This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Gerard L. Goettel, Judge), dismissing after a bench trial a suit for trademark infringement. The issue on the merits is whether the District Court properly denied the plaintiff’s request for an injunction, even though the marks of the plaintiff and defendant are virtually identical and their products share at least some competing uses. We conclude that the District Court was entitled to deny injunctive relief upon its consideration of all the relevant factors, including the balance of equities.
Facts
Plaintiff-appellant Vitarroz Corporation sells food products primarily in the New York-New Jersey metropolitan area to approximately 4,000 retail stores, one-half of which are small bodegas catering to a Spanish-speaking clientele. Vitarroz conducts its advertising in Spanish, and its name is well known in the Hispanic market. Its present volume of sales is approximately $17 million per year, 70-75% of which derives from the sale of rice.
In July 1976, Vitarroz decided to add an “all purpose cracker” to its line of food products under the name BRAVO’S. After selecting this name, Vitarroz conducted a trademark search for the name BRAVO. The search disclosed reported uses of BRAVO for a wide variety of food products, including macaroni, olives, spaghetti sauces, corned beef, roast beef, and cheese; state registrations of BRAVO for food and food ingredients, vegetable oil, olive oil, olives, and alcoholic beverages; and federal registrations of BRAVO for canned meat, vegetables, fish, spaghetti sauce, alimentary paste, powders for making soft drinks, and wines. Vitarroz previously had registered eight marks for some of its other products, but it did not file an application to register BRAVO’S for its crackers.
Vitarroz introduced its BRAVO’S crackers in November 1976. The crackers look and taste like Ritz crackers. They may be eaten plain, topped with a variety of spreads, served with hors d’oeuvres, or used as a scoop for dips. The crackers are packaged in a box. The VITARROZ mark appears at the top of the face of the box in *962 large letters. The BRAVO’S mark appears below the VITARROZ mark in smaller letters. The remainder of the face of the box is devoted to a realistic depiction of the crackers.
Vitarroz’s expenses in introducing the crackers were approximately $13,000, a substantial part of which was spent on Spanish-language radio advertising during the period November 24, 1976, to February 27, 1977. Vitarroz has not advertised the product since February 1977. Its total sales of the product during the three and one-half years preceding the trial of this action were about $136,000.
Defendant-appellee Borden, Inc. is a New ■Jersey corporation having its principal places of business in Columbus, Ohio, and New York City. Borden’s Snack Foods Group sells snack foods under the WISE trademark to independent distributors for resale to supermarkets and grocery stores throughout the Eastern United States. The Wise products usually are displayed in what was referred to as a store’s “salty, crunchy snack food” section, often in a rack holding only Wise products.
Sometime in 1978, Borden decided to add a round tortilla chip to its line of Wise products under the name BRAVOS. Borden chose the name BRAVOS because of its suggestive meaning of approval and because it has a Mexican flavor, like the chips themselves. Before adopting the name, Borden conducted a trademark search, which disclosed essentially the same information turned up by Vitarroz, but did not disclose Vitarroz’s unregistered BRAVO’S mark for crackers.
Borden introduced its BRAVOS tortilla chips in 1979. The tortilla chips resemble ordinary potato chips, though appearing to be slightly thicker. They may be eaten plain or used as a scoop for dips. The chips are packaged in a colorful cellophane bag through which they may be readily seen by the shopper. The bag is dominated by the name BRAVOS appearing at the top, with the BORDEN and WISE marks appearing less prominently, though still boldly, at the bottom. Like other Wise products, the chips usually are stocked in a store’s “salty, .crunchy snack food” section, often in the Wise rack. In some small stores, however, including some of the bodegas that carry Vitarroz’s products, the chips may be found near Vitarroz’s crackers.
Vitarroz became aware of the marketing of Borden’s BRAVOS chips sometime prior to March 1979. In that month, it filed an application in the United States Patent and Trademark Office to register the BRAVO’S mark for crackers. This application and a similar application filed with New York State authorities were rejected due to federal and state registrations of BRAVO for a variety of other food, products.
In May 1979, Vitarroz informed Borden of its use of the BRAVO’S mark on crackers, and proposed that Borden adopt a different mark. Borden replied that it already had spent in excess of $1.3 million in developing good will for its BRAVOS chips, without knowledge of Vitarroz’s prior use of the BRAVO’S mark. Borden did not believe that the risk of consumer confusion was sufficiently grave to justify wasting this investment.
Since Borden’s receipt of Vitarroz’s objection, Borden has continuously advertised and promoted its BRAVOS chips. In 1979, its advertising and promotion costs exceeded $2.5 million. In 1980, its marketing outlays rose to approximately $2.8 million. Borden’s total sales of the product from the date of introduction to the time of trial were approximately $9 million.
