The Lanham Act permits a prevailing party to recover attorney fees “in exceptional cases.” 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). In this appeal, we are asked to decide whether defendant’s reliance on the advice of counsel removes his otherwise wilful conduct from § 1117(a) sanction. Under the circumstances of this case, we hold it does not because of the absence of any evidence establishing reasonable reliance. We therefore affirm the district court.
I.
The issue before us arises from an action for infringement of a federally registered trademark. In 1983, plaintiff TakeCare Corporation (TakeCare), a health maintenance organization (HMO) incorporated in California and offering its services in northern California, registered its sеrvice mark “TakeCare” in the United States Office of Patent and Trademark.
1
TakeCare is an affiliate of Blue Cross of California, which is an affiliate of the national Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. Take-Care offers prepaid group medical services
After a three-day trial to the court, supplemented by post-trial briefs and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law submitted by TakeCare and defendant, the district court found that as members of the national Blue Cross/HMO network, both TakeCare and defendant often solicited and negotiated contracts with some of the same national businesses. Although their immediate services were confined to distinct geographical areas, the court found that because each HMO permitted subscribers to receive emergency medical or other care outside of the service area there was an additional likelihood of confusion about the reimbursement source of the services. Consequently, the court held a likelihood of con fusion existed between the TakeCare mark аnd defendant’s TAKECARE mark. Having used and registered its service mark prior to defendant’s adoption of a similar mark and having informed defendant of this use along with a demand for defendant to cease using the mark, Take-Care, the court concluded, was entitled to a permanent injunction to protect its exclusive use from defendant’s infringement. In addition, the court held that defendant’s continued use of the mark without explanation after notice from TakeCare amounted to a wilful and deliberate infringement, sufficient tо characterize the case as exceptional, meriting an award of attorney fees.
Defendant moved to amend the findings of fact and for a new trial and to amend the judgment to permit documentary evidence to be introduced to show its good faith reliance on the advice of counsel in order to strike the award of attorney fees. The district court rejected defendant’s arguments, in particular, its offer to produce a ten-page letter written by counsel on which, defendant аsserted, it had relied in good faith. The court eschewed the offer, noting that a key issue at trial, why the defendant continued to develop and market its HMO after notice of the infringement, ought to have triggered defendant’s production of this explanation then. Thus, to reopen the case after final judgment to present this expanded theory would be improper under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(a).
II.
Defendant, taking issue with no other factual findings or conclusions of law, now urges the district court erred in exercising its equitable power to аward attorney fees upon concluding this was the type of “exceptional case” contemplated by 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a).
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Instead, defendant urges we
TakeCare responds that defendant does not challenge those findings which formed the basis for the court’s award of attorney fees: (1) that defendant was aware of plaintiff’s mark and chose to copy it; (2) that defendant could have discontinued its infringing use without hardship after the October 1983 notification but continued to develop and market its service; and (3) that defendant offered nо explanation for this conduct. TakeCare asserts defendant’s mere statements about reliance, without any support in the record, are insufficient to upset the district court’s exercise of discretion.
A.
A trademark identifies a source, a particular good or service which the consumer has found to be satisfactory.
See
1 J. McCarthy,
Trademarks and Unfair Competition
§ 2:1 (1984). Thus, what is infringed is not the mark itself but “the right of the public to be free of confusion and the synonymous right of a trademark owner to control his product’s reputation.”
General Elec. Co. v. Speicher,
Running through the case law, which has developed around a § 1117(a) award of attorney fees, is the implicit recognition that some degree of bad faith fuels the infringement at issue.
See, e.g., Gorenstein Enter., Inc. v. Quality Care-USA, Inc.,
Nevertheless, we agree that, under certain circumstances, a party’s reasonable reliancе on the advice of counsel may defuse otherwise wilful conduct. In
Cuisinarts, Inc. v. Robot-Coupe Int’l Corp.,
Missing from our case, however, is any showing of what counsel advised de
In
Cuisinarts, Inc.,
B.
While we do not suggest any particular means of establishing good faith reliance on counsel is preferable, we do require some showing other than that offered in post-trial and appellate briefs in order to permit the district court to exercise its discretion properly in awarding attorney fees. On the record before us, defendant, having raised interstate trademark concerns previously, appeared to have relied solely on its counsel’s opinion that its trademark was valid in Oklahoma. Under these circumstances, proof of reliance was insufficient. To otherwise now permit dеfendant to shim up its trial showing and conclude the district court abused its discretion is not warranted.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. TakeCare had used the mark since 1978.
. In 1983, officers of Total Care incorporated the organization under the name TAKECARE OF OKLAHOMA, INC. In 1984, the name was changed to TAKECARE PREPAID HEALTH SERVICE OF OKLAHOMA, INC. TAKECARE, as it was generally called, was licensed through thе national Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
. Defendant counterclaimed to invalidate the trademark on the ground of fraudulent procurement. The district court’s denial of that claim is not at issue in this appeal.
.In part, 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a) states: "When a violation оf any right of the registrant of a mark registered in the Patent and Trademark Office shall have been established in any civil action arising under this chapter, ... [t]he court in exceptional cases may award reasonable attorney fees to the prevailing party.”
. We note parenthetically that the advice of counsel is a protection against the tort of the wrongful initiation of civil proceedings even if the advice "consists merely of an opinion that the facts so known or believed afford a chance ... that the claim asserted in the civil proceed
