MEMORANDUM OPINION
Thе motion at issue in this case requires the Court to determine whether a preliminary injunction is appropriate under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051-1127, to afford temporary protection to various trade and service marks claimed by Plaintiff Gougeon Brothers, Inc. Although the Court finds that the acronym “WEST” is a descriptive term entitled to no special protection, the Court finds that a preliminary injunction is necessary to protect the spеcific phrase “WEST System.”
I. Factual Background
Gougeon Brothers, Inc. (“Gougeon”), a Michigan corporation “engaged in the manufacture and distribution of epoxy compounds” used to repair and manufacture wooden and fiberglass boats, see Complaint, II3, sells products under the registered trademark of “WEST System.” See Trade & Service Mark Reg. No. 1,248,-020. The acronym WEST refers to “Wood Epoxy Saturation Technique,” which is a widely-used practice in the boatbuilding industry involving the cold-molding application of epoxy as both a sealant and an adhesive. See, e.g., J. Guzzwell, Modem Wooden Yacht Construction 125 (2d ed. 1981). While Guzzwell contends that the use of epoxy as a sealant was prevalent in the industry well before Gougeon espoused such construction, Guzzwell concedes that “Gougeon Brothers just happened to be the first to fully appreciate (and then publicize) how epoxies might best be used for cold-molding, and how cold-molded construction might be adapted to exploit epoxy’s virtues.” Id.
Defendants W. Kern Hendricks and Thomas Freeman, who are general partners in the Washington partnership of Defendant System Three Resins (“System Three”), also are engaged in the business of building boats using the wood epoxy saturation technique. In an effort to enhance its sales, System Three placed a series of advertisements in various trade publications extolling their products in a variety of terms. In the January/February issue of “Wooden Boat,” for example, System Three offered buyers the opportunity to “build a lighter boat” using System Three’s epoxy products. A subsequent ad in the April/May edition of “Small Boat Journal” invited “WEST System Epoxy Users” to obtain trial samples of System Three’s products; the reference to “WEST System” was explicitly credited in the ad as a “Trademark of Gougeon Brothers, Inc., U.S.A.” See Plaintiff’s Reply Brief, Gougeon Affidavit Exhibit B. The June/July 1986 edition of “Small Boat Journal” described System Three’s products as “a superior resin for the W.E.S.T. method of construction.” This ad contained no reference to Gougeon, however. Similar ads containing references to the “WEST method” appeared in a variety of later publications without mention of Gougeon. In a comparison ad issued in thе March, 1988 “Boatbuilder” magazine, though, System Three did recognize the existence of the Gougeon mark.
System Three’s inclusion of the terms “WEST,” “WEST method,” and “WEST System” in nearly all of its ads prompted *813 Gougeon to file the case at bar in an effort to protect its marks. Along with the original complaint, Gougeon filed the motion for preliminary injunctive relief that is before the Court. In both its motion papers and at oral argument, plaintiff vacillаted between requesting narrow relief and demanding sweeping protection. Because plaintiffs request for injunctive protection at times has been as broad as all variants of the term “WEST,” the Court must address the possibility of an injunction to protect a whole series of marks.
II. The Propriety of Injunctive Protection for “WEST” Terminology
In determining whether a preliminary injunction is appropriate, the Court must evaluate four сonsiderations that the Sixth Circuit has consistently enumerated as relevant sources of inquiry:
1. whether Gougeon has shown a strong or substantial likelihood of success on the merits;
2. whether Gougeon has demonstrated irreparable injury;
3. whether the preliminary injunction could harm third parties; and
4. whether the public interest would be served by issuance of the preliminary injunction.
See, e.g., Gaston Drugs, Inc. v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
A. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
The “likelihood of success” inquiry mandates evaluation of the substantive Lanham Act claim raised by Plaintiff Gougeon.
1
As a threshold matter, the Court notes that Lanham Act claims involve two steps of analysis. First, the Court must classify the marks at issue.
See, e.g., Wynn Oil Co. v. Thomas,
1. Classification of the “WEST” Terminology
For Lanham Act purposes, marks fall into one of five categories: (1) generic;
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(2) descriptive; (3) suggestive; (4) fanciful; or (5) arbitrary.
815 Tonawanda Street,
Because the WEST terms at issue all amount to descriptive marks, they are only entitled to Lanham Act protection if Gougeon “can show that the term[s] had developed a ‘second meaning’ — that the public identifies the trademarks] with a particular ‘source’ rather than the product.”
