The Department of Parks and Recreation for the State of California (the “State”) appeals the denial of its motion to preliminarily enjoin Bazaar del Mundo from using the registered trademarks CASA DE BANDINI and CASA DE PICO in the operation of restaurants located outside the boundaries of the Old Town San Diego State Historic Park (“Old Town”). The critical issue in dispute is whether the State owns any protectible interest in the trademarks. Because we agree with the district court that the State failed to introduce sufficient evidence of ownership of the marks and thereby failed to establish the requisite degree of likelihood of success on the merits, we affirm the district court’s denial of injunctive relief.
I.
In 1968, the State of California acquired title to about fourteen acres of land by condemnation judgment in order to establish Old Town. The sale included the Casa de Pico and Casa de Bandini properties, which were both built in the 1820s. Each building has a rich history: Casa de Pico was built by Pio Pico, the last Mexican governor of California, while Casa de Ban-dini was built by a Peruvian immigrant of Italian descent who became a prominent San Diegan, Don Juan Bandini. Before the State acquired the property, the Casa de Pico building was operated as the “Casa de Pico Motel,” while the Casa de Bandini house was operated as a hotel and stage coach station, which included a restaurant. Afterwards, the buildings were used to house shops and, in 1969, the Casa de Bandini house served as the headquarters for the Fiesta 200 celebration of San Die *1122 go’s bicentennial. In conjunction with the Fiesta 200 festival, the State produced a brochure which mentioned the Pico and Bandini families. Casa de Bandini was registered as a California Historical Landmark in 1932.
On June 21, 1971, the State and Bazaar del Mundo entered into a “Concession Agreement.” The Agreement provided that the State grant Bazaar del Mundo the “privilege and duty” to construct or modify, equip, operate and maintain a Mexican-Style Shopping Arcade in the Casa de Pico Buildings in Old Town for a five-year period, in return for rent and a percentage of receipts. The Agreement was amended several times. In 1972, Bazaar del Mundo was permitted to extend its concession activities into the “Bandini House — Cosmopolitan Hotel,” and the Agreement was extended five years. In 1981, the parties executed Amendment Three, which stipulated that the “subject premises shall be used by the Concessionaire to establish a Mexican Shopping Arcade, Lino’s, Ham-burguesa, Casa de Pico, and the Casa de Bandini Restaurants,” and extended the Agreement another ten years. When the third amendment was executed on November 18, 1981, Bazaar del Mundo had been operating its Casa de Pico restaurant for ten years and its Casa de Bandini restaurant for one year. In 1991, Bazaar del Mundo exercised its option to extend the term of the Concession Agreement for ten more years.
Before the Agreement was to expire, on June 30, 2001, the State initiated an open bidding process for the next concession agreement. In connection with its Request for Proposals, the State prepared a Sample Contract containing a provision that would govern intellectual property rights. Objecting to the intellectual property rights provision, Bazaar del Mundo nevertheless submitted a bid for the concession. On October 17, 2003, the State issued a “Notice of Intent to Award” the concession to Delaware North, Inc., a Delaware corporation. Bazaar del Mundo submitted to the State a “Protest of Bid Award” on October 27, 2003, commencing a state administrative review process. The State allowed Bazaar del Mundo to continue operating as a holdover tenant in Old Town during the pendency of its administrative appeal. During this time, Bazaar del Mundo also filed a federal trademark infringement action in the Southern District of California against Delaware North and Ruth Coleman, the Director of the State Department of Parks and Recreation. The district court dismissed that action on March 3, 2004, finding that (1) the Eleventh Amendment barred suit against Director Coleman; (2) the case was not yet ripe for adjudication; and (3) Bazaar del Mundo had failed to exhaust its administrative remedies.
On July 12, 2004, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) denied Bazaar del Mundo’s administrative bid protest. Director Coleman adopted the ALJ’s decision on July 23, 2004. Bazaar del Mundo petitioned for a writ of mandate to review the decision before the San Diego Superior Court on January 20, 2005, but the petition was denied. The State issued a “Notice to Vacate” the premises effective March 15, 2005. Delaware North took over the concession on June 1, 2005.
