Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ wrote the opinion, in which Judge MICHAEL and Judge KING joined.
OPINION
This case requires us to determine under what circumstances the configuration of a product can constitute inherently distinctive trade dress that is protectable under federal law. Because we conclude that a product’s configuration qualifies as inherently distinctive trade dress if it is capable of functioning as a designator of an individual source of the product, we reverse the contrary ruling of the district court and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Ashley Furniture Industries, Inc., and SanGiacomo N.A. Ltd. manufacture home furniture. In this action, Ashley alleges that SanGiacomo copied the design of one of Ashley’s bedroom suites, in violation of federal trade dress law and an oral contract between the parties.
Both companies market furniture in the mid-level price range and sell numerous lines of furniture nationwide. Between them, for example, the two companies produce over thirty different bedroom suites. Ashley and SanGiacomo sell their furniture to retailers, who display the furniture of various manufacturers and fill consumers’ orders either from inventory or by ordering from the wholesaler.
Generally, those seeking to buy this sort of furniture cannot determine the manufacturer of a piece or set of furniture simply by looking at it. Manufacturers in this market do not carve or emboss their names or trademarks on the exterior of their furniture; instead they rely on hang tags and emblems inside drawers to identify their goods. Often, retailers do not identify the manufacturer or the name of the design to the consumer, refusing even to use the hang tags. Retailers provide pictures of the furniture they offer in flyers, newspapers, and on television, but again these advertisements may not include any reference to the manufacturer.
Ashley and SanGiacomo aggressively compete for customers, and their rivalry has previously led to litigation. In that action, filed in 1993, the parties’ roles were reversed: SanGiacomo sued Ashley charging that it had infringed the trade dress of SanGiacomo’s bedroom furniture and seeking a declaratory judgment that a
Approximately one year after that settlement, in the fall of 1995, Ashley introduced a neoclassical bedroom suite under the trade name “Sommerset.” The suite consists of a headboard, two night stands, an armoire, and a dresser with a mirror. The design of the Sommerset suite combines a “modern” high-gloss polyester look and feel with “classical” elements including a finish that suggests marble or travertine, fluted columns, arches, and entablatures.
According to Ashley’s witnesses, the design and overall appearance of the Som-merset suite were unique and unlike any other bed-room furniture ever sold. For example, one Ashley industry expert, a retired home furniture retailer with 25 years of experience, explained:
Based on my experience, the common high gloss polyester finish in all the pieces of the Sommerset suite, in either the Carmelstone or lighter Goatskin finish, combined with the off white moldings and classic columns and flutings, provide a unique and unusual appearance for the Ashley Sommerset bedroom suite. The combination of features provides both a traditional and contemporary appearance. Although these individual features have been used in other bedroom suites, I do not recall seeing the combination of such features in a single bedroom suite. Therefore, the Ashley Sommerset has a unique appearance in the furniture industry ... [that] distinguishes it from other bedroom suites in either the contemporary or the traditional furniture markets.
Another expert opined that “the overall appearance of Ashley’s Sommerset bedroom suite is not a common design in the bedroom furniture market” but rather is “different and distinct from every other bedroom suite on the market or that had previously been on the market” in his 17-year retail home furniture experience. SanGiacomo offered no contradictory evidence.
Retail sales of the Sommerset suite began in March 1996, and it quickly became one of Ashley’s best-selling bedroom designs.
In December 1996 or January 1997, SanGiacomo began selling a line of bedroom furniture under the name “La Dolce Vita.” This bedroom set, like the Sommer-set suite, consists- of a headboard, two nightstands, an armoire, and a dresser with a mirror. Also like Ashley’s Som-merset, SanGiacomo’s La Dolce Vita includes a high-gloss marble-like finish, fluted columns, arches, and entablatures. The entire Sommerset suite retails for approximately $2,500; the La DolceVita suite retails for approximately $1,800. Ashley asserts that the materials and craftsmanship used in making SanGiacomo’s La Dol-ce Vita furniture are far inferior to those used in making its own Sommerset furniture. In the months that followed introduction of the La Dolce Vita collection, it displaced sales of Ashley’s Sommerset suite at many retailers.
