Topek, LLC v. W. H. Silverstein, Inc.
Filing
69
ORDER denying 22 Silverstein's Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings; denying 31 Silverstein's Motion for Preliminary Injunction; granting 32 Topek's Motion to Amend the First Amended Complaint; and denying 33 Silverstein's Motion for Summary Judgment on Count 8 of the Second Amended Complaint. So Ordered by Judge Steven J. McAuliffe.(lat)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Topek, LLC,
Plaintiff
v.
Case No. 12-cv-494-SM
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 060
W.H. Silverstein, Inc.,
Defendant
O R D E R
Topek, LLC, brings this action against W.H. Silverstein,
Inc. for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and false
designation of origin under the Lanham Act.
It also brings state
common law and statutory claims for unfair competition and
deceptive trade practices, over which it asks the court to
exercise supplemental jurisdiction.
It seeks compensatory
damages, as well as declaratory and injunctive relief.
In
response, Silverstein has filed counterclaims for false
advertising under the Lanham Act and unfair competition under New
Hampshire’s Consumer Protection Act.
Pending before the court are the following motions: Topek’s
Motion to Amend the First Amended Complaint (document no. 32);
Silverstein’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings as to
Previously Settled or Determined Claims (document no. 22);
Silverstein’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (document no.
33); and Silverstein’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction
(document no. 31).
As a preliminary matter, the court addresses Topek’s motion
to amend its complaint.
Such motions are liberally granted in
the absence of undue prejudice to opposing parties, unless they
are likely to result in undue delay or are the product of bad
faith.
See generally Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a).
Silverstein’s
objection fails to identify grounds warranting denial of Topek’s
motion.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, as well as those
set forth in Topek’s memoranda (document nos. 32 and 55), the
motion to amend the amended complaint is granted.
Standard of Review
A motion for judgment on the pleadings is subject to the
same standard of review applicable to a motion to dismiss under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
See Portugues-Santana
v. Rekomdiv Int’l, Inc., 725 F.3d 17, 25 (1st Cir. 2013).
Accordingly, the court must accept as true all well-pleaded facts
in Topek’s complaint and indulge all reasonable inferences in
Topek’s favor.
2010).
See SEC v. Tambone, 597 F.3d 436, 441 (1st Cir.
To survive Silverstein’s motion, the complaint must
allege each of the essential elements of a viable cause of action
and “contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to
2
state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”
Ashcroft
v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (citation and internal
punctuation omitted).
The ground on which Silverstein moves for judgment on the
pleadings - res judicata - is an affirmative defense.
R. Civ. P. 8(c)(1).
See Fed.
And, as this court (Laplante, J.) recently
noted:
To grant a motion for judgment on the pleadings based
on an affirmative defense, the facts establishing that
defense must: (1) be definitively ascertainable from
the complaint and other allowable sources of
information, and (2) suffice to establish the
affirmative defense with certitude. In ruling on such
a motion, the court may consider not only the complaint
itself, but also documents incorporated by reference
into the complaint, matters of public record, and facts
susceptible to judicial notice. This includes
documents from prior state court adjudications.
Bosonetto v. Town of Richmond, 2013 WL 2404023, 2013 DNH 080
(D.N.H. May 31, 2013) (citations and internal punctuation
omitted).
Background
Accepting the allegations in Topek’s Second Amended
Complaint (document no. 32-1) as true, the relevant facts are as
follows.
Yankee Barn Homes (“Yankee”) is a nationally-recognized
builder of custom-designed post and beam homes.
3
It was founded
in Massachusetts in 1969 and, in 1972, it relocated to Grantham,
New Hampshire.
In 2011, it ran into financial difficulty and was
unable to pay its creditors, including its primary lender:
Woodsville Guaranty Savings Bank (the “Bank”).
At the time,
Yankee owed the Bank approximately $2 million.
The Bank’s loans
to Yankee were secured by liens on, and security interests in,
virtually all of Yankee’s assets, including its intellectual
property, trade names, design templates, and goodwill.
The Bank
also held mortgage deeds to Yankee’s real property.