Wynn Oil,
The question of whether the specific term “WEST System” merits preliminary protection as a descriptive mark with secondary meaning is a much closer question. As Judge Kennedy reasoned in
Wynn Oil,
“[t]he fact that [WEST System] ha[s] been registered on the Principal Register of the United States Patent and Trademark Office constitutes ‘prima facie evidence’ of [Gougeon’s] exclusive rights to use the mark on the goods or services specified in the registration.”
Wynn Oil,
2. Likelihood of Confusion
In determining likеlihood of confusion, the Sixth Circuit has relied upon eight relevant factors:
1. strength of Gougeon’s “WEST System” mark;
2. relatedness of Gougeon’s and System Three’s goods;
3. similarity of the Gougeon and System Three marks;
*815 4. evidence of actual confusion;
5. marketing channels used;
6. likely degree of purchaser care;
7. System Three’s intent in selecting the mark; and
8. likelihood of expansion of the product lines.
Elby’s Big Boy,
(i) Strength of Gougeon’s “WEST System” mark
Gougeon received registration of the “WEST System” mark on August 16,1983. Because five years had not yet elapsed from the point of registration on the date that the case at bar was filed, Gоugeon’s mark is not “incontestable.”
See
15 U.S.C. § 1065;
see also Wynn Oil,
(ii) Relatedness of Gougeon’s and System Three’s products
This factor clearly favors Gougeon. As far as the Court can discern, the two companies produce goods that are similar in purpose. In fact, the defendants’ opening sentence in their responsive brief states that “Plaintiff and Defendants market ‘wood epoxy saturation technique’ boat-building products.” This statement is tantamount to an admission that the two companies market virtually identical goods. The Court, therefore, can safely assume that the second factor supports Gougeon’s “likelihood of confusion” claim.
(in) Similarity of the Gougeon and System Three marks
Without question, this factor supports Gougeon’s “likelihood of confusion” argument. System Three has used the specific term “WEST System” in several of its ads, although it has acknowledged Gougeon’s registration on occasion. At this juncture, however, the Court must emphasize that injunctive relief with respect to the registered “WEST System” mark will not preclude System Three’s use of the descriptive “WEST” term. As far as the “WEST System” mark is concerned, the similarity between System Three’s advertisements and Gougeon’s mark suggests the probability of consumer confusion. This similarity is particularly important in view of the Sixth Circuit’s comment that “a mere showing that advertisеments tend to create a false impression is sufficient to warrant
injunctive
relief.”
Elby’s Big Boy,
(iv) Evidence of actual consumer confusion
In support of its assertion of “likelihood of confusion,” Gougeon has submitted two letters demonstrating that consumers have mistaken Gougeon’s epoxy products for those sold by System Three.
See
Reply Brief, Affidavit of Meade Gougeon, Exhibit C. Based on plaintiff’s proof of actual confusion, the Court would encounter sub
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stantial difficulty justifying its position if it chose to deny plaintiffs motion for preliminary injunctive relief. As Judge Kennedy’s
Wynn Oil
opinion unequivocally indicates, “[ejvidence of actual confusion is undoubtedly the best evidence of likelihood of confusion.”
Wynn Oil,
(v)Marketing channels used
Both Gougeon and System Three sell their products through mail-order advertisements placed in national trade magazines. From this ostensibly undisputed fact, the Court concludes that the similarity of marketing channels factor supports Gougeon’s motion for preliminary protection.
(vi)Likely degree of purchaser care
The epoxy products sold by Gougeon and System Three are relatively inexpensive; a comparative ad run by System Three indicates that two of the companiеs’ widely-sold products fall within the $25 to $50 per gallon price range. See Plaintiff Reply, Gougeon Affidavit, Exhibit B. The comparatively low prices of the products suggest minimal purchaser care.
Conversely, the facts that the products are used to construct and maintain expensive boats and are available only through mail-order purchases indicate that consumer purchasing awareness may be substantial. Balancing the сonflicting indicators of the degree of consumer purchasing care, the Court cannot conclusively determine that the purchaser care factor counsels either for or against issuance of a preliminary injunction based on likelihood of confusion.
(vii)System Three’s intent in selecting the mark
The series of ads run by System Three that culminates in a major comparative piece indicates that System Three recognizes that it stands to gain market share at Gougeon’s expense by attacking Gougeon. At oral argument, counsel for both parties concurred in the view that Gougeon is the market leader and System Three is a new market entrant with plans to challenge Gougeon. In this respect, System Three has a vested interest both in confusing its products with those of Gougeon and in stripping “WEST System” of any secondary meaning that the term might possess. While the Court cannot detect any discrete evidence imputing intentional wrongdoing to System Three, the Court can readily infer that System Three seeks to closely associate itself with Gougeon so long as Gougeon is the market leader and System Three is a challenger; System Three’s sequence of advertisements provides ample support for this inference.
