MEMORANDUM AND ORDER *
Plaintiff Neles-Jamesbury, Inc. (“Plaintiff’ or “Neles-Jamesbury”), a valve manufacturer, has brought this action against Defendants Valve Dynamics, Inc. (“Valve Dynamics”), a valve reseller, and Bill’s Valves, Inc. (“Bill’s Valves”), a valve reeonditioner, alleging trademark infringement and unfair competition for Defendants’ resale of reconditioned valves originally manufactured by Neles-Jamesbury. Pending before the Court are Neles-Jamesbury’s Motion for [Partial] Summary Judgment Against Valve Dynamics [Doc. #35], Motion for [Partial] Summary Judgment Against Bill’s Valves [Doe. # 36], Motions to Strike Affidavits [Docs. # 103 and 104], and Motion for Leave to File a Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses [Doc. # 111]. In addition, Defendant Valve Dynamics has filed a Motion for a Second Alternative Dispute Resolution Proceeding [Doe. # 92],
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
For more than 35 years, Neles-Jamesbury has manufactured and sold industrial valves that are used to store and regulate the release of gases in such applications as petrochemical plants and fueling operations. Neles-Jamesbury has acquired a reputation for producing high quality valves and has achieved widespread product name recognition in its industry. 1 Its trademarks, which have been registered with the United States Patent and Trademark Office since 1968, 2 are cast on its valve bodies.
Defendant Bib’s Valves reconditions and resells secondhand Neles-Jamesbury valves that either have been previously used or have been bought and left unused. 3 The reconditioning process includes activities such as sandblasting, cleaning, refitting the valve seats, “machining” the valve faces, putting together components, and testing the valves. See Deposition of Vasilios Kallergis (President of Bill’s Valves), Exhibit D to Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment Against Bill’s Valves (“Motion Against Bill’s Valves”) [Doc. #36], at 22. When it resells the valves, Bill’s Valves retains the Neles-Jamesbury trademark on the valve bodies. It does not, however, consistently mark the valves to indicate that they have been reconditioned. Neles-Jamesbury alleges that there is no evidence that Bill’s Valves ever marks the valves it resells to identify itself as a reconditioner. Bill’s Valves, on the other hand, claims that it “usually” stamps the bodies of its valves with a marking that reads “RECON BVI” (abbreviation for “Reconditioned, Bill’s Valves, Inc.”) after the valves are sold but before they leave Bill’s Valves’ facility. Bill’s Valves has admitted, however, in its owner’s deposition, that its employees often fail to stamp the valves before they are resold. 4
Neles-Jamesbury alleges that Bill’s Valves’ practice of reconditioning and reselling these valves without effectively indicating to future purchasers that they are not firsthand Neles-Jamesbury valves produces a likelihood of confusion among buyers, who may attribute the secondhand valves’ inferior quality to perceived defects in Neles-Jamesbury’s manufacturing process. Neles-Jamesbury claims that such confusion harms its reputation as a high quality valve manufacturer and may even expose it to potential liability from purchasers of inferior quality reconditioned valves. It further alleges that such confusion may pose a physical danger to the public if secondhand valves, which no longer have the proper safety features, are mistakenly treated as firsthand valves. 5
This lawsuit arose after Neles-Jamesbury became aware of Defendants’ practices, when ten reconditioned Neles-Jamesbury valves that were installed in a fuel operating system for the Greater Cleveland Rapid Transit Authority (“GCRTA”) did not function properly. The end-user, GCRTA, who was apparently unaware that the valves were not factory new, 7 had received the valves through its general contractor as part of an installation within a natural gas fueling project. After GCRTA contacted Neles-Jamesbury to inquire about its problems with the valves, Plaintiff investigated and discovered that the valves had arrived at the GCRTA after passing through the hands of several intermediary distributors. The valves had been reconditioned by Bill’s Valves but had not been marked as reconditioned. Bill’s Valves then sold the valves to Valve Dynamics, who then delivered them to Wilson Technologies, Inc., a California corporation that was the contractor for the GCRTA project. 8
Concerned upon learning that reconditioned Neles-Jamesbury valves were being sold to end-users without markings indicating that they were no longer firsthand, Neles-Jamesbury conducted a test purchase by ordering two of its valves, one new and one reconditioned, from Valve Dynamics. Valve Dynamics sold the requested valves to Neles-Jamesbury. The new valve was, as requested, a factory new Neles-Jamesbury valve. The reconditioned valve, which had been reconditioned by Davis Valve, Inc., 9 was apparently not conspicuously and legibly marked as reconditioned.
Neles-Jamesbury brought this action against Bill’s Valves and Valve Dynamics, alleging that Defendants, who are not authorized Neles-Jamesbury distributors, sold used valves still bearing the Neles-Jamesbury trademark as “new” and unlawfully failed to mark the valves as reconditioned.
