MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Bobak Sausage Company (“BSC” or “Plaintiff”) filed its complaint against Defendants A & J Seven Bridges, Inc, d/b/a Bobak’s Signature Events, and John Bobak and Anna Zalinski (collectively “A & J” or “Defendants”), alleging Trademark Infringement (Count I), Trademark Dilution (Count II), False Designation of Origin (Count III), Common Law Unfair Competition (Count IV), Statutory Deceptive Trade Practices Competition (Count V), and Piercing Corporate Veil/Alter Ego (Count VI). Currently before the Court are BSC’s motion for summary judgment [68] on Count I-V and A & J’s Opposition to BSC’s motion for summary judgment and cross-motion for summary judgment [77], For the reasons explained below, BSC’s motion for summary judgment [68] is denied and A & J’s cross-motion for summary judgment [77] is granted as to Plaintiffs claims for Trademark Infringement (Count I), Trademark Dilution (Count II), and False Designation of Origin (Count III). The Court dismisses without prejudice BSC’s state law claims for Unfair Competition (Count IV), Statutory Deceptive Trade Practices Competition (Count V), and Piercing Corporate Veil/Alter Ego (Count VI).
I. Background
A. Statements of Facts
The Court has taken the relevant facts primarily from the parties’ Local Rule (“L.R.”) 56.1 statements: BSC’s Statement of Facts (“BSC SOF”) [69], A
&
J’s Statement of Facts (“A
&
J SOF”) [77], and BSC’s Response to A & J’s Statement of Facts (“BSC Response”) [81]. Local Rule 56.1 requires that statements of facts contain allegations of material fact and that factual allegations be supported by admissible record evidence. See L.R. 56.1;
Malec v. Sanford,
Where a party offers a legal conclusion or statement of fact without proper evidentiary support, the Court will not consider that statement.
Malec v. Sanford,
The Seventh Circuit repeatedly has held that a district court is within its discretion to strictly enforce compliance with its local rules regarding summary judgment motions and the Court will do so here. See
Patterson v. Indiana Newspapers, Inc.,
As the Seventh Circuit has stressed, facts are to be set forth in Rule 56.1 statements, and it is not the role of the Court to parse the parties’ exhibits to construct the facts. Judges are not “like pigs, hunting for truffles buried in briefs.”
United States v. Dunkel,
In addition, where a party improperly denies a statement of fact by failing to provide adequate or proper record support for the denial, the Court deems that statement of fact to be admitted. Thus, any statements or responses that contain legal conclusions or argument, are evasive, contain hearsay or are not based on personal knowledge, are irrelevant, or are not supported by evidence in the record will not be considered by the Court in ruling on the summary judgment motions. Any paragraph or fact that is not supported by record evidence will be disregarded.
B. Facts
BSC is an Illinois Corporation with its principal place of business at 5275 S. Archer Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. BSC has owned Trademark/Service mark No. 2,870,879 for the word “Bobak’s” and mark No. 2,859,600 for the word “Bobak’s” in a distinctive script since 2004 and has continuously used the mark since 1967 in connection with its wide range of food products, its retail stores, and its manufacturing and wholesale food product sales business. The mark is in a red, stylized script resembling sausages. Until early 2006, a related company, Bobak Enterprises, opened retail grocery stores in Burr Ridge and Naperville under the name “Bobak Sausage Company.” The retail grocery stores had restaurant areas that could accommodate small parties. Those stores are no longer in operation. Until early 2007, BSC also operated a restaurant in its Archer Avenue location but then removed the restaurant and replaced it with a deli with no table service. There is a modest seating area, in a hallway leading to the store’s restrooms, for customers who want to eat their deli items in the store.
A & J is an Illinois Corporation that provides banquet hall, conference center, and food catering services at 6440 Double Eagle Drive in Woodridge, Illinois, under the name “Bobak’s Signature Events (and Conference Center at Seven Bridges).” Individual Defendants John Bobak (“Cousin John”) and his sister Anna Zalinski are officers and shareholders of A & J. 1 The conference center and banquet facility had been operated under the name “Signature Room” and were owned by the same entity that operated the Signature Room at the John Hancock Building in downtown Chicago. However, as a condition of A & J’s purchase of the Seven Bridges facility, A & J was required to phase out the “Signature Room” name within six months of the purchase.
