Roger Cleveland Golf Company Inc v. Prince et al
Filing
135
Supplemental MOTION for Judgment as a Matter of Law ( Response to Motion due by 5/9/2011), Supplemental MOTION for New Trial, Supplemental MOTION for Relief from Judgment by Bright Builders Inc. (Attachments: # 1 Memo in Support, # 2 Exhibit, # 3 Exhibit, # 4 Exhibit, # 5 Exhibit, # 6 Exhibit, # 7 Exhibit, # 8 Exhibit, # 9 Exhibit, # 10 Exhibit, # 11 Exhibit, # 12 Exhibit, # 13 Exhibit, # 14 Exhibit, # 15 Exhibit, # 16 Exhibit, # 17 Exhibit, # 18 Exhibit)No proposed order(Doolittle, Paul)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA
CHARLESTON DIVISION
Roger Cleveland Golf Company, Inc.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Christopher Prince, Sheldon Shelley, Prince
Distribution, LLC, and Bright Builders,
Inc.
Defendants.
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Civil Action No. 2:09-2119-MBS
DEFENDANT BRIGHT BUILDERS,
INC.’S SUPPLEMENTAL
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF
THE FOLLOWING: RENEWED
MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A
MATTER OF LAW (FED. R. CIV. P.
50(b)); MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL
(FED. R. CIV. P. 59); MOTION FOR
RELIEF FROM JUDGMENT (FED. R.
CIV. P. 60)
Following a two-day trial, a jury in the above captioned matter issued a verdict finding
Defendant Bright Builders, Inc. liable for contributory trade mark infringement pursuant to the
Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §1051, et seq., and violation of the South Carolina Unfair Trade
Practices Act (“SCUTPA”), S.C. Code §39-5-10, et seq.. Under the standards set forth by the
U.S. Supreme Court in Inwood Labs., Inc. v. Ives Lab., Inc., 456 U.S. 844 (1982), the evidence
produced at trial was insufficient to sustain the verdict on either cause of action and the renewed
motion for judgment as a matter of law and motion for relief from judgment should be granted.
Moreover, because the jury instructions allowed the jury to find the defendant liable under an
incorrect standard, they were plain error and highly prejudicial justifying a new trial.
I.
FACTS RELEVANT TO MOTION
Frederick Fessenden, an employee of Cleveland Golf who worked as a “mystery
shopper” and “purchase[d] golf clubs from various online sources,” testified via affidavit that in
June of 2009, he purchased a Cleveland brand golf club from a website bearing the domain name
“copycatclubs.com.” (Ex. A at ¶¶ 3-4).1 Mr. Fessenden further testified that in July of 2009 he
purchased additional Cleveland brand golf clubs from copycatclubs.com, took photographs of
the clubs purchased and provided the clubs to Cleveland‟s legal counsel. (Ex. A at ¶ 5). Stephen
Gingrich, Vice President of Human Resources and Global Legal Enforcement for Cleveland Golf
supported such and indicated, upon inspecting the purchased clubs, that they were not authentic.
(Doc. 133 at 14:20-15:5). It was stipulated in trial that 11 registered trademarks of Cleveland
existed on Prince‟s website and were subject to “trademark infringement without authorization.”
(Ex. B; Doc. 129 at 63:16-25).
Mr. Fessenden turned over the clubs he purchased to Cleveland Golf care of its law firm,
Nelson Mullins. (Ex. A at ¶ 7). Cleveland Golf then filed suit against Christopher Prince and his
company Prince Distribution, LLC, for trademark infringement and counterfeiting. Subsequent
to suing Prince, Cleveland learned that Prince had used “Bright Builders” to host his website and
provide website building services. (Doc. 133 at 15:10-17). Nobody at Cleveland nor its legal
team contacted Bright Builders regarding the suit against Prince nor sent a “cease and desist”
letter to Bright Builders indicating that Prince‟s site was being used to sell counterfeit goods.
(Doc 132 at 67:2-23; Doc. 133 at 27:4-22). Bright Builders did not suspect Prince was selling
counterfeit clubs until it received the Amended Summons and Complaint in this action. (Ex. C at
112:6-10; Doc. 132 at 67:2-23).
Generally, Bright Builders sells a variety of coaching, training, development, web hosting
and support services for use in the e-commerce market. (Exs. F, K-O; Doc. 132 at 3:7-11, 29:2430:3, 83:21-84:16). In regard to the Prince Defendants specifically, Bright Builders‟ services
1
Citations to exhibits attached hereto and filed herewith are referred to as (Ex. __) followed by
the designated letter as listed on the Exhibit List attached as Exhibit 1 hereto. Citations to the
trial transcript are referred to by the docket number of the completed excerpts on file with the
court followed by the page and line.
2
were sold to Prince by a third party wholesaler, Auction Success Group, LLC. (Ex. D; Ex. C at
30:20-31:9; Doc. 132 at 29:6-9). On or about February 21, 2008, the Prince Defendants
purchased a package of Bright Builders‟ services from Auction Success Group wherein Bright
Builders agreed to provide the following services: “The Bright Builder Package” including a
research tool and “lister” tool; “Mentoring” for 7 months; “SEO Marketing Foundation”;
“Graphic Design”; and “Innovative Tax Services.” (Ex. D).
In connection with his purchase of
Bright Builders‟ services, Prince signed a “Hosting Agreement” which provided the following:
Sections 4.0, 4.1 and 4.3: Bright Builders‟ “obligations under this Agreement are
conditioned upon the following representations and warranties:
4.1
Compliance with Law. You [the Prince Defendants] represent and
warrant that you will comply with all applicable state and federal laws in
your performance of this Agreement and in the use and operation of the
Hosting Service, including laws governing technology, software, and trade
secrets.
...
4.3
Non-Infringement. You [the Prince Defendants] represent and
warrant that your performance of this Agreement and providing the Web
Service, including the software or data files, shall not infringe the
intellectual property or other proprietary rights of any third party.
Section 6.4: “violation of Sections 4.1, 4.2 or 4.3” of the Agreement “constitute a
breach or default of this Agreement.”
Section 8.0:
We [i.e., Defendant Bright Builders] may immediately deactivate any
Hosting Service that is used for Illegal, Abusive, or Unethical Activity
without warning to you . ... Although we will make reasonable efforts to
alert you to such activities and allow you an opportunity to cure them
within a 12-hour period after discovery, we are not required to give notice
before deactivating your use of our services if, in our discretion, your use
is or results in Illegal, Abusive or Unethical activities.
(Ex. E)
In addition to the signed Hosting Agreement, Bright Builders then sent a “welcome
packet” to Prince. (Ex. F). Nothing in Bright Builders‟ training materials or welcome packet
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states that customers should “copy and paste” information from other websites without the
website owner‟s permission and/or that infringes on a third-party‟s copyright or trademark
ownership in violation of Bright Builders‟ own hosting agreement. (Exs. F, K-O).
Despite the documentary evidence confirming that he bought the services through
Auction Success Group, Prince testified at trial that he “found” Bright Builders‟ services by
conducting a Google search and finding Bright Builders‟ website from which he purchased the
services. (Doc. 128 at 3:11-13; 36:24-37:5). Despite being able to conduct this search prior to
his introduction to Bright Builders‟ services, Prince testified that he did not even know how “to
turn on a computer” before Bright Builders assisted him. (Doc. 128 at 36:21-23). Prince testified
that Bright Builders‟ coaching and mentoring taught him how to cut and paste content from other
websites onto his own and how to build his websites. (Doc. 128 at 10:5-13). Prince testified that
Bright Builders representatives told him to use the drop-shippers that Prince used to obtain the
golf clubs he was selling through his website. (Doc. 128 at 4:4-6, 16:23-17:4). Prince further
testified that Bright Builders told him that he should “copy and paste” images and information
that he wanted to use on his site directly from other websites, which he then did. (Doc. 128 at
5:22-6:4, 10:5-13). Prince also testified at trial that, during the coaching sessions with Bright
Builders, Prince told Bright Builders representatives that he was going to sell copied golf clubs.
(Doc. 128 at 66:25-67:8, 68:11-14).
