Case Information
*2 Before HARTZ , PHILLIPS , and MORITZ , Circuit Judges.
_________________________________
PHILLIPS , Circuit Judge.
_________________________________
Sinсe 2007, EC Design, LLC, has been selling its popular personal organizer, the LifePlanner. In 2015, Craft Smith, Inc., wanting to enter the personal-organizer market, reached out to EC Design about a possible collaboration. Failing to join forces with EC Design, Craft Smith, with input from Michaels Stores, Inc., designed and developed a personal organizer to sell in Michaels stores, leading to this action in Utah federal district court. EC Design has asserted that the Craft Smith and Michaels product infringes on the LifePlanner’s registered compilation copyright and unregistered trade dress. The district court disagreed, granting summary judgment in favor of Craft Smith and Michaels (collectively, the Appellees) on both issues. On the copyright issue, the district court concluded that EC Design does not own a valid copyright in its asserted LifePlanner compilation. Though we disagree with how the court framed this issue, we affirm because no reasonable juror could conclude that the allegedly infringing aspects of Appellees’ organizer are substantially similar to the protected expression in the LifePlanner compilation. On trade dress, the district court held that EC Design had failed to creаte a genuine issue of material fact over whether the LifePlanner’s trade dress had acquired secondary meaning. We agree.
Accordingly, exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Appellees on both claims.
BACKGROUND
I. EC Design’s LifePlanner
Erin Condren, EC Design’s founder, designed the LifePlanner personal organizer to help users better plan their lives. To do so, the LifePlanner provides users with weekly and monthly calendars, which are color-coded and laid out helpfully. In addition to the calendars, the LifePlanner has colorful artwork, spaces for the user to write notes, inspirational quotations, and various other textual elements, all of which are interspersed throughout the entire planner. All these features are bound together by a single metal coil and enclosed between plastic- laminated front and back covers. And every year, users can select a LifePlanner to their liking from one of EC Design’s many color/art options.
The LifePlanner contains three labeled sections—introductory, monthly, and notes. The introductory section comprises a notes page, an ownership page, аnd a two-page spread of monthly thumbnail calendars. After the thumbnail calendars comes another two-page spread containing “an inspirational statement spanning the top of both pages” and six different-colored boxes on each page. App. vol. 18 at 4784. The introductory section ends with a lined page for notes. The monthly section follows. It contains color-coordinated tabs for each month, inspirational quotations to start each month, monthly calendars spread over two pages (with space on one side for notes), weekly calendars (horizontal or vertical layout), and a notes page. The *4 LifePlanner concludes with the notes section, which is signaled by a different color from the previous months and is labeled “NOTES.” at 4792–93. Several lined, graphical, and blank pages follow, along with a two-page spread of the next year’s calendar, with rectangular boxes at the bottom for notes. The notes section concludes with several pages of stickers, a cutaway folder, and a pocket to place things.
Though this overall layout has stayed relativеly constant, each passing year brings a variety of changes, distinguishing each year’s LifePlanner from previous versions. Some changes occur every year—new text/artwork and updated calendars. Additional changes are made occasionally to the organizer’s fundamental layout and look. These new offerings often reflect customer surveys, for instance, 2015’s horizontal weekly calendar layout and hardbound-cover version.
Through the years, EC Design has registered trademarks in “LifePlanner,” “Erin Condren,” and the asterisk symbols adorning all its products. For the LifePlanner specifically, EC Design has registered three copyrights in the 2016/2017 version. Only one of those registrations relates to this appeal: U.S. Registration No. VA 2-072-725 (‘725 Registration), which ties to the “2016/2017 Vertical LifePlanner *5 Compilation.” [3] App. vol. 16 at 4214. This registration covers “2-D artwork, compilation of introductory and section phrases, graphics” and excludes “[c]alendar arrangement and calendar text.”
II. Craft Smith Enters the Personal-Organizer Market
In October 2015, Craft Smith took steps towards entering the personal-planner market. [4] At that time, Craft Smith reached out to Michaels—Craft Smith’s biggest customer—about creating a new spiral-bound orgаnizer that would be “like . . . the current Erin Condren Life Planner.” [5] App. vol. 32 at 8448, 8512. As this comment *6 reflects, Craft Smith sought to emulate the LifePlanner with its own product. For example, it used a LifePlanner sample to obtain pricing estimates from the manufacturer. As a result, the manufacturer’s quote to Craft Smith was based on the LifePlanner’s “size,” “quality of spiral,” and “laminated type cover.” Id. at 8508, 8512 (noting that the manufacturer’s quote was “based on everything you see in the EC planner”). Further, Craft Smith designed its organizer with the same “pagination and sheet counts” as the LifePlanner. at 8508.