Shortly after it began experiencing financial problems,
Yankee was contacted by Silverstein, which had recently purchased
another local company that specializes in the construction of
timber frame homes.
In March of 2011, Yankee and Silverstein
signed a “letter of intent,” essentially ceding control of Yankee
to Silverstein.
But, when the Bank learned of the parties’
proposal, it refused to approve it (as, apparently, was its right
under the security instruments signed by Yankee).
Nevertheless,
Yankee and Silverstein moved ahead with their “deal” and entered
into an “Asset Purchase Agreement.”
Silverstein then began
integrating its operations with those of Yankee and began holding
itself out to the public as Yankee Barn Homes.
4
The Bank was not amused.
Despite the Bank’s efforts to
obtain the return of what it considered misappropriated assets,
Silverstein continued to represent that it had purchased Yankee
and all of its assets.
Because the Bank believed Silverstein’s
actions were impairing the value of its security, it filed suit
against Silverstein in state court.
Then, in September of 2011,
Yankee appears to have recognized that it could not follow
through on its “deal” with Silverstein absent Bank approval.
Accordingly, Yankee conveyed to the Bank all (or virtually all)
of its assets.
See Bill of Sale from Yankee to the Bank
(document no. 32-9).
Two days later, the Bank conveyed those
same assets - including all of Yankee’s general intangibles such
as “copyrights, trademarks, and trade names, including the name
Yankee Barn Homes,” as well as its existing inventory, machinery,
manufacturing equipment, customer lists, computer records, phone
numbers, and ICC certifications - to Topek.
See Bill of Sale
from the Bank to Topek (document no. 32-3).
And, shortly
thereafter, Topek re-opened Yankee’s Grantham facility and
rehired many of Yankee’s former employees.
By November of 2011, Topek concluded that despite a state
court order directing Silverstein to stop doing so, Silverstein
continued to exercise (or attempt to exercise) control over
former assets of Yankee and, in so doing, was interfering with
5
Topek’s ownership of those assets.
Accordingly, Topek intervened
in ongoing state court suits brought by the Bank against
Silverstein (collectively, the “280 Litigation”).
Subsequently, as part of that ongoing 280 Litigation, the
state court held two days of evidentiary hearings on Topek’s
motion for preliminary injunction.
The court then made the
following factual findings:
On September 28, 2011, Yankee Barn Homes (“YBH”)
conveyed all of its real and personal property to
Woodsville Guaranty Savings Bank (“the Bank”).
Thereafter, on September 30, 2011, the Bank conveyed
all former YBH fixed assets to Topek. Such fixed
assets include inventory, machinery and equipment, and
general intangibles. While the parties dispute whether
certain assets constitute former YBH property, the
parties agree for purposes of this motion that the Bank
sold to Topek any interest it held in YBH fixed assets.
Since September 2011, Topek has managed the Yankee Barn
Homes’s manufacturing facility in Grantham, N.H. Topek
alleges, and the Court finds, that notwithstanding the
sale of YBH assets to Topek, [Silverstein] has retained
the phone numbers from the former Yankee Barn Homes and
has represented itself to outside parties as “Yankee
Barn Homes.” Topek also claims, and the Court finds,
that [Silverstein] has retained YBH property, has used
YBH’s ICC certifications, and has recently interfered
with Topek’s Facebook page by claiming copyright
infringement of photos used by Topek of Yankee Barn
Homes taken by Shane Godfrey. On November 21, 2011,
Topek intervened in the actions pending between the
Bank and WHS, Inc., and filed the present petition.
Order on Intervenor’s Petition for Preliminary Injunction
(document no. 1-1) at 2 (citations and internal punctuation
6
omitted).