10
In its pending Motions for Summary Judgment, Neles-Jamesbury has requested a ruling from this Court that it is entitled to judgment against both Defendants on its claims for trademark infringement and for unfair competition. 12 Defendants strenuously oppose the Motions, arguing that a number of factual issues preclude judgment as a matter of law on these claims.
II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
In deciding a motion for summary judgment, the Court must determine whether “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317, 322-23,
The party moving for summary judgment has the initial burden of demonstrating the absenpe of a material fact issue with respect to those issues on which the movant bears the burden of proof at trial. For any matter on which the nonmovant carries the burden of proof at trial, however, the movant may, by merely pointing to the absence of evidence supporting the essential elements of the nonmovant’s case, shift to the nonmovant the burden of demonstrating by competent summary judgment proof that there is an issue of material fact so as to warrant a trial.
Transamerica Ins. Co. v. Avenell,
The nonmovant’s burden may not be satisfied by conclusory allegations, unsubstantiated assertions, metaphysical doubt as to the facts, or a scintilla of evidence.
Douglass v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n,
III. DISCUSSION
Neles-Jamesbury bases its claim for trademark infringement on the federal Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1114(1),
13
and on Texas common law.
See
Counts I and II of Complaint, at 11-13. It bases its claim for unfair competition on Texas common law.
See
Count IV of Complaint, at 13. These two causes of action require the same standard and type of proof.
See Marathon Manufacturing Co. v. Enerlite Products Corp.,
“The gravamen for any action of trademark infringement or common law unfair competition is whether the challenged mark is likely to cause confusion.”
Marathon Manufacturing,
Under the well-established test in this Circuit, the factfinder must consider
In determining whether Defendants created a likelihood of confusion, the factfinder must consider and weigh the importance of all of the factors listed here; there is no firm rule requiring that a specific number, or even a majority, of these factors be satisfied.
17
The Court believes that Neles-Jamesbury has submitted extremely strong evidence supporting Defendants’ liability with respect to most of these factors. How
1. Strength of Plaintiff’s Trademark
As noted by the Brandtjen court, the strength of a manufacturer’s trademark is not particularly relevant to a case involving reconditioned products 18 because, no matter how strong or weak the trademark, there is no question that the defendant sellers are deriving whatever advantage may attach to use of the plaintiffs mark. In any ease, this factor is not in issue here because Defendants in this action do not dispute that Neles-Jamesbury has developed widespread recognition of its trademark throughout the valve industry. 19
2. Similarity of Design Between Parties’ Trademarks
In a case of reconditioned products still bearing the manufacturer’s original trademark, the allegedly infringing trademark is undisputedly identical to the original. Thus, similarity of design between the parties’ trademarks, like the strength of Plaintiffs trademark, is not a disputed, or relevant, consideration in the case at bar.
See Brandtjen,
3.Similarity of the Products
In this case, the parties’ products are not only similar but are in fact identical, except in that Defendants’ valves are reconditioned versions of Plaintiffs original valves. Thus, it appears that Plaintiff has a strong argument that, in the absence of prominent markings indicating that reconditioned valves have in fact been reconditioned, the valves are so similar 20 that buyers of the reconditioned valves are likely to be confused regarding whether the valves they purchase are factory new, and thus supplied directly through Neles-Jamesbury, or are reconditioned by a seller such as Bill’s Valves.
However, by Plaintiffs own admission, there is a factual question regarding the extent of similarity between the Neles-Jamesbury factory new valves and Bill’s Valves’ reconditioned valves. Neles-Jamesbury’s Senior Engineer testified that when he inspected one of the malfunctioning valves installed in the GCRTA project, he found a number of glaring modifications and defects in the valve.
21
If Neles-Jamesbury has as strong a reputation as it claims it has for producing high quality valves, then such evidence, that Defendants’ reconditioned valves
4. Identity of Retail Outlets and Purchasers
Defendants’ principal argument in response to Plaintiffs claims is that the valve industry contains two distinct markets, a primary market for factory new valves and a secondary market for reconditioned valves. Defendants contend, as the foundation for their defense, that their customers are not the general public, but instead are specialized engineering companies who are sophisticated consumers, knowledgeable about industrial valves and likely to know when they purchase valves which market they are entering. 23 Plaintiff, on the other hand, labels absurd Defendants’ concept that there are two different markets and contends instead that the same purchasers may buy both factory new valves from Neles-Jamesbury and reconditioned valves from Defendants. Plaintiff further contends that, unless reconditioned valves are clearly marked as such, even a sophisticated buyer would be unlikely to know that a valve is not factory new.
