Lead Opinion
CLAY, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which KEITH, J., joined, and BATCHELDER, J., joined in part of the
OPINION
Defendant Creative Harbor, LLC (“Creative Harbor”) appeals the judgment entered by the district court on February 1, 2016, voiding Creative Harbor’s trademark applications numbered 86198230 and 86198309, respectively. Creative Harbor challenges the district court’s determinations that: (1) Creative Harbor lacked a bona fide intention to use its requested mark in commerce with respect to some of the goods and services identified in its trademark applications, in violation of § 1(b) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051(b); and (2) if Creative Harbor lacked such intent with respect to any of the goods and services, the applications must be voided in their entirety. We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM IN PART and VACATE IN PART the district court’s judgment. We REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual History
We present the facts in the light most favorable to Creative Harbor, against whom the district court entered summary judgment. See, e.g., Green v, Brennan, — U.S. -,
Defendant Creative Harbor is a California-based technology startup purportedly “engaged in the business of original content creation and concept development for all media, including but not limited to, internet, mobile, photography, film, and TV.” (R. 11, Answer, PagelD #121.) Creative Harbor was founded in 2014 by Christian Jurgensen (“Jurgensen”), who serves as Creative Harbor’s owner, sole manager, and CEO.
Plaintiff Kelly Services, Inc. is a Michigan-based company that is allegedly “one of the world’s largest providers of personnel and managed business services - staffing 99% of Fortune 100 companies and 90% of Fortune 500 companies.” (R. 1, Complaint, PagelD #4.) Plaintiff Kelly Properties, LLC, is an affiliated entity of Kelly Services, Inc. Because Plaintiffs do not assert separate claims or arguments, and have identical interests for the purposes of this appeal, we refer to them collectively as “Kelly Services.”
In essence, the parties dispute which of them should have priority to the trademark WORKWIRE (“the Mark”), which both wish to use in connection with their competing employment-based software applications. In September 2013, Jurgensen allegedly developed an idea for a mobile application designed to connect employers with prospective employees. Jurgensen decided to call the application ‘WorkWire,” and formed Creative Harbor in February 2014 to develop the WorkWire application. In early 2014, Creative Harbor hired an intellectual property attorney to explore obtaining the WORKWIRE trademark. That attorney allegedly advised Creative Harbor that the Mark was available.
However, in early 2013, Kelly Services allegedly began developing its own employment-based iPad application, which it intended to distribute through the Apple App Store. Kelly Services also decided to name its application “WorkWire.” Kelly Services allegedly completed this iPad application on February 4, 2014, and submitted the application to Apple for its approval and eventual distribution. On February 17, 2014, Apple approved Kelly Services’
On February 19, 2014, Creative Harbor filed two trademark applications seeking rights to the Mark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office at 6:28 p.m. and 7:56 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, respectively (“the Applications”). The Applications sought the right to use the Mark in connection with thirty-six individually identified goods and services. Creative Harbor affirmed under penalty of perjury that it possessed a bona fide intention to use the Mark in commerce on or in connection with each of the goods and services listed in the Applications. On the same day, at approximately 8:11 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, Kelly Services’ iPad application became available on the Apple App Store. A customer first downloaded the Kelly Services application on February 20, 2014.
On March 10, 2014, Creative Harbor sent Kelly Services a cease and desist letter asserting its right to use the Mark, and demanding that Kelly Services cease using the WORKWIRE name in connection with Kelly Services’ Apple App Store iPad application. Sixteen days later, Kelly Services responded to that letter by bringing suit against Creative Harbor in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. In its complaint, Kelly Services sought a declaratory judgment, inter alia, that: (1) it possessed superior rights to the Mark; (2) it had not infringed on Creative Harbor’s rights to the Mark; and (3) Creative Harbor’s rights to the Mark were invalid.
On May 2, 2014, Creative Harbor answered the complaint and filed counterclaims against Kelly Services. Relevant to this appeal, Creative Harbor sought a declaratory judgment that it had priority rights to the Mark over Kelly Services because it filed the Applications before Kelly Services began using the Mark in commerce.
In roughly mid-August 2014, when the Patent and Trademark Office published the Applications for opposition, Kelly Services promptly opposed the applications, notified the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (“TTAB”) of the pending action before the district court, and moved to stay the TTAB proceedings pending resolution of the instant suit. The TTAB consolidated the oppositions and stayed the proceedings.
