ROSE ART INDUSTRIES, INC., a New Jersey Corporation; Warren Industries, Inc., an Indiana Corporation v. Carl SWANSON, an individual; The Swanson Group, Inc., a Delaware Corporation; Raymond Geddes & Company, Inc., a Maryland Corporation
No. 98-6489
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit
Argued Sept. 10, 1999. Filed Dec. 13, 2000.
235 F.3d 165
There is nothing in the record to indicate, nor have the parties claimed, that the officers undermined the magistrate‘s independence of judgement and autonomous determination to issue the warrant. Absent any such subterfuge, and in conjunction with the decision of the prosecutor, the grand jury indictment, and the general policy concerns expressed in the majority opinion, I would find that the officers do not bear legal responsibility for the costs accrued after the initial illegal detention.
Rose Art Industries, Inc., Appellant
Roslyn S. Harrison, (Argued), Joseph F. Falgiani, Joan T. Pinaire, Nicholas Albano III, McCarter & English, LLP, Newark, NJ, Attorneys for Appellant.
Kathryn Miller Goldman, (Argued), Donna M.D. Thomas, Astrachan, Gunst, Goldman & Thomas, Baltimore, MD, Attorneys for Appellee.
OPINION OF THE COURT
ROTH, Circuit Judge:
The issue in this appeal is colorful. The appellant, Rose Art Industries, Inc. (Rose Art), claims that the appellee, Raymond Geddes and Company (Geddes), engaged in unfair competition in violation of
The District Court held that Rose Art‘s packaging did not have a “consistent overall look” and thus did not constitute recognizable trade dress. The District Court denied Rose Art‘s motion for a preliminary injunction because it found that Rose Art had not demonstrated a reasonable probability of success on the merits.
We conclude that the District Court misapplied the legal standard in determining whether the characteristics of three types of Rose Art‘s packaging constituted recognizable trade dress. We will reverse the District Court‘s denial of Rose Art‘s motion for a preliminary injunction and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Facts
Rose Art Industries, Inc., a New Jersey corporation, has been manufacturing and selling stationery products, including crayons, colored pencils, and markers, for over sixty years. Rose Art is currently the second-largest seller in the United States of children‘s crayons, markers, and chalks.
Raymond Geddes and Company, a Maryland corporation, was founded in 1923 and originally sold novelty items. Geddes subsequently expanded its operations in order to sell office supplies and stationery products to elementary school bookstores. Initially, Geddes did not have its own line of crayons. It purchased crayons from third parties, such as Crayola or Sargent, for resale to schools. In 1994, however, Geddes developed its own line of crayons called Spectrum, which it marketed and sold to elementary school bookstores in packaging designed by an independent designer.2
In 1996, hoping to expand its sale of stationery products into national mass merchandise retail outlets, Geddes hired Chris Blackmon as its national sales manager to develop mass market distribution channels for Geddes‘s products. Under Blackmon‘s direction, Geddes‘s Creative Director, Aleksandra Gulan, developed a product line under the name KidStuf 1.
In 1997, Geddes decided to further expand its mass market offerings by designing an art supply line, including a full range of markers, colored pencils, and crayons. Geddes targeted older children, ages 10-12, for its new line and named it “ARTiculates,” suggesting a more sophisticated arts and crafts product. Because Geddes felt that the KidStuf 1 package design was not suitable for a mass market line, it decided to create a new package design for ARTiculates. Before creating the new design, Gulan and Blackmon obtained samples and catalogs of other manufacturers’ retail stationery products, including Rose Art‘s.
Gulan completed the design of the ARTiculates packaging in September 1997, in time for Geddes to show the new line at the industry trade show in November. The ARTiculates packaging was characterized by a yellow background with a contrasting bold, bright color illustration of the product on the box and the product type written in white letters on a black oval-shaped band. The ARTiculates package also featured the legend “since 1923” and the statement: “We invite your comments about our product. Please write to: Raymond Geddes & Company, Consumer Affairs, P.O. Box 24829, Baltimore, MD 21220.” Both of these legends were new additions to the Geddes product design.
In July 1997, Dollar General Corporation (Dollar General)3 conducted its standard annual bid process. During the bid process, also known as a line review, Dollar General accepted bids from different manufacturers seeking to supply Dollar General with stationery products for 1998.
