Avco Corporation v. Precision Airmotive LLC
Filing
621
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Signed by Chief Judge Matthew W. Brann on 03/02/2023. (ea)
Case 4:12-cv-01313-MWB Document 621 Filed 03/02/23 Page 1 of 43
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
AVCO CORPORATION,
No. 4:12-CV-01313
Plaintiff-Counterclaim
Defendant,
(Chief Judge Brann)
v.
TURN AND BANK HOLDINGS,
LLC, AND PRECISION
AIRMOTIVE, LLC,
Defendants-Counterclaim
Plaintiffs,
v.
AVSTAR FUEL SYSTEMS, INC.,
Counterclaim Defendant.
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
MARCH 2, 2023
I.
BACKGROUND
In 2015, Avco Corporation (“Avco”) filed a second amended complaint in
which it sought declaratory judgment holding that AVStar Fuel Systems, Inc.
(“AVStar”) and Avco had not infringed on Turn and Bank Holdings, Inc.’s (“TNB”)
trademarks, and seeking cancellation of several of TNB’s trademarks related to
airplane engine fuel injection systems known as “servos.”1 TNB in turn filed a
1
Doc. 138.
Case 4:12-cv-01313-MWB Document 621 Filed 03/02/23 Page 2 of 43
counterclaim asserting that AVStar and Avco were liable for trademark infringement
and unfair competition under the Lanham Act and Pennsylvania common law related
to AVStar’s use of TNB’s “RSA” Marks, which are used on servos produced by
Precision Airmotive Corporation (“Precision”).2
Based on the facts underlying this matter, in April 2018, this Court granted
TNB’s motion for summary judgment and denied Avco’s3 motion for summary
judgment.4 The Court concluded that TNB had established as a matter of law that
the RSA Marks are valid and legally protectable, and that AVStar’s use of the marks
was likely to cause consumer confusion.5
Specifically, the Court determined that the primary significance of the RSA
Marks is to refer to TNB servos and was not simply a generic descriptor, and the
descriptive marks had acquired a secondary meaning associated with TNB’s servos.6
As part of that determination, this Court found that Avco’s use of the RSA Marks
was intentional and had “resulted in several instances of actual confusion.”7 The
Court further concluded that Avco’s use of the RSA Marks produced a likelihood of
confusion, as Avco and TNB directly competed in the servo market for the same
2
3
4
5
6
7
Doc. 144. Although there are several iterations of Precision, the Court refers them as a single
entity in this document.
Unless legally or factually significant, AVStar and Avco will be referred to collectively as
Avco, while TNB and Precision will be referred to collectively as TNB.
Docs. 356, 357.
Doc. 356.
Id. at 16-22.
Id. at 21.
2
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customers, Avco deliberately used identical model numbers, and there was evidence
of actual confusion.8 Finally, the Court determined that Avco could not establish fair
use.9 To that end, Avco’s use of the RSA Marks was not descriptive of its own
products rather than TNB’s, and was not used in a descriptive sense or in good
faith.10
The Court therefore entered judgment on the issue of liability as to all
counterclaims.11 Approximately three months later, in the summer of 2018, AVStar
ceased using the RSA Marks on its servos.12 In December 2019, the parties filed
competing motions to exclude expert testimony: TNB sought to exclude the
testimony of Avco’s damages expert, Krista Holt, while Avco sought to exclude the
testimony of TNB’s damages expert, Dana Trexler.13 The Court mostly denied those
motions,14 leaving only a jury trial on the question of whether Avco’s infringement
was willful, and a bench trial on the issue of damages.
A five-day jury trial commenced on October 17, 2022, after which a jury
determined that Avco had willfully infringed upon TNB’s trademarks by using the
RSA Marks.15 The Court thereafter held a two-day bench trial on the issue of
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Id. at 23-24.
Id. at 25-26.
Id.
Id.
E.g., Avco’s Jury Trial Exhibit 433.
Docs. 430, 432.
Docs. 461, 462.
Doc. 579.
3
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damages, which commenced on November 9, 2022. Set forth below are this Court’s
findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding damages following the bench trial.
In accordance with the following reasoning, this Court holds that TNB is entitled to
an award of disgorged profits. Consequently, the Court will enter judgment in favor
of TNB and award damages in the sum of $264,818.
II.
FINDINGS OF FACT
1.
Servos operate by delivering a mixture of fuel and air to aircraft
engines. To ensure optimal engine performance, however, the amount
of fuel delivered must be precisely regulated. In the middle of the 20th
century, a company known as the Bendix Corporation (“Bendix”)
created a fuel injection system that accomplished this regulation by
measuring the force of the air being pulled into the engine. Bendix
eventually assigned servo model numbers to these servos that began the
with letters “RSA”—e.g., RSA-5AD1 and RSA-10AD1 (hereinafter
“RSA Marks”).16
2.
Bendix manufactured servos bearing RSA Marks until it sold the rights
to the entire product line to Precision in 1988. Precision, in turn,
manufactured those servos until 2013, when it sold all of its assets—
including the servo product line—to TNB. Since then, servos bearing
16
Doc. 356 at 2-3.
4
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the RSA Marks have been manufactured by Precision pursuant to a
licensing agreement with TNB.17
3.
Lycoming Engines (“Lycoming”), a division of Avco, manufactures
airplane engines. For decades, Lycoming purchased servos from
Precision and its predecessors, including servos bearing the RSA
Marks.18
4.
Around 2004 or 2005, AVStar began to reverse-engineer some of the
RSA-labeled servos for possible manufacture and sale. Around that
time, the relationship between Avco and Precision became rocky,19 and
Avco later asked AVStar to complete the reverse engineering process
to manufacture and sell servos to Avco for use in its engines.20
5.
Between 2007 and 2008, AVStar and Avco signed a series of
agreements codifying an arrangement to create and manufacture the
servos, which included an obligation for Avco to pay approximately
$2,000,000 to AVStar in furtherance of such servo development and an
obligation on the part of AVStar to use the RSA Marks.21
17
18
19
20
21
Id. at 4.
Id. at 2. Unless factually relevant, Lycoming is referred to in this document as Avco.
E.g., Doc. 605 at 16-17.
Doc. 356 at 4-5.
Id. at 5.
5
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6.
In 2010, AVStar began selling its servos bearing the RSA Marks to
Avco and, in August 2012, Avco sold its first engine containing an
AVStar-manufactured servo that bore the RSA Marks.22
7.
All parties agree that there was a souring relationship between Avco
and TNB, but the parties dispute why Avco ultimately decided to buy
servos from AVStar that bore the RSA Marks, rather than from
Precision.
8.
TNB contends that, because Avco mandated the use of the RSA Marks,
and because there were only two suppliers of servos with RSA Marks,
Avco purchased AVStar servos because of the RSA Marks.23
9.
Unsurprisingly, Avco asserts that it purchased AVStar servos for
reasons unrelated to the RSA Marks—and the evidence presented at
trial bears out that assertion.
10.
First, Avco grew disillusioned with Precision in part because of pricing
issues. The evidence reflects that Avco believed—based on certain
indices such as the consumer price index and cost of materials—that
Precision requested unreasonable year over year price increases.
However, when Avco challenged these price increases, Precision flexed
its monopolistic muscle as the sole supplier of servos to Avco and
22
23
Id. at 5-6.
Doc. 604 at 165, 178-79; Doc. 605 at 202-03.
6
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presented Avco with a “take it or leave it proposition.”24 As of the date
of the bench trial, Precision servos cost approximately 49% more than
AVStar servos,25 although at least some of this price differential is due
to economies of scale and the fact that Precision now primarily
produces and sells to Avco less popular models of servos.26
11.
Second, Avco encountered quality issues with Precision servos, which
frequently created issues when testing newly produced engines and led
to customer complaints.27
12.
Third, Avco employees described Precision as being difficult to work
with and “less than cooperative” when issues arose with its servos.28
13.
Fourth, issues arose around the timely delivery of servos to Avco.
