, alliterative words (two of which are the same word) – evoke the
same mental reaction.” (Of course, to the extent that tacking occurs on the
basis of visual elements of the mark, the similarity inquiry will also have to
take visual elements into account.)
There was also enough evidence to go to the jury on likely
confusion, given the similarity of the products and the purchasers. The court
gave a very broad reading to the intent factor, ruling that “[a] jury could
reasonably infer that Secard intended to confuse consumers by improving upon
Plaintiff’s pre-existing product with a similarly-named product.”
However, Secard got out of the trade dress infringement
claim. SSR argued that its infringed trade dress was its color scheme, characterized
by “a sequence of several colors (red, yellow and orange) depicted against the
distinct blue backdrop of SSR’s products, and displayed in a highly distinct
dot-matrix style of color printing and color shading.” SSR alleged that Secard’s
use of a sun design bolstered its infringement claim. But “Secard was already
using the allegedly infringing color scheme along with an image of a sun in
1993, well before Plaintiff went into business in 2003.” Without priority of
use, SSR couldn’t win. “To hold otherwise would allow a junior user to employ
litigation as a means of forcing a senior user to abandon a trade dress which
predates the junior user’s existence.” [Interesting conceptual question: if the
trade dress was in use but hadn’t developed secondary meaning, and the junior
user then came along and developed secondary meaning, what then? Of course, the
junior user’s ability to develop secondary meaning would itself suggest lack of
confusion with the existing trade dress, whether or not that prior trade dress
could be the foundation of any affirmative rights.]
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