ROSENRUIST-GESTAO E SERVICOS LDA, formerly known as Rosenruist-Gestao E Servicos Sociedade Unipessoal LDA v. VIRGIN ENTERPRISES LIMITED
No. 06-1588
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit
Dec. 27, 2007
437-461
REVERSED AND REMANDED
ARGUED: James Wilson Dabney, Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, L.L.P., New York, New York, for Appellant. Douglas Vernon Rigler, Young & Thompson, Arlington, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Darcy M. Goddard, Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, L.L.P., New York, New York, for Appellant. Andrew J. Patch, Jeff Goehring, Young & Thompson, Arlington, Virginia, for Appellee.
Before WILKINSON and TRAXLER, Circuit Judges, and WILKINS, Senior Circuit Judge.
Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge TRAXLER wrote the majority opinion, in which Senior Judge WILKINS joined. Judge WILKINSON wrote a dissenting opinion.
OPINION
TRAXLER, Circuit Judge:
Rosenruist-Gestao E Servicos LDA (“Rosenruist“) is a Portuguese company that seeks to obtain a United States trademark registration and enjoy the benefits that accompany ownership of a registered mark under the Lanham Act. Virgin Enterprises Ltd. (“VEL“), a British conglomerate that owns numerous United States registrations, opposes the registration of Rosenruist‘s mark and commenced an administrative proceeding before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (“TTAB“) against Rosenruist to prevent the registration. When Rosenruist refused to appear voluntarily for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition under the procedural rules promulgated by the Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO“), see
Seeking to ensure Rosenruist‘s cooperation, VEL filed a motion to compel Rosenruist, on pain of contempt sanctions, to designate its Rule 30(b)(6) representative and appear for the corporate deposition as directed by the subpoena. Notwithstanding its earlier ruling that Rosenruist had been properly served with a valid subpoena for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition, the court determined that it could not require Rosenruist to produce a corporate designee for the deposition unless that designee personally resided within the district of the issuing court. Because there are no individuals residing within the Eastern District of Virginia who Rosenruist could designate as its witness under Rule 30(b)(6), the court denied VEL‘s request to compel an appearance.
VEL appeals this ruling. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
I.
Rosenruist filed an application in December 2002 with the PTO to register the mark VIRGIN GORDA under section 1(b) of the Lanham Act. See
Rosenruist applied to register based on its intent to use the mark VIRGIN GORDA in connection with forty-one categories of goods, including “[b]ags, purses, traveling bags, trunks, make-up bags and empty vanity cases, document holders, umbrellas, [and] handbags,” as well as various kinds of clothing and footwear. J.A. 46. In its application with the PTO, Rosenruist appointed various members of the Virginia-based law firm prosecuting the application as “domestic representatives” under
Initially, the PTO‘s examining attorney refused registration on the basis that the VIRGIN GORDA mark is “primarily geographically deceptively misdescriptive,”
In July 2004, VEL filed a Notice of Opposition with the PTO. See
In December 2005, VEL, pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, sought to conduct a testimonial deposition of Rosenruist to present in evidence at trial before the TTAB.2 When
In January 2006, VEL served Thomas Perkins—one of the lawyers designated by Rosenruist as its representative under
The subpoena was issued by the district court for the Eastern District of Virginia pursuant to
The clerk of any United States court for the district wherein testimony is to be taken for use in any contested case in the [PTO], shall, upon the application of any party thereto, issue a subpoena for any witness residing or being within such district, commanding him to appear and testify before an officer in such district authorized to take depositions and affidavits, at the time and place stated in the subpoena. The provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure relating to the attendance of witnesses . . . shall apply to contested cases in the [PTO].