Turning to Topek’s request for injunctive relief, the
court entered the following findings:
The Court finds that Topek has demonstrated it is
entitled to injunctive relief. First, Topek has
demonstrated it will suffer irreparable harm if the
injunction is not issued. Topek has offered evidence,
unrebutted by [Silverstein], that [Silverstein] has
used YBH phone numbers to “promote continuity” between
YBH and [Silverstein]. Topek has also offered
evidence, again unrebutted by [Silverstein], that
[Silverstein] has retained certain YBH assets, used YBH
ICC certifications, and claimed exclusive copyrights of
YBH photos. The public is likely to confuse Topek the owner of YBH assets - with [Silverstein], its
competitor. The cumulative effect of [Silverstein’s]
conduct, then, is a loss of potential business to
Topek. The Court finds that this loss constitutes
irreparable harm.
Id. at 4.
The court then enjoined Silverstein “from (A)
representing to anyone that [Silverstein] has purchased Yankee
Barn Homes or has any authority to act on behalf of Yankee Barn
Homes; and (B) from using or exerting any control over property
owned by Yankee Barn Homes, including, but not limited to, the
Yankee Barn Home website.”
Order of Grafton County Superior
Court (Jan. 5, 2012) (document no. 32-6).
The court also ordered
Silverstein to turn over to Topek all of Yankee’s property then
in its possession, including “customer lists, computer programs,
prints/plans or drawings.”
Four days later Silverstein registered, with the State of
New Hampshire, a new company named “Yankee Post & Beam” - a name
7
Topek claims is deceptively similar to Yankee Barn Homes.
Silverstein also began operating a website that, according to
Topek, was a virtual copy of the Yankee website (albeit with a
different URL).
Eventually, after being found in contempt of an earlier
court order and being required to pay nearly $30,000 in costs and
attorney’s fees to the Bank, Silverstein settled the Bank’s
claims against it.
But, Topek’s claims against Silverstein
remained unresolved.
Topek then learned that Silverstein had
registered trademarks with the United States Patent and Trademark
Office, as well as the New Hampshire Secretary of State, that
Topek believed were confusingly similar to those it purchased
from Yankee.
Accordingly, it sought to amend its complaint in
the pending state court action against Silverstein to include
trademark infringement and unfair competition claims under both
state and federal law.
When that motion to amend was denied,
Topek filed a separate state court action against Silverstein
advancing those claims (the “440 Litigation”).
Shortly thereafter, Silverstein and Topek settled their
disputes in the underlying 280 Litigation.
Importantly, their
settlement agreement specifically provided that:
8
9.
This settlement agreement does not affect the
parties’ claims in Topek, LLC v. W.H.
Silverstein, Inc., No. 215-2013-cv-440
pending in this court [i.e., the 440
Litigation].
10.
All other claims in this case, except as set
forth above, shall be dismissed with
prejudice.
Settlement Stipulation (document no. 15-4) (emphasis supplied).
Two days later, Silverstein removed the 440 Litigation to this
court.
Silverstein now claims that, despite language in the
settlement agreement seemingly to the contrary, that agreement
(along with the state court’s order denying Topek’s request to
amend its complaint in the 280 Litigation) bars the majority of
claims Topek seeks to pursue in this case.1
Discussion
I.
Silverstein’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings.
Silverstein moves for judgment on the pleadings as to counts
one through seven of the Second Amended Complaint, asserting that
those claims are barred by the doctrine of res judicata and the
rule against so-called “claim splitting.”
Alternatively, it
argues that the court should decline to exercise jurisdiction
1
In its Second Amended Complaint, Topek dropped claims
relating to Silverstein’s alleged improper website optimization,
as well as a claim that Silverstein violated various state court
orders. Accordingly, the court need not address whether those
claims would have been precluded by the parties’ settlement
agreement in the 280 Litigation.
9
over Topek’s trademark infringement claims (or, at a minimum,
stay this proceeding) because similar claims are already pending
before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (“TTAB”).
Under New Hampshire law, the doctrine of res judicata
precludes the relitigation of:
matters actually decided, and matters that could have
been litigated, in an earlier action between the same
parties for the same cause of action. For the doctrine
to apply, three elements must be met: (1) the parties
must be the same or in privity with one another; (2)
the same cause of action must be before the court in
both instances; and (3) a final judgment on the merits
must have been rendered in the first action.
Brooks v. Trustees of Dartmouth College, 161 N.H. 685, 690
(2011).