Servos were not always delivered on time, which slowed Avco’s
production and forced the company to change its production procedures
to accommodate these late deliveries. Precision had previously stopped
supplying Avco with servos during a dispute, which resulted in a
shutdown of Avco’s engine production.29
24
25
26
27
28
29
Doc. 587 at 188-89.
Doc. 605 at 79.
Doc. 604 at 43.
Doc. 587 at 196-96; Doc. 588 at 39.
Doc. 587 at 186.
Id. at 89-91; Doc. 589 at 89-91.
7
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14.
Fifth, Avco believed that having a second supplier of servos would
generally be beneficial for Avco. With a single supplier, Avco is reliant
on that supplier making timely deliveries to maintain Avco’s
production schedule and to timely deliver engines to its customers, and
there have been instances in the past where a supplier (not Precision)
had suffered a fire or worker strike that disrupted Avco’s production.
Additionally, a single supplier can act monopolistically and issue “take
it or leave it” propositions and may fail to work with Avco to make ontime deliveries.30
15.
The evidence demonstrates that, after AVStar ceased using the RSA
Marks on its servos in the summer of 2018 and switched to new model
numbers, its sales increased.31 This increase reflected an increase in
both unit sales and revenue.32
16.
There have been several instances of actual confusion where
individuals or companies were confused about the relationship between
Precision and AVStar.33
17.
No evidence has been presented that individuals or entities were
confused about the identity of the manufacturer of servos at the time of
30
31
32
33
Doc. 587 at 187, 189-91.
Avco’s Jury Trial Exhibits 433, 444; Doc. 604 at 191; Doc. 605 at 77.
Doc. 605 at 32-33.
Doc. 356 at 21.
8
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the purchase of any servo. Avco was not confused about the
manufacturer of the servos when it purchased AVStar servos that bore
the RSA Marks.34
III.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
A.
Standard of Review
1.
Lost Profits
Under the Lanham Act, once a trademark violation has been established, a
trademark holder is entitled, “subject to the principles of equity, to recover (1)
defendant’s profits, (2) any damages sustained by the plaintiff, and (3) the costs of
the action.”35 When pursuing compensation for profits lost as a result of trademark
infringement, “[t]he owner [of the trademark] has the burden of proving that lost
profits are attributable to the unlawful use of the mark.”36 Furthermore, plaintiffs are
only entitled to recover profits that “the plaintiff would have earned but for the
infringement.”37 “In order to recover actual damages . . . a plaintiff must demonstrate
that ‘the violation caused actual confusion among consumers of the plaintiff’s
product.’”38
34
35
36
37
38
See Doc. 604 at 189 (testimony of TNB’s damages expert, Trexler: “I think it’s already, you
know, been in the record that Avco wasn’t confused. Of course they weren’t confused”).
15 U.S.C. § 1117(a).
Gucci Am., Inc. v. Daffy’s Inc., 354 F.3d 228, 242 n.15 (3d Cir. 2003).
Am. Auto. Ass’n of N. Cal., Nev. & Utah v. Gen. Motors LLC, 367 F. Supp. 3d 1072, 1105
(N.D. Cal. 2019) (quoting Lindy Pen Co. v. Bic Pen Corp., 982 F.2d 1400, 1407 (9th Cir.
1993)).
Zurco, Inc. v. Sloan Valve Co., 785 F. Supp. 2d 476, 500-01 (W.D. Pa. 2011) (quoting Web
Printing Controls Co., Inc. v. Oxy–Dry Corp., 906 F.2d 1202, 1204-05 (7th Cir. 1990)).
9
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2.
Disgorgement of Infringer’s Profits and Treble Damages
As the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has explained with
respect to damages under the Lanham Act, “Section 35(a) of the Lanham Act
provides for the disgorgement of an infringer’s profits, ‘subject to the principles of
equity.’”39 Disgorgement of profits is available as a remedy “if the defendant is
unjustly enriched, if the plaintiff sustained damages, or if an accounting is necessary
to deter infringement.”40 Because a balancing of the equities is required,
“disgorgement does not follow as a matter of course upon the mere showing of an
infringement, and, for example, will be denied where an injunction satisfies the
equities of a case.”41
To “evaluate whether equity supports disgorging the infringer’s
profits,” [courts must] consider “(1) whether the infringer had the intent
to confuse or deceive, (2) whether sales have been diverted, (3) the
adequacy of other remedies, (4) any unreasonable delay by the plaintiff
in asserting his rights, (5) the public interest in making the misconduct
unprofitable, and (6) whether it is a case of palming off.”42
When seeking to disgorge profits, “the plaintiff shall be required to prove
defendant’s sales only; defendant must prove all elements of cost or deduction
39
40
41
42
Kars 4 Kids Inc. v. Am. Can!, 8 F.4th 209, 223 (3d Cir. 2021) (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a)).
Banjo Buddies, Inc. v. Renosky, 399 F.3d 168, 178 (3d Cir. 2005).
Kars 4 Kids, 8 F.4th at 223 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Id. (quoting Banjo Buddies, 399 F.3d at 175 (brackets omitted)). As this implies, unlike an
award of damages for lost profits, for disgorgement of profits a plaintiff need not show any
actual confusion. Zurco, 785 F. Supp. 2d at 501.
10
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claimed.”43 Such deductions include “profits demonstrably not attributable to the
unlawful use of” the plaintiff’s trademark.44
“When an award is based on [disgorged] profits, which ‘is either inadequate
or excessive, the court may in its discretion enter judgment for such sum as the court
shall find to be just, according to the circumstances of the case’” which may amount
to three times the total disgorged profits.45 “If the court increases the monetary
award, such an enhancement ‘shall constitute compensation and not a penalty.’”46
“Generally, actual, proven profits will adequately compensate the plaintiff.”47
“Thus, in most cases, when disgorging profits, the district court should award actual,
proven profits unless the infringer gained more from the infringement than the
infringer’s profits reflect.”48 Importantly, “[w]hile ‘willful infringement is central’
to the decision whether to enhance damages . . . [the Third Circuit has] not held that
willful infringement is alone sufficient to support an enhanced award.”49
As the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has explained in
relation to trebled damages, “[r]ecognizing that a fact finder might sometimes have
trouble identifying the precise amount of profits generated by a defendant’s
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
15 U.S.C. § 1117(a).
Members 1st Fed. Credit Union v. Metro Bank, No. 1:09-CV-1171, 2011 WL 208743, at *5
(M.D. Pa. Jan. 21, 2011) (quoting Mishawaka Rubber & Woolen Mfg. Co. v. S.S. Kresge Co.,
316 U.S. 203, 206 (1942)).
Kars 4 Kids, 8 F.4th at 224 (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a)).
Id. (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a)).
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Id. (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted).
Id. at 225 (quoting SecuraComm Consulting Inc. v. Securacom Inc., 166 F.3d 182, 187 (3d Cir.
1999)).
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infringement, Congress gave district courts the discretionary power to adjust a
profits award up or down.”50 “Yet the Act imposes a clear limit on this discretionary
power: ‘Such sum shall constitute compensation and not a penalty.’”51
This language distinguishes between two types of adjustments. On the
one hand, the court may increase a profits award for a compensatory
reason, such as a concern that the award does not encompass the
defendant’s full profits. Perhaps the defendant received intangible
benefits as a result of its infringing conduct. Or perhaps the defendant
engaged in discovery “stonewalling” that prevented the plaintiff from
identifying its total infringing sales.
On the other hand, the court may not increase a jury’s profits award for
a punitive reason. The record might show such an improper purpose,
for example, if the court highlighted the defendant’s bad faith as the
basis for the increase. Or such an improper purpose might exist if the
court increased the profits to penalize the defendant for discovery
violations, something that other laws and court rules are better equipped
to handle.52
3.
Attorneys’ Fees and Punitive Damages
The “Lanham Act . . . permits the recovery of reasonable attorneys’ fees only
‘in exceptional cases.’”53 The Third Circuit has explained that, pursuant to United
States Supreme Court precedent, “a district court may find a case ‘exceptional,’ and
therefore award fees to the prevailing party, when (a) there is an unusual discrepancy
50
51
52
53
Max Rack, Inc. v. Core Health & Fitness, LLC, 40 F.4th 454, 473 (6th Cir. 2022).