II. Procedural History
Kelly Services sought discovery related to various issues in the case, including Creative Harbor’s intent to use the Mark in commerce with respect to each of the goods and services listed in the Applications. In response to Kelly Services’ document requests, Creative Harbor produced a PowerPoint presentation that included mock-up “wireframes” (a concept map outlining the elements of a software application) for a potential iPhone application.
Kelly Services also deposed Jurgensen as Creative Harbor’s representative pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6). During the deposition, Kelly Services asked Jurgensen a number of questions related to Creative Harbor’s plans to use the Mark in connection with the thirty-six goods and services identified in the Applications. In response to these questions, Jurgensen testified that Creative Harbor’s outside attorney, David Sharifi, prepared the Applications under Jurgen-sen’s instructions to “protect the mark” as to different products and services for which the Mark “could” eventually be used “in case the brand got bigger.” (R. 56-1, Jurgensen Dep. Vol I, PagelD #1477-78.) Accordingly, Jurgensen testified that he was not personally aware of the particular reasons why Sharifi included particular
Additionally, Jurgensen made several statements concerning the goods and services identified in the Applications. The court below summarized those statements as follows:
• Mr. Jurgensen said that the services and goods listed on the [Applications] ‘were defined with the idea of protecting my present and future exploration of this name—of this brand.’ (Id. Pa-gelD #1486);
• Mr. Jurgensen conceded that at the time his attorney drafted the [Applications] he (Jurgensen) ‘had clear ideas for some of them, and some of them were meant for future exploration.’ (Id. PagelD #1481);
• Mr. Jurgensen acknowledged that some of the listed ‘services might be of future importance’ and that they ‘might protect my endeavors in the future that I have.... ’ (Id. PagelD # 1477);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor stated that it intended to use the Mark with ‘computer game software,’ but Mr. Jurgensen testified that Creative Harbor did ‘not’ intend to use the Mark ‘with a game.’ (R. 56-2, Jurgen-sen Dep. Vol. II, PagelD #1507);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘professional credentialing verification services ... on behalf of others,’ but Mr. Jurgensen acknowledged that he simply ‘wanted to keep the option open to at some point do that.’ (Id. PagelD #1508-09);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘employee relations information services,’ but when asked about that listing, Mr. Jurgensen did not know what it ‘refers to.’ (Id. Pa-gelD #1512);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘employment staffing consultation services,’ and Mr. Jur-gensen explained that Creative Harbor included this' service because ‘maybe at some point [the WorkWire application] would have consulting in there, maybe some kind of career advisor, something like this.’ (Id.);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘business consulting’ services, but Mr. Jurgensen conceded that he ‘wanted to make sure [that] was there included [sic]’ because the company ‘could’ perhaps perform those services ‘at some point’ in the future. (Id. PagelD #1509.)
Kelly Servs., Inc. v. Creative Harbor, LLC,
On May 14, 2015, Creative Harbor moved for partial summary judgment seeking a declaration that it had priority to the Mark based on the Applications. Kelly Services opposed Creative Harbor’s motion on the ground that the Applications were invalid because Creative Harbor lacked bona fide intent to use the Mark on some of the goods and services listed ,in the Applications, as required by § 1(b) of the Lanham Act. The district court construed Kelly Services’ opposition as a cross-motion for summary judgment on the priority issue.
The district court delayed ruling on Kelly Services’ cross-motion. Instead, the district court ordered supplemental briefing as to whether it “should (1) decide the validity of the [Applications] or (2) leave that issue to the TTAB and stay this action pending the TTAB’s action on Kelly [Services’] Notices of Opposition.” Id. at 779. Thereafter, the parties conferred and stipulated that the district court should determine the Applications’ validity. The parties then filed supplemental briefing.