It is the third element - a final judgment on the merits
- that is at issue here.
According to Silverstein, when the state court denied
Topek’s motion to amend its complaint (to add the trademark and
unfair competition claims that now form the basis of this action)
and Topek did not appeal that ruling, the order became final, on
the merits, and was with prejudice.
(document no. 22-1) at 13.
See Silverstein’s Memorandum
And, says Silverstein, under the
doctrine of res judicata, that ruling serves to preclude Topek
from litigating in this forum any claims that were the subject of
the motion to amend.
In support of that position, Silverstein
10
points to a recent decision of the Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit, in which the court noted:
It is axiomatic that claim preclusion doctrine requires
a party to live with its strategic choices. Those
strategic choices include whether to attempt to amend a
complaint and whether to appeal a denial of such an
attempt. When a party chooses to move for leave to
amend its complaint and then not to appeal denial of
that motion, the party is not entitled to a second
opportunity in a later action to litigate the claim
that the party sought to add. Instead, the party’s
recourse is to appeal, not to start a new action.
Hatch v. Trail King Indus., 699 F.3d 38, 45 (1st Cir. 2012)
(citations and internal punctuation omitted) (emphasis supplied).
There is, however, a critical distinction between the facts in
this case and those in the Hatch case.
Following the denial of
plaintiff’s motion to amend the complaint, the Hatch case
proceeded to a final decision on the merits (a jury verdict) - a
decision that was affirmed on appeal.
See Id. at 47.
Here, however, the was no judicial resolution of the claims
between Topek and Silverstein, and Topek never had the
opportunity (or the need) to appeal the trial court’s denial of
its motion to amend.
Rather, the parties resolved their disputes
short of any judicial declaration of their rights and
responsibilities, and the parties have offered nothing in this
record suggesting that the settlement agreement was entered as an
order of the court, a consent decree, or the like.
11
Of course, there are circumstances in which a settlement
agreement can have a preclusive effect on a party’s ability to
pursue subsequent litigation on the same or related claims.
For
example, in discussing the doctrine of res judicata as applied to
a consent judgment, the court of appeals for this circuit has
observed that:
When a dispute of law exists between parties to a case
and they agree to a settlement of that dispute and
entry of a judgment with prejudice based on that
settlement, then the terms of that judgment in relation
to that legal issue are subject to res judicata
principles. A judgment that is entered with prejudice
under the terms of a settlement, whether by stipulated
dismissal, a consent judgment, or a confession of
judgment, is not subject to collateral attack by a
party or a person in privity, and it bars a second suit
on the same claim or cause of action. Such a judgment
has the force of res judicata until further order of
that or a higher court modifying that consent judgment.
Langton v. Hogan, 71 F.3d 930, 935 (1st Cir. 1995) (citations
omitted) (emphasis supplied).
See also Bews v. Town of Carroll,
2009 WL 1664064, 2009 DNH 083 (D.N.H. June 15, 2009) (noting that
the court “must examine the language of the stipulation [of
dismissal] to discern whether the parties intended the document
to be a final resolution of all matters that could have been
litigated in the enforcement action.”).
As noted above, however, this case presents a different fact
pattern.
Silverstein might well be heard to assert that a
12
settlement agreement precludes any further litigation of the
claims actually resolved by that agreement.
But it cannot
credibly argue that the settlement agreement in this case
precludes further litigation of claims that the parties
specifically and expressly agreed were unaffected by the their
settlement.
See generally Settlement Stipulation at paras. 9 and
10 (providing that the settlement agreement “does not affect the
parties’ claims in [the litigation presently pending in this
court]” and noting that all other claims between the parties,
“except as set forth above, shall be dismissed with prejudice.”).
Silverstein plainly understood (and certainly objectively
manifested its intent) that the parties’ settlement agreement
would not have any preclusive effect on the claims Topek is
presently pursing in this court.
And, it is quite clear that
under the circumstances, Silverstein is equitably estopped from
asserting that the agreement should be understood as barring the
“unaffected” claims on res judicata grounds.