Id. (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a)).
Id. (internal citations omitted).
Fair Wind Sailing, Inc. v. Dempster, 764 F.3d 303, 313 (3d Cir. 2014) (quoting 15 U.S.C.
§ 1117(a)).
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in the merits of the positions taken by the parties or (b) the losing party has litigated
the case in an ‘unreasonable manner.’”54
“Thus, it is within a court’s discretion to find a case ‘exceptional’ based upon
‘the governing law and the facts of the case,’ irrespective of whether the losing party
is culpable. For example, ‘a case presenting exceptionally meritless claims may
sufficiently set itself apart from mine-run cases to warrant a fee award.’”55 “Whether
litigation positions or litigation tactics are ‘exceptional’ enough to merit attorneys’
fees must be determined by district courts ‘in the case-by-case exercise of their
discretion, considering the totality of the circumstances.’”56 “The losing party’s
blameworthiness may well play a role in a district court’s analysis of the
‘exceptionality’ of a case,” but culpability is not a requirement to award attorneys’
fees.57
Turning to punitive damages, because plaintiffs are not “entitled to punitive
damages under the Lanham Act,” any claim for punitive damages must flow from
state law.58 Under Pennsylvania law, it is well established that “[p]unitive damages
are an ‘extreme remedy’ available only in the most exceptional circumstances.”59
54
55
56
57
58
59
Id. at 315 (quoting (Octane Fitness, LLC v. ICON Health & Fitness, Inc., 572 U.S. 545, 554
(2014)).
Id. at 314 (quoting Octane Fitness, 572 U.S. at 555 (ellipsis omitted)).
Id. at 315 (quoting Octane Fitness, 572 U.S. at 555).
Id.
Caesars World, Inc. v. Venus Lounge, Inc., 520 F.2d 269, 274 (3d Cir. 1975). See also Lontex
Corp. v. Nike, Inc., No. CV 18-5623, 2021 WL 2138621, at *2 (E.D. Pa. May 26, 2021) (noting
that punitive damages are “unavailable under the Lanham Act”).
Hall v. Episcopal Long Term Care, 54 A.3d 381, 395 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2012).
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“Additionally, punitive damages may be appropriately awarded only when the
plaintiff has established that the defendant has acted in an outrageous fashion due to
either the defendant’s evil motive or his reckless indifference to the rights of
others.”60 Moreover, “the size of a punitive damages award must be reasonably
related to the State’s interest in punishing and deterring the particular behavior of
the defendant and not the product of arbitrariness or unfettered discretion.”61 “In
accordance with this limitation, the standard under which punitive damages are
measured in Pennsylvania requires analysis of the following factors: (1) the
character of the act; (2) the nature and extent of the harm; and (3) the wealth of the
defendant.”62
B.
Application of the Law to the Facts of this Case
1.
Lost Profits
The Court first addresses TNB’s request for damages in the form of lost
profits; TNB asserts that but-for causation is established primarily due to Avco’s
decision to mandate that AVStar use RSA Marks for its servos.63 The Court finds
that lost profits are not appropriately awarded.
It is clear, based upon the testimony presented at trial—along with the other
evidence of record produced during the course of this litigation—that at some point
60
61
62
63
Id. (brackets omitted).
Brown v. End Zone, Inc., 259 A.3d 473, 487 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2021).
Id.
Doc. 613 at 26-34.
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the relationship between Avco and Precision deteriorated precipitously. TNB has
asserted throughout this litigation that Avco helped create AVStar, mandated the use
of RSA Marks on AVStar servos, and bought AVStar servos with the sole motive of
destroying Precision.
The problem with TNB’s assertion is two-fold. First, as noted in the findings
of fact above and as discussed in more detail below, the Court concludes that Avco
purchased AVStar servos for a variety of reasons other than the RSA Marks—
indeed, none of the sales of AVStar servos are demonstrably attributable to the RSA
Marks, meaning that TNB has failed to establish that, but-for the infringement,
Precision would have made all of the relevant servo sales. Second, even if TNB is
correct that Avco sought to destroy Precision, this is a trademark infringement case,
not a business tort action. If in fact Avco helped to create AVStar and purchased
AVStar servos in an effort to destroy Precision,64 then it necessarily did not purchase
AVStar servos due to the RSA Marks, but would have purchased AVStar servos in
its efforts to destroy Precision, regardless of the model number employed by AVStar.
As a consequence, there would be no trademark damages.
64
Although not legally dispositive, the Court notes that TNB’s assertion that Avco sought to
destroy Precision is strongly contradicted by the evidence and logic. The evidence presented
at trial establishes that Precision remains the sole manufacturer of several models of servos
that Avco uses in its engines, and that Avco remains one of Precision’s largest customers. Doc.
587 at 125; Doc. 604 at 43; TNB’s Bench Trial Exhibit 147. It makes no logical sense to believe
that Avco would have sought to destroy Precision, thereby depriving itself of the sole
manufacturer of a product that is a necessary component in many of Avco’s engines.
15
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As noted above, it is TNB’s burden to prove but-for causation.65 TNB has
failed to sustain that burden for three reasons. First, it is undisputed that Avco was
not confused about the manufacturer of servos when it purchased servos from
AVStar that bore the RSA Marks,66 and Avco accounts for 98% of AVStar’s servo
sales.67 Second, the evidence convincingly establishes that Avco purchased AVStar
servos for reasons other than the RSA Marks, including: issues with Precision’s
pricing and its ability to issue “take it or leave it” demands for price increases; quality
issues with Precision servos; Precision was a difficult entity with which to work;
Precision’s ongoing issues making timely deliveries; and Avco’s preference to have
two servo suppliers.
Third, and most critically, the available real-world data demonstrates that
AVStar sales were not driven by its use of the RSA Marks, as sales of AVStar servos
increased after it ceased using the RSA Marks on its servos.68
As Krista Holt, Avco’s expert witness in damages, testified, not only is it clear
from the testimony of the relevant individuals involved in Avco’s purchasing
decisions that Avco purchased AVStar servos for reasons other than the RSA
Marks,69 but the available sales data after AVStar ceased using the RSA Marks
65
66
67
68
69
Gucci, 354 F.3d at 242 n.15; Gen. Motors LLC, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 1105.
Doc. 604 at 189.
Doc. 590 at 154; Doc. 604 at 166; Doc. 605 at 73.
Avco’s Jury Trial Exhibits 433, 444; Doc. 604 at 191; Doc. 605 at 32-33, 77.
Doc. 451 at 134-35, 138-41, 156-62; Doc. 605 at 15-17.
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leaves little room to reach any other conclusion.70 Holt explained during the bench
trial:
When I say we see no difference [in sales], what I mean is we do not
see a drop in sales. We do not see that the price went down. What we
see is that there’s a steady increase. There’s—the industry does not care
what model number is on the servo. What they care is that they’re
getting a Lycoming engine, and that Lycoming is their supplier. And
that’s what they care about. And we can see this proven by the
numbers.71
Holt iterated that this sales data demonstrated the absence of causation between the
RSA Marks and AVStar servo sales to both Avco and third parties:
Causation is that if the name were changed, the sales would go to
Precision. That is the theory of lost profits . . . [b]ut-for the trademark
infringement, the sales would have gone to Precision. The trademark
did change, the infringement did stop, and yet, we still see that the sales
did not go to Precision” but instead continued to go to AVStar.72
All of this is to say that the sales data demonstrating that AVStar servo sales
increased after it ceased using the RSA Marks is the single most powerful piece of
evidence presented at trial. Although TNB could plausibly have argued—prior to
AVStar having ceased to use the RSA Marks—that all of AVStar’s sales were due
to the RSA Marks since Avco mandated use of those marks,73 such a contention
70
71
72
73
Doc. 451 at 142-48; Doc. 605 at 29-33.