Previously, in 1985, Bazaar del Mundo applied to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) and the Secretary of the State of California, to register the trademarks CASA DE PICO, CASA DE BANDINI, LINO’S, and HAM-GURGUESA for restaurant services. The trademarks were published and received no opposition. The USPTO granted federal registration to Bazaar del Mundo for the mark CASA DE BANDINI on July 16, 1985 and for the mark CASA DE PICO on *1123 October 8,1985. In its application, Bazaar del Mundo distinguished the terms “Pico Pollo” and “Pico de Gallo” from CASA DE PICO, representing that “[t]he Pico in Bazaar del Mundo’s mark refers not to an animal but to General Pio Pico, the last Mexican governor.” Bazaar del Mundo went on to state that “[t]he site on which the restaurant stands was the home of General Pico which was later converted into a motel in 1930 ... [and] subsequently converted into a restaurant.”
In May 2005, after it had vacated its Old Town location, Bazaar del Mundo announced its plans to open restaurants under the names “Casa de Pico Restaurant” and “Casa de Bandini Restaurant” in La Mesa, California and on the waterfront in downtown San Diego. This announcement prompted the State to file this action against Bazaar del Mundo, seeking (1) declaratory judgment of trademark ownership under California Code of Civil Procedure § 1060; (2) rectification of the trademark registry under 15 U.S.C. § 1119; and damages for (3) common law trademark infringement; (4) fraudulent federal trademark infringement under 15 U.S.C. § 1120; (5) unfair competition under California Business and Professions Code § 17200; (6) false advertising under California Business and Professions Code § 17500; and (7) false designation of origin under 15 U.S.C. § 1125.
To prevent Bazaar del Mundo from using the marks in connection with its new restaurants, the State moved for a preliminary injunction. Bazaar del Mundo responded by filing a motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). The district court denied both motions by Order dated May 17, 2005. Only the State appeals the district court’s ruling. The district court found, based on the state of the record at that time, that the State failed to demonstrate a protectible trademark interest in the marks so as to demonstrate a sufficient probability of success on the merits warranting injunctive relief.
II.
We review a district court’s denial of injunctive relief for an abuse of discretion.
See Hecht Co. v. Bowles,
III.
To obtain injunctive relief, the movant must demonstrate either: (1) a combination of probable success on the merits and the possibility of irreparable harm, or (2) that serious questions are raised as to the merits and that the balance of hardships tips in its favor.
Arcamuzi v. Cont’l Air Lines, Inc.,
The district court both articulated and applied the correct legal standard to the State’s request for an injunction against Bazaar del Mundo’s use of the CASA DE PICO and CASA DE BANDINI marks. Quoting
Arcamuzi,
Conceding, as it must, that the district court articulated the correct legal standards, the State nevertheless insists that it failed to correctly apply them to this case. Specifically, it contends that the district court applied the wrong “likelihood of success” standard because of the “presence of significant issues of public importance” tipping the balance of hardships sharply in the State’s favor. The State’s assertion, however, confuses the analysis of the “success” factor with the “harm” factor.
Although we “must consider the public interest as a factor in balancing the hardships when the public interest may be affected,”
Caribbean Marine Servs. Co. v. Baldrige,
Nor was the district court required to issue an injunction to restore the “status quo.” While the “basic function of a preliminary injunction is to presexrve the status quo pending a determination of the action on the merits,”
Chalk v. United States District Court,
IV.
To prevail on its claim of trademark infringement, the State must prove: (1) that it has a protectible ownership interest in the mark; and (2) that the defendant’s use of the mark is likely to cause consumer confusion, thereby infringing upon the State’s rights to the mark.
Levi Strauss & Co. v. Blue Bell, Inc.,
A.
The district court correctly found that the State could not demonstrate common law trademark rights based on its asserted prior use of the marks in connection with the operation of the state park and its provision of tourism services from 1968 to 1971, a time period immediately preceding the Concession Agreement. Because the State failed in its attempt to establish a protectible common law interest in its use of the marks for those purposes, the district court properly rejected the State’s argument that the marks extended to related services, such as restaurants.
