Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge TRAXLER wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINS and Judge MICHAEL joined.
OPINION
Emergency One, Inc. (“E-One”) appeals from a nationwide injunction entered by the district court prohibiting E-One from *266 using its AMERICAN EAGLE mark in connection with the sale of its fire tracks or from otherwise infringing upon the trademark rights of American FireEagle, Ltd. (“AFE”). We vacate the injunction and remand the case for further proceedings.
I.
E-One, a manufacturer of fire trucks and rescue vehicles, sued AFE for trademark infringement. The parties agree that AFE’s AMERICAN FIREEAGLE mark, which depicts a bald eagle superimposed over an American flag, and E-One’s AMERICAN EAGLE mark “are sufficiently similar as to create a likelihood of confusion among potential purchasers of fire tracks.” J.A. 129. AFE counterclaimed on the grounds that E-One had abandoned its mark, that AFE had then acquired ownership through use of the mark, and that E-One’s subsequent renewed use of the mark infringed on AFE’s common-law trademark rights. A jury initially determined that E-One had not abandoned the AMERICAN EAGLE mark and, therefore, AFE was infringing on E-One’s mark. Based on the verdict, the district court entered an injunction against AFE’s continued use of its AMERICAN FIREEAGLE mark. The injunction was unlimited in its geographical scope.
AFE appealed. This court concluded that there was sufficient evidence for a jury to find “that E-One had discontinued use of the AMERICAN EAGLE mark.”
Emergency One, Inc. v. American FireEagle, Ltd.,
Upon remand, the district court granted E-One’s request for bifurcation of the trial. The only issue submitted to the jury was whether E-One had abandoned its rights in the AMERICAN EAGLE mark prior to the time that AFE began using its similar mark. Specifically, the second jury was asked to decide if E-One “intend[ed] to resume use of the American Eagle trademark on fire tracks in the reasonably foreseeable future.” J.A. 205. The jury determined that E-One had not intended to resume use of the mark. Following the verdict, AFE requested that the district court impose an unlimited injunction, virtually identical to the one imposed against AFE after the first trial, against E-One’s continued use of its mark. E-One objected, however, arguing that a nationwide injunction was inappropriate and that an evidentiary hearing was necessary to establish the proper geographical scope of the injunction. The district court concluded that E-One had waived the right to challenge the geographical scope of the injunction, that E-One was therefore not entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the *267 issue, and that a nationwide injunction was appropriate. The district court noted that jury issues still remained with respect to whether AFE was entitled to monetary relief from E-One on AFE’s trademark infringement claim or its claims under the North Carolina Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act, see N.C. Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1, and North Carolina common law. E-One immediately appealed the district court’s entry' of the injunction. See 28 U.S.C.A. § 1292(a)(1) (West 1993).
II.
We review the entry of an injunction by the district court for abuse of discretion.
See Wilson v. CHAMPUS,
A.
Before considering the scope of the injunction entered against E-One, a brief review of the governing principles of trademark law is in order. AFE and E-One both asserted trademark rights in an unregistered mark. Common law determines who enjoys the exclusive right to use an unregistered trademark, the extent of such rights, and the proper geographical scope of any injunctive relief necessary to protect against the infringement of such rights.
See Spartan Food Sys., Inc. v. HFS Corp.,
At common law, trademark ownership is acquired by actual use of the mark in a given market.
See United Drug Co. v. Theodore Rectanus Co.,
When more than one user claims the exclusive right to use an unregistered trademark, priority is determined by “the first actual use of [the] mark in a genuine commercial transaction.”
Allard Enters., Inc. v. Advanced Programming Res., Inc.,
The territorial extent of ownership rights in an unregistered mark is not unlimited.
See Spartan Food,
Into whatever markets the use of a trademark has extended, or its meaning has become known, there will the manufacturer or trader whose trade is pirated by an infringing use be entitled to protection and redress. But this is not to say that the proprietor of a trademark ... can monopolize markets that his trade has never reached.... [S]ince it is the trade, and not the mark, that is to be protected, a trademark ... extends to every market where the trader’s goods have become known and identified by his use of the mark. But the mark, of itself, cannot travel to markets where there is no article to wear the badge and no trader to offer the article.
