The issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in granting a preliminary injunction that would require the appellant to approve the manufacture and delivery of a large number of charge cards to the appellee, which intends to solicit in excess of one million potential customers to use the charge cards. Where a requеsted preliminary injunction will alter the status quo, the movant must show that on balance, the traditional four factors weigh heavily and compellingly in favor of granting the injunction. Because the district court below erroneously determined that the preliminary injunction requested by the appellee would not alter the status quo, it failed to require the movant to meet this hеavy burden. Upon reviewing the record below, we determine that the movant did not meet the burden required of it, and that, therefore, the preliminary injunction imposed by the district court was improper. We REVERSE.
FACTS
In mid-1989, Sears, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Greenwood Trust Corporation (the issuer of the Discover Card), applied to Visa, U.S.A. (“Visa”) to become a Visa member. Visa denied Sеars’ application. Immediately thereafter, the Board of Directors of Visa enacted several amendments to the Visa by-lav/s and operating regulations specifically precluding Sears or any of its subsidiaries from issuing Visa cards.
On May 25, 1990, SCFC ILC, Inc. (“SCFC”), another wholly-owned subsidiary of Sears, acquired MountainWest Savings & Loan, a small Utah savings & loan, from the Resolution Trust Corporation (“RTC”). As a rеsult of its purchase of Mountain-West, Sears acquired a small Visa program which had been operated by the former MountainWest for the benefit of the local depositors.
In June of 1990, following the SCFC takeover, Visa requested MountainWest to reapply for Visa membership pursuant to
MountainWest filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Utah raising federal and state antitrust and state unfair trade practice claims. Shortly after filing the lawsuit, Mountain-West moved for a preliminary injunction to force Visa to approve the manufacture and delivery of the 1.5 million cards ordered by MountainWest. The district court granted the preliminary injunction.
DISCUSSION
We must determine whether the district court erred in granting MountainWest’s motion for a preliminary injunction. We will not set aside a preliminary injunction “[ujnless the district court abuses its discretion, commits an error of law, or is clearly erroneous in its preliminary factual findings.... ” Hartford House, Ltd. v. Hallmark Cards,
In order to obtain preliminary injunctive relief, the moving party must establish:
(1) substantial likelihood that the movant will eventually prevail on the merits; (2) a showing that the movant will suffer irreparable injury unless the injunction issues; (3) proof that the threatened injury to the movant outweighs whatever damage the proposed injunction may cause the opposing party; and (4) a showing that the injunction, if issued, would not be adverse to the public interest.
Otero Savings and Loan Ass’n,
In addition, the following types of preliminary injunctions аre disfavored and they require that the movant satisfy an even heavier burden of showing that the four factors listed above weigh heavily and compellingly in movant’s favor before such an injunction may be issued: (1) a prelimi
A preliminary injunction that alters the status quo goes beyond the traditional purpose for preliminary injunctions, which is only to preserve the status quo until a trial on the merits may be had. See Otero Savings and Loan Association,
The preliminary injunction motion granted by the district court required Visa to approve MountainWest’s 1.5 million card order bearing the Prime Optiоn logo. Such an order would clearly have altered the status quo.
MountainWest argues that the preliminary injunction motion granted by the district court would have preserved rather than altered the status quo because Moun-tainWest was entitled, as a Visa member, to solicit new Visa customers, and that Visa was obligated under various federal and state laws to approve the manufacture and delivery of the сards requested by MountainWest. In particular, Mountain-West claims that under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act (“FIRREA”), Pub.L. No. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183 (1989) (codified throughout scat
Because the district court incorrectly concluded that the preliminary injunction would not alter the status quo, it failed to require MountainWest to carry its heavy burden of showing that under the four-part test in Otero, that the four factors, on balance, weigh heavily in MountainWest’s favor. Thus, it abused its discretion. Because the record below is well developed, and becausе both parties claim a need for a resolution of this issue as quickly as possible, we see no reason to remand this case to the district court on the preliminary injunction issue; instead we will review the record to determine whether the preliminary injunctive relief requested by MountainWest is justified.
The first factor we examine is whether, in the absence of the requеsted injunctive relief, MountainWest will be irreparably harmed. MountainWest claims that if the injunction is not issued, it will miss its “window of opportunity” to launch the Prime Option program, and thus will be irreparably harmed. MountainWest argues that if its Prime Option program is delayed, other competitors will be able to undercut its program by offering the same product first. In addition, MountainWest claims that the Prime Option program is designed to take advantage of the current market and that as time passes, the market may change in such a way as to prejudice its ability successfully to implement the Prime Option program.