On October 16, 2015, the district court granted Kelly Services’ cross-motion for summary judgment, voiding the Applications in their entirety. Kelly Servs. II,
Having won priority as to the Mark, Kelly Services voluntarily dismissed its remaining claims without prejudice. The district court thereafter entered a final judgment declaring, inter alia, that: (1) “Creative Harbor’s trademark applications nos. 86198230 and 86198309 are invalid and void;” (2) “Kelly [Services] possesses priority to the trademark WORKWIRE that is superior to Creative Harbor;” and (3) “Creative Harbor has no valid or enforceable rights to the trademark WOR-KWIRE as against Kelly” Services. Kelly Servs., Inc. v. Creative Harbor, LLC, No. 14-cv-11249,
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Creative Harbor argues that: (1) the district court erred in concluding that it lacked a bona fide intent to use the Mark in commerce with respect to some of the goods and services listed in the Applications at the time the Applications were filed; and (2) even if Creative Harbor did lack bona fide intent as to certain goods and services, the Applications should not have been voided in their entirety. We address each of these arguments in turn.
I. Bona Fide Intent
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s partial grant of summary judgment. See, e.g., Coach, Inc. v. Goodfellow,
B. Applicable Legal Principles
Section 1 of the Lanham Act creates two procedural mechanisms through which individuals or businesses can apply to register a trademark. First, under § 1(a), trademark owners can apply for protection of marks already being “used in commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 1051(a)(1); see generally Aycock Eng’g, Inc. v. Airflite, Inc.,
Second, under § 1(b), a “person who has a bona fide intention, under circumstances showing the good faith of such person, to use a trademark in commerce may request registration of its trademark” by providing certain information and fees in an application to the Patent and Trademark Office. 15 U.S.C. § 1051(b)(1) (emphasis added). As the Federal Circuit has explained, while intent-to-use (“ITU”) applicants “can begin the registration process having only a sincere intent” to later use the mark in commerce,, “the [Lanham Act] also requires that applicants filing such intent-to-use applications must in due course either (i) file a verified statement of actual use of the mark, or (ii) convert the application into a use application.” M.Z. Berger & Co., Inc. v. Swatch AG,
Two of our sister Circuits and the TTAB have held that “lack of a bona fide intent is proper statutory grounds on which to challenge a trademark application.” M.Z. Berger,
Although the Lanham Act does not define what constitutes a bona fide intent to later use a mark in commerce, the Federal Circuit has explained “that the applicant’s intent must be demonstrable and more than a mere subjective belief.” M.Z. Berger,
“Neither the [Lanham Act] nor [its] legislative history indicates the specific quantum or type of objective evidence required to meet the bar” to show bona fide intent. M.Z. Berger,
For example, the applicant may have filed numerous intent-to-use applications to register the same mark for many more new products than are contemplated, numerous intent-to-use applications for a variety of desirable trademarks intended to be used on [a] single new product, numerous intent-to-use applications to register marks consisting of or incorporating descriptive terms relating to a contemplated new product, numerous intent-to-use applications to replace applications which have lapsed because no timely declaration of use has been filed, an excessive number of intent-to-use applications to register marks which ultimately were not actually used, an excessive number of intent-to-use applications in relation to the number of products the applicant is likely to introduce under the applied-for marks during the pendency of the applications, or applications unreasonably lacking in specificity in describing the proposed goods. Other circumstances may also indicatethe absence of genuine bona fide intent to actually use the mark.
Id. (quoting S. Rep. No. 100-515, at 28-24).
Further, one prominent practitioner has recently compiled a list of “affirmative activities that have been deemed indicative of the •presence of a bona fide intent to use,” including:
• conducting a trademark availability search;
• performing preparatory graphic design work or labeling on sales material for a product;
• using a mark in test marketing;
• testimony regarding informal, unwritten business plans or market research;
• obtaining necessary regulatory permits;
• obtaining a correlative domain name for the mark or setting up a website;
• making contacts with individuals who might help develop a business;
• correspondence mentioning the planned use of the mark;
• attempts to find licensees, including ones outside of the U.S.; [and]
• obtaining commercial space in which to perform the services.
See Sandra Edelman, Proving Your Bona Fides—Establishing Bona Fide Intent to Use Under the U.S. Trademark (Lanham) Act, 99 Trademark Rptr. 768, 781-82 (2009) (footnotes omitted) (emphasis in original).