Rosenruist moved pursuant to Rule 45(c)(3)(A) to quash the subpoena, see
The magistrate judge concluded that the subpoena was properly issued and valid under
Following the court‘s denial of Rosenruist‘s motion to quash, VEL re-served the subpoena and rescheduled the deposition. Rosenruist, however, refused to produce a Rule 30(b)(6) designee at the deposition. Instead, counsel for Rosenruist appeared and announced that Rosenruist did not intend to designate a representative to testify on behalf of the corporation as there was no such person “residing or being” within the Eastern District of Virginia. J.A. 259.3 VEL then sought and obtained sanctions against Rosenruist for its failure to appear at the deposition. The magistrate judge ordered that Rosenruist pay the legal fees and costs incurred by VEL in connection with counsel‘s preparation for and appearance at the deposition.
On March 31, 2006, in view of Rosenruist‘s continued belief that it was neither required nor able to comply with the subpoena, VEL moved the district court for an order compelling Rosenruist to obey the subpoena, which the court had already deemed valid, and to produce an appropriate representative under Rule 30(b)(6) to be deposed on the subjects identified in the subpoena. VEL argued that, because a corporation can only testify through its individual representatives, Rosenruist was technically the witness in a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition. And, because Rosenruist had designated a Virginia resident as domestic representative under
In response, Rosenruist argued that all of its potential Rule 30(b)(6) designees were foreign citizens residing outside the United States and beyond the reach of the court‘s subpoena power under
After hearing VEL‘s motion to compel, the magistrate judge concluded that, even though Rosenruist had been properly served with a valid subpoena, Rosenruist was not required to produce a Rule 30(b)(6) designee unless that designee resided within the district. The decision of the magistrate judge rested on his conclusion that the term “witness” as used in the statute applied only to natural persons. The court instructed Rosenruist to file a declaration indicating that there was no officer, director, or managing agent of Rosenruist residing in the district who could address the topics listed in the subpoena. Likewise, the court instructed Rosenruist
VEL filed objections to the magistrate judge‘s order, arguing that
II.
Before turning to the particular arguments of the parties, we believe it is helpful to consider very briefly the role of the district court in the context of an opposition proceeding before the TTAB, as well as the interplay between the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the PTO‘s rules of procedure.
The TTAB is an administrative tribunal of the PTO with jurisdiction over inter partes challenges to the registration of trademarks. See
Inter partes proceedings before the TTAB are governed by the Rules of Practice in Trademark Cases adopted by the PTO and set forth in Part 2 of Title 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations. See
As an administrative tribunal of limited jurisdiction, the TTAB is empowered only to decide whether a given trademark is registrable. See
Accordingly, Congress granted district courts subpoena authority under
A.
With this context in mind, we turn to VEL‘s challenge to the conclusion of the magistrate judge that “witness” in
For the reasons set forth below, we agree with VEL that the term “witness,” as used in the statute, is not limited to natural persons and allows the court to reach corporations and other juristic persons. Because the unappealed order of March 2, 2006, established for purposes of this case that the subpoena was valid and that Rosenruist, as the subject of the subpoena, was required to obey it, it follows that the district court should have granted VEL‘s motion to compel.
1.
As we noted above, the PTO‘s rules of practice generally incorporate the deposition procedures prescribed by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically including Rule 30(b)(6). See
A party may in the party‘s notice and in a subpoena name as the deponent a public or private corporation or a partnership or association or governmental agency and describe with reasonable particularity the matters on which examination is requested. In that event, the organization so named shall designate one or more officers, directors, or managing agents, or other persons who consent to testify on its behalf, and may set forth, for each person designated, the matters on which the person will testify.
Prior to the adoption of this rule in 1970, a party wishing to establish the knowledge of a corporate entity was forced to identify and subpoena a specific officer or representative of the corporation who qualified
Thus, like any person named in a subpoena to appear as a deponent or witness, a corporation may be named in a subpoena issued under Rule 45, which “command[s] each person to whom it is directed to attend and give testimony” at a trial or deposition.
