MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction is granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a).
BACKGROUND
This is an action for trade dress infringement and unfair competition. Plaintiffs Jolly Good Industries, Inc. and Continental Gum of Canada, Ltd. [“Jolly Good”] import and distribute a 21-inch high beverage dispenser, designed to be a replica of a 1920’s era gasoline pump. Defendants Elegra Inc. d/b/a Horizon Creations and Accord Inc. d/b/a Cal Sternberg & Associates, are planning to import and distribute a gumball machine and aquarium which utilize the same design as Jolly Good’s beverage dispenser. No gumball machines or aquariums have yet been produced. However, the molds have been prepared and defendants’ Taiwanese manufacturer is ready to commence production.
Jolly Good’s beverage dispenser is designed to hold and dispense up to 48 ounces of liquid. The unit rests on a black, octagonal two-level base, aproximately % of an inch high. The next component is a metal cylinder, approximately eight inches high and thirteen inches in circumference. The cylinder is interspersed with vertical indentations, spaced approximately one inch apart, and has three decals in front and one in back. On the upper left side of the cylinder, a small hook supports a palm-sized version of a modern-day gasoline pump handle, which is connected to a rubber hose leading to the bottom of the cylinder. On the right side of the cylinder is a movable, five-inch black plastic pump. It is a replica of the 1920’s pump used by patrons to deliver the desired amount of gasoline to the dispensing mechanism.
Resting upon the metal cylinder is a round glass container, surrounded by vertical metal bars approximately two inches apart. The container has twelve gradation lines, each accompanied by its corresponding number. The vertical bars are screwed into a round metal top. A plastic display attachment fits into the metal top. It is circular, with a flat front surface, and is used to display any one of six available logos, each apparently representing a prominent gasoline company of the 1920s. The display attachment lights up and is powered by two “AA” batteries.
Defendants have yet to manufacture their products. Instead, they have contracted with a Taiwanese manufacturer to produce a gumball machine and aquarium utilizing the same design motif as Jolly Good’s beverage dispenser. In fact, in order to advertise their future product at a *229 May 1988 trade show for the gift industry, defendants actually purchased several of plaintiffs’ beverage dispensers and “cannibalized” them in order to print brochures and set up a display. For their gumball machine, defendants cut a hole through the metal cylinder portion of the beverage dispenser and installed a gumball dispensing mechanism. For their aquarium, defendants utilized a larger-sized glass container because the size of aquarium tanks are regulated by state laws governing their sale. Essentially all the other features remained the same. At the trade show, defendants received orders for approximately 6,000 pieces. The president of Elegra testified that he informed all of his customers that the models on display were merely prototypes and that the actual product shipped might look somewhat different. He further testified that the product defendants intend to manufacture will be different than plaintiffs’ in that (1) the handle and nozzle will be nonfunctional, (2) the display attachment will not light up or hold any of the six logos utilized by Jolly Good, and (3) the gumball dispensing receptacle will be placed at the very bottom of the metal cylinder, rather than towards the top of the cylinder.
Plaintiffs allege that the gumball machine and aquarium are merely pirated versions of their unique and distinctive product. They seek injunctive and other relief pursuant to section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), and the common law of New York. 1
DISCUSSION
The standards for granting a preliminary injunction in this circuit are well established. Plaintiffs must make a showing of
both possible irreparable injury [in the absence of interim relief] and either (1) a likelihood of success on the merits or (2) sufficiently serious questions going to the merits to make them a fair ground for litigation and a balance of hardships tipping decidedly in the movant’s favor.
LeSportsac, Inc. v. K Mart Corp.,
A. The Lanham Act Claim
Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), establishes a federal law of unfair competition prohibiting the marketing of a product which conveys a false designation of origin.