Cross examination of Prince revealed that first, he tried to sell hospital scrubs with his
wife, and then video games, but neither of these ideas worked out. (Doc. 128 at 47:15-48:11,
73:23-74:15). Prince also admitted that he may have sold golf clubs on eBay prior to his ever
finding or utilizing Bright Builders in 2008. (Doc. 128 at 49:15-50:12). Prince said he would go
on eBay during the use of his eBay account and look at where he could find the cheapest clubs to
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sell in order to reap the largest profit margin, and he found them at the Chinese drop shipper
websites (Doc. 128 at 50:17-25). Moreover, Prince‟s prior testimony confirmed that he would
have both bought and sold golf clubs on eBay during this earlier time (prior to his involvement
with Bright Builders). (Doc. 128 at 49:15-50:12).
Prince further had testified that he alone had selected his domain names because “I had
seen other companies out there with names similar, and cool names I thought at that particular
time, so I registered it.” (Doc. 128 at 63:15-25). Prince also had testified that he alone designed
the layout of his golf site, on his own using the general layouts and sales interface provided in
Bright Builders‟ web builder software and that nobody else had involvement in the design.
(Doc. 128 at 8:9-11, 70:10-16). Prince testified that all of the content and images for his golf
clubs website came by him copying and pasting from wholesalers‟ websites and other third-party
websites. (Doc. 128 at 53:14-54:18, 70:5-16). Moreover, he stated that during the only
discussion about golf with Bright Builders, Prince simply discussed “golf clubs in general,”
nothing about selling counterfeit or illegal clubs. (Doc 128 at 52:1-9, 68:11-14). Prince also
explained that, while Bright Builders recommended certain drop-shippers he did not use those
shippers because he would not be able to make the amount of money he wanted. (Doc. 128 at
4:4-6, 38:3-9) Instead, Prince used various drop shipping “companies in China” to obtain the
products he sold. (Doc. 128 at 16:8-17). Prince also admitted that he could not recall telling
Bright Builders about the Chinese Web sites he was using to supply his sale of golf clubs or the
fact that the clubs he was selling were counterfeit. (Doc. 128 at 52:1-6, 68:11-14) Prince further
admitted that he knew the golf clubs he was ordering from the Chinese Web sites were not
authentic because he received multiple complaints from his customers that they could not
register the clubs they purchased with Cleveland. (Doc. 128 at 52:10-25; 53:9-13). Prince had
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further confirmed that Bright Builders directed him to other sites suggesting that Prince pattern
his site after them, and copy and paste images and content from those sites. (Doc. 128 at 5:226:4, 10:5-13) Prince had testified that Bright Builders walked him through a demonstration of
how to set up a Web site and denied that Bright Builders ever helped him incorporate specific
information into a his site. (Doc. 128 at 5:22-6:4, 70:5-19, 81:9-82:1)
Michael A. Johnson, a coach with Bright Builders and Prince‟s specific advisor during
the pendency of Prince‟s account testified via deposition. (Ex. C). Using contemporaneous
notes of telephone and instant message communications with Prince, Johnson confirmed that
Prince failed to attend most of the webinars on general website building provided with the
general site building training, and consistently failed to complete most assignments or check in
with his coach. (Ex. C at 81:15-22, 83:2-8). During the handful of conversations conducted
with Prince via telephone, Bright Builders told Prince to generally find a “niche” that interested
him around which he would be motivated to build an e-commerce business. (Ex. C at 70:1871:7, 89:6-7). Johnson further testified that the Bright Builders software and web building tools
provided general stock page layouts and themes with automatically inserted “form” text such as
“menu” or “Insert Title Here” (which the user was supposed to overwrite with their own content)
and provided an automatic sample “privacy” disclaimer that users, such as Prince, were supposed
to review and adjust to their own specific business. (Ex. C at 44:22-47:25).
Prince testified that the first domain name he registered and website he intended to build
was “myscrubs4u.com” in attempt to sell hospital apparel items that his wife wanted to sell and
he discussed this concept with Bright Builders. (Doc. 128 at 21:19-22; 47:15-48:6). On March
13, 2008, a Bright Builders coach called Prince to assign him a project of doing research using 5
drop-shippers (dropshipdirect.com, megagoods.com, globalsource.com, ezdropshipper.com and
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ckproducts.com). (Ex. G at 20). To this, Prince replied that he had already done the assignment
and “somebody” he could not name had assisted with this. (Ex. G at 20). When Johnson was
assigned as Prince‟s coach at the end of March 2008, Prince had not proceeded very far with a
business concept. (Ex. G at 19). On April 3, 2008, Prince called Johnson and complained that
he could not find drop-shippers willing to sell him “anything” for prices lower than items were
selling for on eBay. (Ex. G at 19). During April and May of 2008, Prince also stated that he was
frustrated because he had ordered items from a shipper only for those “products” to be
unavailable. (Ex. G at 17; Ex. C at 90:4-24, 91:8-25). However, after repeated inquiries
regarding not hearing from Prince, Johnson spoke with Prince confirming that Prince said “life
took hold and he got distracted on building his website.” (Ex. G at 15; Ex. C at 90:4-9).
Ultimately, Prince testified, he failed to create the “myscrubs4u.com” website and abandoned the
idea altogether. (Doc. 128 at 47:15-23).
At the beginning of June of 2008, Johnson tried to talk about what “niche” Prince was
interested in so that he could create a successful business (as the scrubs idea had failed). (Ex. G
at 13; Ex. C at 89:5-10). During the June 10, 2008 call, Prince told Johnson that he was
interested in golf and selling “golf clubs” and that he, Prince, had found “suppliers” for such and
was “excited.” (Ex. G at 13; Ex. C at 89:5-10). Subsequently, Prince dropped out of
substantive communication again until he spoke with Johnson on July 14, 2008 after “computer
issues” prevented him from working on his site. (Ex. G at 11; Ex. C at 82:17-83:8). At that
point, Johnson assigned Prince more tasks, but did not have any coaching sessions with Prince
until August 4, 2008. (Ex. G at 9, 11.) During that conversation, Prince stated that he had gotten
a new computer and was “just starting to work on his site again as of last night.” (Ex. G at 9).
Johnson sent him some assignments and signed Prince up for webinars, but Prince did not attend
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the sessions. (Ex. G at 8-9). On September 4, 2008, Johnson sent Prince an email to warn him
that his coaching period was coming to a close and noting that Prince had missed the
appointments. (Ex. G at 8). Johnson called again on September 10, 2008 and talked with Prince
about being “MIA for a while.” (Ex. G at 7). Prince replied that he was doing fine and not to
worry – he had been working on his site and made progress. (Ex. G at 7). Prince had technical
questions that Johnson said he should discuss with technical support. (Ex. G at 7). After this
conversation, Prince attended one webinar. (Ex. G at 7). However, Johnson sent two emails
explaining that his coaching was now officially over as of September 22, 2008. (Ex. G at 6).
After that point, Johnson did not personally have contact with Prince. (Ex. G at 1-6).
Johnson testified that he did not know Prince was selling any name-brand golf clubs.
(Ex. C at 111:17-19). Johnson further testified that he was familiar with seeing generic golf
clubs at flea markets and “the like” all of the time. (Ex. C at 112:2-5). Johnson was aware at
some time that Prince had registered the domain name “copycatclubs.com,” and assumed that
Prince was selling golf clubs generally, but was not asked to review nor did he review the
content placed by Prince on Prince‟s website. (Ex. C at 111:17-23). Customers like Prince using
the builder could “sign up and register any domains” much like one can through Go Daddy,
Google, or Yahoo. (Ex. C at 105:14-20). In fact, Prince did not register his “copycatclubs.com”
domain until August 31, 2008, after all conversations with Johnson had ended and only weeks
before the end of his coaching time period, and this would have been a process that Prince did on
his own through the builder. (Ex. H; Ex. I at 14:19-15:5).
Emily Davies, who served as Office Manager for Bright Builders during the relevant time
period, testified via deposition regarding the free “Bright Lister” service provided by Bright
Builders. (Ex. I at 19:7-16). She explained that users, such as Prince, could have their registered
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domains sent to a list of search engines by filling in an online form. (Ex. I at 16: 2-8, 19:7-16).