By April 2016, Michaels agreed to sell Craft Smith’s new organizer in its stores—called the Recollections Planner. Soon thereafter, Michaels asked Craft Smith to compare the Recollections Planner with the LifePlanner to ensure that they were “not too similar.” App. vol. 32 at 8600. In particular, Michaels sought assurance from Craft Smith that the organizers had different artwork and quotations. Craft Smith satisfied itself and Michaels that the artwork and quotations sufficiently differed from EC Design’s, so, according to EC Design, the review led to no changes. And in October 2016, the Recollections Planner went on sale at Michaels.
the quotations that appear in this paragraph and the next. But this information appears
in the district court’s order, which is public.
See Craft Smith, LLC v. EC Design,
LLC
,
what brand of organizer was used as a sample to obtain the quote, saying only that Craft Smith might have used a LifePlanner or a different brand’s organizer. This would be a question of material fact for the jury. For purposes of summary judgment, we assume Craft Smith used a LifePlanner.
III. Procedural Background
On November 29, 2016, soon after the Recollections Planner went on sale, EC Design notified Craft Smith and Michaels that the Recollections Planner infringed the LifePlanner’s copyright and trade dress. In response, Craft Smith sought a declaratory judgment in Utah federal district court that it had infringed neither. EC Design counterclaimed, joining Michaels to the suit and asserting copyright and trade-dress infringement claims, along with related state-law claims. After discovery, both sides filed motions for summary judgment on the copyright and trade-dress claims. The district court granted Appellees’ motion on the copyright and trade-dress claims, denied EC Design’s motion, and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over EC Design’s state-law claims after disposing of the federal claims. EC Design timely appealed, challenging the district court’s grant of summary judgment against its copyright and trade-dress claims.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment, using “the
same standard applied by the district court.”
Sally Beauty Co. v. Beautyco, Inc.
, 304
F.3d 964, 971 (10th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted). Summary judgment is appropriate
“if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “We view
*8
all facts and evidence in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary
judgment.”
Blehm v. Jacobs
,
I. Copyright Infringement
Copyright infringement requires that the plaintiff prove two elements: “(1)
ownership of a valid copyright, and (2) copying of constituent elements of the work
that are original.” (quoting
Feist Publ’ns Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co.
, 499 U.S.
340, 361 (1991)) (internal quotation marks omitted);
see also Enter. Mgmt. Ltd., Inc.
v. Warrick
,
We hold that though EC Design owns a valid copyright in the LifePlanner compilation (element one), EC Design has failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact concerning the required substantial similarity between the LifePlanner compilation’s protected expression and Appellees’ allegedly infringing organizer (element two). Thus, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
A. Element One: Valid Copyright
To meet the first element of a copyright-infringement claim, a plaintiff must
demonstrate ownership of a valid copyright in the allegedly infringed work.
See
Blehm
,
In this case, EC Design presented the ‘725 Registration certificate to the
district court. The district court reviewed this certificate and concluded that “because
EC’s asserted compilation seeks much broader protection than the scope outlined on
the 2016-2017 LifePlanner registration certificate [‘725 Registration],” the certificate
did not satisfy element one. App. vol. 30 at 8011. But in reaching this conclusion, the
district court misapplied copyright infringement’s first element, which requires only
the existence of a valid copyright in the allegedly infringed compilation work as a
whole.
See, e.g.
,
Feist
,
In
Feist
, the defendant copied portions of the plaintiff’s white-pages directory
verbatim, including fake listings inserted to detect copying.
Id.
at 343–44. In
response, the plaintiff sued for infringement of its compilation copyright in the
directory.
Id.
at 344. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide “whether the
*10
copyright in [plaintiff]’s directory protects the names, towns, and telephone numbers
copied by [defendant].”
Id.
But before reaching this issue, the Court concluded that
the first element of copyright infringement wаs met, because the plaintiff had
produced its copyright registration and the defendant conceded that the work “as a
whole” was original.
Id.
at 361. And for a compilation, a valid copyright exists if the
work “as a whole” exhibits “a minimal degree of creativity.”
[8]
at 348, 361;
see
also
17 U.S.C. § 103(a) (extending copyright protection to “compilations”);
id.
§ 101
(requiring that a compilation’s originality be judged by looking to the “work as a
whole”);
Nimmer on Copyright
§ 13.01[A] n.5.3 (noting that
Feist
found element one
satisfied because “the plaintiff’s work as a whole was subject to copyright
protection,” which led the Court to consider “the scope of prohibited copying”—
element two (citing
Appellees agree that EC Design possesses a valid compilation copyright in the
LifePlanner.