Ashley maintains that SanGiacomo’s marketing of the La Dolce Vita design infringes upon its rights in the Sommerset design. Accordingly, it filed this action asserting a violation of federal trade dress law, breach of the parties’ alleged oral agreement not to copy, and other state law
II.
The trade dress of a product consists of its "total image and overall appearance," including its "size, shape, color or color combinations, texture, graphics, or even particular sales techniques." Two Pesos, Inc. v. Taco Cabana, Inc.,
In addition to protecting registered trademarks, the Lanham Act protects unregistered marks and trade dress. Specifically, § 43 of the Lanham Act provides that
[amy person who, on or in connection with any goods or services ... uses in commerce any word, term, name, symbol, or device, or any combination thereof . . . which . . is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive as to the affiliation, connection, or association of such person with another person, or as to the origin . . of his or her goods . . . shall be liable in a civil action by any person who believes that he or she is or is likely to be damaged by such act.
15 U.S.C.A. § 1125(a) (West 1998).
The Supreme Court has explained that "[p]rotection of trade dress, no less than of trademarks, serves the Act's purpose." Two Pesos,
Thus, § 43 does not prohibit copying per se. Rather, the statute only prohibits a copy that can be passed off as the product of the originator, thereby confusing the consumer and interfering with the originator's rights in the goodwill of its business. See Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc.,
To prove a case of trade dress infringement, a party must demonstrate that (1) its trade dress is primarily non-functional; (2) the alleged infringement creates a likelihood of confusion; and, (3) the trade dress either (a) is inherently distinctive, or (b) has acquired a secondary meaning. See Two Pesos,
Without reaching the questions of functionality or consumer confusion, the district court granted summary judgment to SanGiacomo because it concluded that Ashley had not forecast sufficient evidence to demonstrate that its Sommerset design was inherently distinctive or had acquired a secondary meaning. On appeal, Ashley does not contest the secondary meaning ruling but does contend that the district court erred in holding as a matter of law that the Sommerset design's trade dress is not inherently distinctive.
III.
A.
In 1976, Judge Friendly articulated a methodology in Abercrombie & Fitch Co. v. Hunting World, Inc.,
A generic mark refers to the genus or class of which a particular product is a member and can never be protected. A descriptive mark describes a characteristic of a product and can only be protected if it has acquired secondary meaning, i.e., if it has become distinctive of the maker’s goods over time. A suggestive mark connotes a characteristic of a product, thereby enabling a consumer to infer something about the product from the mark. Both arbitrary and fanciful marks are totally unrelated to the product; the two differ, however, in that a mark qualifies as arbitrary if it is well-known in a different context, and fanciful if it is newly invented. With suggestive, arbitrary, and fanciful marks, “the association between the mark and its source is presumed and the mark is eligible for trademark protection.” See Perini,
The rub, of course, is in trying to distinguish generic marks (ineligible for trademark protection) or descriptive marks (eligible only if accompanied by secondary meaning), from suggestive, arbitrary, or fanciful marks (all automatically eligible for trademark protection). This almost always depends on the particular facts of the case. For example, the trade name “Pet Store” for a shop that sold pets would be generic. The word “penguin,” by contrast, would be descriptive when used in the name of a shop that specialized in items relating to a certain polar species; suggestive when denominating an air conditioning company; and arbitrary when the name of a book publishing 'company. (If the book publisher wanted a fanciful mark, it could use a made-up word, like “Penquell.”)
Despite the Supreme Court’s unqualified and express approval of the application of the Abercrombie analysis in the trade dress context, some courts have held that the Abercrombie analysis does not apply where, as here, the alleged trade dress is the product’s design or configuration. See, e.g., Knitwaves, Inc. v. Lollytogs Ltd.,
The refusal to apply the Abercrombie analysis to trade dress cases involving product configuration also ignores the facts of Two Pesos itself. The plaintiff in Two Pesos asserted that a rival had infringed the trade dress of its Mexican restaurant; a jury agreed and awarded damages to the plaintiff, which were affirmed on appeal. The Supreme Court stated that the courts below had been correct in using Abercrombie to determine whether the decor and design of the restaurant constituted an inherently distinctive trade dress. Two Pesos,
Furthermore, contrary to suggestions made by courts that would limit the application of Abercrombie, see, e.g., Duraco,
This is not to say that the Abercrombie analysis may not be difficult to apply in some product configuration cases. But the contention that we should therefore refuse to apply it at all in such cases is, as the Supreme Court remarked with respect to another thorny Lanham Act issue, “unpersuasive ... because it relies on an occasional problem to justify a blanket prohibition.” Qualitex Co. v. Jacobson Prods.