Over the course of his utilization of Bright Builders‟ site hosting services, Prince sent in and
registered three different domain names for his golf site: “legacygolfclubs.com”
“worldtimegolf.com,” and “copycatclubs.com” starting in August of 2008. (Doc. 128 at 11:1124). Customers, such as Prince, would fill in a brief “request” form online with the domain name
they desired to have submitted to search engines. (Ex. I at 19:7-16). The domain name from the
form was then copied and pasted by various employees into Bright Builders‟ “Submit Wolf”
program that then forwards the domain name to a “queue” for the search engines‟ review. (Ex. I
at 15:15-23; Ex. C at 62:19-63:13).
Johnson explained that, while Bright Builders offered and Prince apparently paid for
many services (such as the SEO and Marketing, and Custom layout) that would have required
Bright Builders team members to view and work with the actual content of Prince‟s website,
Prince did not, in fact, utilize any of these services – a fact that was noted to him when Prince
inquired about cancelling the account. (Ex. C at 115:5-116:5; Ex. G at 1-3). In that latter
conversation, Prince actually admitted to having spent additional money going through a thirdparty marketing company to develop his site, though he was apparently told by this company that
they “worked with some people from” Bright Builders. (Ex. C at 115:13-116:5, 116:13-22; Ex.
G at 1-3). The Bright Builders representative told Prince that Bright Builders only used an inhouse marketing department and that Prince was misinformed by the third-party if the marketing
company told Prince that they were Bright Builders. (Ex. C at 117:19-118:3; Ex. G at 1-3). The
representative further reminded Prince at that time that he had not utilized the SEO or Marketing
services that he paid for and that he could still do so if he desired. (Ex. C at 115:9-12, 118: 1-3;
Ex. G at 1-3). Prince said he would think on it. (Ex. C at 118:4-11; Ex. G at 1-3).
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It was only upon receiving Cleveland‟s complaint after March 23, 2010, that anyone at
Bright Builders was informed that Prince was infringing Cleveland‟s trademarks (or anyone‟s
trademarks) through his website at the domain “copycatclubs.com.” (Ex. C at 112:6-10; Doc.
132 at 67:6-14). Greg Cole, CEO of Bright Builders testified that Bright Builders did not police
customer websites, it relied on third-parties to contact Bright Builders if there were complaints
and Bright Builders would investigate. (Doc.132 at 19:3-7, 19:16-20:11). Cole testified that
nobody, prior to the lawsuit filed in the instant action, ever complained about Prince‟s site. Cole
and Stephen Gingrich confirmed that Cleveland never contacted Bright Builders about
copycatclubs.com prior to the initiation of the lawsuit. (Doc. 132 at 67:7-14; Doc. 133 at 27:422). After being served, Bright Builders tried to go to the copycatclubs.com website to
investigate, but Prince had already deleted all content on the site. (Doc. 128 at 71:17-72:9; Doc.
132 at 67:24-68:3, 68:14-20).
Greg Cole testified that Bright Builders had previously received approximately seven
complaints from third parties concerning content contained on its clients‟ websites. (Doc. 132 at
80:22-81:9). The complaints concerned the alleged sale and/or inclusion of material protected by
copyright and/or trademark on the complained-of websites. (Doc. 132 at 80:22-81:4).
Mr. Cole
testified that in all instances, the complaints were investigated and all necessary steps were taken
by Bright Builders to address the complaints, including removing allegedly infringing content
from its customers‟ websites. (Doc. 132 at 81:10-21). Mr. Cole also testified that none of the
prior complaints received by Bright Builders resulted in legal action being initiated against the
company. (Doc. 132 at 81:10-12). Mr. Cole testified that the first legal action initiated against
Bright Builders with regard to violation of trademark and/or copyright law was the present
action. (Doc. 132 at 81:10-12). Furthermore, as previously noted, Mr. Cole and Mr. Gingrich
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both testified that at no time did Cleveland Golf or its counsel contact Bright Builders prior to
filing suit in an effort to notify it that allegedly infringing material was included on Prince‟s
website. (Doc. 132 at 67:7-14; Doc. 133 at 27:4-22).
II.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND JURY INSTRUCTIONS
Following the close of the plaintiff‟s case, Bright Builders moved for judgment as a
matter of law on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the plaintiff‟s burden on
the knowledge element of its claims against Bright Builders and renewed the motion at the close
of the evidence. (Doc. 129 at 8:1-19, 14:2-24, 16:18-20:13, 78:7-9) The motion was denied.
(Doc. 129 at 39:1-6; 78:10-12).
The Court heard arguments from all parties regarding the content of the jury instructions
and verdict form. In particular, Bright Builders objected to the Court‟s definition of the requisite
“knowledge” element for contributory trademark infringement. (Doc. 129 at 8:1-9, 14:2-24,
16:18-20:13). The Court‟s instruction included the following:
The knowledge element is satisfied by proof a preponderance of
the evidence that Bright Builders had either actual or constructive
knowledge of the infringing activity. Actual knowledge exists where it
can be shown by a defendant‟s conduct or statements that it actually knew
of specific instances of direct infringement. Constructive knowledge
exists where it can be shown a defendant should have known of the direct
infringement.
The knowledge element is similarly satisfied if Cleveland Golf can
show by a preponderance of the evidence that Bright Builders was
willfully blind to the infringing activity. In other words, if Bright Builders
had reason to suspect that users of its service were engaging in infringing
activities, it may not shield itself from learning of the particular infringing
transactions by looking the other way. Ignorance is no defense to
violations of the Lanham Act.
(Ex. J at 5-6, No. 9.3).
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Bright Builders specifically objected to the instruction regarding “willful blindness.”
(Doc. 129 at 18:5-20, 22:1 – 4, 42:8-17). Bright Builders requested that, if a “willful blindness”
instruction was to be included as part of the definition of knowledge, then, in accord with the
case law establishing “willful blindness” as a proper method of proving the requisite knowledge,
the jury should be instructed that “willful blindness” is equivalent to “actual knowledge” in the
context of contributory trademark infringement liability. (Doc. 129 at 42:8-17). Bright Builders
objected to the instruction further by saying that the jury must be instructed that plaintiffs needed
to prove “something other than should have known. Should have known leaves it up to [the jury]
to decide, without any basis of what should have known means” in the contributory trademark
infringement context. (Doc. 129 at 21:19-24).
III. ARGUMENTS
A. Knowledge Element of Contributory Trademark Infringement
1. The Supreme Court‟s Standard in Inwood and its Application
In Inwood Labs., Inc. v. Ives Lab., Inc., 456 U.S. 844, 854 (1982), the U.S. Supreme
Court stated that a “manufacturer or distributor” of a product could be found liable for
contributory trademark infringement by proof that “it continues to supply its product to one
whom it knows or has reason to know is engaging in trademark infringement.”2 Based in the
Supreme Court‟s language, the knowledge element has and continues to be the primary focus of
the case law as the critical element of contributory liability. David Berg and Co. v. Gatto Int’l
Trading Co., Inc., 884 F.2d 306, 311 (7th Cir. 1989) quoting Sealy, Inc. v. Easy Living, Inc., 743
F.2d 1378, 1382 (9th Cir. 1984) (“[t]he determination of contributory infringement depends upon
2
While the Court in Inwood also stated that contributory trademark infringement can be proved
by showing the defendant “intentionally induced” a third-party to infringe, the plaintiff in this
case did not pursue this theory of recovery at trial. (Doc. 129 at 7:7-24; 8:20-9:10). Moreover,
while the verdict form includes at various points the term “vicarious liability,” the plaintiff also
agreed that it was not pursuing this theory of recovery at trial. (Doc. 129 at 81:4-10).
12
a defendant‟s intent and its knowledge of the wrongful activities of its distributors”). See also
Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc. v. Gamemasters, 87 F.Supp. 2d 976, 986 (N.D.Cal.
1999) (“gravamen of a contributory infringement action is the defendant‟s knowledge”).
While acknowledging that contributory trademark infringement liability derives from the
common law, rather than directly from the Lanham Act, see Georgia Pacific Consumer
Products, LP v Von Drehle Corp., 618 F.3d 441, 449 (4th Cir. 2010) (“judicially created doctrine
of contributory trademark infringement, derived from the common law of torts”); Tiffany v.
eBay, 600 F.3d 93, 103-104 (2d Cir. 2010) (“[c]ontributory trademark infringement is a
judicially created doctrine that derives from the common law of torts”), courts have been equally
quick to point out that the Supreme Court in Inwood did not articulate a mere “negligence”
standard for liability. See Tiffany v. eBay, 576 F.Supp.2d 463, 502-503, aff’d in part and
remanded on other grounds, 600 F.3d 93 (2nd Cir. 2010) (rejecting plaintiff‟s argument that it
apply a “reasonable anticipation” standard for contributory infringement as an alternative to the
standard set forth in Inwood); accord 600 F.3d 93, 110, n.15 (2d Cir. 2010).