Cf. Wynn Oil,
(viii)Likelihood of product line expansion
In the case at bar, the Court has received no evidence to suggest that Gougeon or System Three intends to extend its product line or expand its sales efforts into new markets. Both companies currently undertake nationwide sales efforts and appаrently offer full lines of epoxy materials for boatbuilding use. Thus, the final factor for evaluating likelihood of confusion favors System Three in that no danger of increased potential for confusion exists.
3. Summary of the Court’s Preliminary Merits Analysis
In the Court’s view, Plaintiff Gougeon has demonstrated the requisite “substantial likelihood of success on the merits” to warrant injunctive protection for the “WEST System” mark, although Gougeon is nearly certain to fail in its attempt to secure swеeping protection for all “WEST”
*817
terminology. From the evidence presently available, the Court reaches the
preliminary
conclusion that “WEST System” is a descriptive mark with a secondary meaning. The Court further finds as a
preliminary
matter that five of the eight relevant factors indicate a strong “likelihood of confusion,” while only one factor clearly suggests a contrary conclusion. In sum, Plaintiff Gougeon has satisfactorily established a “substantiаl likelihood of success on the merits.”
Cf. Wynn Oil,
B. Irreparable Harm
Because a showing of imminent irreparable harm is an essential prerequisite to the issuance of a preliminary injunction,
see, e.g., Friendship Materials,
In Flint YMCA, the Sixth Circuit provided the following test for irreparable harm in the context of the Lanham Act:
[A] preliminary injunction should not issue unless “there is, then, such high probability of confusion, injury irreparable in the sense that it may not be fully compensable in damages almost inevitably follows.”
Id.
at 201 (quoting
Omega Importing Corp. v. Petri-Kine Camera Co.,
The evidence of record clearly indicates that Defendant System Three has used variants of “WEST” terminology that include the terms “WEST” and “System” in a single clause. This type of advertising, if permitted while the case at bar is pending, will tend to divest Plaintiff Gougeon’s registered mark of whatever secondary meaning it may currently possess. The Court recognizes that the Sixth Circuit has not adopted a
per se
rule for finding irreparable harm when a registered mark is used by a plaintiff’s competitor.
See Flint YMCA,
C. Potential Harm of Injunction to Third Parties
By granting narrowly-tailored relief in the form of protection for the term “WEST System” only, the Court has endeavored to allow competitors in the boatbuilding business to freely use variants of descriptive “WEST” terminology. The Court recognizes that the use of “WEST” as a descriptive acronym is pervasive in the industry, and therefore should not be needlessly cur *818 tailed. As far as the Court is concerned, then, neither boatbuilding competitors nor consumers will be unduly limited or misled by the Court’s preliminary restriction on System Three’s power to use the term “WEST System.”
D. Public Interest Concerns Underlying Injunctive Relief
Based on Plaintiff Gougeon’s proof of actual consumer confusion, the Court finds that the public interest will be served by issuance of limited preliminary injunctive relief. Trademark infringement, by its very nature, adversely affects the public interest in the “free flow” of truthful commercial information.
Cf. Virginia State Bd. of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Cоuncil, Inc.,
Ill Conclusion
Finding merit to a limited extent in Plaintiff Gougeon’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief, the Court will enter an order granting in рart plaintiff's motion. Although the Court will issue a preliminary injunction pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1116(a), the Court will not require Defendant System Three to submit a sworn statement of its efforts to comply with the Court’s order. See id.
Notes
. Plaintiff Gougeon’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief is premised solely on its Lanham Act claim.
See
Plaintiffs Reply Brief at 1. Plaintiffs additional claims are all pendent state claims for unfair competion, breach of contract, and violation of the Michigаn Consumer Protection Act. While these claims are not relevant to the motion at issue, the Court notes in passing that Gougeon apparently lacks standing to assert a claim under the Michigan Consumer Protection Act.
See Noggles v. Battle Creek Wrecking, Inc.,
. In evaluating the irreparаble harm consideration, the Sixth Circuit has indicated that proof of " 'substantial financial interest’ ” can satisfy the irreparable harm requirement.
See Frisch’s Restaurants, Inc. v. Elby’s Big Boy of Steubenville, Inc.,