On a motion for summary judgment in an action challenging an ITU application for lack of bona fide intent, the party opposing the application (“opposing party” or “opposer”) “has the initial burden of demonstrating by a preponderance of the evidence that [the] applicant lacked a bona fide intent to use the mark on the identified goods.” Bos. Red Sox Baseball Club LP v. Sherman,
C. Analysis
Creative Harbor argues that the evidence in the record shows that it had a bona fide intent to use the Mark in connection with each and every one of the thirty-six goods and services listed in the Applications at the time they were filed. We disagree.
1. Prime Facie Showing of Lack of Bona Fide Intent
As the party challenging Creative Harbor’s Applications, Kelly Services bore
As the district court correctly found, Jurgensen’s deposition testimony on behalf of Creative Harbor was sufficient to demonstrate by a preponderance of- the evidence that Creative Harbor lacked bona fide intent to use the Mark as to at least some of the goods and services identified in the Applications at the time the Applications were filed. The district court and Kelly Services specifically reference the following portions of Jurgensen’s deposition:
• Mr. Jurgensen testified that he asked his attorney to file the [Applications] in order ‘to protect this brand ... in case the brand got bigger; in case it diversifies a little bit.’ (R. 56-1, Pa-gelD #1478);
• Mr. Jurgensen said that the services and goods listed on the [Applications] ‘were defined with the idea of protecting my present and future exploration of this name—of this brand’ (Id. Pa-gelD #1486);
• Mr. Jurgensen conceded that at the time his attorney drafted the [Application] he (Jurgensen) ‘had clear ideas for some of them, and some of them were meant for future exploration.’ (Id. PagelD #1481);
• Mr. Jurgensen acknowledged that some of the listed ‘services might be of future importance’ and that they ‘might protect my endeavors in the future that I have — ’ (Id. PagelD # 1477);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor stated that it intended to use the Mark with ‘computer game software,’ but Mr. Jurgensen testified that Creative Harbor did ‘not’ intend to use the Mark ‘with a game.’ (R. 56-2, PagelD #1507);
• In the [Applications],. Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘professional credentialing verification services ,. on behalf of others,’ but Mr. Jurgensen acknowledged that he simply ‘wanted to keep the option open to at some point do that.’ (Id. PagelD #1508-09);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘employee relations information services,’ but when asked about that listing, Mr. Jurgensen did not know what it ‘refers to.’ (Id. Pa-gelD #1512);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘employment staffing consultation services,’ and Mr. Jur-gensen explained that Creative Harbor included this service because ‘maybe at some point [the WorkWire application] would have consulting in there, maybe some kind of career advisor, something like this.’ (Id.);
• In the [Applications], Creative Harbor said that it intended to use the Mark in connection with ‘business consulting’ services, but Mr. Jurgensen conceded that he ‘wanted to make sure [that] was there included’ because the company ‘could’ perhaps perform those services ‘at some point’ in the future. (Id. PagelD #1509.)
Kelly Servs. II,
These excerpts establish that Creative Harbor did not have a “firm” intention to use the Mark in connection with computer software games, professional credentialing verification services, employee rela
Creative Harbor challenges the district court’s conclusion that Kelly Services carried its initial burden of production by arguing that the district court was not entitled to consider Jurgensen’s deposition testimony. Creative Harbor appears to argue that Jurgensen’s deposition testimony was inadmissible hearsay, and that the district court erred in considering the testimony as an admission against interest.
However, Creative Harbor failed to raise its evidentiary challenge to the consideration of Jurgensen’s deposition testimony in its briefing before the district court; it has thus waived the right to make that argument on appeal. See, e.g., Bailey v. Floyd Cty. Bd. of Educ.,
2. Rebuttal Evidence
Once Kelly Services met its initial burden of production, Creative Harbor was required to come forward with either objective documentary evidence establishing its bona fide intent, or facts supporting a sound explanation as to why such evidence was lacking. Honda Motor Co.,
In its summary judgment briefing, and again on appeal, Creative Harbor marshals significant evidence demonstrating its bona fide intent. A representative sample of Creative Harbor’s evidence includes:
• Its hiring of a computer program development to to develop an employment-based software application for Apple’s “App Store.” (R. 48-33, App Developer Agreement);
• A trademark search it purportedly conducted to determine whether the WORKWTRE name was available. (R. 58-3, Jurgensen Supp. Decl., ¶ 19);
• The wireframes it developed for its proposed employment-based software application. (Id. ¶¶ 10-13);
• Its business plans for the proposed application. (R. 65-5, 5 Year Business Plan);
• Its obtaining of the www.work-wire. com domain name. (R. 48-20, Domain Registration); and
• Its press release regarding its employment-based software application. (R. 48-22, Press Release.)