The Lanham Act places the duty to police trademark violations squarely on the shoulders
of the trademark owner. See, e.g., 2 McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 11:91
(4th ed.) (Author’s Comment) (“The law imposes on trademark owners the duty to be pro-active
and to police the relevant market for infringers…. Similarly, the trademark owner must
anticipate constant “maintenance” of its trademark property by policing and enforcing the
exclusivity of its trademark symbol in its marketplace.”). See also, MDT Corp. v. New York
Stock Exchange, 858 F.Supp. 1028, 1034 (C.D. Cal. 1994) (Inwood did not “extend so far as to
require non-infringing users to police the mark for a trade name owner. The owner of a trade
name must do its own police work.”). For this reason, courts addressing the "hav[ing] reason to
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know" standard articulated in Inwood have repeatedly warned that there must be proof that a
service provider, distributor, or landlord was actually on notice of a specific instance of
infringement by the particular customer or tenant and fail to investigate while continuing to
supply services or product to that customer or tenant. Sony Corp. of American v. Universal City
Studios, Inc., 464 U.S. 417, 439, 104 S.Ct. 774, 78 L.Ed.2d 574 (1984) (continued supply of
service or product with a merchant who the provider "knew was mislabeling the product with the
trademark owner's mark").
Nevertheless, litigants have, citing the Restatement, repeatedly urged that a party ought to
be found liable where it “fails to take reasonable precautions against the occurrence of the third
person‟s infringing conduct in circumstances in which the infringing conduct can be reasonably
anticipated.” See Tiffany v. eBay, 576 F.Supp.2d at 502, citing Restatement (Third) of Unfair
Competition Sec. 27 (1995). This reading of Inwood has consistently been rejected.
The Fourth Circuit has not addressed the question of what evidence is necessary as a
matter of law to prove a claim under Inwood‟s articulated “knows or has reason to know is
engaging in trademark infringement” prong in the context of internet service providers.
However, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia did address the question in
Rosetta Stone Ltd. v. Google Inc., 730 F.Supp.2d 531, (E.D. Va 2010), and relied directly on the
Second Circuit‟s reasoning in Tiffany Inc. v. eBay Inc., 600 F.3d 93 (2d Cir. 2010). “For
contributory trademark infringement liability to lie, a service provider must have more than a
general knowledge or reason to know that its service is being used to sell counterfeit goods.
Some contemporary knowledge of which particular listings are infringing or will infringe in the
future is necessary.” Tiffany v. eBay, 600 F.3d 93, 107 (2d Cir. 2010). “The Supreme Court has
specifically disavowed the reasonable anticipation standard as a „watered down‟ and incorrect
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standard.” Tiffany, 576 F.Supp.2d at 469, citing Inwood, 456 U.S. at 854 n. 13. In Tiffany v.
eBay, generalized knowledge that counterfeit goods might be sold on eBay‟s website was
insufficient to support a claim of contributory trademark infringement against the online
marketplace eBay. Contributory trademark law requires “more specific knowledge as to which
items [were] infringing and which seller [was] listing those items before requiring eBay to take
action.” 576 F.Supp.2d at 470.
In the suit, Tiffany alleged that thousands of pieces of counterfeit jewelry had been
offered on eBay‟s website, and that eBay “facilitated and allowed these items to be sold” there.
Tiffany, 576 F.Supp.2d at 469. Tiffany argued that “eBay was on notice that a problem existed”
and was thereby obligated to “investigate and control the illegal activities” of its sellers. Tiffany
took the position that eBay should “preemptively refus[e] to post any listing offering five or
more Tiffany items and … immediately suspend[] sellers” upon learning of Tiffany‟s belief that
the seller had engaged in “potentially infringing activity.” Id. In response, eBay asserted that
the responsibility lay with Tiffany “to monitor the eBay website for counterfeits and to bring
counterfeits to eBay‟s attention.” Id. at 469. eBay argued that its generalized knowledge was
insufficient to impose contributory liability; the law demanded “more specific knowledge of
individual instances of infringement and infringing sellers before imposing the burden on eBay
to remedy the problem.” Id. at 508.
Both the trial court and the Second Circuit agreed with eBay. In a bench trial, the trial
court found that Tiffany had taken several actions to protect its trademark: (1) sending demand
letters to eBay explaining its belief that counterfeit Tiffany jewelry items were being sold, and
that listings wherein five or more pieces of alleged Tiffany jewelry were offered were “almost
certainly” counterfeit; (2) notifying eBay that Tiffany‟s own “Buying Program” study found that
15
73.1% of Tiffany items purchased during a given time were counterfeit; and (3) filing thousands
of “NOCIs” (notices of claimed infringement) under eBay‟s “notice-and-takedown” system
stating Tiffany‟s belief that certain listings were counterfeit or otherwise infringing on Tiffany‟s
marks. 576 F.Supp.2d at 507. The trial court also found that eBay received “numerous
complaints” from buyers that they had purchased counterfeit Tiffany jewelry on its site. Id.
Nevertheless, the district court found these actions had only put eBay on “generalized notice that
some portion of the Tiffany goods sold on its website might be counterfeit.”
Citing Inwood, the district court pointed to the Supreme Court‟s language which was
focused on individual infringers, and the language in Gucci America, Inc. v. Hall, 135 F.Supp.2d
409, 420 (S.D.N.Y. 2001) describing the plaintiff‟s “high” burden to demonstrate knowledge,
supporting a requirement of specific rather than generalized knowledge. Tiffany, 576 F.Supp.2d
at 509-510. Citing Justice White‟s concurring opinion in Inwood, the court stated that “the
doctrine of contributory infringement should not be used to require defendants to refuse to
provide a product or service to those who merely might infringe the trademark.” Id. at 510
(emphasis added), citing Inwood.
On appeal, Tiffany argued that the trial court‟s distinction between general and specific
knowledge was not justified, and that the only relevant inquiry was “whether all of the
knowledge, when taken together, puts [eBay] on notice that there is a substantial problem of
trademark infringement.” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 107. The Second Circuit found Tiffany‟s reading
of Inwood too broad. Id. The Second Circuit looked to the Supreme Court‟s only elucidation of
the Inwood standard in Sony Corp., 464 U.S. 417 (1984). In the Sony “Betamax” case, plaintiffs
Universal Studios and Walt Disney Productions brought claims of contributory copyright
infringement against Sony as the manufacturer of home video recorders. Sony Corp., 464 U.S. at
16
419-420. The plaintiffs claimed that Sony‟s customers were using the recorders to tape
television shows to which the plaintiffs held the copyrights, that such use was copyright
infringement, and that Sony should be held contributorily liable for its role. Id. In rejecting the
plaintiffs‟ claim against Sony, the Supreme Court noted that if the more “narrow” trademark
standard of Inwood applied, the plaintiff‟s claim of contributory infringement “would merit little
discussion,” as the trademark standard would have required knowledge by Sony of “identified
individuals known by it to be engaging in continuing infringement….” Id. at 439, n.19. See also
Hard Rock Café Licensing Corp. v. Concession Services, Inc., 955 F.2d 1143, 1150 (1992),
citing Sony Corp., 464 U.S. at 439, n.19 (“the Supreme Court tells us that secondary liability for
trademark infringement should, in any event, be more narrowly drawn than secondary liability
for copyright infringement”).
Applying Sony, the Second Circuit agreed that Tiffany “failed to demonstrate that eBay
was supplying its service to individuals who it knew or had reason to know were selling
counterfeit goods.” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 109 (emphasis added). “For contributory trademark
infringement liability to lie, a service provider must have more than a general knowledge or
reason to know that its service is being used to sell counterfeit goods. Some contemporary
knowledge of which particular listings are infringing or will infringe in the future is necessary.”
Id. at 107.