The State first incorrectly contends that it need not demonstrate prior use at all, relying on its own misapprehension of section 5 of the Lanham Act, codified at 15 U.S.C. § 1055. Section 5 provides:
If first use of a mark by a person is controlled by the registrant or applicant for registration of the mark with respect to the nature and quality of the goods or services, such first use shall inure to the benefit of the registrant or applicant, as the case may be.
Section 5, however, is not remotely relevant to the State’s circumstances. First, section 5 by its plain terms applies only to first use by a person “controlled by the registrant or applicant for registration.” The State is neither. Second, the State quotes a passage that was added to section 5 in 1988, which functioned only to permit an applicant to “reserve” a mark before commencing use of the mark in its business.
See
1988 Amendments to Lanham Act, Pub.L. 100-667 (S.1883); 3 McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 19:1.1 (4th ed.2005). Registration under the Lanham Act has no effect on the registrant’s rights under the common law, which requires a mark to have been used in commerce before a protectible ownership interest in the mark arises.
See Kellogg Co. v. Nat’l Biscuit Co.,
Next the State asserts that the district court incorrectly assessed the character and extent of the State’s prior commercial use of the marks when it concluded that the State failed to introduce sufficient evidence of such use. We disagree. The district court correctly found that the “evidence” submitted by the State did not demonstrate actual commercial use.
To demonstrate priority of use, the State must prove (1) that it actually adopted and used the marks in commerce prior to Bazaar del Mundo’s registration in such a manner that sufficiently associated the marks with the State’s provision of
*1126
tourism and recreational services,
Chance v. Pac-Tel Teletrac,
[A] single sale or shipment may be sufficient to support an application to register the mark, providing that this shipment or sale has the color of a bona fide transaction and is accompanied or followed by activities which would tend to indicate a continuing effort or intent to continue such use and place the product on the market on a commercial scale within a time demonstrated to be reasonable in the particular trade.
Id.
(citing
Hydro-Dynamics, Inc. v. George Putnam & Co.,
It is not disputed that the State has offered tourism and recreational services since Old Town was classified as a State Historical Park in 1968. The State, however, offers no evidence tending to show that it adopted and commercially used the marks CASA DE PICO and CASA DE BANDINI “in a way sufficiently public to identify or distinguish” its recreational and tourism services “in an appropriate segment of the public mind” as activities conducted by the State.
Brookfield,
The State offers numerous documents, predominantly historical and narrative in nature, in an effort to demonstrate prior commercial use. These include books, brochures, and guides entitled, inter alia, “An Armchair Tour of San Diego,” “The Journal of San Diego History,” “Tour Guide to Old Town,” excerpts from The History of San Diego 1512-1908 by William E. Smythe, Places at Old Town San Diego by Orion M. Zink, and Silver Dons-The History of San Diego, by Richard F. Pourade. Although due to their historical significance, the Bandini and Pico families, names and homes are described in most if not all of these books, brochures and guides, they are not evidence of commercial use of the marks by the State in connection with the State’s Old Town tourism and recreational activities. Indeed, much of this evidence contains historical *1127 data that predates the State’s acquisition of Old Town.
The State points to one brochure advertising the 1969 Fiesta 200 Celebration as an example of prior commercial use. Entitled “Old Town San Diego-State Historic Park,” the brochure celebrates Old Town’s bicentennial dating from 1769 to 1969. The brochure primarily describes the park and its first families, mentioning Juan Bandini and Pio Pico as part of Old Town’s upper class and identifying the location of the Bandini house, headquarters for the Bicentennial, on an Old Town map. The State also submitted a brochure entitled “Old Town San Diego — State Historic Park,” which also recites the history of San Diego and the growth of Old Town, identifies Bazaar Del Mundo on a map of the park and mentions, again in passing, Casa de Bandini and Juan Bandini. Neither of these brochures uses the marks in relation to the State’s provision of recreational or tourism services. Indeed, neither of them even uses the contested marks at all.