Doc. 605 at 30-31.
Id. at 31-32. See also id. at 33 (Holt explaining that expert witnesses on damages “look
analytically at numbers to see what’s happening, because what we have to do under
disgorgement is we have to figure out well how much of the profit of these sales is due to the
mark. And what we see by this, that it’s zero of the profit is due to the mark. Because before
they have sales and then afterwards, both their price and their units go up. There is no
difference, other than an increase” in sales).
Indeed, Trexler offered such an opinion. See Doc. 434-1; Doc. 604 at 157-62.
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simply does not hold water given AVStar’s post-RSA Mark sales data. Because
Avco and other third parties continued to purchase AVStar servos after the Marks
were removed, it is apparent that sales of those servos were not dependent upon, or
driven by, the RSA Marks. This evidence strongly supports Holt’s opinion, and the
Court accepts that opinion as well-reasoned and persuasive. In contrast, the Court
rejects Dana Trexler’s opinion as equally unsupported by the evidence.
Trexler thoroughly explained the basis for her opinion during the Daubert
hearing and bench trial.74 Trexler testified that her calculation for lost profits is
relatively straightforward: because Avco contractually required that AVStar use the
RSA Marks, Trexler concluded that Avco would only purchase servos bearing the
RSA Marks; this effectively created a two-supplier market, as only AVStar and
Precision produced servos with RSA Marks.75 Trexler also opined that Avco and
AVStar must have ascribed some value to the RSA Marks because AVStar continued
using those marks “for ten years despite this litigation.”76 Because Avco required
servos with an RSA Mark, and because the parties were operating in a two-supplier
market, Trexler concluded that 100% of sales from AVStar to Avco were lost profits
74
75
76
The Court primarily relies upon Trexler’s testimony at the Daubert hearing to explain the basis
of her opinion, unless her opinion was modified, updated, or explained in greater detail during
the bench trial.
Doc. 451 at 39-41, 106-07.
Id. at 110.
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for Precision as, absent AVStar’s infringement, Avco would have had to order those
servos from Precision.77
Trexler testified that she considered other factors that may have driven Avco’s
purchasing decisions, such as price, quality, and on-time delivery, but found none of
those factors significant because “it really comes back to the fact that it’s a twosupplier market.”78 When only one other supplier is able to supply RSA-marked
servos, Trexler believed that no other factors would contribute to sales.79 Trexler
testified that she also considered that sales of AVStar servos increased after AVStar
ceased using the RSA Marks, but found that insignificant as well because Avco and
AVStar “are so intertwined . . . [that] it would be difficult to separate the two.”80
As this Court noted in ruling on the Daubert motions, Trexler’s hypothesis is
weak, and nothing presented at the bench trial undermined that conclusion.81
Trexler’s hypothesis that Avco would only purchase servos with RSA Marks has
been disproven by the fact that AVStar has twice changed it servo markings, and its
sales to Avco and third parties has only increased.82 This undercuts Trexler’s opinion
and supports Holt’s conclusion that purchasing decisions were based on factors other
than the RSA Marks.
77
78
79
80
81
82
Id. at 40, 105-06.
Id. at 41; see id. at 40-41.
Id.
Id. at 41; see id. at 112-13.
Doc. 461 at 34-36.
See Avco’s Jury Trial Exhibits 433, 444.
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Holt stated during the Daubert hearing that Trexler’s opinion that “all sales
would be lost but-for the use of a trademark is a very dangerous place to be.”83 Holt
explained:
Any damage expert would be frightened that during the case the
trademark would change, and you would be proven wrong, that your
causality would be completely shown to be untrue.
So that’s a very dangerous place. And most trademark experts will be
very careful that they can absolutely prove it, for the fear that if it
changed mid-case and now you see that all the sales still go to the
person, you would be—that would not be allowed. The Court would
not allow that. And the reason is because your theory under lost profits
is but-for the use of that mark, you would make all the sales.
And the problem is that when that name changes and you can see that
that’s not true, that means that the causality was not there.84
Holt’s warning ultimately bears true after the conclusion of the bench trial.
No evidence was presented that would demonstrate that AVStar’s sales were driven
by anything other than Avco’s desire to purchase AVStar servos for a variety of
reasons other than the model numbers used for those servos. The testimonial
evidence revealed that Avco purchased AVStar servos for reasons other than the
RSA Marks, and the sales data strongly supported that notion.85 Consequently, the
Court rejects Trexler’s opinion on lost profits.
83
84
85
Doc. 451 at 136.
Id. at 136-37.
Based on the evidence, the Court cannot conclude that TNB has demonstrated that any of
AVStar’s servo sales were driven, in any part, by the use of the RSA Marks on those servos.
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Despite this compelling evidence demonstrating that AVStar sales were
driven by factors other than the RSA Marks, TNB and Trexler assert that TNB is
still entitled to damages, and that AVStar’s post-RSA Mark sales data is irrelevant,
because AVStar’s use of the RSA Marks allowed it to capture market acceptance.86
Trexler opined at trial:
So essentially when you look at the facts and circumstances in this case,
you know, it’s been found that Avco willfully induced AVStar’s
infringement. Avco funded AVStar’s startup costs and then diverted
sales to AVStar. And AVStar is Avco’s coconspirator. AVStar uses the
RSA marks immediately. And that helps them with market acceptance.
And there was a lot of testimony at the jury trial about how this industry
does not like change. It likes consistency. Mr. Kraft talked about that.
And so AVStar was immediately able to benefit from the use of
Precision’s goodwill, which helped them to gain market acceptance in
the early time period while, you know, and they used that mark for a
six-year period until this Court found them to be infringing.87
This opinion is unconvincing for several reasons.88 First, it is uncontested that
ninety-eight percent of AVStar sales are made by Avco,89 and AVStar simply did
not need market acceptance with Avco. Second, although Trexler opined that there
was market acceptance downstream, the evidence firmly establishes that Avco
engine sales are based on factors other than the model of servo used in the engine,
86
87
88
89
Doc. 604 at 148, 157-62, 188-89, 209-10.
Id. at 148.
Avco has filed a motion to strike this opinion as a new, untimely opinion. Doc. 610. There are
good reasons to conclude that, under the relevant factors set forth in Meyers v. Pennypack
Woods Home Ownership Ass’n, 559 F.2d 894, 904-05 (3d Cir. 1977), Trexler’s opinion would
be stricken. However, because the Court finds the opinion unpersuasive, it will simply deny as
moot Avco’s motion. The same reasoning and result applies to any opinion related to
downstream confusion.
Doc. 604 at 11 (opening statement from Richard T. Matthews, Esquire), 189 (testimony from
Trexler).
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including their price, performance, reliability, relationships, and reputation—indeed,
it is generally the case that once an engine is selected for an airplane, that airplane
manufacturer has no choice but to purchase that specific engine.90 Michael Everhart
testified that no one has ever inquired as to what type of servo is used in Avco
engines.91
Third, there is no evidence that AVStar gained downstream market acceptance
when mechanics replaced or overhauled AVStar servos. Not only did the evidence
at trial—including a working model of an Avco engine—demonstrate that servos
cannot be seen when inside of a plane, and are only easily visible when the engine
is removed from a plane, but it also established that the work of an aircraft
mechanic—whether working on a servo or ordering and replacing one—is driven by
the part number of a servo, not its model number.92 Given that this work is largely
driven by part numbers, and the part numbers for AVStar and Precision servos are
distinct, there is little chance that AVStar gained market acceptance among third
party mechanics by using the RSA Marks.93
90
91
92
93
Doc. 588 at 20-22; Doc. 605 at 12, 14-15, 60-61.
Doc. 588 at 22.
Doc. 589 at 39, 95-96; Doc. 596 at 9-10; Doc. 597 at 39-40; Doc. 605 at 65-67. One mechanic,
David Czarnecki, testified that mechanics cannot legally “sign off [on] an annual inspection
on an aircraft if you haven’t taken the time to get the model, manufacturer, serial, and parts list
number off the magnetos, off the fuel pump, and off the fuel servo and do your homework first,
because you have to know what you’re looking at and working on . . .” Doc. 597 at 39-40.
