Defendant Impressa Perosa, S.R.L. (“Impressa”) appeals from an August 9,1996 Memorandum Decision of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Schwartz, J.) granting summary judgment to plaintiffs Tommaso Buti and Fashion World Company (referred to collectively as “Buti”) on their claim for a declaratory judgment that Impressa has no rights under federal trademark law in the name “Fashion Cafe” for restaurant services and clothing in the United States. The District *100 Court also granted summary judgment to Buti on Impressa’s counterclaims, dismissing with prejudice the federal trademark counterclaims and declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over, and thus dismissing without prejudice, the state law counterclaims. The District Court’s opinion adopted, and relied heavily upon, the Report and Recommendation (“Report”) of Magistrate Judge Peek, with the exception of a recommendation to impose sanctions against Impressa, which the District Court denied. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm in full the decision of the District Court.
BACKGROUND
As Magistrate Judge Peck observed in his Report, none of the parties’ various disputes regarding the record facts are material to the core legal issue that both sides agree governs this ease, namely, whether Buti or Impressa first used the contested mark “Fashion Cafe” in “commerce,” within the meaning of the Lanham Act.
See Buti v. Impressa Perosa, S.R.L.,
In 1987, Impressa opened an establishment called the Fashion Cafe, which the Report describes as “a ‘bar with a cafeteria,’ not a restaurant,” in Milan, Italy. Along with his interest in that business, Impressa’s principal, Giorgio Santambrogio (“Santam-brogio”), also is part owner of several other Italian concerns, including a modeling agency known as Fashion Model Management, and a restaurant called the Grand Fashion Cafe, which formally opened in Milan in February 1995; neither of the latter businesses is at issue in this ease. Impressa registered the trademark Fashion Cafe in Italy in April 1988, and Santambrogio asserts that he purchased the name from Impressa several years thereafter for the purpose of developing such establishments around the world.
It is undisputed that Impressa never opened a Fashion Cafe or any other restaurant or store in the United States, nor did the company ever conduct any formal advertising or public relations campaign in this country for its Milan Fashion Cafe. Nevertheless, Santambrogio did submit evidence that he promoted the Fashion Cafe during visits to the United States by distributing “literally thousands of T-shirts, cards, and key chains with the [Milan] Fashion Cafe name and logo to persons associated with the modeling and fashion industry which entitled them to free meals” at the Fashion Cafe. Id. at 466 (alteration in original). Santambrogio also maintains that he actively negotiated with at least one well-known restaurateur for the purpose of opening a Fashion Cafe “theme restaurant” in New York City; in addition, he claims to have devised a plan to put a Fashion Cafe establishment in hotels in major cities throughout the United States, but admits taking no actual steps to implement this “fantasy,” which existed only “in [his] brain.” Id. at 466 & n. 6.
In May 1993, Buti opened a restaurant, also called the Fashion Cafe, in Miami Beach, Florida. In the summer of 1994, he commenced a plan to open a “franchise” of Fashion Cafe theme restaurants, which would focus on the fashion model industry by displaying fashion photographs and tapes of televised fashion shows, and marketing associated apparel and souvenirs. Pursuant to that plan, Buti hired a law firm to perform a trademark search of the Fashion Cafe name, and when the search revealed no use or registration of the name in the United States, he filed an application with the Patent and Trademark Office to register the mark Fashion Cafe. Anticipating a spring 1995 opening for his New York City Fashion Cafe, Buti publicized the restaurant’s December 1994 groundbreaking through publicity and promotions involving, inter alia, appearances by well-known models, all of which “generated thousands of television, newspaper and magazine articles worldwide.” Id. at 465. The New York Fashion Cafe formally opened in April 1995, another opened thereafter in New Orleans, and several more were under construction as of the time of the District Court litigation.