In early 2005, BSC and its three shareholders and officers, Stanley Bobak, John Bobak (“Brother John”) and Joe Bobak, told A & J that BSC had no problem with A & J’s use of the name “Bobak’s Signature Events.” Cousin John testified that he again confirmed with Stanley Bobak that the three brothers had agreed to A & J’s use of “Bobak’s Signature Events” for the Woodridge banquet and conference facility.
2
At the request of the bank financ
PERMISSION TO USE BUSINESS NAME: I, John Bobak, president of Bobak Sausage Company, give A & J Seven Bridges, Inc., John Bobak, and Anna Zalinski permission to use the name Bobak’s in a d/b/a Bobak’s Signature Events. Bobak’s Sausage Company has no ownership interest in A & J Seven Bridges, Inc. and A & J Seven Bridges, Inc. has no ownership interest in Bobak’s Sausage Company.
A & J did not pay a fee or provide anything of value in exchange for the written permission.
A & J started to use the name “Bobak’s Signature Events” in June 2005. A & J has a blue and yellow logo that retained the general appearance of the former “Signature Room” logo, replacing “Room” with “Events” and adding the family name in smaller print, above the main portion of the logo. A & J employees answer the facility’s telephone by stating “Signature Events,” and catering menus sent to prospective customers are labeled “Signature Events at Steven Bridges.” A & J also maintains a website at www. signatureevent.com. When A & J opened Bobak’s Signature Events, BSC and the Bobak Sausage Company retail stores placed promotional fliers for Bobak’s Signature Events into customers’ grocery bags.
Most of A & J’s business comes from former customers of the Signature Room. Approximately 45 percent of A & J’s events consist of corporate functions for companies such as Verizon, Best Buy, and McDonald’s, and the remaining 55 percent includes social events such as weddings, proms, anniversary celebrations, or First Communion parties. A & J occasionally advertises in wedding resource guides and local newspapers, but its main method of promotion is word-of-mouth and referrals. The facility can accommodate groups from 25 to 1200 people. The hefty Bobak’s Signature Events menu offers steak, chicken and seafood. It also offers BSC sausage as one of forty available appetizers. The facility can provide audiovisual equipment such as projectors, screens, and microphones for corporate meetings. The cost of hosting an event at Bobak’s Signature Events ranges from a couple hundred to several thousand of dollars.
In early 2006, BSC reorganized and Stanley Bobak became president. In October 2006, BSC, through its counsel, asked A & J to sign a trademark licensing agreement. A & J declined to execute the trademark license. Neither BSC nor A & J considered BSC’s permission to use the name “Bobak’s Signature Events” in April 2005 to be a trademark license. After A & J refused to sign the proposed license agreement, BSC sent letters to A & J referencing litigation and the possibility of “a financially crippling injunction,” warning that A & J would “experience what it is like to have its very business existence at risk.”
C. The Survey
BSC hired Amplitude Research to develop and analyze a trademark confusion survey. Amplitude, in turn, hired Communi
Defendants filed a motion to exclude the expert testimony of Plaintiffs witness, Thomas J. Caljahan of Amplitude, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 702. In assessing the survey, the Court noted that the flaws in the survey substantially limit the helpfulness of the proposed survey and present a close question in regard to whether to exclude the survey entirely. However, the Court ultimately concluded that it could not say — especially without the context provided by, for example, the summary judgment motions that have now been filed — that the survey is one of the “rare” surveys that is “so flawed as to be completely unhelpful to the trier of fact and therefore inadmissible.”
AHP Subsidiary Holding Co.,
Although the Court declined to exclude the survey in its entirety, not one of Plaintiffs statements of fact sets forth evidence from the survey or from Plaintiffs proposed expert. The only fact from the survey included in either party’s statements of fact is from Defendants: According to BSC’s expert, as of 2009, fewer than one-third of the Chicago metropolitan area residents surveyed had heard of Bobak’s food products. Because this fact was properly set forth in Defendants’ statement of additional facts, the Court will consider it in ruling on the cross motions for summary judgments.
II. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is proper where “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In determining whether there is a genuine issue of fact, the Court “must construe the facts and draw all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”
Foley v. City of Lafayette, Ind.,
III. Analysis
BSC brought this action alleging federal Lanham Act claims for (I) trademark infringement, (II) dilution, and (III) false designation of origin, and state law claims for (IV) unfair competition, (V) violation of the Illinois Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act, and (VI) veil piercing to prevent the individual defendants, John Bobak and Anna Zalinski, from using their family name in conjunction with the operation of banquet and conference facilities and attendant catering services.
A. Infringement Claims (Counts I and III)
Section 1114 of the Lanham Act provides: “Any person who shall, without the consent of the registrant, use in commerce any reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation of a registered mark in connection with the sale * * * of any goods or services * * * which is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive * * * shall be liable in a civil action by the registrant for the remedies hereinafter provided.” 15 U.S.C. § 1114(l)(a). Section 1114 prohibits any use of a registered trademark likely to cause confusion among the public as to the source of goods or services. To prevail under this section of the Lanham Act, a plaintiff must establish (1) that it has a protectable registered trademark, and (2) a likelihood of confusion as to the origin of the defendant’s product.
Ty, Inc. v. The Jones Group, Inc.,
Prior to assessing whether there is a likelihood of confusion as to the origin of Defendants’ product, the Court first must examine Defendants’ claim that BSC “acquiesced” in Defendants’ use of the Mark.
3
Acquiescence is an equitable de
As a general matter, while “consent is a defense only with respect to acts undertaken before an effective termination of the consent, reliance on the consent or acquiescence of the trademark owner can create an estoppel which will preclude an effective termination of the consent.” See
Trace Minerals Research, L.C. v. Mineral Resources Intern., Inc.,
The Court concludes that the undisputed facts establish acquiescence. First, BSC consented to A & J’s use of the name “Bobak’s Signature Events.” In early 2005, BSC and each of its three shareholders told A & J that they had no objection to A & J’s use of the name “Bobak’s Signature Events.” A & J SOF ¶ 13. Then, in April 2005, Brother John, BSC’s president at the time, provided A & J with written permission.
Id.
¶ 16-17.
To counter, in its reply brief, BSC contends that when it expressly consented to A & J’s use of “Bobak’s Signature Events,” it could not have known that such use would be infringing. However, this argument contradicts BSC’s other arguments, contending that “Bobak’s Signature Events” is so similar to “Bobak’s” that confusion is a foregone conclusion.- See PI. Brief in Support of SJ at 11 (“The resemblance is obvious, and the differences make no difference because of the nature of the Mark — It’s possessive. The nature of the word is such that whatever appears after it will appear to belong to BSC”); id. at 12 (“This is especially so as it’s in the possessive form, indicating ownership. • Even without the possessive, where the dominant portion of the mark is the same surname, the likelihood of confusion is high”); id. at 19 (“[T]hey are using the Bobak’s name, without any disclaimer, in a way that clearly implies they are part of the same organization and selling the same line of products.”). Indeed, a few pages after claiming that BSC could not have foreseen any confusion, BSC argues, “BSC and A & J are both in the business of selling food. They are within a few miles of each other, and both go by the name ‘Bobak’s.’ ‘Bobak’s’ is a possessive, and the very nature of the word implies that the banquet hall and BSC’s operation have the same owners.” See PI. Reply at 12-14.
BSC also asserts that Defendants could not have reasonably relied on BSC’s express written consent in using “Bobak’s Signature Events.” However, the undisputed evidence shows that the bank financing the acquisition required a written confirmation of BSC’s consent and that Cousin John requested the written consent at the time that he ordered the signage for the conference facility. Having secured the consent, A & J purchased the signage and had new menus and letterhead printed with the new logo.