Morever, the State introduced no evidence about the length of time the Casa de Bandini building was used to house the Fiesta 200 shops, whether the brochures were provided to visitors, how many brochures were provided, whether any sales activity was conducted using the marks, or whether the State continued to conduct advertising or non-sales activity under the marks after the Fiesta 200 celebration. Because neither of the brochures was designed to attract the attention of the viewer to the marks themselves, they fail to create any association between the marks and the tourism and recreation services provided by the Department of Parks.
See Pac-Tel Teletrac,
The State’s failure to establish continuous use of the marks in commerce also undermines its claim to ownership by virtue of its alleged prior use of the marks.
See Pac-Tel Teletrac,
Even were the State able to establish prior commercial use, because the trademarks are descriptive,
ie.,
based on their geographic and historical origin,
see
15 U.S.C. § 1052(e), the State would not be entitled to trademark protection unless it were able to establish that the marks “acquired secondary meaning,
ie.,
it ‘has become distinctive of the applicant’s goods in commerce.’ ”
Park 'N Fly, Inc. v. Dollar Park & Fly, Inc.,
To determine whether a descriptive mark has acquired secondary meaning, we consider: “ ‘(1) whether actual purchasers of the product bearing the claimed trademark associate the trademark with the producer, (2) the degree and manner of advertising under the claimed trademark, (3) the length and manner of use of the claimed trademark, and (4) whether use of the claimed trademark has been exclusive.’ ”
Yellow Cab Co. of Sacramento v. Yellow Cab of Elk Grove, Inc.,
The State failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that by virtue of its prior commercial use of the marks CASA DE PICO and CASA DE BANDINI, if any, they acquired a secondary meaning. The State failed to demonstrate that advertising it may have conducted was “of a nature and extent such as to create an association of the term with the user’s goods,” rather than the restaurant services of Bazaar del Mundo.
Malcolm Nicol & Co. v. Witco Corp.,
B.
Having failed to demonstrate ownership of the marks through evidence of prior use, the State asserts that the Concession Agreement operated as a trademark licensing agreement as a matter of law. Of course, even if the Concession Agreement were to be so construed, at most it would show that the State purported to license trademarks in the Concession Agreement, not that it necessarily owned the rights to do so. In any event, we agree with the district court’s finding that the Concession Agreement neither expressly nor impliedly granted Bazaar del Mundo a license to use the marks. Nor did the parties’ course of conduct surrounding the agreement indicate that the State had licensed marks it owned to Bazaar del Mundo. Therefore, contrary to the State’s claim, Bazaar del Mundo’s commercial use of the marks for restaurant services did not inure to the benefit of the State. Because the Concession Agreement is silent on the topic of intellectual property rights, it does not expressly license any such rights to Bazaar del Mun-do. The State nevertheless refers us to Paragraph One of the Concession Agreement and to certain language in Amendment 3, which reference the names of the *1129 restaurants and the locations of the concessions. Paragraph One provides:
1. GRANT AND DESCRIPTION OF PREMISES: ... The concession shall be located in the premises provided by State and known as the Casa de Pico Buildings, Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, at 2754 Calhoun Street, in the City and County of San Diego, State of California, and being a portion of Lot 1 all of Lot 2, Block 426 of Old San Diego ....
There is obviously no mention of trademark rights in the name CASA DE PICO.
Similarly, Amendment 3, paragraphs One and Ten, grant the rights to use the buildings for limited purposes:
1. GRANT AND DESCRIPTION OF PREMISES: The State ... grants to Concessionaire the right, privilege and duty to construct or modify, equip, operate and maintain a Mexiean-style Shopping Arcade together with the Casa de Pico, Lino’s, Hamburguesa and Casa de Bandini Restaurants.... The concession shall be located in the premises ... known as the Casa de Pico Building, ... and the Casa de Bandini....
10. USE OF PREMISES: The subject premises shall be used by the Concessionaire to establish a Mexican Shopping Arcade, Lino’s, Hamburguesa, Casa de Pico, and the Casa de Bandini Restaurants ....
Thus a plain reading of the Concession Agreement reveals that it is nothing more than a standard leasing arrangement. It does not even purport to convey a license to use the marks. The State itself prepared a Sample Contract containing a provision for the use of intellectual property in connection with its Request for Proposals for Bazaar del Mundo’s successor concessionaire, an acknowledgment that the prior Concession Agreement with Bazaar del Mundo did not similarly license use of the marks.