If a party to an inter partes proceeding wishes to take the trial testimony of an adverse party or an official of an adverse party who is unwilling to appear voluntarily, then the examining party must secure attendance of the deponent by subpoena. See Health-Tex, Inc. v. Okabashi (U.S.) Corp., 18 U.S.P.Q.2d 1409, 1410 (T.T.A.B. 1990). As mentioned previously, the TTAB is not vested with the power to subpoena witnesses in inter partes PTO cases. Under
We agree with VEL that the “witness” is not limited only to natural persons. The PTO regulations expressly contemplate the use of Rule 30(b)(6) depositions in which the corporation is the “person” named in the subpoena as the deponent. See
Accordingly, we do not agree with the magistrate judge‘s narrow interpretation of “witness,” and we hold that corporations, as well as natural persons, are subject to the issuance of Rule 30(b)(6) subpoenas pursuant to
2.
Rosenruist contends that even if the corporation itself can be considered a “witness” under
Rosenruist also contends that the subpoena was not valid because the Rosenruist corporation lacked the “continuous and systematic contacts” with the Eastern District of Virginia necessary to support the district court‘s exercise of in personam jurisdiction. Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall, 466 U.S. 408, 416 (1984); see Ratliff v. Cooper Labs., Inc., 444 F.2d 745, 748 (4th Cir. 1971) (concluding that the designation of a statutory agent for service was insufficient to confer general jurisdiction over an out-of-state corporation).
Although Rosenruist advances these arguments as separate challenges to the validity of the subpoena, they are essentially one and the same argument—that Rosenruist is not subject to the court‘s subpoena power under
We conclude these arguments are not properly before the panel because the validity of the subpoena has already been determined. Thus, we need not determine precisely what is required for a witness to satisfy the statute‘s “residing or being” component, although we find no support for the notion that the statute requires the “systematic and continuous” presence needed for the exercise of general jurisdiction.5
Subsequently, in its opposition to VEL‘s motion to compel a Rule 30(b)(6) designation and appearance, Rosenruist argued that the court lacked in personam jurisdiction over it and therefore could not enforce the subpoena against it. The court effectively rejected Rosenruist‘s jurisdictional argument and reiterated that Rosenruist was subject to the subpoena when it granted VEL‘s motion in part and ordered Rosenruist to designate a Rule 30(b)(6) witness or submit a declaration that no qualifying witness resided or was present within the district. The court, however, refused to require an appearance. VEL, of course, appealed the latter portion of the order, and that appeal is before us now. Rosenruist did not file a cross-appeal.
A prevailing party may urge an appellate court “to affirm a judgment on any ground appearing in the record,” Toll Bros., Inc. v. Dryvit Sys., Inc., 432 F.3d 564, 572 (4th Cir. 2005), and may do so without having to file a cross-appeal, see Blum v. Bacon, 457 U.S. 132, 137 n. 5 (1982). If the prevailing party raises arguments that seek to alter or modify the judgment below, then a cross-appeal is required. See El Paso Nat. Gas Co. v. Neztsosie, 526 U.S. 473, 479 (1999) (“Absent a cross-appeal, an appellee may urge in support of a decree any matter appearing in the record, although his argument may involve an attack upon the reasoning of the lower court, but may not attack the decree with a view either to enlarging his own rights thereunder or of lessening the rights of his adversary.“) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also JH ex rel. JD v. Henrico County Schl. Bd., 326 F.3d 560, 567 n. 5 (4th Cir. 2003) (“The general rule is that without taking a cross-appeal, the prevailing party may present any argument that supports the judgment in its favor as long as the acceptance of the argument would not lead to a reversal or modification of the judgment . . . .“) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted).
Here, Rosenruist asks us to affirm the court‘s refusal to require it to produce a Rule 30(b)(6) witness as commanded by the subpoena based on Rosenruist‘s lack of presence and the issuing court‘s lack of personal jurisdiction. As explained previously, the court below clearly concluded that the subpoena was valid and that Rosenruist as a corporation was subject to the subpoena. Thus, these particular arguments, were the panel to accept them, would require us to modify the court‘s judgment below and enlarge Rosenruist‘s rights thereunder. Because Rosenruist did not assert a cross-appeal, we decline to consider these issues.
B.