4
Further, when A & J opened Bobak’s Signature Events, BSC and the BSC retail stores placed promotional fliers for “Bobak’s Signature Events” into customer’s grocery bags. Finally, the 18-month delay between BSC’s permission to use the name “Bobak’s Signature Events” and BSC’s request for A & J to sign a trademark license'agreement prejudiced Defendants. In reliance on BSC’s explicit and (arguably) enthusiastic approval of the name “Bobak’s Signature Events,” A & J effected the name change, purchased and installed the new signage, ordered stationary and menus with the new name, and began promoting the facility under the new name. A & J made these expenditures with BSC’s knowledge and approval. Indeed, even BSC contends that the effect of prohibiting A & J’s use of the name “Bobak’s Signature Events” would have a substantial effect on A & J’s business: BSC’s counsel predicted that an injunction would be “financially crippling”
BSC argues that, even if the defense of acquiescence is satisfied, it is entitled to relief because it established a showing of inevitable confusion. As indicated, a necessary element of BSC’s infringement and unfair competition claims under both state and federal law is a likelihood of confusion between the two Bobak’s marks. Because Defendants have demonstrated that BSC acquiesced in Defendants’ use of the mark, the standard rises from “likelihood of confusion” to “inevitable confusion,” but the question is similar: whether consumers will inevitably be confused by BSC’s and A & J’s concurrent use of the “Bobak’s” mark or whether the differences in the products, in the trade channels, in the conditions under which sales of products are made, and other factors eliminate the possibility of confusion. Put another way, the Court considers whether consumers, and specifically consumers who would use either product, would be likely to attribute them to a single source. See
Auto-Zone, Inc. v. Strick,
The Seventh Circuit considers seven factors in determining whether a likelihood of confusion exists: (1) the similarity of the marks in appearance and suggestion; (2) the similarity of the products in connection with which the marks are used; (3) the area and manner of the marks’ concurrent use; (4) the degree of care likely to be used by consumers; (5) the strength of the plaintiffs mark; (6) whether any actual confusion exists; and (7) the defendant’s intent to palm off its goods as those of the plaintiff.
AutoZone,
1. The similarity of the marks
The proper method for comparing the marks is to look at them as a whole, rather than dissecting them into their component parts. See
Henri’s Food Products Co., Inc. v. Kraft, Inc.,
BSC’s mark bears a large “Bobak’s” in a red script that appears to resemble sausages. A & J’s logo is blue and yellow, with a large “Signature Events” in an oval. None of the words in A & J’s logo bears any resemblance whatever to a sausage. In addition, the dominant portion of A & J’s mark is “Signature Events”; it is centered in the logo, in a script that is more than twice as large as the family name. This observation is bolstered by the fact that A & J’s, in its promotional materials, frequently uses “Signature Events” without reference to the owners’ surnames. For instance, its website is found at www.signatureevent. com, the menus sent to prospective clients are marked “Signature Events at Seven Bridges,” and its employees answer the
2. Similarity of the products and services
BSC focuses on the manufacture and sale of sausage and other deli products, such as head cheese and pierogis. The only dining facilities that it provides are a few tables for those customers who want to eat their deli products in the store. BSC has never offered banquet or conference facilities, although BSC’s president testified that BSC offers “food packages that are either picked up or delivered on site.” In contrast, A & J’s facility hosts banquets, wedding receptions, and conferences for up to 1,200 people. A & J provides audiovisual equipment for its corporate clients’ conferences.
Although both parties provide food, the manner in which the food is provided and the type of food that is offered differ substantially. As for food, A & J offers items such as chicken cordon bleu “beggars purses”; curried chicken salad canapés with red grapes and cashews; stuffed beef tenderloin topped with a truffle demiglace; and chicken saltimbocca with sun-dried tomato au jus. The only common ground is that both establishment offer food for consumption and off-site catering, but the dissimilarity in the kinds of food and the manner in which it is presented tends to favor Defendants. As pointed out by Defendants, a couple celebrating their wedding or a company staging its quarterly sales conference would likely choose the banquet hall over the available eating area at BSC’s Archer Avenue store. Similarly, a family interested in catering a tailgate or other informal event would likely choose BSC’s food packages over the fancier, more expensive offerings from Defendants’ catering service. The interior of each establishment has a very different feel and Signature Events’ emphasis on gourmet food and presentation differentiates its style substantially from that of BSC’s.