Both the district court and the Second Circuit in Tiffany expressly rejected the reasonable
anticipation standard as “foreclosed by Inwood itself.” See 576 F.Supp.2d at 502, (citing Justice
White‟s concurring opinion and the majority response); 600 F.3d at 111, n.14 (“To be clear, a
service provider is not contributorily liable under Inwood merely for failing to anticipate that
others would use its service to infringe a protected mark. Inwood, 456 U.S. at 854 n.13 (stating
17
that for contributory liability to lie, a defendant must do more than „reasonably anticipate‟ a third
party‟s infringing conduct (internal quotation marks omitted)).”).
See also Medic Alert
Foundation U.S., Inc. v. Corel Corp., 43 F. Supp.2d 933, 940 (N.D. Ill, 1999) (“[t]he standard is
not whether a manufacturer „could reasonably anticipate‟ possible infringement, but rather
whether it knew or had reason to know that a third party is engaging in trademark infringement
and continued to sell its products to that third-party.”). The trial court noted that, with the sole
exception of cases in the Third Circuit dating back three decades, the courts considering the
question have rejected it as well. See Tiffany, 576 F.Supp.2d at 503 and cases cited.
Likewise, in Rosetta Stone Ltd. v. Google Inc., 730 F.Supp.2d at 548-549, comparing
Google with eBay, the Eastern District of Virginia found Google lacked the requisite specific
knowledge to impose contributory liability. Specifically on the issue of whether evidence
existed as to whether “Google is supplying a service to those it knows or has reason to know is
engaging in trademark infringement,” the court found “no evidence” and granted summary
judgment in favor of Google on the count of contributory trademark infringement. Id. at 548 &
552. Compare Government Employees Insurance Co. v. Google, Inc., 330 F.Supp.2d 700, (E.D.
Va 2004) (allegations that Overture Services, Inc. “encouraged advertisers to bid on trademarked
words” and monitored and controlled infringing third-party advertisements merely sufficient to
state a claim of contributory infringement on the basis of “actual or constructive” knowledge).
The court, citing Tiffany, stated that “[a]bsent evidence showing that [the defendant] had
specific contemporary knowledge of which particular listings were infringing or would infringe
in the future, [the defendant] could not be contributorily liable.” Rosetta Stone, 730 F.Supp.2d at
548. The court reasoned that Google‟s policy of expressly prohibiting advertisements for
counterfeit goods, having a team that responded to notices of counterfeit advertisements, and
18
removing “any advertisements confirmed to violate” its program, was all that was required of
Google. Id. at 538 & 548. Moreover, it did not matter that neither Google nor eBay had a
“mechanism for detecting which advertisers sold counterfeit” versus “legitimate” goods. Id. at
548. The court noted that even with “knowledge of the high rate of Tiffany counterfeits, the
Second Circuit did not impute the degree of specific knowledge necessary for liability.” Id. at
548-549, citing Tiffany at 109.
In summary, the Inwood standard has been developed in the context of internet service
providers to require knowledge, either “actual or constructive” of: (1) “identified individuals”
Sony Corp., 464 U.S. at 439, n.19; (2) who [the defendant] knew or had reason to know were
selling counterfeit goods.” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 109 (emphasis added).
2. Limited Concept of “Willful Blindness” as applied to Contributory Trademark
Infringement
In Tiffany, The Second Circuit reiterated that in “the words of the Seventh Circuit,
„willful blindness is equivalent to actual knowledge for purposes of the Lanham Act.‟” Tiffany,
600 F.3d at 111, citing Hard Rock, 955 F.2d at 1149.
The court explained: “if eBay had a
reason to suspect that counterfeit Tiffany goods were being sold through its website, and
intentionally shielded itself from discovering the offending listings or the identity of the sellers
behind them, eBay might very well have been charged with knowledge of those sales sufficient
to satisfy Inwood‟s „knows or has reason to know‟ prong.” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 110 (emphasis
added). The “willful blindness” test focuses on intentional actions of the defendant to avoid
knowledge, rather than on mere passivity or “negligence.”3
3
“A willful act may be described as one done intentionally, knowingly, and purposely, without
justifiable excuse, as distinguished from an act done carelessly, thoughtlessly, heedlessly, or
inadvertently. A willful act differs essentially from a negligent act. The one is positive and the
other negative. [Black's Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, 1991, p. 1599].”
19
“Willful blindness” was first applied to claims of contributory trademark infringement by
the Seventh Circuit in Hard Rock Café Licensing Corp. v. Concession Services, Inc., 955 F.2d
1143 (7th Cir. 1992). See also, Monsanto Co. v. Campuzano, 206 F.Supp.2d 1271, 1275 (S.D.
Fla. 2002); Medic Alert, 43 F.Supp.2d at 940. In Hard Rock Cafe, Hard Rock brought suit
against the defendant, Concession Services (CSI) who owned and operated a “swap meet” or
“flea market” because Hard Rock‟s investigators discovered that various venders renting stands
at CSI‟s flea markets were selling counterfeit Hard Rock t-shirts. Id. at 1145. After a bench
trial, the district court found that CSI had been “willfully blind” to the infringements of Hard
Rock‟s trademarks. Id. at 1148. Analyzing the district court‟s finding of “willfully blind,” the
Seventh Circuit observed:
The district court, however, made little mention of CSI‟s state of mind and
focused almost entirely on CSI‟s failure to take precautions against
counterfeiting. In its conclusions of law, the court emphasized that CSI
had a duty to take reasonable precautions. In short, it looks as if the
district court found CSI to be negligent, not willfully blind.
Id. at 1149 (citations omitted). In reversing the district court, the Second Circuit stated:
This ambiguity in the court‟s findings would not matter if CSI could be
liable for failing to take reasonable precautions. But CSI has no
affirmative duty to take precautions against the sale of counterfeits.
Although the “reason to know” part of the standard for contributory
liability requires CSI (or its agents) to understand what a reasonably
prudent person would understand, it does not impose any duty to seek out
and prevent violations.
Id., citing Restatement Second of Torts § 12(1) & cmt. A (1965). Accordingly, the Second
Circuit reversed the findings of the district court as having applied a mere “negligence” standard
in finding contributory trademark infringement.
Likewise, in Tiffany, the Second Circuit acknowledged that, once given the requisite
information that counterfeit Tiffany items were being sold on its website, eBay could not
“intentionally shield[] itself from discovering the offending listings or the identity of the sellers
20
behind them” or “shield itself from learning of the particular infringing transactions by looking
the other way” under the doctrine of “willful blindness.” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 109. Nevertheless,
the Tiffany court found that eBay had not “ignore[d] the information it was given about
counterfeit sales on its website” 600 F.3d at 110 (footnote omitted). Rather, the Second Circuit
agreed with the district court in finding that the “generalized notice that some portion of the
Tiffany goods sold on its website might be counterfeit” was insufficient where the “law demands
more specific knowledge of individual instances of infringement and infringing sellers before
imposing a burden upon eBay to remedy the problem.” 600 F.3d at 106-107, quoting 576
F.Supp.2d at 508. Moreover, where eBay received notice that an identified seller might be
engaging in counterfeit sales, eBay actively responded by removing the infringing offers,
warning those sellers and, in cases of repeat offenders, suspended their accounts, 600 F.3d at
110, citing 576 F.Supp.2d at 513.
The Second Circuit also found unavailing Tiffany‟s reliance on Hard Rock, supra, and
Fonovisa, Inc. v. Cherry Auction, Inc., 76 F.32d 259 (9th Cir. 1996) in support of its theory that
eBay was “willfully blind.” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 110, n.16. In Hard Rock, though the defendant
said it had a “policy of cooperating with any trademark owner that notifies CSI of possible
infringing activity,” there was “no evidence that this policy has ever been carried into effect” as
defendant admitted that it “did not investigate any of the seizures [of counterfeit products],
though it knew they had occurred.” Hard Rock, 955 F.2d at 1146. Nevertheless, the court
remanded for a determination of whether these facts rose to the level of “willful blindness” rather
than mere “negligence” as noted supra. Id. at 1149. In Fonovisa, there was “no dispute for the
purposes of [the] appeal” that Cherry Auction‟s operators “were aware that vendors in their swap
meet were selling counterfeit recordings in violation of Fonovisa‟s trademarks and copyrights”
21
even after a sheriff‟s raid and seizure, a letter notifying Cherry Auction of the on-going sales,
and a reminder that Cherry Auction “had agreed to provide the Sheriff with identifying
information from each vendor.” Fonovisa, 76 F.3d at 261. Hence, the court found that
plaintiff‟s claims were sufficient to state a claim where “a swap meet can not disregard its
vendors‟ blatant trademark infringements with impunity.” Id. at 265.4 Noting these facts, the
Second Circuit rejected Tiffany‟s argument that these cases compelled a finding of “willful
blindness” because eBay‟s active efforts to combat known counterfeiting exceeded the efforts of
the defendants in Fonovisa and Hard Rock. Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 110, n.16.