Moreover, difficulties in applying Abercrombie to product configuration can often be mitigated by considering the principles stated in Seabrook Foods, Inc. v. Bar-Well Foods Ltd.,
In essence, Seabrook clarifies when a trade dress should be considered arbitrary or fanciful, on the one hand, or generic, on the other. This elaboration of Abercrom-bie is particularly useful in product configuration cases because the nonverbal character of the product features at issue in such cases makes them less likely to turn — as word mark cases frequently do— on whether the alleged trade dress is descriptive. At .least compared with word marks, few product configurations will have substantial descriptive capabilities, and therefore descriptiveness is likely to be a real issue only rarely. Cases in which a product configuration has enough communicative value to raise a question under the suggestive category may arise more often. But we think it likely that, by and large, the crucial question in product configuration cases will be the question that Seabrook helps answer: whether an alleged trade dress can be considered arbitrary or fanciful or whether it must be ruled generic.
In sum, we hold that the Abercrombie categories, as Two Pesos suggests, provide the appropriate basic framework for deciding inherent distinctiveness in product configuration cases. Furthermore, we believe that the rules that SanGiacomo urges as alternatives to Abercrombie, see I.P. Lund Trading v. Kohler Co.,
In ruling that an alleged trade dress, like a trademark, could be protectable absent a showing of secondary meaning, the Two Pesos Court exhibited a desire for a-uniform approach to claims under § 43(a). See
The alternative tests that have been proposed also conflict with Two Pesos on a more specific level. These tests require that in order to qualify for trade dress protection a product configuration must “act as a[ ] ... signifier of origin,” Duraco,
Moreover, any “source-identification” requirement impermissibly undermines the distinction that the Supreme Court established in Two Pesos between “inherently distinctive” analysis and “secondary meaning” analysis. Prior to Two Pesos, some circuits had held that inherent distinctiveness in trade dress cases could only be established by proof that a trade dress had acquired a secondary meaning in consumers’ minds. See Merchant & Evans, Inc. v. Roosevelt Bldg. Prods. Co.,
Nor does requiring that a design simply be “likely to serve” or “likely to be understood” as source-designating eliminate the tension between Two Pesos and source-identification tests. True, these more modest requirements would not necessarily mandate that a plaintiff produce evidence of the kind required to show secondary meaning; rather a plaintiff could, for example, rely on evidence that product design functions as an important means of source-designation in the relevant market, together with evidence that the product in question is unusual. But even these requirements misdirect the analysis because they improperly suggest that consumers would have to consciously recognize a product design as indicative of source in order for the design to qualify as inherently distinctive. Not only does this approach continue the improper emphasis on source identification,which is the province of secondary meaning, but it also ignores § 43(a)’s intent to prevent customer confusion. Customers could certainly end up being confused about the source of a product by a deceptive trade dress without consciously recognizing the trade dress of the original product as a source-designator upon first seeing it.
Thus, in determining inherent distinctiveness the question is not whether a product design “identifies” a product, is “likely to identify” a product, or is “likely to be understood” as identifying a product. We believe, rather, that the question is whether the design is “capable of identifying a product,” Two Pesos,
We follow the Supreme Court’s lead in Two Pesos and hold that the venerable Abercrombie analysis provides the appropriate method for answering this question. See also Pebble Beach Co. v. Tour 18 I Ltd.,
B.