S. Area and Manner of Concurrent Use
Another factor that courts consider is the degree of overlap of promotion, distribution, and sales of the parties’ goods or services, including the geographical area of distribution, any evidence of direct competition between the relevant products, whether the products are sold in the same stores, and whether the products are sold using the same means of advertising.
S Industries,
Nevertheless, the Court is hard pressed to see how A & J’s banquet facility and conference center competes with BSC’s manufacture and sale of meat and deli products. A & J’s goods and services are
A Degree of Care Exercised by Consumers
The degree of care likely to be exercised by consumers is determined by considering several factors, including the expense of the product and the sophistication of the purchasers. See
Rust Environment & Infrastructure Inc. v. Teunissen,
In" the present case, the common denominator is food. However, as previously noted, the food services provided are quite different, beginning with the price point. BSC contends that both it and A & J provide “relatively inexpensive” food. While that is primarily true in BSC’s case, the cost of hosting an event at Signature Events ranges from several hundred to tens of thousands of dollars. That is not “relatively inexpensive.” See
S Industries,
5. Strength of BSC’s Mark
The “strength” of a trademark refers to the mark’s “distinctiveness, meaning its propensity to identify the products or services sold as emanating from a particular source.” See
CAE, Inc. v. Clean Air Eng’g, Inc.,
Personal names are typically considered “descriptive” and entitled to a lesser degree of protection than suggestive or fanciful marks; this is due to courts’ reluctance to prevent a person from using his own name in his own business and concerns that granting a monopoly on a name deprives the consuming public of valuable information.
Peaceable Planet, Inc. v. Ty, Inc.,
The Bobak’s mark has been registered (albeit for less than a decade); however, “[i]ncontestability does not broaden a trademark in the sense that it allows a registrant to claim rights over a greater range of products than he would otherwise be entitled to claim.”
Union Carbide Corp. v. Ever-Ready, Inc.,
Moreover, even if BSC could establish Bobak’s as a strong mark in its own market, there is no evidence that such strength has spilled into the general consumer market. See
Telemed,
In any event, even if the Court were to ignore the various procedural deficiencies in BSC’s presentation of the evidence and accept the view that the uniqueness of the name “Bobak’s” tends to support a finding that the trademark is somewhat strong (see
Telemed Corp. v. Tel-Med, Inc.,
6. Instances of Actual Confusion
As evidence of actual confusion, BSC first offers its uncorroborated description of the operation of the Google search algorithm. Putting aside the fact that this evidence is not contained in BSC’s statement of facts, Plaintiff has failed to present competent evidence as to how the Goo
Also in support of its contention that “actual confusion” exists, BSC offers the affidavits of three of its employees as well as anonymous internet postings. That “evidence” is problematic on many levels. First, the affidavits and anonymous internet postings are not set forth in Plaintiffs statement of facts. Second, the accounts of alleged confusion by unknown customers are hearsay. Courts in this circuit consistently have rejected vague summaries of hearsay statements by unidentified consumers. See,
e.g., Smith Fiberglass Products, Inc. v. Ameron, Inc.,
Moreover, the unreliability of Ms. Attardo’s and Ms. Spangelo’s accounts of confusion is compounded not only by BSC’s failure to set forth its evidence in its fact statements, but also by BSC’s failure to disclose the employees during discovery. A & J served interrogatories inquiring as to incidents of actual confusion and the identity of persons with relevant knowledge and questioned BSC’s Rule 30(b)(6) representative about claimed instances of confusion, but these incidents and affiants were not disclosed. See,
e.g.,