To conclude, the “willful blindness” doctrine has never been used to replace the “high
burden” on trademark owners to prove that a defendant against whom contributory trademark
infringement is claimed “knew or had reason to know” of specific infringing conduct from an
identified seller and then failed to investigate. “Willful blindness” is not a mere negligence test,
where a defendant can be found contributorily liable for trademark infringement by merely
failing to take precautions against infringement in general. Rather, it is available in those
circumstances where defendants are faced with notice of a particular infringement and
intentionally shield themselves from any verification of the information given. See Louis Vuitton
Malletier, S.A. v. Akanoc Solutions, 591 F.Supp.2d 1098, 1108 (N.D.Cal. 2008) (genuine issue of
material fact regarding “actual or constructive knowledge” where defendant internet service
provider‟s internal emails showed it received complaints documenting specific infringing
websites using its services selling counterfeits under specific marks, yet alleged that it “did not
log on to the [i]nternet to investigate or verify whether [a] complaint is well founded”); Fare
Deals, Ltd. v. World Choice Travel.com, Inc., 180 F.Supp.2d 678, 690-691 (D.Md. 2001)
4
The court further noted that neither the Fonovisa nor the Hard Rock courts concluded the
defendants were, in fact, willfully blind. Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 110, n.16.
22
(receipt of plaintiff‟s allegation in demand letter could not alone be deemed willful blindness;
such suspicion must be coupled with deliberate failure to investigate and remediate if necessary);
Medic Alert, 43 F.Supp.2d at 940 (evidence insufficient of “willful blindness” where “[i]n light
of Corel‟s end-user agreement, it had no reason to expect that one of its software users would
violate the contract and use one of its images for commercial use, until it was provided with
actual information that someone had done so[,]” and plaintiff presented no evidence that it
notified Corel of direct infringement until the instant lawsuit).
B. Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law and Motion for New Trial
1. Standards of Review
On a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, Fed. R. Civ. P. Rule 50(a) and (b)
provides: “If a party has been fully heard on an issue during a jury trial and the court finds that a
reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the party on that
issue,” the court may order a new trial or direct the entry of judgment as a matter of law.
“Judgment as a matter of law is proper „when, without weighing the credibility of the evidence,
there can be but one reasonable conclusion as to the proper judgment.‟” Singer v. Dungan, 45
F.3d 823, 826 (4th Cir. 1995), quoting, 5A James W. Moore, Moore's Federal Practice §
50.07[2], at 50-76 (2d ed. 1994). “The movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law „if the
nonmoving party failed to make a showing on an essential element of his case with respect to
which he had the burden of proof.‟” Singer, 45 F.3d at 827, quoting Bryan v. James E. Holmes
Regional Medical Ctr., 33 F.3d 1318, 1333 (11th Cir. 1994) (internal quotation marks omitted).
“[A] motion for a new trial on the merits . . . requires a review of the evidence under a
different standard [than that applied to a motion for judgment as a matter of law]. Under Rule 59,
F.R. Civ. P., a trial court may weigh the evidence and consider the credibility of the witnesses.
23
Indeed, a trial judge has a duty to set aside a verdict and grant a new trial even though it is
supported by substantial evidence, „if [s]he is of the opinion that the verdict is against the clear
weight of the evidence, or is based upon evidence which is false or will result in a miscarriage of
justice. . . .‟” Wyatt v. Interstate & Ocean Transp. Co., 623 F.2d 888, 891 (4th Cir. 1980). See
also, Conner v. Schrader-Bridgeport Int'l, Inc., 227 F.3d 179, 200 (4th Cir. 2000). The
resolution of a motion for a new trial is reversed only for an abuse of discretion. Klein v. Sears
Roebuck & Co., 773 F.2d 1421, 1428 (4th Cir. 1985).
Where a specific objection was made under Fed.R.Civ.P. 51 to a jury instruction, a court
may also grant a new trial where the language of the instruction could “have misled and confused
the jury” as to an essential element of proof required at trial. See Altvater v. Battocletti, 300 F.2d
156, 161 (4th Cir. 1962). The question is “whether the instructions construed as a whole, and in
light of the whole record, adequately informed the jury of the controlling legal principles without
misleading or confusing the jury to the prejudice of the objecting party.” Spell v. McDaniel, 824
F.2d 1380, 1395 (4th Cir. 1987), citing 9 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil,
Sec. 2558 (1971). Even when Fed. R. Civ. P. 51 (to make a contemporaneous objection) is not
followed, an appellate court can nevertheless reverse when the error is “plain” or “fundamental”
in that the instructions “must necessarily have caused the jury to act in complete ignorance of, or
to have misapplied, fundamentally controlling legal principles to the inevitable prejudice of an
aggrieved party.” Id. at 1398-99.
2. Evidence Insufficient As A Matter of Law That Bright Builders “Knew or
Had Reason to Know” That Prince Had or Would Infringe Cleveland‟s Mark
Or Intentionally Shielded Itself from Verifying Specific Infringing Activities
Cleveland did not meet its burden to show that Bright Builders had more than a “general
knowledge or reason to know that is service is being used to sell counterfeit goods.” Tiffany v.
24
eBay, 600 F.3d at 107. Cleveland presented no evidence that Bright Builders had knowledge of
the “identified individual” Prince, Sony Corp, 464 U.S. at 439, n.19, had “particular listings [that]
are infringing or will infringe in the future [as] is necessary,” Tiffany, 600 F.3d at 107.
Cleveland‟s sole evidence at trial of Bright Builders‟ “knowledge” consisted of the fact that
Bright Builders, at some point, became aware that Prince registered the domain “copycatclubs”
and Prince‟s self-serving testimony that he had discussed selling “copied clubs” rather than “golf
clubs” generally with “someone” at Bright Builders whom he could not name. (Doc. 128 at
66:25-67:8, 68:11-14; Doc. 132 at 75:15-76:2, 94:24-95:4). This evidence is insufficient as a
matter of law to establish that Bright Builders had a “reason to know” that particular listings
from Prince were infringing or would infringe Cleveland‟s mark in the future. There was further
no evidence presented showing that Prince requested that Bright Builders, or that Bright Builders
did, review infringing content of Prince‟s golf-related website. (Doc. 128 at 69:25-70:16, 81:1182:1; Doc. 132 at 68:24-69:1). There was no evidence presented that Prince even had any
specific content generated for Bright Builders to review during the coaching sessions, let alone
content that included specific infringing listings. (Doc. 128 at 43:5-10 – Prince merely
“assumed” Bright Builders reviewed his site; Doc. 132 at 68:4-20 – printouts of Prince‟s website
in evidence were made on 6/23/2009, after coaching ended but before notification of
infringements; Ex. C at 83:9-21; 88:17-89:4 – no particular content to view while coaching).
There was no evidence that Bright Builders contributed any infringing content to Prince‟s
website. (Doc. 128 at 70:12-16, 81:11-82:1; Doc. 132 at 73:17-22). And, there was no evidence
that Prince availed himself of services that would have naturally required that Bright Builders
view and work with actual product listings on Prince‟s site (such as the Marketing and SEO
25
services described by Johnson, but for which Prince actually spent extra money to use a thirdparty company). (Ex. C at 115:5-116:5, 116:13-117:6; Doc. 132 at 85:25-86:7).