[10]
See
Resp. Br. 32 (“It is important to understand that the district court
did not invalidate EC’s copyright registrations, nor did it declare that nothing about
the LifePlanner could be рrotectable subject matter under the copyright laws. There
is plenty that is protectable.”). And because element one concerns only the existence
of a valid copyright in the allegedly infringed work, we conclude it is satisfied. Of
course, this does not mean that EC Design wins; rather, it just takes us to the next
step, that is, examining the scope of this valid copyright. “The mere fact that a work
is copyrighted does not mean that every element of the work may be protected.”
[11]
Feist
,
B. Element Two: Copying of Original Elements
The second element in a copyright-infringement action “consists of two
components.”
Savant Homes, Inc. v. Collins
,
For the second component, “a court must determine (1) which elements of the
copyrighted work are protectable, and (2) whether these elements are substantially
similar to the accused work.”
Savant Homes
,
In this case, EC Design has asserted its compilation copyright in the LifePlanner. So we review this compilation, along with relevant copyright law, to “distill the protec[ted]” expression in the LifePlanner compilation. Blehm , 702 F.3d at 1200. And after identifying the protectable expression contained in the LifePlanner compilation, we consider whether any of that protected expression is “substantially similar” to the Recollections Planner.
1.
Step one: Protectable Expression
“Copyright protection subsists . . . in original works of authorship fixed in any
tangible medium of expression[.]” 17 U.S.C. § 102(a). But “[i]n no case does
copyright protection for an original work of authorship extend to any idea . . .
illustrated . . . or embodied in such work.” § 102(b);
see also Blehm
, 702 F.3d at
1200 (“[Section 102(b)] enshrines the ‘fundamental tenet’ that copyright ‘protection
extends only to the author’s original expression and not to the ideas embodied in that
expression.’” (quoting
Gates Rubber Co. v. Bando Chem. Indus., Ltd.
,
Of importance here, copyright protection extends to “compilations,” § 103(a),
which are “work[s] formed by the collection and assembling of preexisting materials
or of data that are selected, coordinated, or arranged in such a way that the resulting
work as a whole constitutes an original work of authorship,” § 101. This definition
*14
contains the following three criteria: “(1) the collection and assembly of pre-existing
material, facts, or data; (2) the selection, coordination, or arrangement of those
materials; and (3) the creation, by virtue of the particular selection, coordination, or
arrangement, of an ‘original’ work of authorship.”
Feist
,
To satisfy the third criteria, the LifePlanner compilation’s selection,
coordination, and arrangement of preexisting material must be (1) original and (2) a
work of authorship. An original work must be “independently created by the
author . . . and . . . possess[] at least some minimal degree of creativity.”
Savant
Homes
,
In addition to originality, the compilation itself must be a work of authorship
under § 102(a).
Feist
,
A § 102(a)(1) literary work is a “work[], other than audiovisual works, expressed in words, numbers, or other verbal or numerical symbols or indicia, regardless of the nature of the material objects, such as books, . . . in which they are embodied.” § 101. In this case, EC Design argues that the LifePlanner compilation qualifies as a literary work because it contains “preexisting phrases, months, weeks, days, holidays, numbers, and other datа and information.” Reply Br. 8. We agree; the LifePlanner’s original selection, coordination, and arrangement of phrases, inspirational quotations, holidays, and other numerical data qualify the LifePlanner compilation as a literary work. Thus, the LifePlanner compilation’s protected expression includes the specific text selected, as it has been originally arranged throughout the LifePlanner.
Next, we look to whether the LifePlanner compilation’s protectable expression includes the LifePlanner’s graphic components. Section 102(a)(5) pictorial or graphic works are “two-dimensional . . . works of fine, graphic, and applied art.” § 101.
Such works shall include works of artistic craftsmanship insofar as their form but not their mechanical or utilitarian aspects are concerned; the design of a useful article . . . shall be considered a pictorial [or] graphic . . . work only if, and only to the extent that, such design incorporates pictorial [or] graphic . . . *16 features that can be identified separately from, and are capable of existing independently of, the utilitarian aspects of the article. A “useful article” has “an intrinsic utilitarian function that is not merely to portray the
appearance of the article or to convey information.” Id. If an item is a “useful article,” we decide whether its pictorial or graphic features can be separated from it, by employing the following test:
[A] feature incorporated into the design of a useful article is eligible for copyright protection only if the feature (1) can be perceived as a two- or three-dimensional work of art separate from the useful article and (2) would qualify as a protectable pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work— either on its own or fixed in some other tangible medium of expression— if it were imagined separately from the useful article into which it is incorporated.
Star Athletica, L.L.C. v. Varsity Brands, Inc.