Rose Art instructed its manufacturer representative, Carl Swanson, to submit bids to Dollar General for Rose Art‘s products. Unbeknownst to Rose Art, Swanson was also Geddes‘s manufacturer representative. Rose Art alleges that Swanson failed to submit bids for a number of Rose Art‘s products but that he did submit bids to Dollar General on behalf of Geddes for its stationery products.4
In August 1997, Chris Blackmon and Swanson met with Gail Moore, the buyer for Dollar General‘s stationery department. At this meeting, Blackmon showed Moore the KidStuf 1 line of products. In a second meeting on October 2, 1997, Blackmon showed Moore some crayon and marker samples in the ARTiculates packaging. Moore expressed interest in Geddes‘s ARTiculates line but did not like the ARTiculates packaging because it was too wordy, busy, and dull. She told Blackmon that she was looking for a package that was more basic, simple, and colorful with a design that would appeal to younger children. Moore instructed Blackmon to create a package that looked more like Crayola‘s package.5 Blackmon agreed to provide Moore with a revised package design.
Based on Moore‘s directions, Blackmon instructed Gulan to redesign the ARTiculates packaging using the KidStuf name and modifying the package to make it brighter and simpler. The new design, which the parties refer to as KidStuf 2, consists of the following characteristics: a bright yellow background on the top half of the package with a bright contrasting color on the bottom, the product type in white letters on a black band in the middle of the package, a rainbow backdrop (re-
On October 6, 1997, Geddes sent artwork, depicting the KidStuf 2 package design, to Dollar General. On October 10, 1997, Geddes sent forty-eight mock-up packages. The mock-ups comprised other manufacturers’ crayon packages, including Rose Art‘s, with Geddes‘s KidStuf 2 package design wrapped around the other manufacturers’ packages. The forty-eight Geddes mock-up packages were used by Dollar General in its planogram room (where the company displayed products as if they were on a shelf in a store) for review by Dollar General‘s executives in their selection of new vendors. In December 1997, after completing its standard annual bid process, Dollar General selected Geddes as its primary supplier of stationery products for 1998.
II. Procedural History
On May 20, 1998, Rose Art filed suit in U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, claiming unfair competition in violation of
In an attempt to settle this litigation, Geddes in July of 1998 created a new package design for its stationery products (New Package Design). Geddes‘s New Package Design prominently displays the “Raymond Geddes” logo below the product‘s name. The box is characterized by a gold-yellow color on the top portion of the box and a contrasting purple-magenta color on the bottom; the product‘s type (e.g., crayons) is featured in white letters on top of a multi-tiered band of shades of blue. In addition, the New Package Design displays the products themselves either through a die cut, which reveals the markers or pencils, or through crayon illustrations, arranged in a rainbow design. Despite Geddes‘s efforts to settle, however, Rose Art now alleges that the New Package Design is also confusingly similar to Rose Art‘s packaging, especially the Rose Art Neon Color Packaging.
On August 3, 1998, Rose Art filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to stop Geddes from selling the alleged infringing packaging. The District Court denied the motion. See Rose Art Indus., Inc. v. Raymond Geddes & Co., 31 F.Supp.2d 367 (D.N.J.1998).
Rose Art claims on appeal that its trade dress for crayons, markers, and colored pencils is composed of the following elements: (1) a prominent band that is either straight or wavy and often black in color that cuts across the middle of the front of the package, extending to the sides with the words “CRAYONS” or “WASHABLE MARKERS” or other descriptive term in white letters imprinted on the band (the “Band and Letter feature“); (2) a yellow background on the top of the package with a contrasting background color (either red, purple, pink, or a combination of purple fading to red) on the bottom of the package; and (3) a prominent display of the Rose Art logo in golden yellow (either foil or print) or red, either with or without a rainbow “swish” design behind the logo on the front of the package. In addition, in its presentation to the District Court, Rose Art included three other elements in its claim of infringement: (1) the statement “since 1923“; (2) the statement on the front of the package that the product is “Certified Non-Toxic;” and (3) the sentence inviting consumer comments, “Rose Art invites your comments and questions about this product. Please write to Rose Art Industries, Inc., Consumer Affairs, 6 Regent St., Livingston, NJ 07039 or call 1–800-CRAYONS.”
Rose Art markets, advertises, and sells its products in many other package designs, as reflected in the materials gathered by Geddes for the preliminary injunction hearing (purchased either at Target, Toys “R” Us or KMart or from Rose Art‘s catalog). However, Rose Art contends that crayons, markers, and colored pencils packaged in Primary Color Packaging, Color Fade Packaging, and Neon Color Packaging constitute “the vast majority of its crayon[s], marker[s] and colored pencil[s].”
III. Discussion
A. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
This action was filed by Rose Art pursuant to
any word, term, name, symbol, or device, or any combination thereof, or any false designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, which—(A) is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive as to the affiliation, connection, or association of such person with another person, or as to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of his or her goods, services, or commercial activities by another person....