See, e.g., Ramirez-
Carlo v. United States, 496 F.3d 41, 49-50 (1st Cir. 2007).
See
generally Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 894 (1979) (“Equitable
Estoppel as a Defense”).
As for Silverstein’s assertion that the court should either
decline to exercise jurisdiction over Topek’s claims or, in the
13
alternative, stay this proceeding pending the outcome of related
proceedings before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, the
court declines that invitation.
Silverstein has failed to
demonstrate that adoption of either alternative would be
appropriate in this case.
See, e.g., Goya Foods, Inc. v.
Tropicana Prods., Inc., 846 F.2d 848 (2d Cir. 1988) (discussing
the primary jurisdiction doctrine in the field of trademark law
and explaining why the existence of an action before the TTAB
does not warrant a stay of related judicial proceedings).
See
also Calista Enterprises Ltd. v. Tenza Trading Ltd., 2013 WL
6080184 (D. Or. Nov. 19, 2013) (denying a motion to stay a
federal action pending resolution of a related Petition for
Cancellation before the TTAB); Exclusive Supplements, Inc. v.
Abdelgawad, 2013 WL 160275 (W.D. Pa. Jan. 15, 2013) (same).
II.
Silverstein’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.
Next, Silverstein moves for summary judgment on Topek’s
claim of copyright infringement (count 8 of the Second Amended
Complaint).
In that count, Topek alleges that it owns, and
Silverstein has infringed, copyrighted “Wall and Roof Shop
Drawings and Details.”
Silverstein responds that Topek is not
the owner of the claimed copyright and, therefore, asserts that
it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on that
infringement claim.
More specifically, Silverstein claims that
14
Topek’s predecessor in title (the Bank) never acquired title to
the disputed copyrighted material.
It necessarily follows, says
Silverstein, that Topek could not have acquired title to that
work from the Bank:
The Bank to Topek Bill of Sale has a summary recital
conveying “all copyrights . . . held by Yankee Barn
Homes, Inc.,” but does not list the copyright at issue
here.
The Bank obtained the enumerated assets of Yankee Barn
Homes, Inc. in a Bill of Sale dated September 28, 2011,
conveying to the Bank “registered copyrights and
unregistered copyrighted materials, all as further
identified on Exhibit A-1 attached hereto and made a
part hereof.” That Exhibit A-1 identifies some 24
registered copyrights and 34 unregistered copyrights,
but not the purported copyright at issue here.
Silverstein’s Memorandum (document no. 33-1) at 3.
For its part, Topek seems to acknowledge that the
copyrighted material at issue in this case was not specifically
listed in the conveyance from Yankee to the Bank, or the
conveyance from the Bank to Topek.
But, says Topek, the plain
and unambiguous intent of all interested parties was to convey
all of Yankee’s intellectual property - including all copyrighted
works - from Yankee to the Bank, and then from the Bank to Topek.
The court is inclined to agree.
See generally Bill of Sale from
Yankee to the Bank (document no. 32-9) and Bill of Sale from the
Bank to Topek (document no. 32-3).
15
In the absence of dispositive
contrary evidence from Silverstein, whether Topek actually took
title to the copyrighted material at issue is a genuinely
disputed material fact, likely to turn on contract principles.
Consequently, Silverstein’s motion for judgment as a matter of
law must necessarily be denied.
III. Silverstein’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
Finally, Silverstein advances two counterclaims against
Topek: a false advertising claim under the Lanham Act, and a
false advertising/unfair competition claim under New Hampshire’s
Consumer Protection Act.
In short, Silverstein alleges that
while Topek may have purchased the assets formerly owned by
Yankee Barn Homes, Topek did not buy the company (it did not
acquire its stock) and, therefore, Topek is not the “successor in
interest” to Yankee Barn Homes.
Accordingly, says Silverstein,
Topek cannot lawfully hold itself out to the public as “Yankee
Barn Homes,” or say that it has been in business since 1969, or
claim that it has built award-winning homes throughout the
country, or display pictures of homes that it never actually
built, or display testimonials from clients who purchased their
homes from what Silverstein considers to be the “true” Yankee
Barn Homes.