Exhibit 2, Stanley Dep. at 54:3-5; Exhibit 14, Plaintiffs Answers to Defendants’ First Set of Interrogatories, Nos. 7, 11-13. Rule 37(c)(1) provides, “If a party fails to provide information or identify a witness as required by Rule 26(a) or (e), the party is not allowed to use that information or witness to supply evidence on a motion, at a hearing, or at a trial, unless the failure was substantially justified or is harmless.” BSC dismisses its discovery violation by stating that there was no reason for A & J to depose these new witnesses because they “are not witnesses to any substantive occurrence; as the Defendants point out, they merely report comments from others.” BSC Resp. at 18-19. Curiously, the affiants’ second — and third-hand statements are precisely why the employees’ testimony should be subject to cross-examination. BSC admits that John Bobak and Anna Zalinski are well-known in Chicago’s Polish community. Did the comments reflect the unknown declarant’s knowledge
During his deposition, Stan Bobak could think of only a single instance of actual confusion that he witnessed firsthand — and once again, this instance was not set forth in Plaintiffs fact statements. However, even considering that one instance, Stan Bobak’s testimony concerning John Bobak’s and Anna Zalinski’s Tilted Kilt franchise only underscores the importance of being able to determine precisely what the unnamed, allegedly “confused” declarants said. Stan’s account (via Tim Reiter, former BSC vice president) reveals that what the mystery declarant meant was that the Tilted Kilt was owned by members of the Bobak family: “Well, there’s Bobaks that own this place.” Stan Bobak acknowledges that the name “Bobak’s” appears nowhere on the Tilted Kilt. However, in his view, any Bobak family members running a business in the food industry, regardless of whether they use the name “Bobak’s,” are trading on BSC’s mark. Yet the Tilted Kilt anecdote suggests that any association is based on awareness of the family relationship, and not BSC’s mark.
BSC also briefly mentions the survey conducted by its expert, Thomas Callahan, as evidence of confusion. Again, Plaintiff does not mention Callahan’s findings or conclusions in any of its statements of fact. Furthermore, this Court has noted that Mr. Callahan’s survey “has many significant flaws” that “substantially limit the helpfulness” of the survey, including a faulty universe, leading questions, and minimal controls. Even if the survey were given some weight (which the Court declines to do given BSC’s failure to properly set forth the survey’s conclusions in its statement of facts), BSC would be left with minimal, if any, admissible evidence of actual confusion. And as stated by the Seventh Circuit, some incidence of actual confusion, if
de minimis,
is insufficient to establish a likelihood of confusion. See
Platinum Home Mortgage Corp. v. Platinum Financial Group, Inc.,
7. A & J’s Intent
BSC claims that A & J acted in bad faith in changing “Signature Room” to “Bobak’s Signature Events.” However, the undisputed facts tell a different story.
6
8. Balancing the factors
The Court appreciates that whether consumers are “likely” to be confused about the origin of a defendant’s products or services is ultimately a question of fact (see
McGraw-Edison Co. v. Walt Disney Prods.,
The Seventh Circuit has held that “none of the seven confusion factors alone is dispositive in a likelihood of confusion analysis,” and it has rejected the idea that to prevail on a motion for summary judgment, a defendant must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to
any
of the seven factors.
AHP Subsidiary Holding Co. v. Stuart Hale Co.,
The facts and evidence presented by the parties show that the services and products offered by the parties are not identical (and barely overlap) and are not marketed to an overlapping consumer base.
B. Count II: Trademark Dilution
An owner of a famous trademark is entitled to injunctive relief “against another person who, at any time after the owner’s mark has become famous, commences use of a mark or trade name in commerce that is likely to cause dilution by blurring or dilution by tarnishment of the famous mark, regardless of the presence or absence of actual or likely confusion, of competition, or of actual economic injury.” 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(1). A mark is “famous if it is widely recognized by the general consuming public of the United States as a designation of source of the goods or services of the mark’s owner.” 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(2)(A). In determining whether a mark is famous, the court may consider all relevant factors, including the following: (i) the duration, extent, and geographic reach of advertising and publicity of the mark; (ii) the amount, volume, and geographic extent of sales of goods or services offered under the mark; (iii) the extent of actual recognition of the mark; (iv) whether the mark was registered. Id.