Stormy Clime,
To establish a claim for trade dress infringement in the design of a product, the party seeking protection must demonstrate that the design of its product has acquired secondary meaning in the marketplace, by which it is identified with its producer or source,
see LeSportsac,
*230 1. Secondary Meaning
The trade dress of a product has achieved secondary meaning when the “purchasing public associates that dress with a single producer or source rather than just with the product itself.” Id. at 78. In order to establish sufficiently serious questions of secondary meaning, it is enough that plaintiffs offer proof of such things as (1) substantial advertising expenditures, (2) great sales success, (3) unsolicited media coverage, and (4) derendants, deliberate attempt to imitate its product. See id.
Along these lines, plaintiffs offered the following evidence. Since introducing its product in February 1987, Jolly Good has spent approximately $100,000 for advertising. Much of this expenditure took the form of discounts awarded to catalog companies and the like which agreed to advertise the dispenser in their catalogs. Plaintiffs presented evidence that the dispenser has been a highly successful product, generating approximately $625,000 in sales in 1987, or nearly 33 percent of the company’s revenues. There was also evidence that the Jolly Good dispenser has received unsolicited media coverage. See Plaintiffs’ Exhs. 24, 26. Lastly, much evidence was presented to support the conclusion that defendants deliberately attempted to imitate the Jolly Good design in fashioning their own products.
With respect to the issue of intentional copying, the evidence was overwhelming. Entered into evidence were the defendants’ gumball machine and aquarium, Plaintiffs’ Exhs. 28, 29, along with a brochure prepared by them for the May 1988 trade show. Id., Exh. 27. To the eye, the defendants’ products look exactly like the Jolly Good dispenser. This is because they actually were made from Jolly Good dispensers. Defendants conceded that, in order to display a product at the May 1988 show, they had to “cannibalize” the Jolly Good dispenser. Gary Schein, president and founder of defendant Elegra Inc., testified that the idea for the gumball machine and aquarium came, at least in part, from the Jolly Good dispenser. Schein sent the dispenser to a Taiwanese manufacturer to determine how much it would cost to produce an identical product. Schein did not know whether the Taiwanese manufacturer had actually used the Jolly Good dispenser to create the molds for defendants’ products. Schein also testified that his finished products will look substantially similar to the Jolly Good dispenser, with the minor modifications discussed earlier. 2 Lastly, Schein acknowledged that on occasions when he described his products or showed his brochure to customers, some told him that Jolly Good makes a similar product.
With respect to secondary meaning, plaintiffs principally rely on the case of
Metro Kane Imports, Ltd. v. Federated Department Stores Inc.,
[a] senior user in possession of a distinctive mark has a right not to have a second comer intentionally cause a likelihood of confusion between the two marks in an attempt to exploit the reputation of the senior user’s mark, since this would deprive the first user of control over its reputation and goodwill.
Id.
at 317 (quoting
Thompson Medical Co. v. Pfizer, Inc.,
The Court finds the
Metro Kane
analysis persuasive, at least at this preliminary stage. No court in this circuit has explicitly rejected the theory of secondary meaning in the making, while the court of appeals has twice reviewed the theory without condemnation or criticism, especially where there exists strong evidence of intentional copying.
See, e.g., Metro Kane,
The theory of incipient secondary meaning has also been well-received by commentators:
A mark with secondary meaning in the making should also be protected, at least against those who appropriate it with knowledge or good reason to know of its potential in that regard, or with an intent to capitalize on its quality. “Piracy should no more be tolerated in the earlier stages of development of quality than in the latter.”
3 R. Callman,
Unfair Competition Trademarks and Monopolies
§ 77.3, at 356 (3d ed. 1971) (quotation omitted) (emphasis added). In this case, defendants clearly had knowledge of Jolly Good’s success with its dispenser and the overwhelming evidence of intentional copying is “persuasive, if not conclusive, evidence of [the] consumer recognition and good will” which they sought to exploit to their advantage.