This issue is a question requiring further factual development at trial. Other than the parties’ own descriptions of the state of the valve market and Plaintiff’s controverted evidence regarding one allegedly confused purchaser, the GCRTA, the record does not contain sufficient evidence regarding the identities and expectations of the parties’ potential customers for the Court to determine the validity of Defendants’ “two market” argument. 24
5. Similarity of Advertising Media
The parties have presented virtually no evidence to the Court regarding how they
6. Defendants’ Intent
Intent to confuse buyers is an important factor that bears heavily on the analysis of whether Defendants have in fact created a likelihood of confusion with respect to then-reconditioned valves. 25 Plaintiff has submitted persuasive evidence that Bill’s Valves intended for customers to believe its reconditioned valves were actually factory new Neles-Jamesbury valves. 26 In contrast, Valve Dynamics has persuasively argued that it did not intend to create any confusion but that any confusion it may have caused was not of its own making since it is merely a reseller and does not ever recondition or alter valves. Thus, Valve Dynamics argues that its wrongdoing, if any, was inadvertent.
Because intent or lack of intent is only one factor in this multi-part analysis which the factfinder must consider in determining whether Defendants are liable for trademark infringement and unfair competition and because “summary judgment is rarely proper when an issue of intent is involved,”
Guillory v. Domtar Industries, Inc.,
7. Actual Confusion
Neles-Jamesbury strenuously argues that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on its trademark infringement and unfair competition claims because it has submitted proof of actual confusion by the GCRTA, an end-user purchaser of unmarked reconditioned Neles-Jamesbury valves. Neles-Jamesbury is correct that actual confusion is the best evidence of likelihood of confusion.
See Fuji Photo Film,
Because the parties have not submitted to the Court any specific evidence regarding the full scope of their sales, the Court cannot determine whether Plaintiffs purported evidence of actual confusion, regarding the ten valves sold to the GCRTA, was especially significant. 29 Thus, the extent of actual confusion is a genuine question for trial.
8. The Degree of Care Exercised by Potential Purchasers
As to the factor regarding the degree of care exercised by potential purchasers, Defendants argue, again, that there are two distinct valve markets and that valve buyers, who are sophisticated consumers, know which market they are entering when they make their purchases. However, as demonstrated by the winding chain of distribution of the valves installed in the GCRTA project, it appears that valves may often pass through several intermediaries before reaching their end-user. This occurrence also demonstrates that a valve may be installed as an unidentified or relatively minor component of a complex piece of equipment and thus receive little or no scrutiny by the end-user.
Because the valves may pass through several layers of sales intermediaries, Defendants will have a difficult time proving that, without markings clearly imprinted on the valves themselves, potential purchasers (other than Neles-Jamesbury) will be able to identify the source of the valves. 30 Moreover, it is not apparent from this record that sellers of reconditioned valves maintain, or retain for any substantial length of time, records necessary to pass along accurate information regarding the nature or source of their valves’ reconditioning. Notwithstanding these evidentiary difficulties, Defendants’ argument regarding the sophistication of their customers raises a fact question on the potential degree of care factor.
9. The Extent and Nature of Changes Made to the Product
The factor regarding “extent and nature of changes made to the product” overlaps with, but addresses more specifically in this case, the issue raised by the third factor discussed above, “similarity of the products.” When the
Brandtjen
court added this ninth factor to the traditional list, it was considering a ease in which “the reconditioning of or repair to a product [is] so extensive that is would be
The parties have presented the Court with only conclusory statements regarding the extent of the changes made by Bill’s Valves’ reconditioning process. Consideration of this factor, therefore, requires more elaborate evidentiary proof that can only be adequately developed at a trial.
10. The Clarity and Distinctiveness of the Labeling on the Reconditioned Product
In its Motions, Neles-Jamesbury places the greatest emphasis on its argument that Defendants did not adequately mark the reconditioned valves, as it claims Defendants are required to do under the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Champion Spark Plug,
As the Brandtjen court concluded from its analysis of Champion Spark Plug, evidence that Defendants did not adequately mark the reconditioned product will support Plaintiffs claim for Defendants’ liability insofar as such evidence may help convince the factfinder that Defendants’ practice created a likelihood of confusion among buyers. Neles-Jamesbury’s specific arguments regarding what marking Defendants should make on the valves will also be useful in determining a proper injunctive remedy, if liability is in fact found in this ease. 34 However, as noted above, these arguments and evidence do not in themselves conclusively establish Defendants’ liability.
11. The Degree to Which Any Inferior Qualities Associated With the Reconditioned Product Would Likely to Be Identified by the Typical Purchaser With the Manufacturer
In the Court’s view, this factor, which combines elements of a number of the other factors discussed above, addresses the crux of Neles-Jamesbury’s claims against Defendants in this action. For reasons described throughout this opinion, this issue is clearly a question of fact that must be determined by the jury at trial.
Conclusion
Plaintiffs Motions for Summary Judgment each are denied since there are numerous
IV. OTHER PENDING MOTIONS
A. Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File a Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses
The Court grants Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File a Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses [Doc. # 111]. Plaintiffs Motion to Strike is deemed filed the day this Order is entered on the Court’s docket. Defendants shall respond to this Motion within ten (10) business days of entry of this Order.