Moreover, there was no evidence showing that Bright Builders would have or even
should have understood the term “copied” or “copycat” in relation to golf clubs was being used
to sell counterfeit or illegal clubs of any brand, let alone specific instances of infringement, such
that it should alert Bright Builders that Prince was engaging in specific instances of
infringement. Contrast use of specific term in Gucci America Inc. v. Frontline Processing Corp,
721 F.Supp.2d 228, (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (evidence sufficient of “knowingly” providing
instrumentality to conduct business where defendant credit card processing companies‟ emails
showed it provided services to counterfeit merchants using the term “replica” items to indicate
“high risk” and had users sign a “replica acknowledgment” after reviewing their websites, goods,
and inability to receive other credit card services, and customer complaints). Compare Rosetta
Stone, 730 F.Supp.2d at 547-549 (knowledge of use of keyword “Rosetta Stone” as search term
insufficient to induce duty to investigate where no specific instance of infringement alleged).
Rather, Johnson testified to the contrary, stating that he was aware that “generic” golf clubs were
sold at flea markets, and presumed that this must be what “copied” meant. (Ex. C at 111:18-23,
112:2-5). Cole testified that the term "copycat," made him think of “things like when you go to
the store and buy generic Advil, you know, it's a kind of a copy of the Advil brand, or ibuprofen;
acetaminophen, Tylenol.” (Doc. 132 at 66:7-14).
Cleveland‟s only evidence on the issue came from Gingrich, testifying that, to his
knowledge, there are no legitimate “copies” of Cleveland brand golf clubs. (Doc. 133 at 14:1819, 21:1-6). Even limiting the industry to “golf” for the sake of argument, this evidence falls far
short of establishing that people knowledgeable about golf clubs generally would or should
26
assume that the terms “copied” or “copycat” always refers to “counterfeit” items. Compare
Rosetta Stone, 730 F.Supp.2d at 548 (whether internet service provider had a “mechanism for
detecting which advertisers sold counterfeit” versus “legitimate” goods not determinative). Nor
does this evidence come close to providing knowledge of specific infringing conduct by Prince
sufficient to induce a duty on Bright Builders to investigate. There was simply no evidence
coming even close to a sufficient showing that Bright Builders had any reason to know that
Prince or any of his listings infringed or would infringe in the future.
With regard to evidence that Bright Builders‟ was “willfully blind,” the evidence
produced at trial showed that there was no information regarding infringements by Prince or
even infringements generally from which Bright Builders shielded itself. (Doc. 132 at 68:11-22).
In addition to having its members sign a Hosting Agreement contracting not to violate
intellectual property rights of others, the evidence showed that Bright Builders regularly
enforced the agreement against its customers when notified about the violations. (Doc. 132 at
80:22-81:21). It was undisputed that neither Cleveland nor anybody else sent Bright Builders‟
notification of even their suspicion that that Prince‟s site was selling counterfeit goods of any
kind that would have triggered a duty on Bright Builders‟ part to investigate his website until the
summons in the instant suit. (Doc. 133 at 27:4-22). Once notified of the lawsuit, Bright Builders
investigated by specifically reviewing Prince‟s site, which it is undisputed, by that time,
contained no content. (Doc. 128 at 71:17-72:9; Doc. 132 at 67:24-68:6, 68:14-20). Contrast
Louis Vuitton Malletier, 591 F.Supp.2d at 1108 (genuine issue of material fact regarding “actual
or constructive knowledge” where defendant internet service provider‟s internal emails showed it
received complaints documenting specific infringing websites using its services selling
27
counterfeits under specific marks, yet alleged that it “did not log on to the [i]nternet to
investigate or verify whether [a] complaint is well founded”).
At that point, with no content to even review let alone suspend or remove, Bright
Builders had no basis on which to notify Prince of any wrongdoing, let alone cancel his account.
Rather, Bright Builders could not simply presume that Prince had violated the Hosting
Agreement that Prince signed, let alone make a legal determination that Prince had violated the
Agreement, while having no content and plaintiff‟s unproven allegations in a lawsuit. Compare,
Fare Deals, Ltd., 180 F.Supp.2d at 690-691 (receipt of plaintiff‟s allegation in demand letter
could not alone be deemed willful blindness; such suspicion must be coupled with deliberate
failure to investigate and remediate if necessary); Medic Alert, 43 F.Supp.2d at 940 (evidence
insufficient of “willful blindness” where “[i]n light of Corel‟s end-user agreement, it had no
reason to expect that one of its software users would violate the contract and use one of its
images for commercial use, until it was provided with actual information that someone had done
so[,]” and plaintiff presented no evidence that it notified Corel of direct infringement until the
instant lawsuit). There was simply no evidence of any willful action that Bright Builders‟ took
to shield itself from learning of Prince‟s violations or indicating that it looked the other way once
it was given a reason to know that Prince may be infringing another‟s mark.
Cleveland would have the “willful blindness” standard used to require Bright Builders to
police all websites it hosts in perpetuity, searching out and investigating for possible
infringements based on the fact that it provides services to users for a limited period of time
wherein it teaches users generally how to build a website and advises users to “model” their own
businesses after other successful businesses and “copy and paste” information they find useful
while “adapting it” to their own specific needs. (Doc. 129 at 58:8-15). However, courts have
28
consistently refused to re-write the “narrow” standard for contributory liability developed in
Inwood and Sony so broadly that it shifts the trademark owners‟ burden of policing individual
trademarks to service providers. To do so would turn “willful blindness” into a mere negligence
standard applied to anyone who could reasonably anticipate that infringements generally may
occur. There is nothing in the evidence Cleveland presented at trial that would justify extending
the duty to investigate to a duty requiring Bright Builders‟ to police all of its hosted websites in
perpetuity based on the generalized training it provides.
There is nothing in the evidence presented at trial that would differentiate Bright
Builders‟ position from any company offering services on the internet that allow users to post,
alter, and transact their own online pages or advertisements. The policy considerations that
pervaded the Tiffany decision are compounded in the case of small service providers, such as
Bright Builders. The district court in Tiffany, as the Supreme Court in Inwood, was heavily
concerned with the possibility that a mere negligence “reasonably anticipate” standard could
have the result of suppressing legitimate business conduct in the pursuit of “rooting out” all
wrongdoers. See Tiffany, 576 F.Supp.2d at 510, citing Inwood (White, J., concurring) “the
doctrine of contributory infringement should not be used to require defendants to refuse to
provide a product or service to those who merely might infringe the trademark”) & 515 (internet
service providers under “no affirmative duty to ferret out potential infringement”). Though,
arguably, mega-service providers such as eBay and Google could employ armies of specialized
employees to police the “thousands of transaction happening within moments” from usergenerated content, the mechanisms in place would not only quell legitimate business, but also the
high cost of employing such an expert policing operation would inevitably foreclose many
smaller internet service providers from allowing any user-generated content hosting service at a
29
competitive yet profitable rate to maintain their business. The law of contributory trademark
infringement was simply not meant to sacrifice such legitimate business to the benefit of
trademark owners as a response to the risk that some infringing conduct will not be caught.
Hence, as of yet, the vast majority of jurisdictions that have considered such questions have
refused to condone an expansion of contributory trademark liability that would reach so far. A
verdict against Bright Builders in the face of the evidence, or lack thereof, provided would do
just that.
3. Verdict Against the Clear Weight of the Evidence
Even if, arguendo, the scintilla of evidence that Cleveland produced was sufficient as a
matter of law to require the determination of the fact-finder, the verdict in this case is against the
clear weight of the evidence. The evidence regarding Prince having told Bright Builders that he
was selling “copied clubs” rather than simply “golf clubs” should not be credited. (Doc. 128 at
66:25-67:8, 68:11-14). Prince testified that he could not recall discussing the domain name he
chose for his site with Bright Builders. (Doc. 128 at 42:18-43:1). He also testified that Bright
Builders merely gave him advice about “golf clubs in general” and nothing about how to sell
“illegal golf clubs.” (Doc. 128 at 52:7-9). The contemporaneous notes of conversations with
Bright Builders and Prince‟s own testimony established that, during most of his coaching
services with Bright Builders, selling “golf clubs” of any variety was not even contemplated by
Prince, let alone Bright Builders, until June of 2008. (Ex. G at 13; Doc. 128 at 21:9-18).
Whether he was actually selling clubs to anyone prior to June of 2008 through any mechanism is
not established from the testimony. Rather, any sales by Prince of golf clubs prior to August of
2008 would have been made on his own through eBay as Prince testified. (Doc. 128 at 49:1550:12). Nor is it established that Prince developed any infringing content for his Bright Builders‟
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hosted golf site prior to the termination of coaching services or that he even registered his
“copycatclubs” domain until August 31, 2008, only weeks before his seven month coaching
period ended. (Ex. H).