And no proof of such market acceptance was presented at either the bench trial or jury trial.
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In sum, although Trexler opined that Avco engines “get overhauled and
repaired downstream. And if—if there is a different RSA servos number when the
mechanics go in to take those servos out, that’s when the market acceptance and the
questions come,”94 there is simply no evidence in the record to support that those
mechanics purchased any servos based on any potential confusion or market
acceptance. Nor is there any evidence that would tend to demonstrate that
downstream confusion aided AVStar in any way, boosted its sales, or harmed
Precision’s sales. This is particularly true when, as TNB has repeatedly noted during
the course of this litigation, Precision servo sales experienced an initial “dramatic
drop” in 2013 when Avco began purchasing AVStar servos,95 but there was no
further decline in Precision sales in future years. To the contrary, Precision servo
sales began to increase slightly in later years.96 Were Trexler’s market acceptance
theory accurate, one would expect a continued decrease in Precision servo sales in
later years as AVStar servos were taken out of Avco engines, mechanics began to
associate AVStar with the RSA Marks, and market acceptance was realized. The fact
that this did not happen is strong evidence that Trexler’s marketplace acceptance
theory is incorrect.
Consequently, the Court concludes that, while Avco has presented significant
evidence demonstrating that AVStar’s sales were not a result of confusion by
94
95
96
Doc. 604 at 189.
Doc. 604 at 41.
See TNB’s Jury Trial Exhibit 450; Avco’s Bench Trial Exhibit 435.
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purchasers who believed they were buying Precision servos due to AVStar’s use of
the RSA Marks, TNB has presented no countervailing evidence supporting a
conclusion that such confusion drove AVStar sales. This Court has repeatedly held
that TNB established actual confusion regarding whether servos were built by
Precision or AVStar;97 however, there is no evidence that any of the two percent of
individuals or entities other than Avco who purchased AVStar servos were confused
about the identity of the manufacturer of servos at the time they purchased any
servos. This is critical in a determination of damages, as plaintiffs may only recover
profits that they “would have earned but for the infringement.”98 Absent confusion
during the purchasing process, there is no evidence of actual lost profits for TNB.
It is beyond peradventure that all servos purchased from AVStar would have
instead been purchased from Precision if AVStar did not exist, as there are only two
manufacturers of the servos at issue in this case. However, the relevant question is
not whether, in the absence of AVStar, any sales would have instead gone to
Precision. The question is whether, in the absence of the infringement by
AVStar/Avco, any sales would have gone to Precision. The evidence of record
establishes that the answer to that question is no. In the absence of any evidence
demonstrating that TNB actually lost sales due to AVStar/Avco’s trademark
97
98
Doc. 356 at 21.
Gen. Motors LLC, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 1105.
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infringement, the Court concludes that TNB is not entitled to lost profit damages.99
Consequently, the Court will deny TNB’s request for such damages.
2.
Disgorgement of Profits
a.
Amount of Profits Subject to Disgorgement
The Court next turns to the question of disgorgement of profits. Despite
denying any award of damages for lost profits, the Court reaches a different result
regarding disgorgement of profits. Unlike lost profits, for disgorgement of profits,
the plaintiff’s burden is merely to demonstrate “the infringer’s sales before the
burden of proof shifts to the defendant to show costs and deductions.”100 TNB has
clearly satisfied its burden of demonstrating sales that were generated by AVStar
servos bearing the RSA Marks and, while Avco has successfully demonstrated that
the majority of those sales should be deducted, it has failed to demonstrate that all
of the sales of AVStar servos should be deducted.101
99
100
101
Cf. Daffy’s Inc., 354 F.3d at 242-43 (concluding that plaintiff was not entitled to lost profits
damages since “the record does not establish what percentage of Daffy’s sales, if any, was the
result of the use of Gucci’s mark” because, even though “‘Gucci’ suggests a certain level of
quality and prestige,” it was “quite possible that the purchasers were motivated by the
opportunity of purchasing what appeared to be an attractive handbag of exceedingly high
quality at the very favorable price afforded by Daffy’s ‘discount.’ To the extent that consumers
were motivated by obtaining such a bargain, the fact that they were also obtaining ‘a genuine
Gucci’ may have been only an incidental factor in their purchase, or no factor at all. In other
words, given the quality, attractiveness, and price of the bags, we cannot conclude that Daffy’s
could not have sold them at the same price even if they contained no reference to ‘Gucci’”).
Covertech Fabricating, Inc. v. TVM Bldg. Prod., Inc., 855 F.3d 163, 177 (3d Cir. 2017).
TNB asserts that it would be unjust not to disgorge all profits from both Avco and AVStar, as
Avco was a coconspirator that “willfully induc[ed]” AVStar to infringe on TNB’s trademarks,
and a failure to disgorge those profits would ignore “the realities of the two culpable parties
being willfully liable.” Doc. 619 at 16. The Court has no doubt that Avco and AVStar willfully
infringed on TNB’s trademarks—that issue was resolved by a jury following a trial. However,
as detailed in this Opinion, the evidence demonstrates that the vast majority of AVStar and
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TNB has established—and Avco does not appear to dispute—that an accurate
estimate of profits that AVStar and Avco made from servos bearing the RSA Marks
is $10,980,278.102 Having established those sales, the burden shifts to Avco to
demonstrate that some portion of those sales should be deducted and not disgorged.
Avco has largely succeeded in that task, primarily based, as discussed above, on the
strength of Holt’s expert opinion and the evidence upon which she relied to
formulate her opinion.
As Holt’s opinion and the sales data make clear, none of the sales from
AVStar to Avco—accounting for ninety-eight percent of AVStar’s total sales—were
driven by AVStar’s use of the RSA Marks. Rather, Avco would have purchased
AVStar servos regardless of the RSA Marks, as its purchases were driven by factors
other than those marks. Because Avco has successfully demonstrated a “lack of
connection between the infringing mark and the actual sales” from AVStar to Avco
based upon that infringement, none of those profits are subject to disgorgement.103
That leaves as potentially subject to disgorgement profits from AVStar’s
servo sales to third parties and profits from Avco’s engine sales. However, as to
profits from Avco’s engine sales, Avco has again sustained its burden of proving
102
103
Avco sales did not occur as a result of the RSA Marks, and equity supports disgorgement only
of those profits potentially derived as a result of the trademark infringement. Stated differently,
it would be fundamentally unfair to disgorge profits that are wholly unrelated to trademark
infringement which, here, make up the majority of Defendants’ sales.
TNB’s Bench Trial Exhibit 452—1.1, 2.1, 3.0, 3.1.
Resorts Int’l, Inc. v. Greate Bay Hotel & Casino, Inc., 830 F. Supp. 826, 840 (D.N.J. 1992).
26
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that the sales and profits were not attributable to the infringing RSA Marks used on
the AVStar servos contained within the engines.
As discussed previously, Avco engine sales were, and are, based on factors
other than the model of servo used in the engine, including the engines’ price,
performance, reliability, relationships, and reputation, and the requirement that
certain Avco engines be used in certain airplanes.104 Holt testified convincingly at
the bench trial that Avco sales data confirms this conclusion:
Well, yeah, [Avco engine sales are] going up. So . . . we do not see a
drop in sales. We do not see that the price went down. What we see is
that there’s a steady increase. There’s—the industry does not care what
model number is on the servo. What they care is that they’re getting a
Lycoming engine, and that Lycoming is their supplier. And that’s what
they care about. And we can see this proven by the numbers.105
Because Avco engines sales—and the profits derived from those sales—were
“demonstrably not attributable to the unlawful use of” the RSA Marks on AVStar’s
servos contained within the Avco engine, none of those profits are properly subject
to disgorgement.106 TNB argues that it would be unfair and in direct contravention
104
105
106
Doc. 588 at 20-22; Doc. 605 at 12, 14-15, 60-61. See also Doc. 451 at 164 (Holt opining that
Avco’s customers purchase Avco engines for numerous reasons, including “the quality, the
timely delivery . . . that it will come at a good price, that the quality will be good, . . . that the
airplane manufacturer will not shut down its facility because the engine manufacturer can’t get
them engines on time”).