Vitarroz commenced this suit in New York State Supreme Court for injunctive relief, claiming trademark infringement and unfair competition. The complaint did not specify whether these claims were based on state or federal law. The complaint also claimed trademark dilution, specifically referring to N.Y.General Business Law § 368-d (McKinney 1968). Borden removed the suit to the District Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b) (1976), invoking 28 U.S.C. § 1338(a) (1976), which vests the district courts with jurisdiction over actions arising under any Act of Congress relating to trademarks. Vitarroz did not move to *963 remand the suit to state court, nor otherwise contest the District Court’s jurisdiction. A bench trial ensued.
The District Court first considered jurisdiction and concluded that jurisdiction existed because the suit could have been brought as an original action in federal court under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a) (1976). Proceeding to the merits, the Court recognized that the issue was whether Vitarroz had demonstrated a “likelihood” that, as a result of Borden’s use of the name BRAVOS, “an appreciable number of ordinarily prudent purchasers are likely to be misled, or indeed simply confused, as to the source of the goods in question.”
Mushroom Makers, Inc.
v.
R. G. Barry Corp.,
In light of these findings, the District Court concluded that there is no likelihood of confusion as to the source of the goods, and that Borden’s use of the name BRAVOS would, if anything, redound to Vitar-roz’s benefit. 1 Weighing, on the one hand, the slight risk of harm to Vitarroz, and, on the other, Borden’s good faith and substantial investment, the Court decided that the balance of equities tipped decidedly in Borden’s favor. It therefore declined to enjoin Borden from using the BRAVOS name and dismissed the complaint.
Discussion
1. The threshold issue concerns subject matter jurisdiction, which we are obliged to consider, even though it has not been questioned by the parties.
Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Mottley,
“[T]he party who brings a suit is master to decide what law he will rely upon and therefore does determine whether he will bring a ‘suit arising under’ [the laws] of the United States by his declaration or bill.”
The Fair
v.
Kohler Die & Specialty Co.,
Had the plaintiff resisted removal in this case by a prompt motion to remand, we think federal jurisdiction would have been defeated. In that event, the pleader’s preference to confine its claim to one based on state law would have been manifest, and a remand to the state court would have been required. However, by not contesting jurisdiction at an early stage, we think the plaintiff permitted the District Court to exercise jurisdiction, since the Court was entitled to conclude that the plaintiff was willing to see its trademark infringement claim treated as one based on federal law. We acknowledge that this approach is a slight departure from the usual rule of testing whether a claim arises under federal law strictly from the face of the complaint. But since the cases recognize that the pleader whose facts would support a federal or a state law claim has an option to invoke or bar federal jurisdiction by the wording of his claim, we see no reason why the option period should end on the day the complaint is filed. Indeed, the Supreme Court has observed that removal jurisdiction may properly be exercised over a com
*965
plaint not within the federal court’s jurisdiction at the time removal occurred but, because of subsequent developments, within federal jurisdiction by “the time of the actual trial of the case or of the entry of judgment.”
American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Finn,
2. Turning to the merits of the infringement claim,
3
we are confronted at the outset with Vitarroz’s claim that, as the senior user of the BRAVO’S mark for its crackers, it was entitled as a matter of law to an injunction against Borden’s use of the virtually identical name BRAVOS for its chips. Vitarroz concedes that this approach is contrary to the “now classic” analysis based on the
Polaroid
factors,
McGregor-Doniger Inc. v. Drizzle Inc.,
The issue raised by Vitarroz’s argument is not whether the
Polaroid
factors should be ignored entirely, as Vitarroz urges, for the
Polaroid
factors include the similarity of the marks and the “proximity” of the products, the very factors on which Vitar-roz bases its asserted right to relief.
See
Equitable relief historically has not been available as a matter of right, but has been awarded in the court’s discretion only upon consideration of all the facts and circumstances,
Hecht Co. v. Bowles,
In no ease, however, have we determined a senior user’s right to injunctive relief solely on the basis of the similarity of the marks and the proximity of the products. Our statement in the
Avon
case raising the possibility of such a restricted analysis rested on citation of
La Touraine Coffee Co. v. Lorraine Coffee Co.,
Since the
Polaroid
decision, we have consistently considered all the
Polaroid
factors, including the junior user’s good faith, dé-spite the similarity of the marks and the close proximity of the products.
See, e. g., American Home Products Corp. v. Johnson Chemical Co., supra
(ROACH MOTEL insect trap protected against ROACH INN insect trap);
Mushroom Makers, Inc. v. R. G. Barry Corp., supra
(MUSHROOMS women’s footwear not protected against MUSHROOM women’s sportswear);
McGregor-Doniger Inc. v. Drizzle Inc., supra
(DRIZZ-LER men’s golf jackets not protected against DRIZZLE women’s coats);
Scarves by Vera, Inc.
v.
Todo Imports Ltd. (Inc.), supra
(VERA high-fashion women’s scarves and sportswear protected against VERA cosmetics and toiletries);
King Research, Inc. v. Shulton, Inc.,
Vitarroz argues that the products in this case are more closely related than the products in our prior cases. It is difficult to see, however, how crackers and chips are more closely related than two different brands of insect traps, or men’s cream hairdressings, or coffees. Nor do they appear to be more closely related than women’s footwear and sportswear, or pantyhose and tights. Analysis of the proximity of the products demonstrates, moreover, that the competitive gap between them is not so narrow as to leave no room for consideration of other factors.