When the district court applied the Abercrombie analysis it concluded as a matter of law that “[t]he Sommerset design is merely descriptive of itself and, as such, is not inherently distinctive.” This ruling relies upon the same false premise that animated the Duraco and Knitwaves holdings, i.e., that the asserted trade dress in a product design case is “the product itself.” Duraco,
As noted above, the trade dress in such cases is not “the product itself,” but rather the nonfunctional aspects of the product that makeup its total image. If this were not so, then a product design could never be protectable as an inherently distinctive trade dress because it would always be part of the product. Two Pesos simply does not permit that result — rather it clearly contemplates trade dress protection for inherently distinctive product configurations. Indeed, given that both the district court and the court of appeals in Two Pesos approved the jury’s finding that the design and decor at issue there did not “describe” the restaurant to which it was attached,
The district court also erred in holding that the Sommerset design could not fall within the “arbitrary” or “fanciful” Aber-crombie categories. The court reasoned that “[t]he use of a high-gloss finish, columns, arches and entablatures on bedroom furniture cannot be characterized as arbitrary or fanciful because, as Ashley admits, such features are common to the furniture industry.”
At the heart of this holding is the erroneous belief that if the elements of a design are common in the industry, the design cannot be inherently distinctive. In fact, trade dress is the “total image” of a product, and thus the relevant inquiry is not whether the individual components of a design are common or not, but rather whether the alleged trade dress as a whole is inherently distinctive. See Two Pesos,
For instance, in AmBrit, Inc. v. Kraft, Inc.,
Similarly, the evidence here supports a possible finding that the Sommerset’s total overall image was arbitrary or fanciful and therefore inherently distinctive. A factfin-der could reasonably conclude that the total image created by the Sommerset’s neo-Roman design has no more to do with bedroom furniture than a penguin does with a publishing company. Ashley produced uncontroverted evidence that the “the combination of features in the Som-merset — features which include the high gloss polyester Carmelstone and Goatskin finishes, off white moldings on the night stands, dresser, and armoire, classic columns and fluting on the headboard and mirror, and arched tops on the mirror and headboard frames — have never before been utilized together in a bedroom suite.” Also undisputed was the evidence that “[t]he overall appearance” of the Sommer-set “is not a common design in the bedroom furniture market,” and that it has a “unique and unusual appearance” that “distinguishes it from other bedroom suites.” From this evidence, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that even if the individual elements of the Sommerset design were common in the furniture industry, ie., even if some of these elements fit within Abercrombie’s “generic” category, the Sommerset’s combination of these elements was sufficiently unique to be arbitrary or fanciful and therefore eligible for trade dress protection. See Roulo,
Our determination that the Sommerset design could qualify for trade dress protection does not mean that every unique or novel product design will be protectable as an inherently distinctive trade dress. For an item to be considered inherently distinctive, it must differ from its predecessors in a more than trivial way; an alleged trade dress is not protectable if it is “a mere refinement of a commonly-adopted and well-known form of ornamentation for a particular class of goods.” Seabrook,
For example, in EFS Mktg., Inc. v. Russ Berrie & Co.,
In contrast to the plaintiff in EFS, Ashley presented evidence that its Sommerset design is not merely unique, but also significantly and remarkably different from other designs. One expert testified that the design creates a “unique and unusual appearance” and that “the unique appearance of the Sommerset distinguishes it from other bedroom suites.” Another opined that “[t]he overall appearance of Ashley’s Sommerset bedroom suite is not a common design in the bedroom furniture market.” If SanGiacomo had offered un
C.
Before leaving the trade dress question, we pause to examine the considerations that seem to have motivated courts to raise the bar for inherent distinctiveness in product configuration cases. On examination, we conclude that none of these considerations gives cause for alarm; indeed, most of them are adequately accommodated by traditional trademark and trade dress law.