Id.
at 415-16,
Although federal registration of a mark does not itself confer ownership rights, registration constitutes “prima facie evidence of the validity of the registered mark ..., of the registrant’s ownership of the mark, and of the registrant’s exclusive right to use the registered mark.... ” 15 U.S.C.A. § 1057(b) (West 1997). Moreover, the presumption of priority enjoyed by the registrant of a mark is “nationwide in effect.” 15 U.S.C.A. § 1057(c). Thus,
*269
registration of a trademark under the Lan-ham Act “creates a presumption that the registrant is entitled to use the registered mark throughout the nation.”
Draeger Oil Co. v. Uno-Ven Co.,
The nature of common-law trademark rights in large measure determines the appropriate scope of any injunctive relief. Thus, the owner of common-law trademark rights in an unregistered mark is not entitled to injunctive relief in those localities where it has failed to establish actual use of the mark.
See Spartan Food,
B.
AFE established its priority in the mark when the jury on remand determined that, after discontinuing use of the mark, E-One had not intended to resume use of the mark in the reasonably foreseeable future.
See
2 McCarthy,
supra,
§ 17:2 at 3. For all practical purposes, the abandonment determination also settled the issue of liability,
i.e.,
who had priority in the mark. E-One conceded to the district court that AFE was “the prevailing party on the issue of the ownership of the trademark.” J.A. 159. Because the mark was not registered, however, the common law rights of
*270
AFE in the abandoned mark were “restricted to the locality where the mark [was] used and to the area of probable expansion.”
Spartan Food,
III.
AFE argues that the district court correctly determined that E-One “waived its right to contest the geographic scope of [the] injunction.” J.A. 292. The district court did not elaborate on the basis for its conclusion that E-One waived its right to challenge the injunction. However, AFE presented to the district court the same waiver argument it makes on appeal — that E-One’s challenge to the territorial scope of the injunction is effectively an
affirmative
defense that E-One failed to raise and thus waived. Specifically, AFE argues that in challenging the scope of the injunction, E-One was in fact claiming to be an “innocent” or “good-faith remote user” of the mark. AFE asserts that this is an affirmative defense which is subject to waiver.
See Brinkley v. Harbour Recreation Club,
In order to accept AFE’s argument, we must determine that a good-faith remote user claim qualifies as an affirmative defense; that E-One is actually raising such a defense; but that E-One waived its ability to do so by not alleging in its pleadings that it was a good-faith remote user of the mark. We conclude that although a good-faith remote user claim can be categorized as an affirmative defense, E-One is not technically raising this claim and, therefore, has not waived its ability to challenge the injunction.
A.
As previously explained, the senior user of a mark acquires priority over a
*271
subsequent user and thereby enjoys the exclusive right to use the mark within the “areas where [the mark] had been used and the claimant of the mark had carried on business.”
Armand’s Subway,
A use is geographically remote if the mark was used in an area “where the senior user’s mark was not known such that there could be confusion as to source.”
Best Cellars, Inc. v. Wine Made Simple, Inc.,
No. 01 Civ. 11780,
Whether a good-faith remote user claim must be pled affirmatively under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure depends upon whether it raises “matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c). An affirmative defense is the “ ‘defendant’s assertion raising new facts and arguments that, if true, will defeat the plaintiffs or prosecution’s claim, even if all allegations in the complaint are true.’ ”
Saks v. Franklin Covey Co.,
A good-faith remote user claim qualifies as an affirmative defense. The plaintiff in
*272
an action for infringement of an unregistered mark must prove “the validity and its ownership of the mark as part of its larger burden in a trademark infringement action ... to prove that it has a valid, protectable trademark and that the defendant is infringing its mark.”
America Online, Inc. v. AT & T Corp.,
B.
Even if the good-faith remote user defense is technically one that should be pled affirmatively, we conclude that E-One is not, in fact, asserting this defense. Rather, E-One’s objection goes to the scope of the remedy — specifically, the lack of a factual basis to support a nationwide injunction. The good-faith remote user defense applies when there is a priority dispute between two parties that have been using the mark in the same territory. The junior user of the mark uses this doctrine to argue that it cannot be ousted from its territory by the owner and senior user of the mark:
[T]he national senior user of a mark cannot oust a geographically remote good-faith user who has used the mark 'first in a remote trade area. When the national senior user tries to enter the remote area, its rights must give way to the rights built up in good faith by a local user.