,
Here, EC Design contends that the LifePlanner’s “banners, color schemes, and two-dimensional artwork and design” render the LifePlanner a work of authorship under § 102(a)(5). Reply Br. 5; see also Opening Br. 48 (referencing the LifePlanner’s “2-D artwork and graphics” as those that qualify for copyright protection). We need not decide whether the LifePlanner is a useful article regarding these graphics, because, even if it were, the bannеrs, two-dimensional artwork, and color schemes can easily be viewed “separate from” the LifePlanner as required by Star Athletica . This renders those graphical components copyrightable elements of *17 the overarching compilation. In fact, Appellees agree that the LifePlanner’s two- dimensional “art is separable” and conclude that the art contained in the LifePlanner qualifies as a work of authorship (they contend this does not matter, because these components of the LifePlanner were not copied). Resp. Br. 36. Thus, the LifePlanner compilation’s protectable expression includes—in addition to textual elements—its original selection and arrangement of the specific two-dimensional artwork and graphics contained therein.
Before moving to the substantial-similarity test, however, it is important to
keep in mind what is not included in the LifePlanner’s protectable expression.
Because a compilation copyright arises from “the selection, coordination, and/or
arrangement of specific content,” its protectable expression is “limited to the
selection, coordination, and/or arrangement of
that specific content
, and [does] not
apply to the format and layout itself.” U.S. Copyright Office,
Compendium of U.S.
Copyright Office Practices
§ 313.3(E) (3d ed. 2017) (emphasis added) [hereinafter
Compendium
]. To grant further protection would violate § 102(b)’s dictate that
*18
copyright law does not protect ideas. And because a compilation copyright protects
the selection and arrangement of the specific content used (its expression), “[t]he
protection available for a compilation is ‘thin.’”
TransWestern
,
In sum, the LifePlanner’s protectable expression consists of the selection, coordination, and arrangement of the specific literary and graphic components that make up the LifePlanner as a whole.
2.
Step two: Substantial Similarity
Having identified the LifePlanner compilation’s protected expression, we now
ask whether that expression is “substantially similar to the accused work.”
Savant
Homes
,
artwork, compilation of introductory and section phrases, graphics.” App. vol. 16 at 4214.
the facts as a whole work, in an infringement action the court must compare the
allegedly infringing work as a whole” when determining whether the two works are
substantially similar.
TransWestern
,
Here, EC Design argues that the following four bases demonstrate substantial similarity between the LifePlanner compilation and the Recollections Planner: First, EC Design argues that Appellees used “the same monthly and weekly calendar forms, with the same banners and notes sections, and arranged them in the same order[.]” Reply Br. 15. Second, EC Design points out that “Appellees arranged their infringing planner compilation into the same three sections: introductory, monthly, and notes, with the same number of pages in each section.” Id. at 19 (footnote omitted). Third, EC Design argues that Appellees “selected the same number of sticker pages and arranged them in the same location in their planner.” And fourth, EC Design argues that the “two works have the same tab size and font.” Id. From this, EC Design contends that a jury should resolve the question of whether the two works, when compared as a whole, are substantially similar. We disagree.
*20 In listing these similarities, EC Design does not claim that Appellees copied any of its planner’s artwork or text—the two most significant portions of protected expression in the LifePlanner compilation. In fact, EC Design does not even claim that Appellees employed similar artwork or similar text. Instead, EC Design claims that Appellees have adopted a similar format. But the format of the LifePlanner is not part of its protectable expression. Rather, EC Design’s protectable expression, for example, is the selection of the quotations “make room for good things to begin” and “everything you now know was once unknown” and the quotаtions’ arrangement on the pages immediately after the ownership page. App. vol. 18 at 4783 (capitalization removed).
Copyright law does not protect how EC Design has laid out its LifePlanner,
which is an idea, not expression.
See
§ 102(b);
Compendium
§ 313.3(E). EC Design’s
original idea of arranging a colorful organizer full of quotations and art is not
protectable by copyright. § 102(b) (“In no case does copyright protection for an
original work of authorship extend to any
idea
. . .
embodied
in such work.”
(emphasis added)). Instead, copyright protects the selection, coordination, and
arrangement of the specific text and artwork found in the LifePlanner compilation.
Thus, when Appellees used entirely different artwork and text, even if arranged
similarly, it did not copy the LifePlanner’s protected expression. These substantial
differences eliminate the possibility that a reasonable juror could conclude that the
protected elements of the LifePlanner are substantially similar to the Recollections
*21
Planner.
[17]
See TransWestern
,
Thus, becаuse none of the alleged similarities in Appellees’ Recollections Planner relate to the LifePlanner’s protected expression, no reasonable juror could conclude that the two products are substantially similar, and we affirm the district court. [19]
II. Trade Dress
Next, we consider EC Design’s argument that the district court improperly
took the issue of trade-dress infringement from the jury. Trade dress consists of a
product’s “overall image and appearance, and may include features such as size,
*22
shape, color or color combinations, texture, graphics, and even particular sales
techniques.”