However, many of Defendants’ affirmative defenses have been implicated in their extensive arguments in response to Plaintiffs Motions for Summary Judgment and therefore have been addressed by the Court’s foregoing analysis. In addition, because Valve Dynamics has already briefed and argued the merits of many issues raised by its affirmative defenses, the Court supplements the foregoing conclusions with the following.
Valve Dynamics, in summary, argues as its first, second, third, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and fifteenth affirmative defenses that it cannot be liable for trademark infringement or unfair competition because it does not itself recondition valves, because it sells what its sophisticated customers request and want, because it has no knowledge of the ultimate use of the products it sells, because it never received any complaints about the valves sold in 1994 that ultimately reached the GCRTA, because it has had no knowledge of any valves it has sold being defective, because it has followed “custom and practice” in making sales as it has, because it often does not even know whether or not the valves it passes along have been reconditioned, and because it has never intended to deceive anyone or willfully violate the law. None of these arguments in and of themselves are legally viable defenses to liability. At best,- some are factual issues that may bear on the likelihood of confusion analysis. Otherwise, they are not viable arguments and may not be asserted at trial.
Valve Dynamics has correctly noted that Neles-Jamesbury has primarily cited cases that involve parties who reconditioned or altered the plaintiffs’ products, not defendants who served only as resellers in a chain of sales-of those products. However, Valve Dynamics has provided no legal authority for its contention that resellers in the chain of distribution should be excluded from liability for trademark infringement and unfair competition. On the contrary, the plain language of the Lanham Act clearly implicates all parties who
“use
[an infringing mark] in commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 1114(1). Although the Court has found no Fifth Circuit cases directly on point to this issue, courts in other circuits have held that intermediary sellers, in Valve Dynamics’ position, can be liable for trademark infringement and unfair competition.
See El Greco Leather Products Co., Inc. v. Shoe World, Inc.,
Valve Dynamics argues (like Bill’s Valves.) that it has had no intent to create any confusion. This argument, however, addresses merely one of the factors that the factfinder must consider in determining liability. In short, it is no defense that Valve Dynamics acted in good faith or was itself confused about the history of the valves that it sold.
See Fuji Photo Film,
Nor is it a defense that Valve Dynamics merely gives its customers what they want—inexpensive or price discounted valves. Even if Valve Dynamics’ customers request and are provided with reconditioned valves, if the valves are not clearly labeled as reconditioned, subsequent buyers farther down the distribution chain may be confused about whether the valves are reconditioned or. factory new. Despite vociferous argu
Because some of the likelihood of confusion factors relate specifically to the reconditioning process, the discussion in Section III occasionally refers only to Bill’s Valves. (See, for example, the ninth factor, “the extent and nature of changes made to the product.”) However, as the preceding analysis indicates, all of the factors must be considered in determining both Bill’s Valves and Valve Dynamics’ liability for trademark infringement and unfair competition. Even if Bill’s Valves initially created liability by reconditioning the valves, Valve Dynamics may nevertheless still be liable for distributing, even unknowingly, the infringing product, if Valve Dynamics’ own conduct (even its mere sale of the product) is found also to create a likelihood of confusion among buyers. 35
Thus, it appears to the Court, that Valve Dynamics’ first, second, third, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and fifteenth affirmative defenses are not legally viable defenses to Plaintiff’s claims. Valve Dynamics will be allowed to argue at trial only factual matters to the extent they relate to the likelihood of confusion factors discussed in Section III. To the extent Bill’s Valves asserts comparable defenses, this Order applies to Bill’s Valves as well. To the extent Defendants contest this ruling, Defendants must enumerate their specific arguments in their responses to Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike, and each argument must be accompanied by applicable legal authorities.
B. Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike Affidavits
In Plaintiff’s Reply [Doc. # 103] to Bill’s Valves’ Response [Doc. # 101], Plaintiff objects to and moves to strike the affidavit of Bill’s Valves’ expert, Bob Ramsey, Final Attachment to Bill’s Valves’ Response. Plaintiff bases its Motion on allegations that Mr. Ramsey is currently on probation for a forgery conviction and is not an expert regarding valve reconditioning and that Mr. Ramsey’s testimony is speculative, conclusory, and unsupported by the summary judgment evidence. The Court denies the motion as to Mr. Ramsey as moot since the Court did not rely on his testimony in considering Plaintiff’s Motions. For the reasons discussed supra in Section IV.A., the defenses as to which Mr. Ramsey testified have little or no legal merit.
