Hawaii Foodservice Alliance, LLC v. Meadow Gold Dairies Hawaii, LLC, --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2024 WL 2834159, No. 21-00460 LEK-WRP (D. Hawai’I Jun. 4, 2024)
Interesting contributory liability issue in its interaction
with laches. At the core, plaintiff alleged that defendant MGDH’s use of
phrasing and imagery suggesting that Meadow Gold brand products are sourced in
Hawai’i was misleading and deceptive because Meadow Gold products contain milk
and other products, such as whipping cream, imported from the continental
United States. The other defendants, Hollandia, Heritage, and Saputo, supplied products
to MGDH. The operative claims were false designation of origin/false
advertising in violation of the Lanham Act and coordinate state-law claims.
The court previously granted partial summary judgment to
MGDH for all claims based on “Hawai’i-Themed Images and Phrases” (e.g., a Hawai’ian
themed mascot and the tagline “Hawaii’s Dairy” as well as “Made with Aloha”) on
laches grounds, although the court denied summary judgment for claims based on
the use of text that represents that Meadow Gold products are manufactured
fresh in Hawai’i:
In 1897 seven O‘ahu dairy farms
united as the Dairymen’s Association, Ltd., to manufacture fresh milk for the
community. Through the support of Hawai‘i families, we grew to become Meadow
Gold Dairies in 1959. Today we operate statewide and continue to manufacture
fresh milk, dairy, juice and nectar products in Hawai‘i. Generations of loyal
Island families enable us to maintain our tradition of giving back to the
communities we serve.
The court previously denied the supplier defendants’ request
for summary judgment on the grounds that the laches defense was personal to
MGDH. Now, it essentially reverses that holding for purposes of contributory
liability. The court accepted the suppliers’ argument that they couldn’t have “‘contribute[d]’
to a Lanham Act violation that never occurred.” This Court agrees. [But that’s
not what laches means: a violation (may have) occurred, but it is no longer
redressable. Had they sued in time, it would have been found to be a
violation.]
But the court applied a plaintiff-focused rule:
“The affirmative defense of laches
‘is an equitable time limitation on a party’s right to bring suit, which is
derived from the maxim that those who sleep on their rights, lose them.’ ”
Plaintiff did not merely lose the ability to obtain a remedy against MGDH for
its use of the Hawai’i-Themed Images and Phrases, Plaintiff lost any rights it
may have had under the Lanham Act regarding the use of the Hawai’i-Themed
Images and Phrases.
Permitting plaintiff to prove contributory liability by
establishing a primary violation by MGDH would allow plaintiff to avoid the “effect”
of laches.
In addition, Hawai’i-themed images and phrases suggested a
connection to the state, but didn’t make a representation about the origin
of the milk. Thus, plaintiff couldn’t show falsity for false designation of
origin/false advertising. (For the same reasons, it couldn’t show a violation
of the state law prohibition on unfair methods of competition from those
words/images.)
Remaining claims against suppliers (only two of whom could
have been held to make the remaining accused claims): They argued that a
defendant has to falsely designate origin of their own goods,
contrasting the language of Section 1125(a)(1)(A) (prohibiting false
designation of origin that “is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake,
or to deceive as to ... the origin ... of his or her goods”), with that of
Section 1125(a)(1)(B) (covering misrepresentations of “the nature,
characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin of his or her or another
person’s goods ....”). AvePoint, Inc. v. Power Tools, Inc., 981 F. Supp. 2d 496
(W.D. Va. 2013), held that §1125(a)(1)(A), “by its plain terms, does not extend
to misrepresentations regarding the geographic origin of another person’s goods
...,”
Even if that was so, there was at least a genuine issue of
material fact as to whether the products that the remaining supplier defendants
provided to MGDH were their own goods.
The court described the accused text as “a trademark of
MGDH,” which seems dubious (it doesn’t seem like the kind of thing that
functions as a mark, coming within a block of text as it does). But the larger
point—in preparing the packaging for the dairy products they sold to MDGH, the
suppliers engaged in “bona fide” use of the text—seems right regardless of
whether it was a trademark use. If the products had been defective, we’d
certainly say they were the supplier’s products even if they were also the
licensor’s products.
Damage: The supplier defendants argued that the evidence
showed that, after MGDH took over, plaintiff “did not lose any customers, and
retained its 65% market share” during the period it used the relevant text. But
that didn’t prove it couldn’t have had more. Likewise, that its sales didn’t
increase after the text was removed didn’t indicate that MGDH didn’t lose
potential profits as compared to a world in which the text was never used. Also,
plaintiff provided a damages expert; the motion to exclude was the proper forum
for dealing with the expert.
Direct liability for § 1125(a)(1)(B) false advertising requires
that an entity “made ‘the specific, false statement[ ] at issue in the
litigation.” This could be shown if they controlled or were involved in
creating the statement on the labels. The suppliers argued that this was all MGDH’s
doing, and that they only reviewed for compliance with FDA regulations, correct
spelling, etc. Witnesses said things like: “when they give us their graphics
with their brand equity on it, we are not checking and validating that because
it’s not ours to do anything with.”
But plaintiff submitted evidence that supplier-defendant Saputo
suggested to MGDH that the accused text be removed, which suggestion was
followed, creating a genuine issue of material fact on control. By contrast,
supplier-defendant Heritage approved label proofs that included the accused
text, but there was no evidence of control over the use of that text in
particular, so the direct liability claim against it failed.
Contributory liability also involved contested factual
issues. The court adopted the Eleventh Circuit standard: “[f]irst, the
plaintiff must show that a third party in fact directly engaged in false
advertising that injured the plaintiff. Second, the plaintiff must allege that
the defendant contributed to that conduct either by knowingly inducing or
causing the conduct, or by materially participating in it.” The second prong
requires a plaintiff to “allege that the defendant actively and materially
furthered the unlawful conduct — either by inducing it, causing it, or in some
other way working to bring it about.”
The court treated the state law claims similarly.
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