In December 1994, upon learning of Buti’s planned opening of his Fashion Cafe in New York, Impressa attempted to register that name with the Patent and Trademark Office. In January 1995, counsel for Impressa sent a “cease and desist” letter to Buti, threatening litigation if he did not refrain from using the *101 Fashion Cafe name. Buti responded by filing the present action, on May 17, 1995, alleging federal question jurisdiction and naming Impressa as the sole defendant. The Complaint seeks primarily a declaratory judgment “[tjhat Defendant does not have rights in the trademark ‘Fashion Cafe’ for restaurant services or clothing in the United States.” The Complaint also requests various other forms of equitable relief, including a declaration that Buti did not compete unfairly with Impressa, nor infringe Impressa’s trademark rights (if any) in the Fashion Cafe name, by advertising or operating Buti’s restaurants; a declaration that Buti did not misrepresent the origin of his restaurant services; and an injunction preventing Impressa from filing or threatening to file an infringement suit against Buti. 1
Impressa answered and asserted five counterclaims, alleging that Buti (i) infringed on Impressa’s rights in the Fashion Cafe name, giving rise to a claim for false designation of origin under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a); (ii) misappropriated Impressa’s concepts and the name Fashion Cafe; (iii) engaged in unfair and deceptive business practices in violation of New York General Business Law Section 349 et seq.; (iv) committed acts constituting common law unfair competition; and (v) caused Impressa such harm through the aforementioned conduct as to entitle Impressa to an injunction. After Buti moved to dismiss the counterclaims, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P., Impressa filed an amended answer and counterclaims, adding a sixth counterclaim alleging that Buti made false representations in his application for trademark registration, in violation of Section 38 of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1120.
After the close of discovery, Buti moved for summary judgment on his declaratory judgment claim and in addition requested that his motion to dismiss the counterclaims be converted to one for summary judgment, under Rule 56, Fed.R.Civ.P.; that request was granted, and Buti submitted additional papers in support of the latter motion. Although Impressa failed to move for summary judgment on its own claims, its opposition to Buti’s motion did contain a request that the court “search the record” and grant Impres-sa summary judgment on the counterclaims; the District Court therefore considered the motions before it to be cross-motions for summary judgment.
Magistrate Judge Peck, to whom the motions were referred, recommended that the District Court grant Buti’s motion for summary judgment, awarding him a declaratory judgment that Impressa has no rights in the mark Fashion Cafe in the United States, and dismissing all of Impressa’s counterclaims. The determinative conclusion, with respect to both the declaratory judgment claim and the federal trademark counterclaims, was that Impressa did not “use” the Fashion Cafe name “in commerce” within the meaning of the Lanham Act prior to Buti’s registration and use of the name. Specifically, Magistrate Judge Peck found, based largely on decisions of the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (“TTAB”), that Santambrogio’s efforts in the United States to advertise and promote the Milan Fashion Cafe were insufficient to satisfy the statutory standard for “use in commerce” because the restaurant services associated with that advertising were provided solely in Milan, Italy, outside the scope of United States “commerce.” The District Court adopted in full these core conclusions regarding the trademark claims, and in addition adopted the recommendation to refrain from exercising supplemental jurisdiction over Impressa’s state law counterclaims. Thus the District Court awarded Buti a declaratory judgment, dismissed Impressa’s federal counterclaims with prejudice, and dismissed the state law counterclaims without prejudice.
DISCUSSION
Even when viewed in the light most favorable to Impressa, as is required here pursuant to our
de novo
review of the grant of summary judgment to Buti,
see Samuels v. Mockry,
“Use in Commerce”
The Lanham Act authorizes trademark registration only for marks that are “used in commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 1051. In the context of the restaurant “services” at issue in this case, “use in commerce” is defined by Section 45 of the Lanham Act as:
bona fide use of a mark in the ordinary course of trade, and not made merely to reserve a right in a mark....
[A] mark shall be deemed to be in use in commerce ... on services when it is used or displayed in the sale or advertising of services and the services are rendered in commerce, or the services are rendered in more than one State or in the United States and a foreign country and the person rendering the services is engaged in commerce in connection with the services.
15 U.S.C. § 1127 (emphasis added). Impres-sa asserts, and Buti accepts, that the italicized portion of the definition is the section applicable in this ease.
As discussed at length below, the parties’ disagreement with respect to the meaning of Section 45 centers on Impressa’s contention that Santambrogio’s advertising and promotional activities in the United States constituted sufficient “use” of the Fashion Cafe name “in commerce” as to merit protection under the Lanham Act. Notwithstanding this disagreement over the statutory concept of “use,” however, the parties are in complete accord as to the meaning under Section 45 of “commerce.” That is, Impressa and Buti acknowledge, as they must, that “commerce,” for purposes of delimiting “use in commerce” under the Lanham Act, is expressly defined by Section 45 to be “all commerce which may lawfully be regulated by Congress.” 15 U.S.C. § 1127. We recently affirmed that the “history and text of the Lanham Act show that ‘use in commerce’ reflects Congress’s intent to legislate to the limits of its authority under the Commerce Clause.”