The Court concludes that BSC fails to establish that its trademark “Bobak’s” became famous prior to A & J’s use of the name “Bobak’s Signature Events.” Here, the only evidence that BSC produces as to the fame of the name “Bobak’s” within the “general consuming public of the United States” is its own president’s deposition and affidavit statement that the mark is famous, supported by a general discussion of BSC’s advertising expenditures and activities. This is insufficient, especially in view of BSC’s own survey, which showed that fewer than one third of Chicago area residents had ever heard of Bobak’s products. Additionally, BSC fails to provide any evidence that its mark became famous before A & J adopted the name “Bobak’s Signature Events” in early 2005. Although Stan Bobak’s affidavit generally discusses BSC’s advertising expenditures and activities, once again, these figures are not set forth in Plaintiffs statement of facts, and, furthermore, the figures appear to date from 2006 to the present. Finally, Plaintiffs reply brief does not even reference its claim for trademark dilution, let alone address Defendants’ arguments and Plaintiffs own evidentiary shortfalls. For all of these reasons, summary judgment is appropriate on Defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment as to Plaintiffs claim of trademark dilution.
Because the Court grants summary judgment to Defendants as to all claims (Counts I, II, and III) over which it has original jurisdiction, it must now address whether to retain jurisdiction over those state law claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). In addition to its infringement claims under the federal Lanham Act (Counts I and III), BSC has asserted state law claims for Unfair Competition (Count IV), Statutory Deceptive Trade Practices Competition (Count V), and Piercing Corporate Veil/Alter Ego (Count VI). Defendants claim that “federal and state laws regarding trademarks and related claims of unfair competition are substantially congruent” (see
TMT North America, Inc. v. Magic Touch GmbH,
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff BSC’s motion for summary judgment [68] is denied and Defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment [77] is granted as to Plaintiffs claims for Trademark Infringement (Count I), Trademark Dilution (Count II), and False Designation of Origin (Count III). Judgment is entered in favor of Defendants on these claims. The Court dismisses without prejudice the remaining state law claims for Unfair Competition (Count IV), Statutory Deceptive Trade Practices Competition (Count V), and Piercing Corporate Veil/Alter Ego (Count VI).
Notes
. Cousin John and Anna are "double first cousins” to Stan Bobak, “Brother John” Bobak, and Joe Bobak.
. BSC responds to this statement of fact by designating it "[ujndisputed but misleading.” BSC did not provide any citations to the record in its response to Defendants' statement of additional facts to support its explanation for why the fact is “misleading.” BSC also failed to provide the Court with record evidence in its own statement of facts as to why it believes the fact is "misleading.” Not a
. As discussed below, the Court first addresses Defendants' acquiescence defense because a finding that the defense applies shifts the assessment from whether there is a "likelihood of confusion” to whether Plaintiff has demonstrated "inevitable confusion.”
. BSC argues that A & J has ignored Stan Bobak's testimony that their permission to use "Bobak’s Signature Events" was conditioned on the execution of a formal trademark license. However, as previously mentioned, this "fact" appears nowhere in BSC’s Local Rule 56.1 statement of material facts in support of BSC's summary judgment motion, and BSC did not file a statement of additional material facts in response to A & J’s motion. Merely including facts in a responsive memorandum is insufficient to place an issue before the Court, particularly when a party has had ample time to do so. See
Midwest Imports, Ltd.
v.
Coval,
. Once again, this fact was not set forth in Plaintiff's statement of facts but instead merely referenced in its briefs.
. Plaintiff's briefs make extensive reference to an ongoing family feud between Stanley Bobak and other members of the Bobak family (not the defendants in this case) and also refer to past litigation between Stanley Bobak and other members of the Bobak family. However, Plaintiffs statement of facts makes no reference to the family feud or to the prior litigation.
. In
Wright v. Associated Ins. Cos., 29
F.3d 1244, 1251-53 (7th Cir.1994), the Seventh Circuit noted that there occasionally are “unusual cases in which the balance of factors to be considered under the pendent jurisdiction doctrine judicial economy, convenience, fairness, and comity-will point to a federal decision of the state-law claims on the merits.” The first example that the Court discussed occurs "when the statute of limitations has run on the pendent claim, precluding the filing of a separate suit in state court.”
Id.
at 1251. That concern is not present here, however, because Illinois law gives Plaintiff one year from the dismissal on jurisdictional grounds of state law claims in federal court in which to refile those claims in state court. See 735 ILCS 5/13-217;
Davis v. Cook County,