Rosenruist next contends that
Relying on the TBMP (the TTAB‘s Manual of Procedure) Rosenruist suggests that the PTO‘s rules do not permit the attendance of a foreign witness to be secured by a subpoena. According to the
It is important to recognize that the TBMP is simply a manual issued by the TTAB “to practitioners with basic information generally useful for litigating cases before the [TTAB],” which expressly acknowledges that it “does not modify, amend, or serve as a substitute for any statutes, rules or decisional law and is not binding upon the [TTAB].” TBMP, Intro. The TBMP does not provide, or even purport to provide, authoritative interpretive guidance with regard to the scope of
We conclude that reading the statute to permit the issuance of a Rule 30(b)(6) subpoena to Rosenruist does not expand or add to the procedures established by the PTO. As noted above, the PTO‘s rules of procedure allow for the use of Rule 30(b)(6) depositions in inter partes cases and permit the taking of trial testimony “by depositions upon oral examination.”
C.
Finally, Rosenruist argues that the service of the subpoena was ineffective because it failed to comply with Rule 45(b)(1), which requires the witness fee and reasonably estimated mileage to be tendered at the time of service. See
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the order of the district court denying
REVERSED AND REMANDED
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
In a first for any federal court, my colleagues hold that a foreign company that has no United States employees, locations, or business activities must produce a designee to testify at a deposition in the Eastern District of Virginia so long as it has applied for trademark registration with a government office located there.
The majority‘s holding that this subpoena is enforceable is problematic for many reasons. It fails to properly apply the statute,
I recognize this is an extensive dissent. However, the brevity of the majority‘s conclusion belies its significance. No matter how one cuts the cookie, the bottom line is that the majority enforces the subpoena. In so doing, the majority creates a standard that is in fact a national one: the PTO is located in the Eastern District of Virginia; applications for trademark registration are filed there; and subpoena enforcement will frequently be sought in that district. Indeed, for any foreign corporation without a pre-existing United States presence, the majority‘s decision will be controlling. For this reason, among others, I think this decision is unfortunate. The decision to extend the subpoena power under
I.
The first obstacle to the majority‘s view is the language of the statute itself. The statute provides,
The clerk of any United States court for the district wherein testimony is to be taken for use in any contested case in the Patent and Trademark Office, shall, upon the application of any party thereto, issue a subpoena for any witness residing or being within such district, commanding him to appear and testify before an officer in such district authorized to take depositions and affidavits, at the time and place stated in the subpoena.
The majority then gives short shrift, however, to the statute‘s very next words, which state that a party in patent proceedings may seek to subpoena only a “witness residing or being within such district.” Id. (emphasis added). Through a strained interpretation of this case‘s procedural posture, the majority first claims that the issue of whether Rosenruist is “residing or being” within the Eastern District of Virginia is “not properly before the panel because the validity of the subpoena has already been determined.” Ante at 446. Thus, the majority seems content to interpret only half of the relevant statutory phrase.
However, the majority then issues a conclusory statement, albeit in dicta, that “Rosenruist‘s activities in this case were sufficient to qualify it as ‘being within [the] district.‘” Ante at 446 n. 5. It is not a good idea to have a single sentence of dicta pass upon matters of such foreign and domestic import. As a result, the majority expresses its view on the merits in a manner that avoids any need for explication, but is simultaneously bound to influence how district courts interpret this enactment.
The upshot of this ruling is painfully clear. The majority first entangles foreign trademark applicants in a procedural web by misapplying basic principles of appellate process. It then flatly and wrongly concludes that the statute affords no protection to the prospective trademark registrants. A more effective one-two punch could not have been landed upon foreign trademark applicants. Because I think that the question of the statute‘s application is clearly before us and that Rosenruist cannot be described, under any reasonable interpretation of
A.
Because, through any lens,
The PTO itself has embraced a geographically constrained view of the subpoena powers that
B.