The District Court had federal question jurisdiction pursuant to
B. Background
The District Court determined that “Rose Art seeks trade dress protection not for the overall appearance of a single product, but rather for the overall look of a line of packaging for three products—crayons, markers and colored pencils.” Rose Art Indus. Inc. v. Raymond Geddes and Co., 31 F.Supp.2d 367, 373 (D.N.J.1998). The District Court noted that the Third Circuit Court of Appeals had not addressed the plaintiff‘s burden in such a case, but acknowledged that the Second Circuit, Fifth Circuit, and district courts within the Second Circuit had recognized such trade dress protection.
The District Court held that a plaintiff seeking protection for a line of products, rather than a single product, must establish that the series or line of products for which it seeks trade dress protection has a “consistent overall look.” See id. (quoting Walt Disney Co. v. Goodtimes Home Video Corp., 830 F.Supp. 762, 766 (S.D.N.Y. 1993)).
Applying the “consistent overall look” standard to this case, the District Court concluded that “the variations in Rose Art‘s package design are not slight but rather represent a kaleidoscope of color combinations and design formats which fail to convey a ‘consistent overall look’ to the consumer.” Rose Art, 31 F.Supp.2d at 376. Addressing each of the six elements asserted by Rose Art to be part of its trade dress, the District Court concluded that:
Rose Art‘s trade dress varies so widely that consumers cannot conclude that the products come from one source. Accordingly, this Court concludes that Rose Art uses numerous different styles of packaging for its crayons, markers and colored pencils such that its packaging fails to present a “consistent overall look” and does not qualify for trade dress protection under the law.
Id. at 378.
The District Court ended its analysis with the finding of no consistent overall look, concluding that the Appellants had not demonstrated a reasonable probability of success on the merits.7 Since the requirements of a trade dress infringement claim are conjunctive, the court did not analyze the remaining elements: (1) inherent distinctiveness or secondary meaning, (2) non-functionality, and (3) likelihood of confusion.
C. Analysis
1. The Proper Legal Standard for Identifying Recognizable Trade Dress
The application of
Trade dress has been defined as the total image or overall appearance of a product, and includes, but is not limited to, such features as size, shape, color or color combinations, texture, graphics, or even a particular sales technique. See Two Pesos, Inc. v. Taco Cabana, Inc., 505 U.S. 763, 765 n. 1, 112 S.Ct. 2753, 120 L.Ed.2d 615 (1992).
In the first case to set forth the “consistent overall look” standard, Walt Disney Co. v. Goodtimes Home Video Corp., 830 F.Supp. 762 (S.D.N.Y.1993), the plaintiff sought protection not for a specific package or the appearance of a single product but for the overall appearance of a number of different packages. See id. at 766. The district court in Walt Disney, noting the distinction between Disney‘s claim and the typical claim in a single product trade dress action, stated:
Disney has a burden which most plaintiffs alleging trade dress infringement do not need to carry. Disney must establish the existence of a recognizable trade dress. That is, Disney must establish that its videocassette packages have a consistent overall look. If established, this trade dress is entitled to protection under Lanham Act § 43(a) if it is distinctive, meaning capable of identifying Disney as the source of the videocassettes, and if GoodTimes’ trade dress is likely to mislead consumers to believe that GoodTimes’ Aladdin is the Disney version.
Rose Art argues, however, that the District Court applied the wrong legal standard when it applied the “consistent overall look” standard before it considered the black letter law standard of non-functionality, distinctiveness, and likelihood of confusion. Rose Art contends that the District Court should have required Rose Art to meet only the latter standard.
We are persuaded that the “consistent overall look” standard, set forth in Walt Disney and applied by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in Landscape Forms and other cases, is the appropriate threshold inquiry in a trade dress case where the plaintiff seeks protection for a series or line of products or packaging. See, e.g., Samara Brothers, Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 165 F.3d 120, 125-27 (2d Cir. 1998), rev‘d on other grounds, 529 U.S. 205, 120 S.Ct. 1339, 1345-46, 146 L.Ed.2d 182 (2000); Landscape Forms, Inc., 113 F.3d at 380-81; Innovative Networks, Inc. v. Satellite Airlines Ticketing Ctrs., Inc., 871 F.Supp. 709, 722-23 (S.D.N.Y.1995).8
In endorsing the “consistent overall look” standard, however, we do not require that the appearance of the series or line of products or packaging be identical. As the District Court stated “a party may have trade dress rights even though there are slight variations in its package design so long as the change does not alter the distinctive characteristics and the trade dress conveys a single and continuing commercial expression.” See id. at 373 (citing Beech-Nut Packing v. Lorillard Co., 299 F. 834, 849-50 (D.N.J.1924), aff‘d. 7 F.2d 967 (3d Cir.1925), aff‘d. 273 U.S. 629, 47 S.Ct. 481, 71 L.Ed. 810 (1927)).