In Plaintiff’s Reply [Doe. # 104] to Valve Dynamics’ Response [Doc. # 100], Plaintiff also requests the Court to strike the affidavits of George McLeod, Janet Falco McLeod, and Brenda Boren, the individual owners and officers of Valve Dynamics who have averred they have personal knowledge of its business. Plaintiff contends that various paragraphs of the affidavits are irrelevant, self-serving, conclusory, speculative, and incompetent summary judgment evidence. The Court denies this request as overbroad and largely without merit. To the extent specific statements in the questioned paragraphs appear to be
C. Motion for Second ADR Proceeding
Defendants Valve Dynamics and related individuals have moved for a second mediation [Doc. # 92] on the ground that Neles-Jamesbury failed to bring a corporate representative to the mediation that was conducted on November 13, 1996, as a result of the Court’s Order of October 31, 1996. Plaintiff was represented by Mark Petersen, a Massachusetts attorney who serves as outside counsel to Plaintiff. In contrast, Defendants each had corporate officers and insurance carriers physically present to participate in the negotiation.
The Court concludes that another mediation is necessary in this case. All parties must bring corporate officers with authority sufficient to waive or pay the entire sums sought by Plaintiff in this ease, if such individuals believe, in their discretion, after engaging in the mediation process that such action is warranted. In other words, each corporate representative (or insurance representative) must have full authority to negotiate the claims in this case. The cost of the mediation shall be divided one-third to each of the corporate parties. The parties shall obtain the services of Mr. Ronald G. Bliss, the mediator who handled the first mediation.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, it is
ORDERED that Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment against Valve Dynamics [Doc. #35] is DENIED. It is further
ORDERED that Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment against Bill’s Valves [Doc. # 36] is DENIED. It is further
ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion for Leave to File a Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses [Doc. # 111] is GRANTED. It is further
ORDERED that Plaintiff’s Motions to Strike Affidavits [Docs. # 103 and 104] are DENIED. It is further
ORDERED that Valve Dynamics’ Motion for a Second Alternative Dispute Resolution Proceeding [Doc. # 92] is GRANTED.
Notes
This Memorandum and Order supersedes the Court's Memorandum and Order issued on January' 22, 1997 [Doc. # 116]. The Court is reissuing its opinion in order to make several minor corrections to the original version on matters not disputed at trial.
. According to a 1995 study, Neles-Jamesbuty valves were ranked first in name awareness and customer preference in the chemical industry. See Exhibit 11 to Plaintiff’s First Amended Verified Complaint (“First Amended Complaint”) [Doc. #19] ("Ball Valves: A Study of Brand Awareness/Preference in the Chemical Industry,” Chemical Processing, November 1995).
. Plaintiff's predecessor corporation, Jamesbury, registered its trademark in 1968, and Neles-Jamesbury registered its trademark in 1992. See Exhibit 5 to First Amended Complaint (Certificates of Renewal and Registration).
. According to Defendant Valve Dynamics, a construction company will often order more valves than it needs so that a construction project will not be delayed due to a shortage of valves. When the project is finished, the company will sell, or apparently abandon, these surplus valves. Valve reconditioners acquire these valves, which have not been used but which have often been left lying around at construction projects, and sell them as "surplus new” valves.
. See Deposition of Vasilios Kallergis, Exhibit D to Motion Against Bill’s Valves, at 131 (Q: "Do you [stamp the valves]? A: Sometimes. Not all the time[].... Q: Why don’t you stamp all the valves ‘reconditioned’? A: Because we forgot— we forgot sometimes”).
. Neles-Jamesbury contends in particular that a series of its valves are "fire-safe,” which means that they can be used in potentially. hazardous applications involving, for example, poisonous or
.Valve Dynamics argues that it participates in a “secondary" resale valve market that employs different terminology from the "primary'' market, which consists of transactions in which the seller is a valve manufacturer or its authorized distributor. Specifically, Valve Dynamics contends that in the secondary market, a "new” valve may refer either to a "factory new” valve sold directly by the manufacturer or its authorized distributor or to a "surplus new" valve which has been purchased previously and "may or may not have been repaired.” See Opposition of Defendant Valve Dynamics, Inc. to Plaintiff's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment ("Valve Dynamics’ Response”) [Doc. # 100], at 5. Rather than adopt this controverted terminology, the Court will simply refer to valves sold directly by Neles-Jamesbury or its authorized distributor as “factory new” and valves that pass through Bill’s Valves or another reconditioner as "reconditioned.” Bill's Valves has acknowledged, during oral argument, that because it is a reconditioner, all valves that pass through its control are "reconditioned,” even if Bill’s Valves does not actually do anything to alter them.
. See Declaration of Anthony Huszcza (GCRTA Station Engineer), Exhibit 14 to Motion Against Valve Dynamics (“At the time the valves were installed, they appeared to me to be new valves”).
. Wilson Technologies subcontracted the acquisition of the valves to Specialty Valve, a Canadian corporation. Specialty Valve ordered the ten valves from Valve Dynamics, which shipped them directly to Wilson Technologies in California.