Rosenruist, a Portuguese company, cannot be described as “residing or being” in the Eastern District of Virginia within the meaning given to these terms by the PTO or indeed with any meaning consistent with ordinary use. Rosenruist has no physical or commercial presence in the district, and no officers or employees either there or anywhere in the United States. It has no facilities, buildings, or operations in the Eastern District and has not carried out commercial activities there or elsewhere in the country.
Virgin Enterprises Ltd. (“VEL“), which seeks in-person depositions in the United States with Rosenruist officials, argues that Rosenruist can nevertheless be compelled to testify because it has filed an application for trademark registration with a government office located within the Eastern District of Virginia, and is “affirmatively press[ing] a claimed right to issuance of a United States trademark registration.” Brief of Appellant at 37. But a person or company is no more “residing or being” within a district by virtue of seeking trademark protection with an office located there than a person would be “residing or being” within a district because he or she applied for a license without so much as setting foot in the territory. Filing an application with a government office is a contact within a jurisdiction, but it does not establish a physical presence or sustained contact akin to a presence within a district.
This trademark application and the attendant proceedings are Rosenruist‘s sole contacts with the district—as evidenced by the way in which VEL subdivides paperwork and proceedings surrounding the single trademark application in an effort to portray multiple, incidental contacts. Rosenruist designated attorneys as its representatives for service of process in proceedings affecting its proposed trademark, under a statute providing that if a company does not name a representative, the Director of the Patent and Trademark Office will be designated to fill the role.
Nor can the existence of a case before the PTO mean that Rosenruist is “residing or being” within the Eastern District
In sum, the only contacts Rosenruist has had with the Eastern District of Virginia are the de minimis contacts from the act of filing for trademark registration itself. This does not entitle VEL to enforcement of the subpoena. Whatever consequences may ensue from Rosenruist‘s failure to appear is something Rosenruist might wish to ponder, but the only question before us is whether the subpoena must be quashed. I believe it must be. No matter how many times the act of filing for a trademark application is repackaged and restated by VEL, this act does not make up for the lack of any physical facilities, business activities, or company employees within a district sufficient to render a Portuguese company “residing or being” within the district. This is true under the PTO‘s own definition or under any definition consistent with the ordinary meaning of the limiting language enacted by Congress.
C.
There is thus no question that
With its actions, the majority ignores the fact that, as an appellate court, we sit to review judgments, not the reasons underlying such judgments. The district court rejected VEL‘s objections to the magistrate‘s denial of VEL‘s motion to compel Rosenruist‘s appearance at a deposition in this country. This is the judgment order VEL appeals. But the majority has elevated reasons into judgments. In focusing on the district court‘s construction of the term “witness,” the majority fails to consider an alternate and valid
This is precisely how the parties understood the issue on appeal. See Brief of Appellant at 3 (“This case concerns the scope of the District Court‘s subpoena power under
Furthermore, despite what I respectfully suggest is an incorrect rendering of the case‘s procedural posture, the majority cannot hide the true import of its opinion: that this subpoena is in its view perfectly enforceable. The majority reaches this conclusion by eschewing any interpretation of the “residing or being” language of
II.
A.
My problems with the majority‘s decision do not end with what I respectfully suggest is its erroneous and conclusory view of
A sense of comity, not needless friction, should govern this whole area. The contours of the “rule of construction derived from the principle of ‘prescriptive
This presumption of comity, so helpful to good will and active commerce among nations, exists even with respect to statutes that specify no geographic limit. It emphatically exists with respect to statutes such as
These interpretive principles are too important for my good colleagues simply to ignore. It hardly respects the legitimate interests of other nations, see Hoffmann-La Roche, 542 U.S. at 164, to allow litigants to compel in-person testimony in the Eastern District from representatives of foreign companies whose only act within our borders has been the filing of a trademark application. In giving regard to other nations’ interests, the Supreme Court has held that judges “must assume” Congress ordinarily seeks to follow the Restatement of Foreign Relations Law in determining whether a U.S. statute applies. Id. at 164. The Restatement provides that a nation will not exercise its jurisdiction “when the exercise of such jurisdiction is unreasonable,” Rest. (Third) Foreign Rels. Law § 403(1) (2006), and that a foreign person or company‘s “connections, such as nationality, residence, or economic activity” to the state are one relevant consideration, id. § 403(2)(b). To make the price of a simple trademark application an overseas trip by a company officer or officers to answer a deposition is to impose a substantial burden from a minimal connection.