United We Stand America, Inc. v. United We Stand, America New York, Inc.,
This case, of course, involves the reverse, or perhaps the mirror image, of the issue presented in the
Vanity Fair
line of cases; we are concerned here not with the extraterritorial force of our trademark laws to regulate or redress the conduct of a foreign citizen in a foreign land, but with the ability of that foreign citizen to gain the protection of our trademark laws, and the degree of interaction with our nation’s commerce that is required of him to receive that protection. Impressa nevertheless has implicitly
*103
acknowledged, through several pivotal concessions, that the question whether it may derive the benefits of the Lanham Act is dictated by one of the same inquiries that guided the decision in
Vanity Fair,
namely, whether Impressa has conducted the affairs of its Milan Fashion Cafe in such a way as to “substantially affect” United States interstate or foreign commerce, and thereby fall within Congress’s authority under the Commerce Clause. Thus Impressa conceded at oral argument that: (1) the food and drink services of the Milan Fashion Cafe form no part of the trade between Italy and the United States; and (2) Congress has no constitutional authority to regulate the operation of the Fashion Cafe in Milan. These admissions, even if only a recognition of the fact that Impressa’s registration and use of the Fashion Cafe name in Italy has not, given the territorial nature of trademark rights, secured it any rights in the name under the Lanham Act,
see, e.g., Financial Matters, Inc. v. PepsiCo, Inc.,
“Services Rendered in Commerce”
As indicated, the crux of the parties’ dispute is whether Santambrogio’s advertising and promotional activities in the United States on behalf of the Milan Fashion Cafe were sufficient to establish Impressa’s “use in commerce” of the Fashion Cafe name, within the meaning of Section 45 of the Lanham Act, where it is undisputed that Impressa rendered no restaurant services, nor operated any other business, under that name in the United States. We believe the answer lies in first principles. The Supreme Court explained long ago that
the right to a particular mark grows out of its use, not its mere adoption; its function is simply to designate the goods as the product of a particular trader and to . protect his good will against the sale of another’s product as his; and it is not the subject of property except in connection with an existing business.
United Drug Co. v. Theodore Rectanus Co.,
The question thus remaining — apparently one of first impression in the federal courts— is whether Santambrogio’s promotional activities
in the United States
merited Lanham Act protection for Impressa’s mark based on the ongoing business of Impressa’s Fashion Cafe
in Milan.
We agree with Magistrate Judge Peck’s conclusion, adopted by Judge Schwartz, that Santambrogio’s activities in the United States were insufficient to establish “use in commerce” of the Fashion Cafe name absent proof that Impressa offered any restaurant' services in United States commerce.
See Buti,
*104
The leading TTAB case in this area is
Mother’s Restaurants Inc. v. Mother’s Other Kitchen, Inc.,
prior use and advertising of a mark in connection with goods or services marketed in a foreign country (whether said advertising occurs inside or outside the United States) creates no priority rights in said mark in the United States as against one who, in good faith, has adopted the same or similar mark for the same or similar goods or services in the United States prior to the foreigner’s first use of the mark on goods or services sold and/or offered in the United States....
Id.
at 1048.
See also Techex, Ltd. v. Dvorkovitz,
The principle articulated in
Mother’s Restaurants
was not new, the TTAB having said as much several times previously.
See, e.g., Intermed Communications, Inc. v. Chaney,
*105
We have noted on many occasions that the decisions of the TTAB, while not binding on courts within this Circuit, are nonetheless “to be accorded great weight.”
Murphy Door Bed Co. v. Interior Sleep Sys., Inc.,
[T]he expression, sometimes met with, that a trade-mark right is not limited in its enjoyment by territorial bounds, is true only in the sense that wherever the trade goes, attended by the use of the mark, the right of the trader to be protected against the sale by others of their wares in the place of his wares will be sustained.