4 McCarthy,
supra,
§ 26:4 at 9. In fact, a junior user who successfully defends against an infringement action by asserting this defense may itself be entitled to injunctive relief against the senior user.
See Spartan Food,
By contrast, in objecting to the scope of the injunction below, E-One contended simply that “far more limited injunctive relief’ was warranted. J.A. 227. E-One, as we understand its argument, does not deny that AFE, as a result of the jury verdict, has priority and the exclusive right
*273
to use the mark in those areas where AFE is able to establish actual use sufficient to confer common law trademark rights. In fact, E-One even acknowledged to the district court that there might be four such markets — Michigan, West Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Thus, E-One does not contend that AFE is not entitled to injunctive relief where AFE used the mark, but only that the injunctive relief awarded was too broad. We are satisfied that, viewed in its entirety, E-One’s challenge to the extent of AFE’s territorial rights is not an affirmative defense to liability but an objection to the extent of the remedy imposed by the district court. Unlike an affirmative defense, a mere challenge to the scope of injunctive relief need not be set forth affirmatively in the pleadings, and the failure to do so does not amount to a waiver of the argument.
See Westchester Media v. PRL USA Holdings, Inc.,
We also reject AFE’s argument that E-One waived its challenge to the injunction because it did not identify, for purposes of the pre-trial order, the geographical scope of AFE’s common law trademark rights as an issue to be resolved by the jury. Generally speaking, the pre-trial order “controls the scope and course of the trial, and, [i]f a claim or issue is omitted from the order, it is waived, even if it appeared in the complaint.”
Sobley v. Southern Natural Gas Co.,
As before, this argument misapprehends the nature of E-One’s appeal. Ownership of a common law mark does not necessarily afford the owner nationwide rights, as explained in detail above. Even the owner of a
registered
mark, who enjoys a presumption of nationwide priority to which AFE is not entitled, is not automatically entitled to national injunctive relief.
See Armand’s Subway,
IV.
Finally, AFE contends that E-One is estopped from challenging the geographical scope of the injunction because (1) it “conceded” in its pleadings that AFE con *274 ducted business throughout the United States and (2) it represented to the court during the injunction hearing that all liability issues had been tried. We cannot agree.
AFE’s argument appears to rely on the doctrine of judicial estoppel, which protects against “improper manipulation of the judiciary.”
Folio v. City of Clarksburg,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court abused its discretion in entering a nationwide injunction with no factual basis from which to conclude that AFE’s use of the mark was nationwide. We vacate the injunction and remand for the district court to reconsider the appropriate scope of its injunction.
VACATED AND REMANDED
Notes
. Federal registration of a mark does not establish ownership rights in the mark; rights in a registered mark are acquired through actual use, just as for unregistered marks.
See Homeowners Group,
. This court has recognized that the area of "use” for purposes of establishing common-law trademark rights may include not only the locality where the mark is actually being used but also areas where use of the mark is likely to expand but has not yet done so.
See, e.g., Spartan Food,
. The owner of a registered mark "has a nationwide
right,
but the injunctive
remedy
does not ripen until the registrant shows a likelihood of entry into the disputed territory.... [The junior user’s] use of the mark can continue only so long as the federal registrant remains outside the market area.”
Lone Star,
. The statutoiy version of the good-faith remote user doctrine, incorporated by the Lan-ham Act as a defense to an infringement claim by the owner of a registered mark that has become incontestable, is not identical to the common law version. For example, the Lanham Act appears to have eliminated "remoteness” as a requirement for the defense. See 15 U.S.C.A. § 1115(b)(5) (West 1998 & Supp.2003).
. Although AFE suggests that to allow E-One to pursue its line of attack would be prejudicial because it would stretch AFE’s limited resources to require a third proceeding, AFE represented to the trial court that it was engaged in "national use and [was] prepared to show that” and that a hearing on the issue would last "one day.” J.A. 173.