See Silverstein’s Memorandum (document no. 31-1) at
9 (“[T]he truth is that Topek has no connection whatsoever to
16
[Yankee Barn Homes].
These advertising statements are false,
misleading and deliberately deceptive.”) (emphasis in original).
Silverstein seeks a preliminary injunction that would, inter
alia, prohibit Topek from: representing that it has been in
business since 1969; stating that it has “any relationship to
Yankee Barn Homes, Inc.”; and making any reference in its
advertising to Yankee Barn Homes, Inc., the awards won by Yankee
Barn Homes, Inc., the founders of that company, or the homes
built by that company.
no. 31-1) at 14.
See Silverstein’s Memorandum (document
Topek objects.
In support of its request for preliminary injunctive relief,
Silverstein relies upon this court’s opinion in Paper Thermometer
Co. v. Murray, 2012 WL 194369, 2012 DNH 017 (D.N.H. Jan. 23,
2012).
That case is, however, factually distinguishable and
provides no support for Silverstein’s position.
Paper
Thermometer involved a defendant who purchased plaintiff’s goods,
re-labeled them, represented to the public that it (rather than
plaintiff) had engineered and manufactured them, and then sold
those products as its own.
The defendant in that case had not
purchased the assets of the plaintiff corporation; it did not own
the intellectual property of the plaintiff corporation; it did
not have the right to use trademarks registered by the plaintiff
17
corporation; it was not employing plaintiff’s former workforce to
manufacture the goods in question; and it had no legal
justification for its challenged practices.
said.
Little more need be
As presented, Silverstein’s argument is unpersuasive.
For its part, Topek has embarked on an entirely different
track.
It alleges that its purchase of virtually all of the
assets of Yankee Barn Homes resulted in a “de facto merger” of
the companies, thereby making Topek the “successor-in-interest”
to Yankee Barn Homes and vesting it with authority to hold itself
out to the public as Yankee Barn Homes.
In support of that
position, it cites several cases in which creditors sought to
impose liability upon an entity that purchased the assets of a
debtor corporation.
In those cases, creditors claimed the
purchasing entity became the “successor” to the debtor
corporation and, therefore, was legally responsible for its
financial obligations.
See, e.g., Kleen Laundry & Dry Cleaning
Servs. v. Total Waste Mgmt., 817 F. Supp. 225 (D.N.H. 1993);
Bielagus v. EMRE of New Hampshire Corp, 149 N.H. 635 (2003).
Topek seems to argue by analogy that if the conditions are met to
hold Topek liable for the financial obligations of Yankee Barn
Homes, Inc. (under what is known as the “substantial continuation
theory”), there must have been a “de facto merger” and Topek
18
necessarily has the legal authority to hold itself out to the
public as Yankee Barn Homes.
While Topek’s argument is clever and, perhaps, even
superficially appealing, it is not terribly persuasive either.
As Silverstein points out, Topek has failed to point to any
authority embracing such a theory in factual circumstances
similar to these.
Rather, the cases on which Topek relies simply
address the circumstances under which the purchaser of a debtor
corporation’s assets (rather than its stock) can yet be held
accountable for the debtor corporation’s liabilities.
Not a
single case cited by Topek addresses the question actually
presented here: whether Topek has the legal authority to hold
itself out to the public as “Yankee Barn Homes.”
Or, stated
slightly differently, whether Topek has the right to hold itself
out to the public as Yankee Barn Homes to draw on its
(apparently) noble and storied history, and to claim to
manufacture the same high-quality homes today that Yankee Barn
produced for many years.
While neither party has directly addressed the relevant
legal and factual issues, a leading and respected treatise
undermines Silverstein’s contention that Topek has engaged in
unfair, deceptive, and unlawful trade practices by, for example,
19
representing to the public that Yankee Barn Homes remains in
business, as it has since 1969.