Sally Beauty
,
A. The Lanham Act
Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act allows an owner of unregistered trade dress
to bring a claim “for the use by any person of ‘any word, term, name, symbol, or
device, or any combination thereof . . . which . . . is
likely to cause confusion
. . . as
to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of his or her goods. . . .’”
Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc. v. Samara Bros., Inc.
,
To succeed in its section 43(a) action, EC Design “must show: ‘(1) [Its] trade
dress is inherently distinctive or has become distinctive through secondary meaning;
(2) There is a likelihood of confusion among consumers as to the source of the
competing products; and (3) [Its] trade dress is nonfunctional.’”
Savant Homes, Inc.
v. Collins
,
This secondary meaning requirement reflects that for product-design trade dress, “consumer predisposition to equate the feature with the source does not exist.” Id. at 213. “Consumers are aware of the reality that, almost invariably, even the most unusual of product designs . . . is intended not to identify the source, but to render the product itself more useful or more appealing.” So when a competitor copies a product’s design, its purpose is not necessarily to confuse consumers, but to copy the aspects of that product that make it more functional. Id. In this way, product-design trade dress fundamentally differs from product-packaging trade dress, which can be inherently distinctive, because the very act of “encasing it in a distinctive packaging [serves] to identify the source of the product.” Id. at 212. As a result, the Court requires “that, in an action for infringement of unregistered trade dress under *24 [section] 43(a) of the Lanham Act, a product’s design is distinctive, and therefore protectible, only upon a showing of secondary meaning.” Id. at 216.
B. Secondary Meaning
Secondary meaning requires that the trade dress “have been used so long and
so exclusively by one producer with reference to his goods or articles that, in the
trade and to that branch of the purchasing public, the [trade dress] has come to mean
that the article is his product.”
Savant Homes
,
To show secondary meaning, parties can present both “direct evidence, such as
consumer surveys or testimony from consumers, and circumstantial evidence.”
Water
Pik, Inc.
,
(1) the length and manner of the trade dress’s use; (2) the nature and extent of advertising and promotion of the trade dress; (3) the efforts made in the direction of promoting a conscious connection, in the public’s mind, between the trade dress and a particular product or venture; (4) actual consumer confusion; (5) proof of intentional copying; or (6) evidence of sales volume. Sales volume, however, only suggests secondary meaning when presented in conjunction with other evidence; standing alone, sales volume may not be indicative of secondary meaning because it could be related to factors other than source identification.
Savant Homes
,
1. EC Design’s circumstantial evidence of secondary meaning Addressing the first category of Savant Homes evidence, EC Design points to what it deems its long-term, exclusive use of the LifePlanner trade dress. It concedes that while the asserted “trade dress was first presented in its entirety in the summer of 2015,” it “has used many core elements of the LifePlanner trade dress for much longer.” Opening Br. 69. For example, EC Design references its use of colorful themes, a customizable cover, sticker pages, and “a coiled binding” in the LifePlanner since 2007. Opening Br. 69 (citing App. vol. 35 at 9205). EC Design also *26 contends that it began using colorful organizer tabs in 2011. In addition, EC Design contends that this use was exclusive, despite some of its competitors using similar features both before and at the time Appellees first introduced their own organizer to the market.
For the second and third categories, EC Design points to $600,000 spent on advertising the LifePlanner (with references to its trade dress) “through social media, email, and third-party bloggers.” Opening Br. 71 (citing App. vol. 2 at 349). For example, EC Design paid for social-media posts by influencers, which favorably reference or picture the LifePlanner. Some posts highlight quotations contained in the LifePlanner, while others focus on its color or calendar layout. And yet other posts discuss topics other than the LifePlanner, such as the Super Bowl or Christmas decorating—showing, perhaps, how the LifePlanner can be used. Further, EC Design has paid for YouTube ads that show people enjoying a colorful LifePlanner. And finally, EC Design has sent newsletters to highlight annual updates to the LifePlanner. These e-mailings, for example, focus on new color options for the covers, different calendar layouts, and various other ways in which a user can customize the LifePlanner.
For the fifth category, EC Design points to “evidence that Craft Smith intentionally copied the design of the LifePlanner in its creation of the Recollections Planner.” Opening Br. 63. This copying evidence shows that Craft Smith sent the LifePlanner to its manufacturer, asking for “everything [to be] the same.” App. vol. 32 at 8508. In addition, Craft Smith told its manufacturer that the Recollections *27 Planner should “feel like [the] overall weight of [the LifePlanner] sample.” at 8564.
For the sixth category, EC Design presents evidence of the LifePlanner’s significant sales. For examрle, EC Design has sold over 1,549,770 LifePlanners since 2009. And gross revenue from those sales has “total[ed] over sixty five million dollars[.]” App. vol. 2 at 239.