See 20th Century Wear, Inc. v. Sanmark-Stardust Inc.,
2. Likelihood of Confusion
As just discussed, it is not seriously in dispute that defendants intentionally copied plaintiffs’ overall design. They went so far as to “cannibalize” Jolly Good’s dispensers in order to make photographs for a brochure and set up a display booth at an annual trade show, at which plaintiffs’ dispenser was being displayed. There was even evidence of actual confusion among buyers at the trade show. In any event, it is by now axiomatic that intentional copying gives rise to a presumption of a likelihood of confusion.
See Mobil Oil Corp. v. Pegasus Petroleum Corp.,
B. Public Domain and Functionality Defense
Defendants argue that Jolly Good’s design is in the public domain because it represents a piece of “Americana” and, therefore, is not entitled to trade dress protection. Purely on a factual basis, the argument is without significant merit. There is no single embodiment of the 1920’s era gasoline pump. In fact, there were many variations of the pump, some of which are quite dissimilar in appearance to the Jolly Good replica. See, e.g., Defendants’ Exhs. A, B.
Defendants next argue that an aesthetic functionality defense is available to them. They pose the question, drawn from LeSportsac, as follows:
Are consumers likely to purchase [Jolly Good’s 1920’s replica gas pump] rather than that of a competitor principally because they find [Jolly Good’s] particular combination of design features aesthetically pleasing, or will they buy principally because the product features serve to identify or distinguish the goods as genuine [Jolly Good] products?
Id.
In the Court’s view, defendants misapply the court’s reasoning in
LeSportsac.
In that case, Chief Judge Feinberg noted that plaintiff claimed “as its mark the particular combination and arrangement of design elements that identify its [products] and distinguish them from other [similar products].”
This conclusion is further supported by the fact, as agreed to by both parties, that people are inclined to buy the dispenser, gumball machine and aquarium not because of their practical uses, but for use as an ornamental or conversation piece in the home. In this sense, none of the design features mentioned above and copied by defendants are truly functional,
i.e.,
“essential to the use or purpose of the article.”
Inwood Laboratories v. Ives Laboratories, Inc.,
C. Irreparable Harm/Balance of Hardships
As a general rule, a finding of irreparable harm almost inevitably follows a finding of likelihood of confusion.
See Church of Scientology Int’l v. The Elmira Mission,
D. Unfair Competition Under New York Law
Plaintiffs also have a claim for unfair competition under the common law of New York. “The essence of an unfair competition claim under New York law is that the defendant misappropriated the labors and expenditures of another. Central to this notion is some element of bad faith.”
Saratoga Vichy Spring Co. v. Lehman,
E. Scope of Preliminary Relief
For all of the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs have established the requisite elements entitling them to preliminary injunctive relief. Accordingly, defendants, their officers, agents, servants, employees, successors, assigns, and all persons in active concert or participation with them, who receive actual notice of these proceedings, are preliminarily restrained and enjoined from:
(a) selling, offering for sale, promoting, advertising, proceeding with the manufacture of, or in any way distributing any gumball machine or aquarium, which appears similar to plaintiffs’ beverage dispenser; and
(b) destroying or otherwise transferring possession or control of any records, documents or any other information relating to the procurement, source of supply, production or sale of gumball machines or aquariums as depicted in Exhibit 3 to the Complaint.
The Court declines at this time to require that any particular notice or letter be sent to any of defendants’ customers who have previously placed orders for the gumball machine and/or aquarium.
As a condition to entry of the injunction, plaintiffs shall post, within five (5) days of this decision, a bond in the amount of $30,-000.
*234 CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction is granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a). The injunction is issued on the condition that a bond be posted in the amount set forth herein.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants do not challenge either the Court’s subject matter or personal jurisdiction.
. As discussed above, the modifications are (1) the handle and nozzle will be nonfunctional; (2) the display attachment will not light up and will not use any of the six logos used by Jolly Good; and (3) the gumball dispenser will be located at the bottom of the metal cylinder. Of course, the fact that the handle will be nonfunctional will not, presumably, affect its appearance in any way. In the same sense, the other modifications will not alter the overall look of the gumball machine and aquarium, which will continue to resemble the Jolly Good dispenser.
