MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff Lever Brothers Company (Lever Brothers), an American subsidiary of a foreign manufacturer of trademarked goods, seeks a preliminary injunction directing defendant United States Customs Service (Customs Service) to exclude importation of so-called “gray market goods” under the Tariff Act of 1930, 19 U.S.C. § 1526(a) (1982), and the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1124 (1982).
Lever Brothers is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Unilever U.S., Inc., which is wholly-owned by Unilever N.V. (Unilever), a corporation organized under the laws of The Netherlands. Lever Brothers manufactures and distributes various household products including “Shield” deodorant soap and “Sunlight” light-duty liquid detergent. Lever Brothers owns the rights in this country to the “Shield” and “Sunlight” trademarks, and it recorded these trademarks with the Customs Service on October 1, 1986.
Due to Lever Brothers’ corporate relationship with Unilever, Lever Brothers is affiliated with a number of foreign registrants of the “Shield” and “Sunlight” trademarks. In particular, Lever Brothers Limited, 1 a corporation organized under the laws of the United Kingdom, produces “Shield” and “Sunlight” products for consumption in the United Kingdom. Many importers and distributors have diverted these products into the United States over the past several years. Lever Brothers now seeks to enjoin the Customs Service from allowing entry of these “gray market” goods into the United States, alleging that such importation violates the Tariff Act of 1930,19 U.S.C. § 1526(a) (1982) (section 526), and the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1124 (1982).
I
Section 526(a) of the Tariff Act makes it “unlawful to import into the United States any merchandise of foreign manufacture if such merchandise ... bears a trademark owned by a citizen of, or by a corporation or association created or organized within, the United States,” provided that the trademark is properly registered, “unless written consent of the owner of such trademark is produced at the time of making entry.” 19 U.S.C. § 1526(a) (1982). Section 526 subjects any such merchandise to seizure and forfeiture for violation of the customs laws, and subsection (c) of the same section provides that any person dealing in such merchandise may be enjoined from doing so or may be required to export or destroy the merchandise or remove or obliterate the trademark.
The pertinent Customs Service regulation excepts from seizure under section 526 imported articles bearing a trademark identical to the one held by a United States citizen or corporation when “[t]he foreign
*405
and domestic trademark or trade name owners are parent and subsidiary companies or are otherwise subject to common ownership or control.” 19 C.F.R. § 133.-21(c)(2) (1985). Lever Brothers’ motion challenges this regulation, asserting that it is invalid, and that the Customs Service must enforce section 526 of the Tariff Act of 1930, 19 U.S.C. § 1526 (1982), as its literal language appears to suggest. Similar relief was also sought by other litigants but was denied by the Court of International Trade in
Vivitar Corp. v. United States,
In light of the fact that the Court of Appeals for this Circuit in COPIAT 2 declined to grant injunctive relief and stayed its mandate (pending determination of the government’s petition for writ of certiorari), this Court is not bound by the COPIAT decision but may consider the substance of the issues presented by plaintiff’s motion. This Court concludes that the regulation is a reasonable exercise of the Customs Service’s enforcement discretion, for the following reasons.
First, the sole effect of the regulation is to define the Customs Service’s role in initiating administrative enforcement of section 526(a). The regulation does not limit the scope of the statute but only the Customs Service’s obligation to enforce it by excluding goods.
See Olympus,
Second, consideration of the administrative difficulties that would result from a decision to require the Customs Service to change its stance leads to the conclusion that the regulation constitutes a reasonable exercise of the Customs Service’s enforcement discretion. As both the
Vivitar
and the
Olympus
courts have noted, the variations in gray market importation are extensive and confusing.
Vivitar,
Third, congressional acquiescence in the Customs Service’s interpretation of section 526 supports these conclusions. The House Ways and Means Committee, in connection with amendments of section 526 in the Customs Procedural Reform and Simplification Act of 1978, Pub.L. No. 95-410, section 211, 92 Stat. 888, 903, explicitly recognized the Customs Service’s then twenty years of excluding gray market goods.
Lastly, since the Supreme Court has granted certiorari in COPIAT and thus is presently reviewing substantive issues which also underlie the injunctive relief requested in this case, the Court believes that the equities and sound judicial policy caution against the contemporaneous issuance of an affirmative injunction against the Customs Service. If the Court were to grant the injunction, the result would be that the Customs Service would be ordered to take action which the Supreme Court might, in short order, determine not to be required by law. It is presumably for similar reasons that the Court of Appeals stayed its mandate. In the exercise of its equitable discretion, therefore, and in the promotion of public interest, the Court will deny the relief requested by plaintiff pursuant to the Tariff Act.
II
Plaintiff fares no better under the Lanham Act. Section 42 of that statute, 15 U.S.C. § 1124 (1982), prohibits the importation of goods which “copy or simulate” a registered trademark. Whether a genuine foreign trademark can be deemed to “copy or simulate” a domestic trademark has been the subject of considerable debate.
In the seminal case of
A. Bourjois & Co. v. Aldridge,
Because the
Aldridge
decision was a one-sentence, per curiam opinion to which the opposing party did not object, several courts have narrowly construed the scope of that decision. In particular, this Court has held that if the domestic and foreign trademark holders are related to, rather than independent of, each other, section 42 only bars merchandise bearing counterfeit or spurious trademarks that “copy or simulate” genuine trademarks.
See COPIAT,
This conclusion is strengthened by the fact that the equities of the
Katzel
case, upon which the decision in
Aldridge
largely rested, are not present when the foreign and domestic trademark holders are related. In
Katzel,
the foreign manufacturer had sold its business and trademark in this country to the plaintiff and in France to the defendant, a company completely independent of plaintiff. The Supreme Court held that the Act barred importation of defendant’s goods into the United States even though defendant’s goods were “genuine.”
For the foregoing reasons, this Court holds that Lever Brothers’ motion for a preliminary injunction must be denied.
Notes
. Lever Brothers Limited is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Unilever PLC. Unilever PLC apparently is owned by Unilever N.V. Plaintiff and Unilever PLC share at least one senior level manager.
. In
COPIAT,
the Court of Appeals held that congressional intent underlying section 526 permits the prohibition of gray-market goods regardless of whether the domestic and foreign trademark holders are related entities and, in the alternative, that the Customs Service regulation is invalid as not constituting a reasonable interpretation of section 526(a).
. While Congress may delegate legislative authority to an agency in certain situations, there is no language in section 526 by which Congress delegated such authority to the Secretary of the Treasury in connection with administration of section 526. Without such authority, the Customs Service cannot affect the scope of a trademark owner’s rights under the statute.
Vivitar,
. It appears that the Court of Appeals for this Circuit declined to uphold the regulation as a reasonable exercise of enforcement discretion because it found that “the Customs Service has never purported to justify these regulations as an exercise of enforcement discretion.”
. The court said in Vivitar:
For example, the U.S. and foreign trademark rights may be owned by the same entity or by related companies, or by wholly separate companies. The goods of the U.S. owner may be imported and may be identical to, or different from, the parallel import. Goods may be produced in the U.S. by the U.S. trademark *406 owner and different goods produced abroad by the U.S. owner or by its affiliate. Services and warranties may or may not be the same here and abroad. A foreign licensee (i.e., related company) may be required by foreign law and may not be subject to meaningful control by the U.S. owner. A number of such actual variations are indicated by the cases cited in this opinion; others are discussed in Takamatsu, Parallel Importation of Trademarked Goods: A Comparative Analysis, 5 Wash.L.Rev. 433 (1982).