The sole evidence on which Cleveland relies to prove the essential element of its claim –
namely, Bright Builders‟ knowledge – is, again, Bright Builders‟ necessarily non-specific
knowledge that Prince registered the domain “copycatclubs” in relation to selling golf clubs
generally. (Ex. C at 112:2-5; Doc. 128 at 52:7-9; Doc. 132 at 16:18-24). A verdict against
Bright Builders‟ based on this mere scintilla of evidence of Bright Builders‟ knowledge is simply
against the great weight of the evidence.
4. Legally Misleading Jury Instructions Allowed Jury to Find Bright Builders
Liable for Negligently Failing to Anticipate and Therefore Police All Hosted
Websites
Unfortunately, there is no case law in any jurisdiction that this counsel could find
outlining the appropriate jury instructions in regard to contributory trademark infringement,
notably because all of the cases reviewed are decided at the motion to dismiss or summary
judgment stages or after a bench trial. Nevertheless, inaccurate and misleading instructions that
could “have misled and confused the jury” as to an essential element of proof required at trial “to
the prejudice of the objecting party” justify reversing the verdict. See Spell, 824 F.2d at 1395,
citing 9 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil, Sec. 2558 (1971); Altvater, 300
F.2d at 161. The question is “whether the instructions construed as a whole, and in light of the
whole record, adequately informed the jury of the controlling legal principles without misleading
or confusing the jury to the prejudice of the objecting party.” Spell v. McDaniel, 824 F.2d 1380,
1395 (4th Cir. 1987), citing 9 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil, Sec. 2558
(1971). Moreover, if the error is “plain” or “fundamental” in that the instructions “must
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necessarily have caused the jury to act in complete ignorance of, or to have misapplied,
fundamentally controlling legal principles to the inevitable prejudice of an aggrieved party[,]” an
appellate court will reverse despite any lack of objection. Spell, 824 F.2d at 1398-99. Here, the
instructions must necessarily have caused the jury to act in ignorance of or to have misapplied
fundamentally controlling legal principles to the inevitable prejudice of Bright Builders. (Ex. J).
A motion for new trial should therefore be granted.
The instructions regarding the requisite level of knowledge that the jury was to find were
as follows:
Actual knowledge exists where it can be shown by a defendant‟s conduct
or statements that it actually knew of specific instances of direct
infringement. Constructive knowledge exists where it can be shown a
defendant should have known of the direct infringement.
The knowledge element is similarly satisfied if Cleveland Golf can
show by a preponderance of the evidence that Bright Builders was
willfully blind to the infringing activity. In other words, if Bright Builders
had reason to suspect that users of its service were engaging in infringing
activities, it may not shield itself from learning of the particular infringing
transactions by looking the other way. Ignorance is no defense to
violations of the Lanham Act.
(Ex. J at 5-6, No. 9.3). Whereas the jury was instructed that it could find “actual knowledge”
only where the defendant had knowledge of “specific instances of direct infringement,”
(emphasis added) the jury was nevertheless instructed that they were allowed to find
“constructive knowledge” where the defendant merely “should have known of the direct
infringement,” (Ex. J. at 5-6, No. 9.3), apparently irrespective of any knowledge, actual or
constructive of “specific instances.” Neither actual nor constructive knowledge were additionally
qualified by instructing that the knowledge must pertain to the particular direct infringer at issue
(as distinct from being allowed to find that knowledge of any person‟s infringement is
sufficient). As noted in section III.A.1 supra, contributory trademark infringement requires
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proof of actual or constructive knowledge of “specific instances of infringement” by an
identified individual.
In particular, Bright Builders objected to the instruction by saying that the jury must be
instructed that plaintiffs needed to prove “something other than should have known. Should have
known leaves it up to [the jury] to decide, without any basis of what should have known means”
in the contributory trademark infringement context. (Doc. 129 at 21:21-24).
The error in the instruction is compounded by the willful blindness instruction further
given without explanation that it must apply to knowledge regarding Prince in particular, rather
than “users of [Bright Builders‟] service” and without qualification “fails to investigate.” As in
Hard Rock, this instruction allows the jury to find Bright Builders liable for being “negligent”
rather than “willfully blind” because Bright Builders “has no affirmative duty to take precautions
against the sale of counterfeits. Although the „reason to know‟ part of the standard for
contributory liability requires [Bright Builders] (or its agents) to understand what a reasonably
prudent person would understand, it does not impose any duty to seek out and prevent
violations.” Hard Rock, 955 F.2d at 1149, citing Restatement Second of Torts § 12(1) & cmt. A
(1965).
Finally, the instruction regarding “Ignorance is no defense to violations of the Lanham
Act” is both incorrect and misleading. (Ex. J at 6, No. 9.3). The instruction that the record
indicates was meant to be given is that ignorance of trademark law is no defense. (Doc. 129 at
9:19-25). However, here the instruction as written suggests that the jury can find Bright Builders
liable even if it finds Bright Builders in complete ignorance or one or both of the critical facts for
which Bright Builders must have knowledge to sustain liability (particular instances of
infringement by a particular alleged infringer). (Ex. J at 6, No. 9.3). This instruction is therefore
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highly prejudicial to Bright Builders as it would allow the jury to find liability even in the
absence of the necessary facts.
5. Cleveland‟s SC UPTA Claim Rises And Falls With Its Lanham Act Claims,
And Therefore Also Must Be Vacated
Bright Builder‟s counsel specifically objected to allowing a verdict against Bright
Builders under the South Carolina Unfair Trade Practices Act Claim unless there was a finding
of liability under the Lanham Act. (Doc. 129 at 54:10-55:20). Plaintiff‟s counsel at this point
argued that Bright Builders could in fact be liable under the Unfair Trade Practices Act Claim
because of different actions. (Doc. 129 at 55:21-57:2) When pressed by the Court as to what
actions, there was never any specific response provided. The only response provided was by Mr.
Patterson wherein he stated the jury could find Bright Builders liable under the Unfair Trade
Practices Act Claim for failing to monitor its twenty thousand websites for illegal activity. (Doc.
129 at 58:10-15). This simply cannot be the case.
The Plaintiff did not plead any cause of action alleging violation of the Unfair Trade
Practices Act for failing to monitor other websites other than Prince. (Doc. 129 at 60:2-17).
Particularly, this case was about Prince. (Doc. 129 at 60:6-13). Testimony about other websites
did come in but cannot be found as the basis for liability for the Plaintiff‟s claim. (Doc. 128 at
11:11-12:4, 62:19-63:21). Specifically, Cleveland Golf would need to show that failing to
monitor sites other than Prince‟s caused some damage to Cleveland in order to prevail under this
theory. A fact they simply did not prove, nor did they even bother to offer any evidence of such
facts at trial.
Therefore, the only way that Bright Builders can be found liable under the South Carolina
Trade Practices Act Claim is if both Prince and Bright Builders were found liable under the
Lanham Act. As referenced earlier, Bright Builders could not and should not be held liable
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under the contributory standard for violation of the Lanham Act. As such, they cannot be held
liable for violation of the Unfair Trade Practices Act.
At a minimum, a remand of the South Carolina Unfair Trade Practices Act Claim would
be justified and necessary. We have no way of ascertaining whether or not the jury found
separate independent actions of Bright Builders in violation of the South Carolina Unfair Trade
Practices Act as believed by Cleveland. Therefore, remand on this issue alone would be
necessary in order to make sure the jury effectuated a proper decision.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the evidence produced at trial was insufficient to sustain the
verdict on either cause of action and the renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and
motion for relief from judgment should be granted. Likewise, because the jury instructions
allowed the jury to find the defendant liable under an incorrect standard, they were plain error
and highly prejudicial justifying a new trial be granted.
s/ Paul J. Doolittle
Paul J. Doolittle, Esquire
Federal Bar No.: 6012
Jekel-Doolittle, LLC
Post Office Box 2579
Mt. Pleasant, SC 29465
(o) (843)654-7700
(f) (888)567-1129
paul@j-dlaw.com
Mt. Pleasant, SC
Dated: April 22, 2011
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