Doc. 605 at 30-31. This testimony mirrored Holt’s testimony at the Daubert hearing, where
she explained “we know . . . that the model number [of the servos] is [not] driving [engine]
purchase decision[s], because we already knew when they went from one supplier to two and
the marketplace did not reduce the quantity [of engines] they bought from [Avco]. Why didn’t
they reduce it? And it’s because they want a Lycoming engine. Why do they want a Lycoming
engine? Certain airplanes have to have that particular engine.” Doc. 451 at 164.
Metro Bank, 2011 WL 208743 at *5.
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of this Court’s role sitting in equity to fail to disgorge the aforementioned profits for
AVStar and Avco, as such a holding would ignore “the realities of the two culpable
parties being willfully liable and intending to deceive the downstream market to gain
acceptance for all of AVStar’s infringing RSA servos.”107 As discussed above, the
Court rejects the downstream confusion theory proffered by Trexler. More
importantly, disgorgement is warranted under equity only where TNB/Precision has
suffered actual harm. For sales of AVStar servos to Avco and sales of Avco engines,
there simply is no evidence that TNB suffered any harm that would render it
equitable to disgorge Avco’s or AVStar’s profits.
Even after such a sizeable deduction, there remains a portion of profits
available for disgorgement—profits for sales of infringing servos to third parties,
and profits on rebuilt and overhauled servos that bore the infringing RSA Marks,
107
Doc. 619 at 16.
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which Holt calculated as $264,818.108 Although, as Avco argues,109 there is no
evidence in the record to support the conclusion that these sales were driven by
AVStar’s use of the RSA Marks, TNB does not bear the burden of proof here.
Instead, it is Avco’s burden to demonstrate the absence of any connection between
these sales and AVStar’s infringement,110 and Avco has not sustained its burden of
proof in this regard.
Holt testified at the Daubert hearing that she “didn’t call and interview the
third-party buyers of AVStar” servos and, “because [she] didn’t call and interview
them to find out that they made the same purchase decisions,” she could not
108
109
110
Doc. 612-1 at 46, 52, 59. Holt likewise left a portion of Avco’s profits open for disgorgement
based upon decisions by third parties to overhaul those AVStar servos in the future, potentially
on the basis of confusion. Doc. 276-1 at 37-39; Doc. 4551 at 166-70. She calculated those
profits at $541,219. Doc. 612-1 at 46, 60, 63. The Court finds no basis for disgorgement of
these profits. Holt explained that it is “possible, though highly unlikely, that a customer of
Lycoming decided its engine’s servo needed repair would have sent the servo to Lycoming for
repair by AVStar rather than another repair vendor as a result [of] the presence of the RSA
[M]arks on AVStar servos.” Id. at 62. However, it does not make logical sense that Precision
suffered any harm from such a hypothetical decision. Even if a customer were confused about
the manufacturer of the servo, it would have sent the servo to Lycoming for overhaul not
because of any confusion, but because the customer had a Lycoming engine. This is borne out
by imagining a counterfactual scenario wherein the AVStar servo did not have infringing RSA
Marks and the customer was not confused about its manufacture: the customer would again
send the servo to Lycoming for an overhaul. Moreover, AVStar is authorized to overhaul both
Precision servos and AVStar servos, while Precision may overhaul Precision servos but cannot
overhaul AVStar servos, as it decided not to obtain approval to perform such overhauls. Doc.
594 at 29; Doc. 604 at 99. If a customer were confused about the manufacturer of the AVStar
servos, it may have sent those servos to Precision to be overhauled, but Precision would have
been unable to perform such an overhaul, and Precision would not gain anything, but neither
would it lose anything. Were the customer to send, based on confusion, the servo to AVStar
instead to overhaul, AVStar would gain profits from that overhaul, but that gain would not be
unjust, since Precision could not have performed the overhaul, nor would Precision have been
harmed by that decision since it could not have performed the overhaul. Consequently, the
Court concludes that this $541,219 in profits for Avco is not subject to disgorgement.
Doc. 612 at 37-43.
15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). See also Metro Bank, 2011 WL 208743 at *5.
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definitively state that those sales were based on factors other than the RSA Marks,
such as “quality, on-time delivery, [or] pricing.”111 Holt testified that she did not
“think [it’s] possible” that those sales to third parties were driven by the RSA Marks,
but she could not eliminate the possibility that a third party “could have bought [an
infringing AVStar servo] confused, thinking that [AVStar was] Precision.”112 No
evidence was presented by Avco at trial that demonstrates to the Court that such
purchasing decisions were not driven by the RSA Marks used on the infringing
AVStar servos.113 Accordingly, the Court concludes that those $264,818 in sales
may be disgorged, subject to the principles of equity.114
b.
Whether Disgorgement is Appropriate
Given that some of AVStar’s profits are subject to disgorgement, the Court
turns to the question of whether equity supports disgorgement of those profits. The
Third Circuit has provided six factors that should be considered in determining
whether equity supports disgorgement, including: (1) whether Avco intended to
111
112
113
114
Doc. 451 at 170-71. See also Doc. 605 at 83-85.
Doc. 451 at 171.
The list of servo core returns provided by TNB at trial provides some evidence to support the
notion that these sales may have been driven by confusion with regard to the RSA Marks
although, for the reasons noted by Avco, that return list is relatively weak evidence of
confusion. Doc. 612 at 41-43.
Avco notes that “[t]he third parties who purchase AVStar servos are primarily mechanics” who
would not be confused as to the servo manufacturer. Doc. 612 at 43-45. However, no testimony
at trial established what percentage of the third-party buyers are mechanics, and there is simply
no logical manner in which the Court could properly determine which portion of those sales
may not be subject to disgorgement. Any attempt by the Court to find less than 100% of those
sales subject to disgorgement would be pure guesswork. Consequently, the Court cannot
conclude that Avco has sustained its burden to demonstrate that any portion of those sales
should be deducted.
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confuse or deceive; (2) whether sales were diverted from TNB; (3) the adequacy of
other remedies; (4) any unreasonable delay by TNB in asserting its rights; (5) the
public interest in making the misconduct unprofitable; and (6) whether this is a case
of palming off.115 Although this presents a close question, considering those factors,
the Court concludes that disgorgement of profits is appropriate.
With regard to the first factor, there is evidence in the record that Avco
intended to confuse or deceive. The jury determined that Avco and AVStar’s
infringement was willful116 after being instructed that “willful infringement consists
of more than accidental or careless encroachment of another’s rights” and, instead,
“involves an intent to infringe or a deliberate disregard of the mark holder’s rights
in a way that was calculated to appropriate or otherwise benefit from the goodwill
that the market holder had nurtured.”117 This determination by the jury supports the
conclusion that Avco intended to deceive or confuse—and thereby sought to
appropriate Precision’s goodwill—which in turn supports disgorgement of profits.
As to the second factor, as noted above, there is no evidence that sales were
actually diverted from TNB/Precision—it is only possible that some sales to third
parties were diverted and, if such sales were diverted, they constitute only a small
fraction of AVStar’s or Precision’s sales. This factor therefore weighs against
disgorging profits. The third factor weighs against disgorgement; AVStar ceased
115
116
117
Kars 4 Kids, 8 F.4th 209 at 223.
Doc. 579.
Doc. 589 at 240.
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using the RSA Marks within three months of this Court’s decision granting summary
judgment in favor of TNB and its finding that Avco/AVStar’s use of the RSA Marks
infringed on TNB’s trademark,118 and there is no realistic possibility that AVStar
will again use the RSA Marks. Furthermore, disgorgement of profits does not appear
to be “necessary to deter infringement” in the future given that Avco has ceased
using the RSA Marks.119
With respect to the fourth factor, the Court finds no unreasonable delay in
TNB attempting to assert its rights as to the RSA Marks. Precision issued demands
that AVStar cease using the RSA Marks as early as January 2010—before AVStar
servos were ever sold to the public—and followed up that letter with additional
letters and a lawsuit.120 This factor therefore supports disgorging AVStar’s profits.