Finally, in addition to evidence fitting the categories listed in Savant Homes , EC Design points to third-party reviews of the Recollections Planner, which have deemed it a “knockoff” or “dupe” of the LifePlanner. Opening Br. 74. These reviews note similarities between the two planners and contend that “the[ Appellees] hacked [their planner] from Erin Condren.” App. vol. 25 at 6775. EC Design also directs us to attention the LifePlanner received from third parties and the media. For example, Fox Business wrote a story documenting EC Design’s growing success. And in another article, Buzzfeed recommended that its readers “organise [sic] [their] li[ves] with an Erin Condren life planner.” App. vol. 21 at 5883.
We must decide whether this evidence creates a genuine issue of material fact regarding secondary meaning. But before considering the entirety of EC Design’s circumstantial evidence, we consider EC Design’s argument that our court’s decision in Sally Beauty renders the question of secondary meaning one for the jury on the strength of its evidence of significant sales and intentional copying alone.
2. Sally Beauty : Significant sales and intentional copying In Sally Beauty , our court held that evidence of significant sales volume and intentional copying created a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the plaintiff’s product-packaging trade dress had developed secondary meaning. 304 F.3d at 970, 977. Based on this holding, EC Design argues that its own evidence of substantial sales and intentional copying renders the issue of secondary meaning in the LifePlanner’s product-design trade dress a jury question. But for the reasons below, we reject this argument. For product-design trade dress, we decline to adopt a per se rule that evidence of intentional copying and significant sales alone render secondary meaning a jury question. [20]
Sally Beauty concerned whether product packaging for the plaintiff’s hair-care line was distinctive, requiring our court to decide whether the product packaging was inherently distinctive or had become distinctive due to secondary meaning. See id. at 977. We concluded that “a genuine issue of material fact exists whether [the] trade dress [was] descriptive.” [21] And because a “ descriptive trade dress . . . is not entitled to trade dress protection unless it has acquired secondаry meaning in the *29 marketplace,” we had to decide whether the hair-care line’s trade dress had developed secondary meaning. Id. (emphasis added).
In analyzing secondary meaning, we started with the principle that oftentimes a jury should decide the secondary-meaning issue. See id. at 978. This influenced our view of “the ultimate question” for trade-dress infringement: “whether in the consumer’s mind the mark denotes a single thing coming from a single source.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). With that, we reviewed the three categories of evidence presented by the plaintiff to show secondary meaning: (1) “a history of successful sales,” (2) “intentional copying,” and (3) “long use of the [relevant] trade dress.” Id.
We began by noting that “[s]tanding alone, sales volume may not be indicative of secondary meaning because it could be related to factors other than source identification.” Id. (citation omitted). In other words, circumstantial evidence that can easily be explained by “factors other than source identification” was not enough to create a genuine issue of material fact on secondary meaning. See id. For example, a product might enjoy high sales because the product itself is desirable—not because of any reason related to its source. Thus, we required further evidence to show that the product-packaging trade dress had developed secondary meaning. And in Sally Beauty , this evidence came from the defendant’s intentional copying of the plaintiff’s product packaging. Id. This evidence, combined with significant sales, created “a *30 genuine issue of material fact” on whether the plaintiff’s product-packaging trade dress had developed secondary meaning. Id.
But why did intentionally copying a package’s design, along with evidence of
significant sales, create an issue of material fact regarding “whether in the
consumer’s mind the [trade dress] denotes a single thing coming from a single
source[?]”
Id.
at 977 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). To answer this
question, we consider what intentionally copying packaging shows that sales do not.
As we noted in
Sally Beauty
, sales volume can be explained by any number of factors
unrelated to the product’s source. at 978. And because trade-dress protection
exists to prevent deception, we required some evidence that the trade dress
infringement caused deception. For product-packaging trade dress, such deception
could be shown by a defendant’s intentional copying, because the “very purpose” of
distinctive product packaging is to identify the source.
Wal-Mart
,
*31
But these considerations do not hold when the relevant trade dress is for
product design, as it is here. Because unlike a product’s packaging, a product’s
design often goes directly to its function.
See Wal-Mart
,
This is true here. EC Design’s evidence of intentional copying may be
explained by “factors other than source identification.”
Sally Beauty
,
*32 Thus, we conclude that EC Design’s evidence of significant sales and intentional copying fail to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding the LifePlanner trade dress’s secondary meaning. Likewise, we decline to extend Sally Beauty ’s holding to the product-design trade-dress context. Now, mindful of the distinctions between product-design trade dress and product-packaging trade dress, we turn to EC Design’s remaining circumstantial evidence—advertising, consumer confusion, and length of use.
3.