The district court correctly acknowledged that Creative Harbor’s evidence “makes clear” that Creative Harbor had a bona fide intent as to some of the goods and services listed in the Applications. Kelly Servs. II,
As the district court correctly noted, “evidence that Creative Harbor intended to use the Mark with respect to some of the goods and services listed in the [Applications] does not contradict Kelly [Services’] evidence that Creative Harbor lacked a firm intent to use the Mark on several of the other services and goods listed in the [Applications.]” Id. (emphasis in original). Creative Harbor, for example, failed to come forward with any objective evidence showing a bona fide intent to use the Mark in connection with computer software games, professional credentialing verification services, employee relations information services, employment staffing consultation services, and business consulting services—the goods and services most fatally undermined by Jurgenseris deposition testimony. Nor did Creative Harbor offer any reasons excusing its failure to come forward with such objective evidence. The “absence of any documentary evidence on the part of an applicant regarding [bona fide] intent constitutes objective proof sufficient to prove that the applicant lacks a bona fide intention to use its mark in commerce.” Bos. Red Sox,
II. Remedy
The parties disagree as to the appropriate remedy for when an ITU applicant has a bona fide intent to use a mark in commerce on some, but not all, of the goods and services listed in her application. Kelly Services argues, and the district court found, that the correct remedy is to void the application in its entirety unless the applicant voluntarily deletes the challenged goods and services before the dispute is substantially litigated. Creative Harbor, by contrast, argues that the Applications should not be void, but rather the court should delete the offending goods and services from the application and allow the remainder to proceed towards registration. We agree with Creative Harbor that the district court erred in voiding the Applications in their entirety.
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s interpretation of another jurisdiction’s precedents, see Salve Regina Coll. v. Russell,
B. Analysis
Both parties marshal TTAB precedent in favor of their preferred remedy. Creative Harbor relies on three eases—Grand Canyon West Ranch LLC v. Hualapai Tribe,
In Grand Canyon, unlike Creative Harbor in this case, the applicant submitted a use-based trademark application under § 1(a) of the Lanham Act.
The next year, in Wet Seal, the TTAB considered Grand Canyon’s holding in the context of a § 1(b) ITU application. There, the opposing party challenged some of the
Finally, in Syndicat, the applicant conceded that it lacked bona fide intent as to certain goods listed in its § 1(b) ITU application.
Notwithstanding this authority, Kelly Services argues, and the district court agreed, that applicable rüle was articulated in Spirits International, B.V. v. S.S. Taris Zeytin Ve Zeytinyagi Tarim Satis Kooperatifleri Birligi,
In a footnote, the TTAB stated that “to the extent that opposer is successful in proving .... lack of bona fide intention to use the mark with respect to any of the goods in each class, specifically alcoholic beverages, the opposition against the classes in their entirety would be sustained.” Id. at *2 n.3. The- TTAB continued that “if [the] applicant believed that oppo-ser’s objection to registration of the mark was limited to the alcoholic beverages listed in the identification of each class[,] ... [the] applicant could have moved to delete alcoholic beverages from its identification if applicant did not have a bona fide intention to use its mark in commerce with respect to such goods, but did with respect to the non-alcoholic beverages.” Id.