One motive behind the efforts to create more rigorous inherent distinctiveness standards for product configuration cases is the fear that trade dress protection in such cases could have anticompetitive effects. The rule that a product feature is unprotectable if it is functional, however, fully safeguards competitors from the danger that a producer will, through trade dress law, obtain a monopoly over a useful product feature when the alternatives are limited. See Two Pesos,
Another concern about applying traditional (rather than more rigorous) trade dress rules in product configuration cases is that they will improperly allow the protection of product features that are aesthetically pleasing, or, as some authorities have put it, features that contribute to the inherent appeal of a product or serve a merely ornamental purpose. See Duraco,
More fundamentally, though, the problem of when aesthetic features can be protected is already dealt with in trade dress law by the functionality requirement. As the Supreme Court has explained, a feature qualifies as functional not only if it “is essential to the use or purpose of the article" but also if it “affects the cost or quality of the article, that is, if exclusive use of it would put competitors at a significant non-reputation-related disadvantage.” Qualitex,
Yet another justification for heightening trade dress requirements in product configuration cases is the perceived need to protect the boundaries between trade dress, copyright, and patent law. The argument is that a producer who could prevent others from copying the distinctive configuration of its product through trade dress law would have little need for a patent or a copyright. We recognize that an improperly expansive application of trade dress principles could conceivably frustrate patent and copyright protection in some circumstances. Such problems can and should be avoided, however, by “careful application of traditional bases for determining the propriety” of trade dress protection, rather than by rewriting trade dress law. See Kohler Co. v. Moen, Inc.,
Allowing traditional trade dress protection for product configuration will not undermine either utility or design patent law. Indeed, the trade dress rule that functional aspects of a product, although patentable, are not protectable as trade dress directly eliminates any conflict between patents for useful items and trade dress protection for product configuration. See Kohler,
For similar reasons, trade dress protection for product configuration poses no general threat to the copyright regime. Again, trade dress protection requires a showing of likelihood of consumer confusion, but copyright law, like patent law, does not. Thus, in contrast to copyright infringement, “mere reproduction” of a trade dress “is not an infringement.” Quality Inns Int’l, Inc. v. McDonald’s Corp.,
A final concern that may have led courts to adopt restrictive inherent distinctiveness standards is the fear that, absent such standards, a plaintiff who merely presents an expert’s affidavit asserting that its product is significantly unique would survive summary judgment on the issue of inherent distinctiveness in every case. Actually, a court would in some cases be justified in rejecting an expert’s opinion on inherent distinctiveness as conclusory or lacking factual foundation. Expert opinion asserting that black and white newsprint is inherently distinctive, for example, would not enable a plaintiff to survive summary judgment.
It is nonetheless true that an expert’s affidavit will frequently enable the plaintiff to defeat summary judgment on the issue of inherent distinctiveness. This is not an unusual circumstance in the law; in many areas, an expert’s affidavit will enable the plaintiff to survive summary judgment unless the defendant shows that the plaintiffs proof fails with regard to at least one element of the claim asserted. And indeed, results of this kind comport with the basic summary judgment principle that the moving party bears the burden of indicating why the nonmoving party’s case fails to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Moreover, the question of inherent distinctiveness almost always involves heavily disputed facts and so is not ordinarily amenable to summary judgment. See, e.g., Mana Products, Inc. v. Columbia Cosmetics Mfg.,
In sum, we find no reason to depart from the traditional Abercrombie test for inherent distinctiveness, and we conclude that under that test Ashley’s alleged trade dress in the Sommerset design could reasonably be found inherently distinctive on the present record. The district court therefore erred in granting summary judgment to SanGiacomo on Ashley’s trade dress claim.
IV.
Ashley also contends that SanGiacomo, by copying the Sommerset design, breached an oral agreement between the parties not to copy each other’s designs.
North Carolina General Statute § 75-4 provides in part that “[n]o contract ... limiting the rights of any person to do business anywhere in the State of North Carolina shall be enforceable unless such agreement is in writing and duly signed by the party who agrees not to enter into any such business within such territory.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75-4 (1998). North Carolina courts have applied this provision to agreements prohibiting former employees or business associates from entering into businesses that compete with their former employers or associates, see, e.g., Manpower of Guilford County, Inc. v. Hedgecock,
More generally, North Carolina courts have repeatedly held that § 75-4 applies to an agreement that “limits substantially” a party’s right to do business. See, e.g., Radio Elecs.,
At oral argument, we raised the question of whether enforcement of this agreement would be inconsistent with the district court’s local rules. The parties came to their agreement in the context of a court-ordered mediation. The local rules governing such mediation efforts provide that “[u]pon reaching a settlement agreement at a mediated settlement conference, the parties shall forthwith reduce the agreement to writing,” M.D.N.C.R. 83.10e(d) (1999), and that “the court will not permit parties in other litigations to conduct discovery regarding the mediation,” id. at 83.10e(f)(8). In memoranda submitted at our request after oral argument, the parties disagreed about the applicability and significance of these rules in the instant case. The district court is certainly in a better position than we to interpret its rules in the first instance, and can, if the point is pressed, make this determination on remand.
V.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