The second factor we address is Mounta-inWest’s claim that any injury to Visa is outweighed by the harm MountainWest will suffer if the preliminary injunction is not granted. Irreparable injury is frequently presumed where a trademark is
The third factor we address is Mountain-West’s claim that the public interest would not be harmed if the preliminary injunction were granted. Visa claims that the public interest requires deliberate consideration, not haste, in this importаnt controversy. There is also the underlying concern about the impact on public confidence in the nation’s credit card system if 1.5 million Prime Option cards are ultimately held to have been improperly issued. Mountain-West counters by arguing that its Prime Option card is so attractive that the public will be injured if its entry into the Visa charge card market is delayed. In addition, MountainWest claims that the policies underlying FIRREA will be undermined if the preliminary injunction is not entered.
If Visa were to prevail on the merits below, it is uncertain from this record whether Visa would cancel the Prime Option cards in circulation or whether the Prime Option program would simply be sold to an acceptable issuer. Thus, the potential harm to the public if thе preliminary injunction is granted and later found to have been improper is speculative. Although this prong of the test does not involve a balancing of public harm, we nonetheless note that MountainWest has not established any credible significant harm to the public that would be caused by a delay in introducing the Prime Option program until after a full trial on the merits. We have reviewed the benefits associated with the Prime Option program, and, even if other credit card issuers were not already offering many of these same benefits to their customers, we do not find anything in that program that would establish a compelling public interest in having that program available to the public even before trial can be held to dеtermine whether MountainWest has the right to provide such a program under the Visa card system.
The last factor MountainWest must establish is a substantial likelihood that it will succeed on the merits. The issues are complex and will need significant development before this court could posit a meaningful prediction as to the strength of MountainWest’s claims and the eventual outcome on the merits. However, this does not mean that this fourth factor itself is in equipoise. It is MountainWest’s burden to prove a substantial likelihood that it will succeed on the merits, and on the record before us MountainWest has not sustained that burden.
Notes
. Visa By-law § 2.06 provides in pertinent part:
[I]f permitted by applicable law, the corporation shall not accept for membership any applicant which is issuing, directly or indirectly, Discover cards or American Express cards, or any other cards deemed competitive by the Board of Directors; an applicant shall be deemed to be issuing such cards if its parent, subsidiary or affiliate issues such cards.
Visa Operating Regulation 10.4B provides in pertinent part:
No member may use the Marks of the American Express Company, Mastercard International, Sears, Roebuck and Company, or the subsidiaries or affiliates of these entities on Visa cards.
. Unless otherwise noted in this opinion, "Mountain West” will refer to the entity now owned by SCFC ILC. "Former Mountain West” will refer to the institution as it existed prior to the RTC takeover and transfer to SCFC.
. Visa By-law § 2.08 states that the membership of a participating institution terminates when the Visа "membership asset" is transferred and requires the purchaser of the transferred asset to reapply.
. L. Carrol, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland ch. 12 (1865).
. In Citizens Concerned, the motion was originally in the form of a preliminary injunction. Then, at the request of both parties, the preliminary injunction motion was consolidated with the permanent injunction hearing.
. In addition, the preliminary injunction entered by the district court would have awardеd the movant much of the relief to which it may be entitled in the event it prevails on the merits. Further, the preliminary injunction was mandatory in nature in that it required Visa to take the affirmative step of approving issuance of the new cards, even though in this particular case that would not have required a substantial amount of court involvement in assuring that Visa complied with its terms.
. Section 1821 (d)(2)(G)(i)(II) provides that the RTC can transfer any asset or liability of an institution that is in default without first obtaining approval or consent for the transfer.
. To the same effect, see Stemple v. Board of Education of Prince George’s County,
.For example, MountainWest produced an affidavit by B J. Mаrtin, the Chairman-designate of SCFC ILC and President of MountainWest, to support its preliminary injunction motion. Affidavit of BJ. Martin, Aplt.App. Vol. I at 72. In his affidavit, Martin claimed: "Given the precarious state of the economy and uncertainties surrounding resolution of the Middle East conflict, consumer attitudes may well change. Regardless, we will have to invest in studying the continued viability of the Prime Oрtion program. And there can be no guarantee that the results of that research will suggest that our ‘window’ will remain open.” Id. at 77. It appears to us that given the rapid resolution of the Middle East conflict, at least some of this "uncertainty” has been resolved. In any event, it is not the purpose of a preliminary injunction to provide a business guarantee to any litigant.
. Indeed, MountainWest’s public interest claim is undermined by the arguments it raised in the irreparable harm section of its brief. Mounta-inWest argued that other competitors may preempt its Prime Option program if it is not allowed to rush it to market. Clearly, if Moun-tainWest’s competitors can quickly fill this "void,” the public will not be harmed by the Prime Option card’s absence from the сharge card market until a trial on the merits can he held.
. We have no finding from the district court on this factor. It erroneously concluded that it did not need to address this factor because it had found the other three factors in favor of MountainWest. Although there may be occasions when this factor may be deemphasized because of a particularly compelling showing on the other three factors, it ordinarily deserves some attention. Particularly in cases where the requested preliminary injunction alters the status quo, is mandatory in nature, or will grant the movant a significant part of the relief it seeks at trial, the movant will ordinarily find it difficult to meet its heavy burden of showing that the four factors, on balance, weigh heavily