. Davis Valve, Inc., is not a party to this lawsuit. However, Plaintiff's predecessor, Jamesbury, has previously brought suit against Davis Valve, Inc., based on similar grounds to those alleged in this action. That suit resulted in a settlement between Jamesbury and Davis Valve. See Jamesbury Corp. v. Valve Liquidators, et al., No. H-86-2115 (S.D. Tex. filed May 20, 1986).
. Accompanying its Answer to the Complaint, Bill's Valves filed a "Counterclaim” against Neles-Jamesbury, which was in substance a Motion to Dismiss [Doc. # 23]. Thereafter, Plaintiff filed a Motion to Dismiss Counterclaim of Bill’s Valves for Failure to State a Claim [Doc. #38]. On July 18, 1996 and on August 27, 1996, this
. The Court granted the orders and allowed the seizures based on Plaintiff's argument that there were urgent circumstances necessitating such relief. Specifically, Plaintiff alleged that Defendants' sale of unmarked valves that were not firesafe had created an imminent risk of personal injury.
. Neles-Jamesbury does not dispute that its other causes of action require a trial. The Court has scheduled a trial to begin in this case on February 18, 1997.
. Section 1114(1) provides in part that:
Any person who shall, without the consent of the registrant—
(a) use in commerce any reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation of a registered mark in connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution, or advertising of any goods or services on or in connection with which such use is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive ... shall be liable in a civil action by the registrant for the remedies hereinafter provided.
It is well established that this provision applies not only to cases in which an alleged infringer
creates
the reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or imitation of a registered mark, but also to cases in which a defendant modifies the plaintiff's product without removing the plaintiff's own rendition of its registered mark.
See, e.g., Brandtjen & Kluge, Inc. v. Prudhomme,
. Neles-Jamesbury insists that this Court may find likelihood of confusion as a matter of law, but it supports this claim with only authority from other Circuits, district courts in this Circuit, and a 1968 Fifth Circuit case,
Beef/Eater Restaurants, Inc.
v.
James Burrough Limited,
In Marathon Manufacturing,
for example, a 1985 case, the Fifth Circuit held that it was improper for the district court to determine likelihood of confusion in a trademark infringement case on a motion for summary judgment.
In
Society of Financial Examiners,
the Fifth Circuit in 1995 reversed a district court for holding that the "fact-intensive” likelihood of confusion inquiry could be conducted without a trial.
Although both critical determinations [including likelihood of confusion] were factual, the district court believed summary judgment appropriate. Whereas general principles of summary judgment assail this conclusion, the explicit guidance of Marathon Manufacturing ... decimates it.
Society of Financial Examiners,
. Both of these Supreme Court cases were decided before the effective date of the Lanham Act, July 5, 1947. However, other courts have nevertheless looked to
Champion Spark Plug
for guidance in deciding trademark infringement cases brought after passage of the Act.
See, e.g., Texas Pig Stands, Inc. v. Hard Rock Cafe Intern., Inc.,
. The Court agrees with the
Brandtjen
court’s recommendation that "a rebuilding case is sufficiently unique to trademark infringement and unfair competition jurisprudence that [these] additional considerations should become standard in these cases.”
Brandtjen,
.In justifying its incorporation of the three additional factors into the traditional Fifth Circuit eight-factor trademark infringement test, the Brandtjen court noted that:
There is ... considerable latitude available to the factfinder in considering and weighing the traditional octinaiy factors. The elements are recognized in this circuit as being nonexclusive, see, e.g. Conan Properties, Inc. v. Conans Pizza, Inc.,752 F.2d 145 , 149 (5th Cir.1985), no one factor is dispositive and different factors will weigh more heavily from case to case depending on the particular facts and circumstances involved, Marathon Mfg. Co. v. Enerlite Prods. Corp.,767 F.2d 214 , 218 (5th Cir.1985) (per curiam), and the plaintiff need not support a claim by a majority of the factors, Armco, Inc. v. Armco Burglar Alarm Co., Inc.,693 F.2d, 1155 , 1159 (5th Cir.1982). Because the weight to be given to the various factors is a matter for the factfinder, "as long as it appears that all relevant proffered evidence was considered and that no impermissible inferences were drawn from that evidence, the factfinder’s determination will not be overturned unless clearly erroneous.” Falcon Rice Mill, Inc. v. Community Rice Mill, Inc.,725 F.2d 336 , 345 n. 9 (5th Cir.1984).
Brandtjen,
.
See
. Plaintiff, however, has the right to present evidence regarding this factor at trial since Defendants’ admitted recognition of the strength of the trademark may be probative of another factor, their intent to infringe. Specifically, evidence of the strength of the trademark may suggest the inference that Defendants intentionally created confusion among buyers in order to capitalize on Neles-Jamesbury's strong reputation as a high quality valve manufacturer.