EC Design’s remaining circumstantial evidence
Though secondary meaning is oftentimes a question for the jury, it only
becomes so if the plaintiff’s evidence creates a genuine issue of material fact
regarding whether the relevant trade dress has “the primary significance of . . .
identify[ing] the source of the product rather than the product itself.”
Forney Indus.,
Inc. v. Daco of Mo., Inc.
,
For product-design trade dress, this task can be difficult, because “even the
most unusual of product designs” often exists “not to identify the source, but to
render the product itself more useful or more appealing.”
Wal-Mart
,
To start, EC Design contends that its length-of-use evidence creates a jury
question over whether the LifePlanner’s trade dress has developed secondary
meaning. But for this to support secondary meaning, the trade dress must “have been
used so long and so
exclusively
by one producer with reference to [its] goods that it
has acquired [secondary meaning].”
Sally Beauty
,
Further, after EC Design introduced the LifePlanner in 2007, it has routinely altered it significantly, including with new colors, artwork, covers, and layout. In fact, even within a same year, the LifePlanner’s appearance has varied. We fail to see how a constantly updated product’s design can develop secondary meaning through long-term use. Moreover, even if such use could be considered “so long,” many aspects of the LifePlanner trade dress are not exclusive to EC Design. In fact, as the district court noted, when the Recollections Planner was designed in 2016, several other competitors were using a variety of the features constituting the LifePlanner trade dress, including LimeLife and Plum Paper, both of whose colorful planners used a single coil, colorful tabs, and laminated covers featuring artwork. Thus, EC Design’s length-of-use evidence fails to create a genuine issue of material fact on secondary meaning.
Next, we look at EC Design’s advertising evidence. Such advertising must
speak directly to the trade dress or demonstrate an “effort[] to promote a conscious
connection in the public’s mind between [EC Design’s trade dress] and its products.”
Water Pik
,
Finally, we conclude by considering EC Design’s evidence that third parties commented that the Recollections Planner was a “knockoff” of the LifePlanner. *36 Opening Br. 74. As support for the relevance of this sort of evidence, EC Design cites Abercrombie & Fitch Stores, Inc. v. American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. , 280 F.3d 619 (6th Cir. 2002). In Abercrombie , the Sixth Circuit allowed evidence that “consumers remark[ed] on the similarity of designs” to show “actual confusion by consumers.” Id. at 639–40. Actual consumer confusion is the fourth category of Savant Homes evidence. Here, EC Design has not used this evidence to show actual consumer confusion, so its reliance on Abercrombie is misplaced. [26] And because EC Design fails to explain how this evidence shows that consumers view the LifePlanner’s trade dress as a source identifier, we conclude that EC Design’s evidence of third-party recognition does not create a genuine issue of materiаl fact over secondary meaning.
In sum, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Appellees, because EC Design has failed to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding the LifePlanner trade dress’s secondary meaning with any of its proffered evidence. [27]
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Appellees on both infringement claims and, accordingly, dismiss this appeal.
invariably serves purposes other than source identification” (quoting Wal-Mart , 529 U.S. at 213)).
Notes
[1] This discussion refers specifically to the 2015/2016 LifePlanner—the version EC Design asserts Appellees infringed.
[2] In this appeal, we assume that the registered 2016/2017 LifePlanner is a
derivative work of the unregistered 2015/2016 LifePlanner, meaning that EC Design
has satisfied the registration requirement—a statutory prerequisite for bringing a
copyright-infringement action.
See
17 U.S.C. § 411(a);
Fourth Estate Pub. Benefit
Corp. v. Wall-Street.com, LLC
,
[3] The other two registrations—the “LifePlanner Horizontal Layout 2016/2017,” U.S. Registration No. VA 2-024-598 and the “LifePlanner Vertical Layout 2016/2017,” U.S. Registration No. VA 2-024-599—cover “2-D artwork, Text [cover/title page artwork; additional text & artwork throughout calendar].” App. vol. 14 at 3757 (Horizontal Layout); App. vol. 15 at 3979 (Vertical Layout). But these registrations exclude “2-D artwork, Text [functional elements; calendar elements; title page text].” App. vol. 14 at 3757 (Horizontal Layout); App. vol. 15 at 3979 (Vertical Layout). Notably, though the title of each registration contains the word “layout,” these registrations do not cover the LifePlanner’s layout. See App. vol. 14 at 3757; App. vol. 15 at 3979.
[4] Earlier in 2015, Craft Smith and EC Design discussed collaborating on an organizer but failed to reach a deal. In addition, in July 2016, EC Design and Michaels began discussions about selling the LifePlanner at Michaels. But this too ended without a deal. EC Design asserts that its discussions with both Appellees allowed them to become “highly familiar” with the LifePlanner to “intentionally copy” it. App. vol. 1 at 43.
[5] Per the parties’ request, volumes 31 to 39 of the appendix were filed under
seal, along with the parties’ opening and response briefs. We respect this request. But
for sealed material already made public (
i.e.
