Diamond Resorts U.S. Collection Development, LLC v. Wesley
Financial Group, LLC, No. 3:20-CV-00251-DCLC-DCP, 2025 WL 1334625 (E.D. Tenn.
May 7, 2025)
Another timeshare case! Diamond alleged that defendants
engaged in “a deceptive timeshare cancellation business” that induces Diamond’s
timeshare owners to breach their contractual agreements with Diamond Resorts. It
sued for false advertising in violation of the Lanham Act, the Tennessee
Consumer Protection Act, and for the unauthorized practice of law. As trial
approached, Diamond told the court that it wouldn’t pursue legal relief, only an
injunction, disgorgement, attorneys’ fees, and costs, so that defendants
couldn’t get a jury (which, one infers, might be more sympathetic to defendants
because timeshares can be such nightmares). The court ruled that there was no
statutory or Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial in these circumstances.
“The right to a jury trial is guaranteed by the Seventh
Amendment,” which states that “[i]n Suits at common law, where the value in
controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be
preserved.” Common law means “suits in which legal rights were to be
ascertained and determined,” and not suits in which “equitable rights alone
were recognized, and equitable remedies were administered.” Making this
distinction requires a court to compare the action at bar to “18th-century
actions brought in the courts of England prior to the merger of the courts of
law and equity,” because that is an excellent way to run a system. “[A]ctions
that are analogous to 18th-century cases tried in courts of equity or admiralty
do not require a jury trial.” If history doesn’t provide an answer, courts “look
to precedent and functional considerations.” The inquiry also requires the
court to “examine the remedy sought and determine whether it is equitable in
nature.” “Th[is] second inquiry is the more important” of the two. Because of
the value of a jury trial, a court “indulge[s] every reasonable presumption” in
favor of finding a right to a jury trial.
Nonetheless, there was no statutory right to a jury trial in
a Lanham Act case. “Congress has shown that it knows how to provide litigants
with a right to a jury trial when it wants to.”
In Osborn v. Griffin, 865 F.3d 417 (6th Cir. 2017), the
Sixth Circuit observed that “in 18th century chancery courts, what [modern-day
courts] now call disgorgement was embodied in the remedies of ‘accounting,
constructive trust, and restitution,’ ” which “were almost universally
recognized as being within the ambit of courts of equity.” Disgorgement, that
is, was equitable.
More specifically, how did England’s 18th-century courts treat
actions for trademark-related disputes when parties sought disgorgement as a
remedy in those actions? The Sixth Circuit has recognized that, “prior to
statutory protection for trademarks,” English and American courts “treated the
damages portion of such suits as an equitable action in the nature of an
accounting.” Consistent with this history, the Lanham Act allows for
disgorgement “subject to the principles of equity” for claims of false advertising
under § 1125(a).
True, the Sixth Circuit spoke about trademark cases, not
false advertising. But Lexmark says that “the Lanham Act treats false
advertising as a form of unfair competition,” and, the court here reasoned, “unfair
competition is analogous to trademark infringement.” Analogy was good enough
here.
Likewise, the disgorgement remedy was equitable in nature,
even when the disgorgement was sought to redress false advertising rather than
trademark infringement. What about an earlier Sixth Circuit statement that,
“[d]espite this pervasive equity background [in trademark actions], the damages
or accounting aspect of trademark infringement actions are considered legal
actions for purposes of the jury trial clause of the Seventh Amendment.” The
Sixth Circuit relied on Dairy Queen, Inc. v. Wood, 369 U.S. 469 (1962), which held
that “a plaintiff, by asking in his complaint for an equitable accounting for
trademark infringement, could not deprive the defendant of a jury trial on
contract claims subsumed within the accounting.” “In short, Dairy Queen
was an action for compensatory damages.”
But plaintiffs here disavowed seeking compensatory damages.
“In Dairy Queen, the Supreme Court was itself skeptical of Dairy Queen’s
claim because it had shades of a breach-of-contract claim and a
trademark-infringement claim all in one, but the Supreme Court declined to
resolve the ‘ambiguity’ in this claim because it was certain that Dairy Queen’s
request for a ‘money judgment’ was “wholly legal in its nature however the
complaint [was] construed.’” Here, disgorgement would only require proof of
defendant’s sales, meaning that “evidence of compensatory damages arising from
any breach of contract will be off the table at trial.” But, given that the
theory here was that defendants induced Diamond Resorts’s timeshare owners to
breach their contracts with Diamond Resorts, the court would watch carefully to
prevent plaintiffs from using theories of breach of contract to arrive at lost
profits; if they did so, defendants would be entitled to a jury trial.
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