It is patently misleading to advertise a false date of
establishment or to suggest, without warrant, that the
reputation of a newly established business is wellknown to the public. Reference to an early date of
establishment suggests that the business is an
experienced, firmly established, successful and
reliable concern. Therefore, the dispositive question
in any case is whether the business enterprise, as a
unit, including all its human elements and its
corporeal and incorporeal values, has continued,
substantially unchanged, since its inception. . . ..
It is difficult to determine what changes in business
status break the continuity of the founder’s
reputation. It is not interrupted by every minor
change in the nature of the business: e.g., its
development from a small craft shop to a big industrial
unit; a change in its legal form, e.g., from individual
ownership to a partnership or corporation; a change of
firm name or trademark; a change of ownership;
expansion to other lines of business; bankruptcy; or
the transfer of the old business to a new corporation.
The continuity of a business is often evidenced by
retention of the old firm name or trademark, even if it
contained the name of an individual owner. Such names
normally lose their personal significance, and
metamorphose into business designations.
Such continuity, however, may be broken by the removal
of the business to another country, by its conversion
to an entirely different product line, or by its
division into several parts transferred to different
successors.
3 R. Callman, Callman on Unfair Competition, Trademarks &
Monopolies, § 5:35 at 189-90 (Louis Altman, ed., 4th ed. 1981 &
2013 supp.) (footnotes omitted) (emphasis supplied).
20
Silverstein does not allege that any of the factors
suggestive of a break in business continuity are present in this
case.
On the other hand, several of the factors that suggest
unbroken business continuity are obviously present in this case.
As noted above, Topek purchased all (or virtually all) of the
tangible and intangible assets of Yankee Barn Homes, Inc.
The
list of those assets is lengthy and it includes, for example, a
number of second-level Internet domain names (e.g.,
“yankeebarnhomes.com,” “yankeebarnhomes.org,” and
“yankeebarnhomes.us.com”) and numerous registered copyrights
(e.g., “Yankee Barn Homes dormer details,” and “Yankee Barn Homes
horsebarn/garage options”).
Topek also purchased Yankee’s
registered trademarks and service marks (including, for example,
“Yankee Barn”), as well as the goodwill and reputation for
quality associated with those marks.
See 15 U.S.C. § 1060(a)(2)
(“In any assignment authorized by this section, it shall not be
necessary to include the good will of the business connected with
the use of and symbolized by any other mark used in the business
or by the name or style under which the business is conducted.”).
See generally 1 J. McCarthy, McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair
Competition, §§ 2:3-2.10 (4th ed. 2011); Restatement (Third) of
Unfair Competition, §§ 1-9 (1995) (“Deceptive Marketing”).
Additionally, Topek is operating the very same manufacturing
facility in Grantham, New Hampshire, from which Yankee Barn Homes
21
has operated since 1972.
And, it has rehired much of Yankee’s
former workforce.
Given what appears to be the controlling law on this issue,
and in light of all that Topek purchased from Yankee Barn Homes
(albeit through the Bank), a challenge to Topek’s right to hold
itself out to the public as the Yankee Barn business that moved
to Grantham in 1972 and has, for many years, manufactured unique
and highly regarded post and beam homes, would seem unlikely to
succeed.
But neither party has directly (or adequately)
addressed the relevant and dispositive legal and factual issues.
Silverstein bears the burden here.
And, it has failed to
demonstrate that Topek’s alleged conduct violates either the
Lanham Act or New Hampshire’s Consumer Protection Act.
Consequently, it has not shown that it is likely to prevail on
the merits of its counterclaims so its motion for preliminary
injunction is denied.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the court rules as follows on the
pending motions:
1.
Topek’s Motion to Amend the First Amended
Complaint (document no. 32) is granted.
2.
Silverstein’s Motion for Judgment on the
Pleadings (document no. 22) is denied.
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3.
Silverstein’s Motion for Preliminary
Injunction (document no. 31) is denied.
4.
Silverstein’s Motion for Summary Judgment on
Count 8 of the Second Amended Complaint
(document no. 33) is denied.
SO ORDERED.
____________________________
Steven J. McAuliffe
United States District Judge
March 20, 2014
cc:
Gary E. Lambert, Esq.
W. E. Whittington, Esq.
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