, by appearing in the published district
court order), we identify it as needed in this opinion.
See Williams v. FedEx Corp.
Servs.
,
[7] EC Design first filed its own federal complaint in the Central District of California. But the proper venue was the District of Utah, leading EC Design to assert its claims against Craft Smith and Michaels as counterclaims in the Utah case.
[8] In Discussion Section I.B.1, we explain what is required for a compilation to obtain copyright protection. We do so there (rather than here) because both EC Design and Appellees agree that a valid copyright exists in the LifePlanner compilation, which is all that element one requires. But the parties disagree over the scope of that copyright. The scope of protection a compilation copyright receives is informed by determining which aspects of the LifePlanner compilation render it copyrightable, making the inquiry relevant to element two.
[9] In fact, most cases concede element one, leaving the dispute over the scope
of protection afforded by the valid copyright.
See, e.g.
,
Feist
,
[12] As mentioned supra note 6, EC Design contends that Appellees used the LifePlanner as a model for the Recollections Planner. Such evidence creates a genuine issue of material fact over factual copying. See Nimmer on Copyright § 13.01[B] (“us[ing] the plaintiff’s [product] as a model, template, or inspiration” demonstrates factual copying).
[13] We question whether the calendar elements can be viewed “separate[ly] from” the LifePlanner. But because EC Design does not argue that those are part of the LifePlanner’s work of authorship, we need not decide that. For similar reasons, this helps explain why we need not consider whether the LifePlanner is a useful article.
[14] “[T]he Compendium is a non-binding administrative manual that at most
merits [
Skidmore
] deference . . . .”
Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc.
, 140 S. Ct.
1498, 1510 (2020) (referring to
Skidmore v. Swift & Co.
,
[16] For this reason, non-compilation cases that discuss “protected elements” of a
copyright can mislead in the compilation context. A compilation copyright must be
viewed “as a whole,” not broken up into protected/unprotected elements.
Cf. Enter.
Mgmt.
,
[17] Because we conclude that EC Design has failed to allege any similarities between the Recollections Planner and the protected expression in the LifePlanner, we do not decide whether the district court erred by applying a “supersubstantial similarity” test. We disagree with EC Design’s argument that the district court also erred by focusing on differences between the products instead of their similarities. In identifying the dissimilarities between the planners, the district court has explained why no reasonable juror could find substantial similarity between the two planners after considering them as a whole.
[18] In addition to having different content, the two planners arrange their own content differently. For example, the arrangement of quotations throughout each organizer is different—for instance, EC Design includes quotations for every month of the year, while Appellees do so for half the months. This further supports the district court’s decision granting summary judgment for Appellees.
[19] The district court reached this conclusion differently. By reviewing the asserted compilation for copyrightability in element one, the district court sought to determine whether the LifePlanner compilation’s protected expression could have been infringed. While therе may be something to say for the district court’s approach, our precedent requires a different framework—the one we follow here.
[20] For reasons discussed infra Discussion Section II.B.3, the principles guiding the decision in Sally Beauty do apply in the product-design context.
[21] “[I]nherent distinctiveness of a trade dress is categorized along the generic-
descriptive-suggestive-arbitrary-fanciful spectrum.”
Sally Beauty
,
[22] In a footnote, we discounted Sally Beauty’s evidence of long-term use,
concluding that it provided “no evidence below or on appeal that its use of trade
dress was substantially exclusive.”
Sally Beauty
,
[23] EC Design argues that by reaching similar conclusions based on the
evidence, the district court inserted itself in the rightful place of the jury. We
disagree. The district court simply explained why the proffered evidence was not
related primarily to source identification. Our court did the same in
Sally Beauty
, when it rejected evidence of sales as insufficient to show secondary meaning because
it “
could
be related to factors other than source identification.”
[24] Our precedent contradicts EC Design’s suggestion in its briefing that
secondary meaning is always a jury question.
See Savant Homes
,
[25] EC Design’s media-attention evidence fails for similar reasons. While the
evidence provides a compelling look at the company’s success, EC Design does not
explain how this evidence demonstrates that the LifePlanner’s trade dress primarily
serves to “identify the source of the product rather than the product itself.”
Forney
Indus., Inc.
,
[26] In fact, Abercrombie undercuts EC Design’s argument. Unlike the consumer-response evidence in Abercrombie , which concerned actual confusion, the consumer-response evidence here shows a lack of consumer confusion—the consumers readily distinguished between the two organizers.
[27] We recognize that this decision may make it more difficult to obtain trade-
dress protection for a product’s design. But this reflects the reality that trade-dress
protection is an awkward fit for product design.
See TrafFix Devices, Inc. v. Mktg.
Displays, Inc.
,