Unlike in the typical implied licensing case, here the State asserts the doctrine of implied license as evidence of its ownership of the marks, as opposed to as a defense to an infringement action. Although this is an unusual context, the State is correct that an implied license to use a trademark for certain services may arise.
See Secular Orgs. for Sobriety, Inc. v. Ullrich,
In most instances under contract law, a patent or trademark owner intentionally creates an express license....
In some circumstances, however, the entire course of conduct between a patent or trademark owner and an accused in-fringer may create an implied license.
This implied license does not offend the protection afforded patent and trademark rights by federal law.
McCoy v. Mitsuboshi Cutlery, Inc.,
*1130 Any language used by the owner of the patent or any conduct on his part exhibited to another, from which that other may properly infer that the owner consents to his use of the patent ... constitutes a license....
Id.
Licenses are contracts “governed by ordinary principles of state contract law.”
Power Lift, Inc. v. Weatherford Nipple-Up Systems, Inc.,
The clear intent of the parties as evidenced by the Concession Agreement itself was solely to lease premises — not to license trademarks. The Agreement’s terms are at odds with the State’s contorted effort to remake it as a trademark licensing agreement. The Agreement describes its purpose as “grant[ing] to Concessionaire the right, privilege and duty to construct or modify, equip, operate, and maintain a Mexican-style Shopping Arcade.” None of the terms typical of a trademark licensing agreement, such as payment of royalties, are present. To the contrary: the only payments to be made are labeled and structured as rental payments. The termination clauses do not provide for the surrender of intellectual property at the expiration of the contract, but rather state only that the concessionaire should quit the premises, surrender real property improvements, and execute a quitclaim deed. Similarly, the Agreement does not provide that the State retains title to any intellectual property developed during its term; the only provision for title requires Bazaar del Mundo to acknowledge the State’s title to the premises described in the contract and to any improvements made to the real property.
Nor do any of the subsequent amendments reveal any intent to enter into a trademark licensing agreement. The preamble to Amendment One reiterates that the purpose of the concession was the “installation of a Mexican-style shopping arcade.” Amendment Two is silent on licensing. Amendment Three contains a renewal rent calculation provision that is not based upon the good will or market value of the trademarks, but rather was to be established based upon “a survey of then-current rental practices and rents and other lease terms established by governmental agencies and private owners for comparable commercial space on a statewide basis,” taking “into account local rental rates and other lease terms in the San Diego area.”
Nor did the subsequent course of dealing between the parties create an implied license to use the marks. Far from it: that Bazaar del Mundo felt free to register and publish the marks with the USPTO and the California Secretary of State belies any mutual agreement to a licensing arrangement. Moreover, the State’s intellectual property rights provision in the 2001 proposed new concession contract demonstrates its understanding that the old Concession Agreement did not impliedly grant a license to the marks. The new contract expressly recognizes the State’s ownership of any marks developed by the concessionaire through its own goodwill during the term of the agreement:
28. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS: Any names, logos, trademarks and/or copyrights developed during and/or pursuant to this contract which will in any way associate with, identify or implicate an affiliation with California State Parks, shall be approved by State, shall belong to State upon creation, and shall continue in State’s exclusive ownership upon termination of this contract.
*1131 Furthermore, upon learning of the proposal for the new intellectual property rights provision in the proposed concession agreement on December 7; 2001, Bazaar del Mundo’s President, Diane Power, wrote back that the proposal is “totally unacceptable. Under no circumstances will we turn over the rights to our trademarked names to the State unless we are fully and fairly compensated for their value,” evidencing Bazaar del Mundo’s understanding that it owned the marks. Power’s hypothetical musings that the State might be able to own a trademark in the name of a historic site, such as the Hearst Castle, where it also operates a concession, are not relevant to the question of ownership of the marks here.
The State also makes an equitable argument based upon Bazaar del Mundo’s failure to provide actual notice to the State of its registration of the marks. We fail to see how this argument assists the State in its trademark infringement claim. Nothing in the Concession Agreement prohibits Bazaar del Mundo from registering the names of its restaurants or requires it to provide actual notice thereof to the State. Because under 15 U.S.C. § 1072 registration serves as constructive notice of the registrant’s claim to ownership, the State’s delay in contesting the 1985 registration of the marks may in fact estop it from bringing an infringement claim.
See Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. Nutrition Now, Inc.,
Finally, the State posits that the quality-control provisions set forth in the Concession Agreement demonstrate the existence of an implied license because well-established trademark law imposes a duty upon the licensor to retain sufficient control over the mark to prevent public deception. “The purpose of a trademark ... is to identify a good or service to the consumer, and identity implies consistency and a correlative duty to make sure that the good or service really is of consistent quality, i.e.,' really is the same good or service.”
Gorenstein Enters., Inc. v. Quality Care-USA, Inc.,
Although the State points to several measures of quality control in the Agreement to support its theory, nothing indicates that the State controlled or supervised the most critical aspects of building goodwill and value in the provision of restaurant services — the quality of the food and service. Nor do any of the provisions, which relate to such matters as sign-age, inspections of the premises, designated use of the premises and period dress, support a finding that the State has exercised such quality control and supervision over Bazaar del Mundo that the marks truly “reflect[ ] the goodwill and quality standards” of the State,
Siegel v. Chicken Delight, Inc.,
Though we have recognized that “ ‘[i]t is difficult, if not impossible to define in the abstract exactly how much control and inspection is needed to satisfy the requirement of quality control over trademark licensees,’ ”
Barcamerica Inti,
Here, however, the State points to no evidence revealing any effort to monitor or sample the quality of Bazaar del Mundo’s food and service. Nor is there any evidence that the State justifiably relied on Bazaar del Mundo’s reputation or had established a close working relationship with it to make a formal quality-control agreement unnecessary.
Barcamerica,
*1133
The cases upon which the State relies to support its quality control theory of implied license are unavailing. The asserted cases in fact undermine the State’s argument because the licensors there exercised rigorous and ongoing supervision and quality control over their licensees. In
Turner v. HMH Publishing Co.,
Finally, the State holds up California Public Resources Code § 5080.02 et seq., in an effort to demonstrate a sufficient quality-control system. This effort is to no avail. Although the Code encompasses a detailed system of regulation of the bidding for and award of concession agreements, not a single provision governs quality-control and supervision over concessionaires licensing trademarks from the State.
C.
The State asserts that Bazaar del Mun-do’s intended use of the names in connection with its new restaurant locations would infringe upon its own use of the marks in Old Town and violate section 2(d) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1052 because of the likelihood of confusion of the two marks. Because this argument is based on yet another convoluted reading of trademark law, the district court did not err in rejecting it.
The State reasons that it showed a “fair chance of success” on its claim to invalidate the marks because Bazaar del Mundo’s use of the marks outside Old Town would deceive the public into concluding that there was some affiliation with or sponsorship by Old Town. While the State may file a petition to cancel Bazaar del Mundo’s registration of the marks under 15 U.S.C. § 1064, its reliance upon 15 U.S.C. § 1052 is misplaced because that section does not create a private right of action for registering a mark giving rise to a likelihood of confusion with another mark. Rather, section 1052(d) sets forth: “No trademark ... shall be refused registration ... unless it ... [c]onsists of or comprises a mark which so resembles a mark registered ... or a mark or trade name previously used ... as to be likely, when used on or in connection with the goods of the applicant, to cause confusion.” Section 1052 simply authorizes the Director of the USPTO to reject applications for marks that have the potential to create confusion. We therefore do not reach the question of likelihood of confusion, as the State urges to do, citing
AMF Inc. v. Sleekcraft Boats,
CONCLUSION
The State has not demonstrated a likelihood of success in establishing a protecti-ble ownership interest in the disputed trademarks and thus has not shown any basis upon which it would be entitled to injunctive relief. Therefore, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the State’s motion for a preliminary injunction. We therefore affirm the district court’s order and remand for further proceedings.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On appeal, the State abandoned its claim of ownership of the marks based solely upon its *1125 ownership of the Casa de Pico and Casa de Bandini historic buildings, which was correctly rejected by the district court.
