I
Plaintiff-appellant American Television and Communications Corporation, brought this action for common law unfair competition under Florida law, and for statutory unfair competition in violation of § 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), against defendant-appellee American Communications and Television, Incorporated. Jurisdiction was based on 28 U.S.C. § 1332 and § 1338(a). After a bench trial, the district court found in favor of the defendant. For the reasons set forth below, we will AFFIRM.
As found by the district court, the facts are as follows: Plaintiff is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Time, Inc. It began doing business under its corporate name in 1968, and now operates cable and over-the-air pay television systems, often under the acronym “ATC”. Plaintiffs cable services include “superstations,” movie-based “pay channel” services (e.g., HBO, CINEMAX and SHOWTIME), and advertiser supported services (e.g., ESPN, CNN, C-SPAN, LIFETIME, WEATHER CHANNEL). It also provides multipoint distribution services (“MDS”), a usually single channel service delivered by microwave, to specially equipped homes, and satellite master antenna systems (“SMATV”) to customers hooked up to an antenna capable of receiving satellite signals. MDS and SMATV are primarily used in areas where cable service is unavailable. Plaintiffs services are provided to individual consumers through its more than 450 cable franchise operations in 31 states, of which approximately 30 franchises are in Florida. The franchises are either owned by or managed by plaintiff through franchise agreements. It is presently the largest distributor of cable and pay television in the United States.
Defendant is a publicly held corporation organized under Florida law, with its principal office and place of business in Gaines-ville, Florida. Through its subsidiaries, it is engaged in the operation of full and low power television stations or radio stations, SMATV, MDS, cable television systems, satellite uplinks, and specialized mobile radio telephone systems (“SMRS”). Defendant was originally incorporated under the name American Satellite and Television; its securities were offered to the public in 1982 through the over-the-counter market using the symbol “ASTV.” To avoid or settle litigation with a similarly named company, defendant changed its name to American Communications and Television, Inc., on March 4, 1983. It has retained ASTV for use in the trading of its securities, and uses the acronym “ACTV” in its other business dealings.
Neither plaintiff nor defendant conducts its business with the service buying public under its corporate name. Instead, both parties negotiate franchises, licenses or contracts with governmental commissions, condominium associations, etc., who then supply consumers with services under the names of the parties’ subsidiaries, affiliated companies, or franchises.
Some of plaintiff's subsidiaries’ public information materials indicate the name of the individual cable franchise along with the words “a division of ATC,” or other indication that plaintiff owns or operates the franchise. Often plaintiff also provides materials about itself to those with whom it *1548 actually negotiates its franchises, referring to itself as “American Television and Communications, a subsidiary of Time, Inc.”
The district court further found that plaintiff has no franchise in direct competition with any franchise of defendant in Florida.
At trial, plaintiff introduced evidence of its advertising and press releases, as well as press articles in which it was mentioned, and the annual reports of Time, Inc. Plaintiff also introduced a letter (mistakenly addressed by the sender’s secretary to the defendant) seeking employment based on an article about the plaintiff. The Executive Director of the Florida Cable Television Association (of which plaintiff is a member and defendant is not) also testified that when he read articles about the defendant’s expanded activities in Florida, he at first thought they referred to plaintiff, as he was unfamiliar with defendant and its activities. When he realized that defendant was a different company, he contacted plaintiff about the articles concerning the defendant.
Based on this evidence, the district court found that plaintiff had failed to prove that its corporate name had acquired secondary meaning, and that even if that fact had been shown, it had failed to prove a likelihood of confusion between its products and those of the defendant on the part of consumers or those in the trade. Judgment was entered for the defendant.
II
Although the plaintiff understandably would prefer to begin the analysis at its final step by focusing on the likelihood of confusion between the names of the parties, the district court properly began, as we do, with the inquiry whether plaintiff has proved that it has a protectable interest in its corporate name necessary for recovery under either a statutory or a state common law theory.
1
Only if plaintiff has proven such an interest need we reach the issue of whether it has also proved the likelihood of confusion between the two names, the other element needed for recovery.
Cf. Levi Strauss & Co. v. Blue Bell, Inc.,
Courts have traditionally divided trade names into four categories of protectability: (1) generic; (2) descriptive; (3) suggestive; or (4) arbitrary or fanciful. Although meant to be mutually exclusive, these categories represent bands on a spectrum; “they tend to merge at their edges and are quite frequently difficult to apply.”
Soweco, Inc. v. Shell Oil Company,
A generic name suggests the basic nature of the article or service. Most courts hold that a generic term is incapable of achieving trade name protection.
Vision Center,
The district court held that, at best, plaintiff’s name is descriptive because of the combination of generic and descriptive terms, and therefore plaintiff was required to prove secondary meaning. Indeed, plaintiff has conceded this point.
2
“In order to establish secondary meaning the plaintiff must show that the primary significance of the term in the minds of the consumer public is not the product but the producer.”
Id.
at 118,
quoting Kellogg Co. v. National Biscuit Co.,
305 U.S. Ill, 118,
The trial court’s finding that plaintiff failed to prove secondary meaning is not clearly erroneous. Applying the proper test, it found that plaintiff does not deal with the ultimate consumer under its own name, and that it is better known to the industry under its acronymn, ATC. Although plaintiff claims that the court did not consider the meaning of its name to its suppliers and to members of the financial community, the court did consider all of plaintiff’s evidence; it merely found it to be insufficient, in that plaintiff presented no more than speculation about what its name might mean to investors
3
and presented no evidence of the meaning of its name to any suppliers. Nor does plaintiff’s evidence of its advertising, press releases, coverage in the media, Time, Inc.’s annual reports, and two misdirected missives convince us that the court’s ruling “does not reflect the truth and the right of the case.”
Armstrong Cork Co. v. World Carpets, Inc.,
Because we affirm the judgment for defendant based on plaintiff’s failure to prove secondary meaning, we need not reach the issue of whether the court’s finding that plaintiff also failed to prove likelihood of confusion is clearly erroneous.
Conagra,
We therefore conclude that the district court’s findings were not clearly erroneous, and the judgment in favor of the defendant is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Relying on
Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Safeway Discount Drugs, Inc.,
. Appellant in its reply brief for the first time argues that its name is suggestive and thus required no proof of secondary meaning. "Arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief are not properly before the reviewing court____ Thus, we do not consider this argument."
United States v. Oakley,
. As plaintiff is a wholly-owned subsidiary, confusion on the part of possible investors in its parent company could only be marginally relevant.