At bottom, the parties’ dispute is centered on which TTAB statement should direct the remedy here: Spirits International’s statement that “to the extent that opposer is successful in proving ... lack of bona fide intention to use the mark with respect to any of the goods in each class ... the opposition against the classes in their entirety would be sustained,”
The disputed text and footnote of Spirits International reads as follows:
With respect to the lack of bona fide intent to use ground, opposer asserts that applicant has not produced any documents in response to opposer’s requests for production of documents that might support applicant’s allegations of a bona fide intention to use the mark MOSKINISI, nor has applicant provided any information of such an intent in response to opposer’s interrogatories seeking such information, and that on information and belief applicant does not and never has had a bona fide intention to use the mark MOSKINISI in commerce in connection with any alcoholic products.3
3 Although the notice of opposition refers specifically to the likelihood of confusion with respect to applicant’s use of the mark for alcoholic beverages, and applicant’s lack of a bona fide intention to use its mark for alcoholic beverages, the opposition was brought against all the goods in Classes 32 and 33. Therefore, to the extent that opposer is successful in proving likelihood of confusion or lack of a bona fide intention to use the mark with respect to any of the goods in each class, and specifically alcoholic beverages, the opposition against the classes in their entirety would be sustained. In this connection, if applicant believed that opposer’s objection to registration of the mark was limited to the alcoholic beverages listed in the identification of each class, it could have availed itself of the divisional procedure, as it did when it requested that Classes 1, 2, 3, 29, 30, 39 and 40 be divided out from the application. Or, with respect to the lack of a bona fide intent to use ground, applicant could have moved to delete alcoholic beverages from its identification if applicant did not have a bona fide intention to use its mark in commerce with respect to such goods, but did with respect to the non-alcoholic beverages. Although all of the goods in Class 33 are alcoholic beverages, applicant’s identified goods in Class 32 include both alcoholic beverages and nonalcoholic items. Opposer could then have determined whether it wished to contest the division and/or proceed with the opposition in connection with non-alcoholic beverages as well as alcoholic beverages, or whether a registration could have issued for the non-alcoholic beverages in Class 32. Compare, Grand Canyon West Ranch LLC v. Hualapai Tribe, 78 U,.S.P.Q.2d 1696 (TTAB 2006), in which an opposition was brought, inter alia, on the ground that the applicant had not used its mark on all of the identified services as of the filing date of the use-based application and the application was therefore void ab initio. Prior to trial applicant filed a motion to amend its identification to delete certain services for which the opposer claimed that applicant did not use the mark; the Board granted applicant’s motion, and denied opposer’s motion for summary judgment with respect to the services remaining in the application.
Spirits Int’l,
In full context, however, the more accurate reading is that the TTAB explained: (1) the consequences of the applicant’s failure to provide any rebuttal evidence in light of the TTAB’s well-established summary judgment procedure for bona fide intent challenges to ITU applications; and (2) how the applicant could have avoided having the bona fide intent challenge risk his trademark as applied to the non-alcohol beverages listed in the application.
Recall that the TTAB utilizes a two-step burden shifting framework: if the opposing party makes a prima facie showing that the applicant lacked bona fide intent, the burden shifts to the applicant to come forward with objective evidence showing bona fide intent, or a good reason why such evidence is lacking. Sprits Int’l,
The TTAB then explains how the applicant could have limited the scope of his exposure to just the alcoholic beverages listed in his application, ie., the goods the opposing party specifically focused on in its challenge. Id. The TTAB explains that the applicant could have either: (1) used the TTAB’s “divisional procedure” to separate the non-alcoholic and alcoholic beverages into distinct applications; or (2) voluntarily deleted the alcoholic goods listed in its application. Id. Nowhere in the opinion does the TTAB say that an applicant can only save an overbroad application by deleting the challenged goods and services before a tribunal litigates the applicant’s bona fide intent.