In assessing product proximity, we have considered the nature of the products themselves and the structure of the relevant market.
See McGregor-Doniger Inc. v. Drizzle Inc., supra,
With regard to the structure of the market, both products are eventually sold to consumers in retail stores. However, since “modern marketing methods tend to unify widely different types of products in the same retail outlets or distribution networks,”
Continental Connector Corp. v. Continental Specialties Corp., supra,
The plaintiff’s
per se
rule based on the similarity of the marks and the competition between the products could be justified only if we could say with reasonable certainty that injury to the plaintiff is inevitable.
See Avon Shoe Co. v. David Crystal, Inc., supra,
We therefore agree with the District Court’s comprehensive approach and turn to consideration of its conclusions and subsidiary findings. Our function is not to consider the issues
de novo,
but to be sure the District Court applied the correct legal standard and correct criteria to findings that are not clearly erroneous.
See McGregor-Doniger Inc. v. Drizzle Inc., supra,
Vitarroz does not contest the finding that its BRAVO’S mark is suggestive, rather than arbitrary or fanciful,
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. v. Hunting World, Inc.,
Moreover, the record affirmatively shows that the plaintiff’s mark has not acquired secondary meaning. Prior to Vitarroz’s adoption of the mark, BRAVO had been registered by others for a variety of food products. Invoices introduced by Vitarroz to establish the sales performance of its crackers do not even refer to the BRAVO’S mark. The crackers are listed on the invoices simply as “10-12 oz Vitarroz All Purpose Cr.” In addition, the price list Vitar-roz supplies to its retail accounts incorrectly refers to the product as BRAVO crackers, rather than as BRAVO’S. When the user of a mark exhibits so little regard for it, it is difficult to avoid the inference that the mark means little to others.
The Court’s finding that the marks are virtually identical is not disputed. We agree with the District Court, however, that the potential for confusion inherent in the similarity of the marks is reduced by the differing contexts in which the marks are presented. Vitarroz’s cracker box subordinates the BRAVO’S mark to the VITAR-ROZ mark, which appears to be the only mark of any commercial significance to Vi-tarroz or its special market. Likewise, Bor
*969
den’s chips bag prominently displays both the BORDEN mark and the familiar Wise owl, and these marks probably have a greater significance for snack food customers than the name BRAVOS. When similar marks are always presented in association with company names, the likelihood of confusion is reduced.
See McGregor-Doniger Inc. v. Drizzle Inc., supra,
Even if the District Court erred in failing to find a likelihood of confusion as to the source of the goods, it was entitled to deny an injunction upon consideration of all the
Polaroid
factors and other pertinent equitable factors.
See Mushroom Makers, Inc. v. R. G. Barry Corp., supra,
The District Court’s subsidiary findings with regard to these factors are not contested. Vitarroz admits that it has no interest in selling chips so as to bridge the gap that currently exists between the products. It also admits that Borden’s chips are of the highest quality, and it does not quarrel with the finding that Borden’s use of the name BRAVOS will, if anything, redound to the benefit of Vitarroz. There is no dispute that Borden, in good faith, adopted the name BRAVOS and devoted substantial investment to developing good will for it, without knowledge of Vitarroz’s prior use and after reasonable effort to discover all prior uses. Finally, Vitarroz recognizes that any injury to its interest is far outweighed by Borden’s interest in retaining the good will developed as a result of its multi-million dollar investment. 5
These factors distinguish this case from such cases as
Kiki Undies Corp. v. Promenade Hosiery Mills, Inc., supra,
where a “finding of bad faith could not very well be avoided,”
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The District Court also found some risk that shoppers unfamiliar with either product who are asked to purchase “Bravos snacks” might not know which product to purchase, terming this “a possibility of confusion as to the goods themselves.” The Court went on to find that this risk “comes very close to being
de minim-is,”
and we agree. However, although a likelihood of confusion as to the goods, rather than as to the source of the goods, has been suggested to be a possible concern in cases involving competing products,
McGregor-Doniger Inc. v. Drizzle Inc.,
. At first glance,
Beech-Nut, Inc. v. Warner-Lambert Co.,
. Plaintiffs entitlement to relief stands or falls on its infringement claim, and the unfair competition and trademark dilution claims need not be separately considered.
. We do not, of course, decide that a per se rule entitling a senior user to injunctive relief on the basis of the identity of the marks and products would ever be appropriate. Prior to the decision in
Polaroid,
we demonstrated how such a rule, allowing a senior user a “premonitory lien” on a “future” or “adjacent” market could lead to “great injustice.” S. C.
Johnson & Son, Inc. v. Johnson, supra,
. In this connection, it should be noted that the denial of an injunction here does not have the effect of depriving Vitarroz of any property interest. The company remains free to use the BRAVO’S mark for its crackers, and thus has not been compelled to write off its own relatively modest investment in development of the mark.