The fifth factor is neutral. The jury’s determination that Avco and AVStar’s actions
were willful is indicative of some culpable conduct on Avco’s part, although there
is no indication that the infringement was profitable, meaning that, while “[i]t is
obvious there would be a great public interest in making misconduct unprofitable
where there is culpable conduct on the part of the infringer,”121 such interest is
lacking here.
118
119
120
121
Doc. 590 at 159-60.
Marshak v. Treadwell, 595 F.3d 478, 495 (3d Cir. 2009).
TNB’s Bench Trial Exhibits 19, 20, 79, 80.
Sabinsa Corp. v. Creative Compounds, LLC, No. CIV.A. 04-4239 DMC, 2011 WL 3236096,
at *6 (D.N.J. July 27, 2011).
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Finally, the sixth factor supports disgorgement. “Passing off (or palming off,
as it is sometimes called) occurs when a producer misrepresents his own goods or
services as someone else’s.”122 Again, the jury determined that Avco and AVStar’s
infringement was willful, meaning that they held “an intent to infringe or a deliberate
disregard of the mark holder’s rights in a way that was calculated to appropriate or
otherwise benefit from the goodwill that the market holder had nurtured.”123 This
indicates that the infringement was done with the intent to misrepresent AVStar
servos as Precision servos.
Weighing the relevant factors, the Court concludes that equity slightly
supports disgorging AVStar’s profits for sales of infringing servos to third parties.
Consequently, the Court will award TNB damages in the sum of $264,818.
c.
Whether Disgorged Profits Should be Increased
Having concluded that disgorgement of profits is appropriate, the Court turns
to the question of whether those damages should be enhanced. Trebling of damages
is only appropriate when a monetary award is “inadequate” when considering the
equities of the case.124 Critical to any such analysis is the fact that “[i]f the court
increases the monetary award, such an enhancement ‘shall constitute compensation
and not a penalty.’”125 Therefore, courts must be careful in enhancing damages,
122
123
124
125
Dastar Corp. v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., 539 U.S. 23, 28 (2003).
Doc. 589 at 240.
Kars 4 Kids, 8 F.4th at 224.
Id. (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a)).
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“because granting an increase could easily transfigure an otherwise-acceptable
compensatory award into an impermissible punitive measure.”126
Here, there is no need to enhance damages, as Avco and AVStar did not
“gain[] more from the infringement than the infringer’s profits reflect.”127 As
discussed previously, the Court rejects the notion that AVStar gained any market
acceptance as a result of the use of the RSA Marks, and there is no evidence that its
prestige or reputation was otherwise enhanced by use of the RSA Marks.128 Nor can
the Court discern any other “intangible benefits” that the companies gained as result
of the infringing conduct.129
Similarly, there is no risk that “actual, proven profits will [not] adequately
compensate” TNB.130 To the contrary, this Court’s award of disgorged profits in the
amount of $264,818 likely represents an overestimate of any profits gained from
AVStar’s use of the RSA Marks,131 as it is highly unlikely that mechanics, who make
126
127
128
129
130
131
Id. at 224.
Id. (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted).
AVStar likely gained some market acceptance by Avco’s use of AVStar servos in Avco
engines, which directly injected thousands of AVStar’s servos into the airplane market,
permitting it to establish a toehold in that market, and introducing those servos to pilots and
mechanics who may otherwise have not used those servos. However, Avco’s decision to use
AVStar servos was based on factors other than the use of the RSA Marks, and these benefits
to AVStar cannot be said to have been the result of any infringement.
Max Rack, 40 F.4th at 473.
Kars 4 Kids, 8 F.4th at 224 (internal quotation marks omitted).
To reiterate, the Court finds that AVStar sales to third parties are subject to disgorgement
because Avco has failed to demonstrate what percentage of third-party buyers are mechanics,
and there is no logical manner in which to apportion any sales that may not have been due to
confusion from sales that may have been driven by confusion. That is to say, disgorged profits
are awarded not because TNB has established that those sales were due to infringement, but
because Avco has failed to prove that they were not due to infringement.
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up at least a portion of third party buyers,132 were confused about the manufacturers
when purchasing or overhauling servos with the RSA Marks, as their decisions are
made based upon the servo’s part number—which are distinct between AVStar and
Precision servos. Because an award of disgorged profits in the amount of $264,818
more than fully compensates TNB for any infringement, trebling of damages is not
warranted.
Despite this conclusion, TNB requests that this Court to stray beyond the
“clear limit[s placed] on [its] discretionary power” by increasing the monetary
judgment as a punitive measure, rather than as a compensatory measure.133 The fact
that Precision bases its request on punitive measures is made clear by TNB’s
statement that trebled damages are warranted “as a deterrent alone” based on the
“egregiousness” of Avco’s litigation position over the course of a decade, and its
willful infringement.134 However, this ignores clear guidance from the Third Circuit,
which has stated “that deterrence is not a compensatory reason” and “cannot serve
as a basis for an enhanced award.”135 There is no non-punitive reason to enhance the
disgorged profits awarded to TNB, and the Court therefore declines TNB’s request
for trebled damages.
132
133
134
135
See Doc. 605 at 83-84.
Max Rack, 40 F.4th at 473.
Doc. 619 at 23.
Kars 4 Kids, 8 F.4th at 225 n.22.
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3.
Punitive Damages
Turning to the question of whether punitive damages should be awarded, the
Court concludes that such damages are inappropriate. As discussed previously,
punitive damages are warranted only in the most extreme circumstances after
considering three factors: (1) the character of the act; (2) the nature and extent of the
harm; and (3) the wealth of the defendant.136 Those factors weigh against the
imposition of punitive damages.
First, the character of the act here is, relatively speaking, innocuous. As the
United States Supreme Court has emphasized, “[t]he most important indicium of the
reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the degree of reprehensibility of the
defendant’s conduct.”137 In assessing the reprehensibility of a party’s conduct, courts
should consider “whether: the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic;
the tortious conduct evinced an indifference to or a reckless disregard of the health
or safety of others; the target of the conduct had financial vulnerability; the conduct
involved repeated actions or was an isolated incident; and the harm was the result of
intentional malice, trickery, or deceit, or mere accident.”138
Here, any harm caused—if indeed there was any harm at all—was modest and
economic only, and involved no physical harm. While Avco’s actions evidenced a
136
137
138
End Zone, Inc., 259 A.3d at 487.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 538 U.S. 408, 419 (2003) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
Id.
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reckless disregard of TNB’s trademark rights, there was no indifference to the health
or safety of others. Moreover, TNB and Precision did not have any particular
financial vulnerability but were, and remain today, solvent and fairly successful
companies. Although the conduct was ongoing, and the harm was the result of, at a
minimum, Avco’s reckless conduct, the character of the tortious act as a whole is
not sufficiently reprehensible to support the imposition of punitive damages.
Second, the nature and extent of the harm is fairly small, if it exists at all. As
discussed previously, the Court cannot conclude that TNB lost any sales due to
Avco’s conduct, meaning there is no real harm here. And even counting the
$264,818 in disgorged profits from AVStar as harm to Precision, that harm is
economic in nature and minor, given that Precision generates sales that regularly
exceed five million dollars per year.139
The third consideration does weigh in favor of awarding punitive damages, as
Avco is a large company, owned by an even larger and highly profitable company,
Textron. However, that single factor does not outweigh the fact that Avco and
AVStar’s actions were not of a character that would warrant punitive damages, nor
was the harm to TNB or Precision significant enough to warrant such damages.
Although Avco’s actions were willful and undeniably infringed on TNB’s rights, “to
award punitive damages here would be an overreach of [the Court’s] judicial
139
TNB Bench Trial Exhibit 435.