I realize that when a subpoena is served upon a corporation, the corporation can designate whom it wishes to produce for
It may or may not be burdensome for the designee of a company large or small to fly from Portugal or India or Japan for a deposition in the Eastern District of Virginia. It may be that technology in time may provide less burdensome alternatives. District courts always have the power to quash subpoenas as posing an “undue burden,” but litigation over burdensomeness is not inconsequential and imposes a burden in its own right upon trademark applicants. See
B.
The majority‘s disregard for these cautionary canons of construction invites retaliatory actions of all sorts. The Supreme Court has sought to avoid applications of U.S. statutes to foreign companies or conduct that could generate “retaliatory action from other nations,” McCulloch, 372 U.S. at 21, and “disrupti[on] of international commerce,” Romero, 358 U.S. at 384. Yet the new burden that the majority places upon foreign companies to give in-person depositions in our country simply because they filed for registration of their trademark—a burden that so far as I can tell has never before been imposed by any court under
Congress has indicated that trademark protection is vital to commerce since it first made actionable “the deceptive and misleading use of marks” based upon the harms that such abuses cause to interstate commerce.
The majority also fails to inquire as to “the degree to which the desirability of such regulation [subpoena authority] is generally accepted” and “the extent to which the regulation is consistent with the traditions of the international system,” as well as “the character of the activity to be regulated.” Rest. (Third) Foreign Rels. Law § 403(2)(c), § 403(2)(f). The majority does not ask whether, in authorizing subpoenas of foreign witnesses to the Eastern District of Virginia for in-person depositions, it is rebuking a consensus surrounding reciprocal reductions in barriers to the protection of intellectual property. Under the Madrid Protocol Relating to the Madrid Agreement Concerning International Registration of Marks, which the United States joined in 2003, an increasing number of nations permit the citizens of signatory states to seek trademark protection through a single transnational application, without filing new papers from country to country.2 This agreement does not by any means decide the issue, but the reciprocal actions of these signatory nations suggest no basis in trademark law for the procedural hurdle that the majority today erects. And insofar as the Protocol indicates that a norm of reciprocity carries weight in this arena, other states could well consider my colleagues’ imposition of this novel procedural hurdle upon their companies to be an invitation to impose corresponding retaliatory hurdles of their own.
Nor can the majority claim a basis for its decision by asserting that there is a need for in-person testimony in cases where a trademark holder claims that a foreign company has made or sold goods here that infringe an existing mark. Section 24, which applies only to PTO proceedings, does not in any way diminish the ability of trademark holders to bring infringement actions in federal court against companies that—unlike Rosenruist—distribute potentially infringing goods or conduct operations here. See Steele v. Bulova Watch Co., 344 U.S. 280, 286-27 (1952). Section 24 does not bear upon the availability of in-person testimony in such infringement cases, because
C.
Separation of powers considerations are present also. I recognize that the statute at issue here is one that regulates judicial process, an issue on which courts rightly claim an expertise. That does not change the equation, however. Congress regulates judicial process through rules and statutes too numerous to mention. None of this regulation affords courts the authority to displace congressional enactments on judicial process with their own.
Other statutes in fact suggest the judgment of my fine colleagues is not in line with the judgment of Congress. As noted earlier, the majority‘s decision seems in some tension with the Madrid Protocol‘s scheme of reciprocal reduction in barriers to intellectual property protections abroad. In addition,
III.
My friends in the majority not only make a policy decision that should be left to Congress, but also disregard the views of the most relevant expert agency in doing so. My colleagues disregard the limited view of the Patent and Trademark Office for whose sole benefit testimony under
A.