. In fact, Plaintiff has offered evidence that Bill’s Valves’ reconditioning process is specifically designed to make the valves appear as similar to original Neles-Jamesbury valves as possible. Bill’s Valves has admitted that it intentionally painted the handles of its reconditioned valves the same color as the handles on factory new Neles-Jamesbury valves. See Deposition of Vasilios Kallergis, Exhibit E to Motion Against Bill’s Valves, at 268 ("Q: [W]hy would you spray paint blue on those handles? A: Because ... Jamesbuiy [handles have a] blue color”).
.These defects included a mislocated and upside down Neles-Jamesbury nameplate; "burred edges” on the valve insert; tool marks on the unpolished ball from the valve; and non-authentic valve seats that had smooth, rather than angled, inner contours.
See
Affidavit of Bruce Wetherbee, Exhibit 7 to Plaintiff's Motion for Summary Judgment Against Valve Dynamics ("Motion Against Valve Dynamics”) [Doc. # 35], at 4-5. In addition, the Neles-Jamesbury representative who inspected the reconditioned valve that Plaintiff ordered directly from Valve Dynamics testified that this valve had prominent defects including a handle attached backwards, an insert cover not marked to indicate whether the valve was locked or unlocked, an overlapping "burr” on the edges between the insert and the valve body, and a smooth, unauthentic valve seat. See
. Valve Dynamics alleges that it quoted prices to Specialty Valves of $997 for a factory new Neles-Jamesbury valve and $565 for a reconditioned Neles-Jamesbury valve. See Valve Dynamics' Response, at 7.
. The Court notes that Defendants’ case cannot rest solely on the argument that their customers are "sophisticated consumers.” In
Fuji Photo Film,
the Fifth Circuit reversed a district court for deciding, following a bench trial, that the defendant had refuted the plaintiff's trademark infringement claim when the court found the "most decisive factor” to be the sophistication of the defendant's buyers and the high cost of the product.
We may assume the purchasers of presses to be sophisticated about printing; we may also assume that presses, which cost tens of thousands of dollars, are not bought on impulse, but rather with a great deal of care. We may not assume that these facts are determinative ____
It is true that in most instances technicians would use the products of either parly and they are a discriminating group of people but that does not eliminate the likelihood of purchaser confusion here. Being skilled in their own art does not necessarily preclude their mistaking one trademark for another.
Id,
at 595-96 (quoting
Wincharger Corp. v. Rinco, Inc.,
.Even conclusive proof of the existence of two markets may be of limited help to Defendants in this case. In
World Carpets,
the court, affirming
[Defendant] asserts that since the parties aim at capturing different markets, retail vis-a-vis wholesale, confusion could not exist since there was no competition even within the carpet industry.
Trademark jurisprudence, however, has long recognized that the lack of competitiveness is not always dispositive of the question of confusion and hence infringement....
If [Defendants] were permitted to continue to use the infringing mark, a choice on their part to market products of a lower grade or standard than the products marketed by [Plaintiff] could ultimately undermine the reputation of [Plaintiff] ... Since the likelihood of a second user’s practices adversely affecting the first user's reputation has been recognized as the basis for an actionable wrong, a fortiori an action will lie if the mere fact that a second user's presence as a retailer adversely affects the first user’s competitive ability as a wholesaler.
World Carpets,
.
See Amstar Corp.,
. See e.g., supra note 20.
. In
Amstar Corp.,
the Fifth Circuit reversed a district court’s finding, following a bench trial, of likelihood of confusion in a trademark infringement case, despite the fact that the plaintiff sub
In view of the fact that both plaintiff’s and defendants’ sales currently run into the millions of dollars each year, these isolated instances of actual confusion are insufficient to sustain a finding of likelihood of confusion ... Indeed, the fact that only three instances of actual confusion were found after nearly 15 years of extensive concurrent sales under the parties’ respective marks raises a presumption against likelihood of confusion in the future.
. However, it appears that Bill’s Valves does not consistently mark its valves in such a way that future buyers could identify Bill’s Valves as the source of the confusion. Thus, even if customers farther down the distribution chain experienced problems with the reconditioned valves, there is little likelihood that the end-user would inform Bill’s Valves of that fact.
. Defendants insistently argue that, because Plaintiff has produced evidence of actual confusion with respect to only ten valves, Plaintiff's entire claim for trademark infringement and unfair competition is limited to those ten valves. This argument is utterly without merit. As indicaled in the discussion above,
actual confusion
is merely evidence supporting Plaintiff's ultimate burden of showing that Defendants' actions created
likelihood of confusion
among potential valve purchasers. Thus, Plaintiff may obtain whatever remedy to which it is entitled for
all
of the valve transactions for which it can prove at trial that Defendants created a likelihood of confusion. Plaintiff is not limited to a remedy for only the transactions in which it can prove actual confusion.
See World Carpets,
.Even if buyers are not likely to be confused that the valves have been reconditioned. Defendants may still be liable if customers mistakenly believe that Neles-Jamesbury authorizes or endorses' Defendants’ activities.