2. The District Court‘s Application of the Consistent Overall Look Standard
Rose Art next contends that the District Court improperly applied the “consistent overall look” standard in this case; that it erred as a matter of law by considering products not at issue. Rose Art is seeking trade dress protection only for its Primary Color Packaging, Color Fade Packaging, and Neon Color Packaging. The District Court, however, considered products beyond these product lines to support its conclusion that each of these Rose Art product lines did not have a “consistent overall look.”
As a preliminary matter, the plaintiff in a trade dress action under
Here, Rose Art has alleged trade dress infringement of three distinct package designs: its Primary Color Packaging, its Color Fade Packaging, and its Neon Color Packaging. The District Court, however, in determining whether the packaging of these three product lines constituted recognizable trade dress (that is, whether the
The District Court, to support its conclusion that Rose Art had not established the existence of recognizable trade dress, found that “certain packages of Rose Art crayons do not have a yellow background on the top of the package” and thus found lacking a critical element of Rose Art‘s alleged trade dress. Rose Art, 31 F.Supp.2d at 376. However, one of the crayon packages referred to by the District Court was the Glow Crayons package with a black background on the top half;9 Glow Crayons are not a part of the Primary Color Line, the Color Fade Line, or the Neon Color Line. Similarly, in concluding that Rose Art used eight different background color combinations as a part of the trade dress it is seeking to protect, see id., the District Court considered products not within the designated lines: glow crayons, glitter and brilliant color crayons, and fluorescent, glitter and superscented crayons. In addition, in concluding that all Rose Art packages do not use the Band and Letter feature, see id., the District Court considered products not within the designated lines: Super Box of Crayons, Super Jumbo Crayons, Pre-School Crayons, Super Rainbow Pack, and Washable Markers in a bucket. Finally, in concluding that Rose Art used eight different colors for its Band and Letter feature, see id., the District Court again considered products not within the designated lines, including washable markers and glitter and brilliant crayons.
In addition to considering products not within the designated lines, the District Court considered designated products that were packaged in different types of boxes. The District Court pointed out that Rose Art used multiple package designs for the same product. For example, washable markers and classic colors were packaged using different package designs, see id. at 378; traditional crayons were packaged in the Primary Color Packaging with a yellow background on the top half of the package and the Rose Art logo with the rainbow swish on the bottom in front of a red or purple background but they were also packaged in a box with a red background on top, a yellow background on the bottom and the Rose Art logo displayed on the upper left hand corner of the box, superimposed on a triangle. See id. at 376. Scented markers were packaged in the Neon Color Packaging with the rainbow swish on the bottom of the package but the rainbow swish did not appear on all packages of scented markers. The District Court concluded that this use of other types of packaging for designated products undermined Rose Art‘s claim of recognizable trade dress.
The District Court‘s reasoning in this regard is flawed. The fact that Rose Art uses a variety of packages for a product such as traditional crayons would be fatal to Rose Art‘s case if Rose Art claimed that all traditional crayons were packaged in Rose Art‘s Primary Color Packaging, but Rose Art makes no such claim. Certainly the fact that Rose Art packages the same product in several different types of packaging does not prevent Rose Art from seeking trade dress protection for one of these packaging designs.10
If Rose Art distributed three different lines of crayons, each line having its own distinctive packaging, and if the packaging of each line has its own “consistent overall look,” then the packaging of each line would constitute recognizable trade dress
We conclude that when applying the “consistent overall look” standard, that is, when determining whether the trade dress alleged by the plaintiff is recognizable, protectable trade dress, a trial court should consider only the products or packaging for which the plaintiff is seeking trade dress protection. See Regal Jewelry, 999 F.Supp. at 486-90 (determining whether alleged trade dress had a consistent overall look by evaluating only the six novelty items at issue despite the fact that the plaintiff distributed almost 200 different novelty items).
The proper question is not whether Rose Art has consistently applied one trade dress to its packages of crayons, markers, and colored pencils, but rather whether Rose Art‘s Primary Color Packaging, Neon Color Packaging, and/or Color Fade Package each individually has a “consistent overall look.”12 As such, we also hold today that when a plaintiff seeks trade dress protection under
IV. Conclusion
Because the District Court misapplied the “consistent overall look” standard, we will reverse the District Court‘s denial of Rose Art‘s motion for a preliminary injunction and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.13