The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board‘s view that
The TTAB attorney relied upon the TTAB Manual, which likewise indicates that foreign companies like Rosenruist are not generally subject to compulsion under
If a party wishes to take the trial testimony of an adverse party or nonparty (or an official or employee of an adverse party or nonparty) residing in the United States, and the proposed witness is not willing to appear voluntarily to testify, the party wishing to take the testimony must secure the attendance of the witness by subpoena.
TTAB Manual § 703.01(f)(2). The subpoena “must be issued, pursuant to
The immediately subsequent provision entitled “Unwilling witness residing in a foreign country,” describes no role for
There is no certain procedure for obtaining, in a Board inter partes proceeding, the trial testimony deposition of a witness who resides in a foreign country, is an adverse party or a nonparty (or an official or employee of an adverse party or nonparty), and is not willing to appear voluntarily to testify.
TTAB Manual § 703.01(f)(3) (emphasis added); see also TTAB Manual § 703.01(f)(1) (“[W]here a party wishes to take the testimony of an adverse party or nonparty, or an official or employee of an adverse party or nonparty, and the proposed witness is not willing to appear voluntarily to testify . . . the party that wishes to obtain the deposition must take steps, discussed below, to compel the attendance of a witness. If the witness resides in a foreign country, the party may not be able to take the deposition.“) (emphasis added).
The regulations governing PTO proceedings, while less explicit, fully support the TTAB Manual and the TTAB hearing officer in concluding that a party cannot demand in-person oral testimony from a foreign party such as Rosenruist simply because the foreign party filed a trademark application. The regulations make no mention of subpoenaing foreign witnesses under
In addition, the TTAB has elaborate provisions that allow litigants to take the testimony of foreign adverse parties or other witnesses through mechanisms other than in-person deposition testimony, which would make little sense if such parties could simply be called to give oral deposition testimony in the United States. Litigants may take foreign witnesses’ depositions through the letter rogatory procedure and Hague Convention letter of request procedure, see TTAB Manual § 703.01(f)(3); id. § 404.03(c)(2), and may take depositions upon written questions without regard to a witness‘s or party‘s country of origin, see
It is hard to imagine that the TTAB would have made it so difficult to subpoena foreign parties for oral depositions in their home countries, if it viewed
B.
Congress has provided that the PTO “shall be responsible for the granting and issuing of patents and the registration of trademarks” and “may establish regulations, not inconsistent with law” that “shall govern the conduct of proceedings in the Office.”
A number of our sister circuits have noted the perils of simply disregarding the PTO‘s view in construing other aspects of
The First Circuit explained based upon
VEL‘s view suffers the problems identified by the First, Third, and Fifth Circuits. While
IV.
In concluding without explanation that foreign companies with the most minimal U.S. contacts ought to be subject to compulsory in-person depositions in PTO cases, the majority overlooks the guideposts—including the very statute governing this situation—that should control its decision. It disregards the statutory text limiting such compulsion to entities “residing or being” within a United States judicial district. It ignores numerous canons of construction relevant to the statute‘s foreign reach. It disregards the evident expert view of the PTO whose proceedings
I fear the result is not simply one that Congress did not intend, but one that could in time negatively impact not only the operations of the PTO, but also international trade and foreign relations. Since a statute that authorizes compulsory depositions only of entities “residing or being” within a judicial district does not clearly reach foreign companies that have done nothing more than file an application for trademark registration, I would heed the Supreme Court‘s cautionary words: “[f]or us to run interference in such a delicate field of international relations there must be present the affirmative intention of the Congress clearly expressed.” Benz v. Compania Naviera Hidalgo, S.A., 353 U.S. 138, 147 (1957). The “affirmative intention” of the Congress is affirmatively at odds with the result reached here. I respectfully dissent.
Buck DOE, Plaintiff-Appellee, and Robert Doe; Tays Doe; Otis Doe; Thomas Doe; Joe Doe; Charles Doe, Plaintiffs, v. Elaine L. CHAO, Secretary of Labor, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 06-2015.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 2, 2007.
Decided Dec. 28, 2007.