Fuji Photo Film,
. Bill’s Valves admits that when it does mark its reconditioned valves, it does so by stamping only the phrase "RECON BVI” on the valve bodies in letters that are 3/i6 of an inch tall. (In contrast, the Neles-Jamesbuiy trademark appears on the valve bodies in large lettering easily discernible from a distance.) Having had the opportunity to view a sample marked valve following oral argument, the Court believes that it is highly unlikely that anyone who is not specifically looking for it would notice Bill’s Valves’ marking.
In the cited cases, after findings of infringement were entered, defendants were ordered to make much clearer markings than Bill's Valves has even claimed to make. In Champion Spark Plug, the Supreme Court stated that reconditioning "is wholly permissible so long as the manufacturer is not identified with the inferior qualities of the product resulting from wear and tear or the reconditioning by the dealer,"331 U.S. at 130 ,67 S.Ct. at 1139 . Before the lawsuit, each reconditioned plug had, stamped on it "in small letters, blue on black, the word 'Renewed,' which at time [sic] is almost illegible."331 U.S. at 126 ,67 S.Ct. at 1137 . After a finding of trademark infringement, the district court enjoined the defendants from selling any reconditioned spark plugs unless they removed the plaintiff's original trademark, repainted the plugs, stamped the word "repaired” in large distinct letters on the plugs, and included in the cartons in which the plugs were packed a legend specifying the plugs’ level of fitness and the reconditioner's full name and street address. See331 U.S. at 126-27 ,67 S.Ct. at 1137-38 . The Supreme Court affirmed the Second Circuit's decision, which modified the district court’s remedy by eliminating the requirement that the defendants remove the trademark of the original manufacturer, substituted a new procedure by which defendants would stamp “repaired” on the plugs, and replaced the prescribed accompanying legend with a more general legend that did not require a specific guarantee of how many miles the reconditioned spark plugs would remain fit for use. See id, at 127,67 S.Ct. at 1137-38 .
In Singer Manufacturing Co., the Fifth Circuit held that while " 'the defendants may repair, renovate, and rebuild Singer Sewing Machines and sell them to the public, in so doing the repaired, renovated or rebuilt machines must be so plainly and truthfully labeled as to plainly and truthfully convey to the buying public the true character of the machines.' ”207 F.2d at 522 . The Court of Appeals affirmed the district court's order that the defendants place on each rebuilt sewing machine a "plainly legible” "medallion or decalcomania” "showing: 1. That the machine is rebuilt. 2. By whom rebuilt. 3. That non-Singer parts have been used in rebuilding. 4. If the machine was originally a treadle machine, that fact shall be stated."207 F.2d at 522 n. 3. In Joy Manufacturing Co.,730 F.Supp. 1387 , 1392 (S.D.Tex.1989), the court enjoined the defendant from selling reconditioned valves "unless they bore nameplates permanently affixed to the valve bodies prominently displaying substantially the following notice: THIS VALVE DISMANTLED, INSPECTED AND REMANUFACTURED BY CGM VALVE CO., INC.”730 F.Supp. at 1392 .
.In Champion Spark Plug,
the Supreme Court merely affirmed a remedy for trademark infringement ordered by the lower courts. Liability was not an issue on appeal.
See
Likewise, liability was not an issue in Singer Manufacturing Co., because the defendants did not appeal the judgment of liability. See207 F.2d at 520 .
In
Joy Manufacturing Co.,
however, the court did base liability solely on the defendant's failure to mark its products. There, the district court found, following a bench trial, that the defendant had willfully and deliberately violated the preliminary injunction the court had issued earlier and also that, as the result of previous lawsuits against it, the defendant was "fully aware” that its practices were unlawful.
See
. On the contrary, a review of the cases indicates that the courts have refrained from establishing a strict standard and have instead encouraged courts to adopt remedies carefully tailored to the peculiar circumstances of each case. For example, in
Champion Spark Plug,
the Supreme Court suggested that courts look to defendants' willfulness and intent when fashioning a remedy for trademark infringement in reconditioned products case ("the character of the conduct giving rise to the unfair competition is relevant to the remedy which should be afforded.”)
. In mediation, the parties apparently reached an agreement in principle regarding proposed injunctive relief However, to date, the parties have been unable to finalize this agreement. If, at trial, the jury finds Defendants liable, it will then be the Court’s duty to fashion appropriate injunctive relief.
. Valve Dynamics’ fifth affirmative defense, that equity bars injunctive relief, is not a matter to be argued to the jury at trial and will be addressed after trial as part of the Court’s decisions as to an appropriate remedy, if the jury finds liability as to Valve Dynamics. Moreover, the Court is unaware of any legal basis for Valve Dynamics' fourth affirmative defense that Neles-Jamesbury, the trademark registrant, lacks standing to assert the claims in the complaint, as amended. This is not a breach of warranty, fraud, or product liability action. Again, these conclusions apply equally to Bill’s Valves’ comparable affirmative defenses.