Id.
at 98,
None of Impressa’s arguments on appeal alter oür conclusion. First, Impressa suggests that the relevant question in this ease is more properly “whether Santambrogio’s conduct could lawfully have been regulated by Congress” (emphasis added), and Impres-sa endeavors at length to demonstrate that the advertising and promotional activities described above were “clearly within Congress’ power to regulate under ... the Commerce Clause.” We have no quarrel, of course, with Impressa’s contention that, “[fjor example, Congress’s consumer protection laws regulated the vouchers [that Santambrogio] distributed,” and likely many other of his advertising activities in this country as well. But where the issue concerns what conduct is regulated by the Lanham Act, Impressa has got it precisely wrong by focusing on “San-tambrogio’s [advertising] conduct,” as opposed to the business services in connection with which that advertising was performed. As Impressa has explicitly conceded in its briefs on appeal, it is “the restaurant services” — and not the advertising — that “must have been ‘rendered in commerce’ ” (emphasis added) in order for Impressa’s activities to fall within the “advertising of services” branch of Lanham Act Section 45. See 15 U.S.C. § 1127 (service mark is deemed used in commerce when, inter alia, “it is used or displayed in the sale or advertising of services and the services are rendered in commerce”) (emphasis added).
Impressa also argues that the 1988 amendments to the Lanham Act, which revised Section 45’s definition of “use in commerce,” see the Trademark Law Revision Act of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-667, § 134, 102 Stat. 3935, 3948 (1988), so broadened the language of the Act as to bring Impressa’s activities *106 within its scope. Inasmuch as the amendments made no change to the portion of the “use in commerce” definition at issue here, Impressa’s argument is based entirely on the legislative history of the amendments, specifically, a Senate report stating in part that “the revised definition of ‘use in commerce’ ... should be interpreted with flexibility so as to encompass various genuine, but less traditional, trademark uses, such as those made in test markets,” etc. See S.Rep. No. 100-515, at 44-45 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5577, 5607-08. Impressa asserts that “[sjuch test market use of a trademark would certainly include Santambrogio’s advertising of the name ‘Fashion Cafe’” in the United States.
This argument is meritless, at least in the circumstances of this case. Simply put, there is insufficient evidence in the record to show that Santambrogio’s advertising activities in this country constituted “test market use” of the Fashion Cafe name preparatory to the opening-of a United States Fashion Cafe. To the contrary, the record indicates that Santambrogio was attempting primarily to promote the
Milan
Fashion Cafe by distributing T-shirts and other items, including meal vouchers, “to persons associated with the modeling and fashion industry which entitled them to free meals at the Fashion Cafe(s) in Milan.”
Buti,
In light of our conclusion that Impressa failed to use the Fashion Cafe mark “in commerce” prior to Buti’s use thereof, we affirm not only the District Court’s grant of summary judgment on Buti’s declaratory judgment claim, but also the grant of summary judgment dismissing Impressa’s federal trademark counterclaims. The first of those claims, for false designation of origin under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), plainly fails given Buti’s success in attaining a declaration that Impressa has no rights in the Fashion Cafe name. The second of the claims, for fraudulent trademark registration under Section 38 of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1120, is based on Impressa’s contention that Buti knew of the Milan Fashion Cafe
5
and specifically chose that name for his restaurants in the United States despite — or because of— that knowledge. Thus the second federal counterclaim alleges that Buti “made false and fraudulent representations” in registering the Fashion Cafe mark, including false declarations that the mark “was not being used in commerce by other persons” — meaning United States commerce as defined by the Lanham Act — and that Buti “had a right to register” the mark as his own. Under our analysis above, however, Buti’s representations were manifestly true, and even if made with knowledge of Impressa’s use of the mark in Milan would not be proscribed by that section of the Lanham Act.
See Person’s Co., Ltd. v. Christman,
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the decision of the District Court is affirmed in full.
Notes
. Contemporaneous with the entry of judgment. Judge Schwartz granted an order amending the Complaint by interlineation to remove Buti’s claims for compensatory and punitive damages.
. The TTAB indicated that the only exception to the rule in
Mother’s Restaurants,
other than— implicitly — where the prior United States user failed to act in good faith, would be when “it can be shown that the foreign party’s mark was ... a ‘famous’ mark within the meaning of
Vaudable v. Montmartre, Inc.,
[
. Impressa makes much of the fact that the first decision of the TTAB in
Linville v. Rivard,
. In light of these shortcomings, we need not reach — and specifically express no opinion regarding — the validity of this putative "test market” exception to the statutory definition of “use in commerce,” 15 U.S.C. § 1127.
. For example, Impressa emphasizes that Buti is married to fashion model Daniela Pestova, who was apparently represented at one point by San-tambrogio’s modeling agency, Fashion Model Management.