In sum, the TTAB voided the entire application in Spirits International because the opposing party put the entire application at issue in its opposition, made a prima fade showing that the applicant lacked bona fide intent, and the applicant failed to produce any evidence that it had a bona fide intent as to any of the goods and services listed in the application. Id. at *2 n.3, 3-4. As Creative Harbor correctly notes, Spirits International was nothing more than a straightforward application of the well-established principle that the “absence of any documentary evidence on the part of an applicant regarding [bona fide] intent constitutes objective proof sufficient to establish that the applicant lacks a bona fide intention to use its mark in commerce.” Id. at *3. The decision did not create a new rule that for § 1(b) ITU applications, as opposed to the § 1(a) use applications identified in Grand Canyon, overbroad applications are presumptively
Several considerations buttress our interpretation of Spirits International. First, contrary to the district court’s suggestion, this interpretation better harmonizes Spirits International with Grand Canyon. Grand Canyon’s core holding was that, in the context of § 1(a) use applications, the harsh remedy of voiding an application entirely was “inappropriate” in cases where “the mark was used on some of the identified goods or services as of the filing of the application.” Grand Canyon,
Second, the TTAB’s citation to Wet Seal’s language in Syndicat that “an application will not be deemed void for lack of a bona fide intention to use absent proof of fraud, or proof of a lack of bona fide intention to use the mark on all of the goods identified in the application, not just some of them,” casts significant doubt on the district court’s interpretation of Spirits International. Syndicat,
Finally, the district court’s interpretation would lead to perverse results. Imagine a hypothetical § 1(b) ITU applicant who submits an application listing 100 goods associated with the requested mark with a subjective intention to use the mark in connection with all of the goods. The hypothetical applicant has at least some objective documentary evidence supporting its bona fide intent as to all 100 goods, but a competitor nevertheless challenges the applicant’s bona fide intent as to ten of the goods in a declaratory action in federal district court. Under the district court and Kelly Services’ interpretation of Spirits International, the applicant is put in quite a quandary: he must either (1) voluntarily delete the challenged goods,
Kelly Services argues that Wet Seal and Syndicate . statements applying Grand Canyon’s reasoning in the context of § 1(b) ITU applications should not be followed as dicta. It is true that neither of those cases ultimately needed to apply a remedy, and therefore their statement that “an application will not be deemed void for lack of a bona fide intention to use absent proof of fraud, or proof of a lack of bona fide intention to use the mark on all of the goods identified in the application, not just some of them,” is dicta. See United States v. Wynn,
Kelly Services counters that if a court can simply delete the offending goods and services from an overbroad application, applicants have no incentive to carefully draft their applications, and will be able to simply “squat” on trademarks for up to three years at a time. While there is some persuasive force to this argument, this consequence seems less severe than the contrary rule. An applicant whose application is voided may, as in this case, lose his priority to the trademark forever as against a key competitor. Weighed against that outcome, the potential for abusive squatting is less compelling.
Accordingly, we hold that when a § 1(b) ITU applicant lacks bona fide intent as to some, but not all, of the goods and services listed in her application, the application should not be voided in its entirety absent fraud or other egregious conduct. Grand Canyon,
III. Remand
At oral argument, Creative Harbor requested that we eschew remand to the district court, and enter an order deleting the overbroad portions of the Applications. However, because the district court erroneously determined that any overbreadth in Creative Harbor’s Applications necessitated voiding the Applications in their entirety, it never generated a complete list of all of the goods and services for which Creative Harbor lacked bona fide intent. Likewise, the parties have not addressed which goods and services should be excised from the Applications in their appellate briefing. Because determining which items to eliminate from the Applications will likely involve a detailed examination of the record, and necessitate additional briefing from the parties, the district court is best positioned to conduct this inquiry. We therefore decline Creative Harbor’s request and remand this case to the district court to determine in the first instance which items should be deleted from the Applications. See, e.g., White v. Burlington N. & Santa Fe R.R. Co.,
On remand, the district court should evaluate each of the thirty-six goods and services listed in the Applications, and make individualized determinations as to whether Creative Harbor’s objective documentary evidence establishes a bona fide intention to eventually use those items in commerce.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s determination that Creative Harbor lacked bona fide intent as to some, but not all of the goods and services listed in the Applications. We hold, however, that the district court erroneously voided the Applications in their entirety, and VACATE the district court’s judgment. We REMAND with instructions for the district court to determine which goods and services were improperly included in the Applications, and excise the improper items. We do not limit the district court’s ability to conduct additional appropriate proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART AND FROM THE JUDGMENT
Notes
. Although both parties extensively cite TTAB decisions in their briefing before us, and essentially treat those decisions as controlling, neither party addresses the appropriate level of weight we should accord TTAB precedent. It appears that our sister Circuits have generally treated TTAB decisions as persuasive authority "entitled to respect” because of the TTAB’s "expertise in trademark disputes.” See, e.g., Rosenruist-Gestao E Servicios LDA v. Virgin Enters. Ltd.,
. The analogous situation in the § 1(b) ITU context would be where the applicant lacks bona -fide intent as to all of the goods and services identified in the application. See Spirits Int'l,
. Neither Kelly Services nor the dissent explain how a reviewing court would determine whether an applicant’s offer to delete the overbroad portions of his application is sufficient to avoid voiding the application entirely. For instance, at what point in time did Creative Harbor's opportunity to cure its Applications expire? Was it permitted to assert that it could prove bona fide intent as to some of the goods and services challenged by Kelly Ser
. The dissent notes that in Bryan Papé and Spello Group, LLC v. Me To We Social Enterprises, Inc.,
. In an appropriate case, where the disputed applications list a particularly large number of goods and services, district courts may find it feasible to determine bona fide intent by reference to representative examples. However, because the Applications at issue here list only thirty-six goods and services, we think the better approach in the instant case is for
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part and dissenting from the judgment.