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responsibility to do justice,” and TNB’s request for punitive damages must be
denied.140
4.
Attorneys’ Fees
Finally, the Court turns to the question of whether to award attorneys’ fees for
TNB. As an initial matter, Avco correctly argues that the issue of attorneys’ fees is
not properly before the Court.141 As the United States Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit has explained, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54 “require[s] that
[any] claim for attorneys’ fees be made by motion” unless the law undergirding the
plaintiff’s substantive claims “‘requires those fees to be proved at trial as an element
of damages.’”142 Moreover, with limited exceptions, Rule 54 requires that a plaintiff
“submit a motion for attorneys’ fees between 0-14 days after the district court
issue[s] its order” disposing of the case.143
Here, the Lanham Act does not require that attorneys’ fees or other expenses
be proved at trial as an element of damages, nor does any statute or court order
provide that a request for attorneys’ fees may be presented prior to the entry of
judgment. Accordingly, TNB’s request for attorneys’ fees is procedurally improper.
Nevertheless, because, as explained below, the Court concludes that attorneys’ fees
are not warranted, it will address TNB’s request at this time.
140
141
142
143
Mifflinburg Tel., Inc. v. Criswell, 277 F. Supp. 3d 750, 806 (M.D. Pa. 2017).
Doc. 618 at 46-47.
Brown & Pipkins, LLC v. Serv. Emps. Int’l Union, 846 F.3d 716, 730 (4th Cir. 2017) (quoting
Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d)(2)(A)).
Id.
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Under the Lanham Act, attorneys’ fees are warranted only “in exceptional
cases,” which occur “when (a) there is an unusual discrepancy in the merits of the
positions taken by the parties or (b) the losing party has litigated the case in an
‘unreasonable manner.’”144
As to the first consideration, the Court cannot find that there was an unusual
discrepancy in the merits of the positions taken here by Avco and TNB. It is true that
the merits of Avco’s position as to infringement were relatively weak; this Court
granted summary judgment in TNB’s favor, finding trademark infringement as a
matter of law,145 and later held that Avco was not entitled to present at trial evidence
that Avco/AVStar believed they were entitled to use the RSA Marks on servos, as
such evidence “would establish, at most, that Avco buried its head in the sand when
presented with evidence that it could not use the RSA Marks.”146 Furthermore, the
jury concluded that Avco and AVStar’s infringement was willful,147 which must
“play a role in a district court’s analysis of the ‘exceptionality’ of a case.”148 This
tends to demonstrate that Avco’s litigation position as to infringement was relatively
weak, although this is offset to some extent by the fact that TNB was twice denied a
144
145
146
147
148
Fair Wind Sailing, 764 F.3d 303 at 315 (quoting Octane Fitness, 572 U.S. at 554).
Docs. 356, 357.
Doc. 526 at 10-11.
Doc. 579.
Fair Wind Sailing, 764 F.3d 303 at 315.
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preliminary injunction based in part on the conclusion that TNB had failed to
establish a likelihood of success on the merits of its infringement claims.149
Even assuming that there was a significant disparity in the parties’ positions
on the merits as to infringement, Avco’s position as to damages—which is frankly
the heart of any civil litigation—was strong and, if there were any disparity in the
parties’ positions in that respect, it was—as discussed above—TNB that had the far
weaker position. Not only did TNB fail to prove any lost profits, but Avco was able
to demonstrate that the vast majority of its and AVStar’s profits were not attributable
to use of the RSA Marks. This success in the damages phase of this case militates
against finding that there is an unusual discrepancy in the merits of the positions
taken by the parties such that this may be termed an “exceptional” case where
attorneys’ fees are warranted.
Turning then to the question of whether this case is exceptional based upon
Avco having litigated this case in an unreasonable manner, the Court again
determines that the answer is no. The docket, to which TNB cites at length,150
supports the notion that this matter was thoroughly and exhaustively litigated
between parties who did not like each other.151 The parties litigated matters
149
150
151
Doc. 60 at 4-9; Doc. 145 at 9-12.
Doc. 613 at 44-48.
This animus appears to have extended to the attorneys involved in the early stages of this case.
Attorneys at Crowell & Moring entered their appearance in this matter in 2017, replacing
Avco’s prior attorneys and, in the Court’s view, the relationship between counsel improved
markedly after this change in attorneys.
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extensively, which was in part responsible for this case continuing for more than a
decade without resolution. These disputes included whether AVStar should be
joined as a party to this matter, TNB’s motion to intervene, a motion to dismiss,
motions to strike and for sanctions, discovery disputes, and issues with expert
reports.
While Avco was often unsuccessful in these disputes, it was also often
successful, for example, winning in part a motion to strike a portion of TNB’s answer
and counterclaims, two motions for a protective order, and a motion for sanctions.152
TNB was often equally unsuccessful in disputes placed before the Court, having
been denied a preliminary injunction on three occasions and a permanent injunction
once, and losing, for example, motions for sanctions and to strike an expert rebuttal
report.153
And while it is true that Magistrate Judge Karoline Mehalchick described the
discovery issues in this case as “the most vitriolic and adversarial discovery dispute
I have ever been involved with, either in practice or in the Court in this position,”154
both parties were equally responsible for those issues. Indeed, the hearing in which
Magistrate Judge Mehalchick made the aforementioned statement arose when
attorneys for both parties got “into a physical altercation over a servo” at a
deposition; both attorneys claimed to have been “bloodied up” during this
152
153
154
Docs. 69, 213, 240, 315, 316.
Docs. 60, 145, 315, 316, 394, 420.
Doc. 245 at 6.
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encounter.155 Moreover, both parties were directed to provide fuller discovery in this
matter, emphasizing that these discovery disputes were hardly one-sided.156
Given that both parties fully litigated this matter in nearly every conceivable
manner, and that both parties were at times successful and at times unsuccessful in
their requests and disputes, the Court cannot conclude that Avco’s method of
litigating this matter was so unreasonable that attorneys’ fees are warranted. In short,
although this matter was certainly contentious, it was not “exceptional” as required
under the Lanham Act.157
IV.
CONCLUSION
In accordance with the above discussion, Avco infringed on TNB’s
trademarks, and TNB is entitled to some limited damages. At bottom, this case is
relatively simple. Although the creation of AVStar and its reverse engineering of
Precision’s servos—an act that did not violate TNB’s or Precision’s rights—directly
and substantially harmed Precision, and although Avco and AVStar violated TNB’s
trademarks, those acts are separate and distinct.
155
156
157
Id. at 4, 6.
Doc. 186.
TNB also requests costs and interest. Doc. 613 at 48. As the Third Circuit has noted, “[t]he
Lanham Act allows a prevailing plaintiff to recover costs . . . as a matter of course.” Green v.
Fornario, 486 F.3d 100, 103 (3d Cir. 2007). Nevertheless, TNB has provided insufficient
information for the Court to determine what costs should be awarded in this matter. The Court
therefore defers any decision on an award of costs, other than attorneys’ fees which are denied,
pending further briefing. TNB may file a motion seeking such costs, along with a detailed
breakdown of those costs, within fourteen days of the date that these Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law are entered.
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Avco’s use of the RSA Marks did not harm TNB. Rather, any harm came from
the creation of a competitive servo manufacturer that took a substantial amount of
Precision’s servo business for reasons other than any use of the RSA Marks.
Ultimately, Avco and AVStar sold servos bearing the RSA Marks “knowing of
plaintiff’s mark, but it appears this was done not as an attempt to profit from the
mark but rather in simple disregard of plaintiff’s rights.”158 Such actions do not
warrant an award of damages beyond $264,818 in AVStar profits that will be
disgorged. Consequently, Judgment will be entered in favor of TNB in the sum of
$264,818.
An appropriate Order follows.
BY THE COURT:
s/ Matthew W. Brann
Matthew W. Brann
Chief United States District Judge
158
Quick Techs., Inc. v. Sage Grp. PLC, 313 F.3d 338, 350 (5th Cir. 2002) (brackets and internal
quotation marks omitted).
43
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