While I agree with my colleagues that Kelly Services met its burden of production and that Creative Harbor failed to demonstrate a bona fide intent to use the Mark in connection with at least some of the goods and services listed in its ITU applications, I disagree with their proposed remedy and disposition of this case. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from the judgment.
Although the majority opinion provides a more-or-less accurate summary of the inconsistent landscape of TTAB precedent that has led to the dispute in this appeal, it overlooks some distinguishing facts that support the district court’s opinion. A more in-depth review of Grand Canyon would be helpful, even though that case concerned § 1(a) use applications. In Grand Canyon, the TTAB held that in the absence of fraud, “an applicant who bases its application on Section 1(a) (use in commerce) but who did not use the mark on some or all of the goods or services identified in the application may ‘cure’ this problem by amending its basis to Section 1(b) (intent to use).” Grand Canyon W. Ranch, LLC v. Hualapai Tribe,
Contrast this with Wet Seal, the case which the majority views as extending Grand Canyon’s holding to § 1(b) ITU applications. In Wet Seal, the TTAB, citing Grand Canyon, broadly stated that “an application will not be deemed void for lack of bona fide intention to use absent proof of fraud, or proof of a lack of bona fide intention to use the mark on all of the goods identified in the application, not just some of them.” The Wet Seal, Inc. v. F.D. Mgmt., 82 U.S.P.Q.2d 1629,
Within this context, the district court’s second holding was also correct: Spirits International remains truest to the import of Grand Canyon. This is because the TTAB in Spirits International clearly reiterated Grand Canyon’s remedy, in which the “applicant could have moved to delete alcoholic beverages from its identification if applicant did not have a bona fide intention to use its mark in commerce with respect to such goods, but did with respect to nonalcoholic beverages.” Spirits Int’l, B.V. v. S.S. Taris Zeytin Ve Zeytinyagi Tarim Satis Kooperatifleri Birligi,
Syndicat, which Creative Harbor and the majority believe dictates the majority’s remedy, only superficially conflicts with Spirits International or Grand Canyon. At the outset of its opinion in Syndicat, the TTAB noted, “During the oral hearing, counsel agreed that, should applicant’s application otherwise be in condition for issuance, applicant would accept judgment on this issue and deletion of ‘distilled spirits’ and ‘liquors’ from the application.” Syndicat Des Proprietaires Viticulteurs de Chateauneuf-Du-Pape v. Pasquier DesVignes, Opposition No. 91179408,
Spirits International essentially applied the Grand Canyon rule, and so the majority’s opinion that the district court “misread” Spirits International or failed to apply “the more forgiving rule articulated in Grand Canyon” does not make sense. (Maj. Op. at 871.) The district court expressly found that Creative Harbor’s “modest” offer to amend its applications to eliminate one service and one good did “not cure the material overbreadth in Creative Harbor’s listing of the goods and services on which it claimed an intent to use the Mark.” The district court continued, “Indeed, even with Creative Harbor’s proposed deletions, the Creative ITUs still list services (e.g., employee relations information services, business consulting, professional credentialing verification services) and goods (e.g., computer game software, computer hardware for integrating text and audio) on which Creative Harbor lacks a firm intent to use the Mark.”
TTAB precedent suggests that it is incumbent upon the applicant to amend its application to eliminate portions of its § 1(b) ITU application for which it cannot demonstrate bona fide intent, or else risk having the entire application voided. Creative Harbor refused to take advantage of this remedy. The district court therefore correctly voided both of Creative Harbor’s
. The majority opinion notes that while we are not bound by dicta, the dicta is not necessarily incorrect. (Maj. Op. at 874-75 (citing Nat‘1 Am. Ins. Co. v. United States,
. The TTAB also cited Spirits International in conjunction with Grand Canyon in a case involving a § 1(a) use application. See Ya-
