Analytic Recruiting, Inc. v. Analytic Resources, LLC

156 F. Supp. 2d 499, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10761, 2001 WL 855624
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 23, 2001
Docket2:01-cv-00783
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 F. Supp. 2d 499 (Analytic Recruiting, Inc. v. Analytic Resources, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Analytic Recruiting, Inc. v. Analytic Resources, LLC, 156 F. Supp. 2d 499, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10761, 2001 WL 855624 (E.D. Pa. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ANITA B. BRODY, District Judge.

Before me is plaintiff Analytic Recruiting, Inc.’s (“Analytic Recruiting”) request for injunctive relief on its claims of trade name infringement under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1)(A), and unfair competition under the common law. On May 9, 2001 through May 11, 2001, I held an evidentiary hearing on plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction. At the close of the hearing, the parties agreed that the record was complete for purposes of determining what if any permanent relief is appropriate. I will now grant a permanent injunction.

I. Findings of Fact

Having considered all of the testimony and exhibits offered at trial, I make the following findings of fact:

A. The Parties

1. Plaintiff Analytic Recruiting is a nationwide recruiting firm that operates from its offices in New York City, New York. Analytic Recruiting has continuously operated under that name since *502 it was formed in 1980. It is co-owned by Rita Raz (“Raz”) and her husband, Dan Raz. Raz is the President of Analytic Recruiting and is also one of its twelve (12) recruiters.

2. Analytic Recruiting specializes in placing individuals with sophisticated backgrounds and strong quantitative and analytical skills in permanent employment positions across a number of industry sectors in quantitative business positions. The individuals recruited for the positions are referred to as “candidates.” The companies seeking individuals to fill its employment positions are referred to as “clients.”

3. Positions for which Analytic Recruiting recruits include direct marketing analysis, credit-risk analysis, market research and sales forecasting, investment banking, and systems development. 1

4. Over the past ten years, Analytic Recruiting has filled between two hundred and fifty (250) and three hundred (300) such positions per year with resulting billings of between five (5) and eight (8) million dollars annually.

5. Analytic Recruiting’s corporate client base includes predominantly Fortune-One Thousand companies, as well as some mid-size and some smaller companies, in the United States.

6. In 1980 Rita and Dan Raz conceived of their new business because they thought that jobs requiring quantitative skills and the “slicing and dicing” of data would need to be created and filled to take advantage of the computational powers of computers. They chose the name “Analytic Recruiting” for their business because they thought that the word “analytic” suggested the type of “braininess” or intelligence that was called for by such positions.

7. The majority of Analytic Recruiting’s communications with candidates and corporate clients are oral, either by telephone or by email. In such communications, the firm’s name is likely to be referred to in an abbreviated form as “Analytic.”

8. In its twenty-one (21) year history, Analytic Recruiting has continually advertised in print, and more recently, electronic media. Since 1992, it has spent approximately $957,000 in such advertising, placing ads, both directly and through an advertising agency, in print media such as newspapers (principally the New York Times), and in trade periodicals such as Orms Today, Credit Card Management and Mnstat News. Advertising through electronic media now takes place through the company’s own web site and through other electronic media such as Dice, com, Headhunter.net, and Bloomberg. Relatively higher expenditures in advertising were made before 1992 when electronic media advertising over the internet was not available.

9. In all such ads, except in the New York Times where the space is especially expensive, prominence is given to the word “Analytic” within the company’s name. The word “Analytic” is frequently portrayed independently of the full name of the firm and in much larger, bolder and more stylized type face. The company’s web site gives similar prominence and separateness to the word “Analytic” on each screen within the site.

*503 10. The word “Analytic” is the only word on the door of the company’s offices. The word “Analytic” is displayed separately and prominently from the company’s name as a whole on its letterhead, on its envelopes, and on its memo pads. The word “Analytic” is superimposed on any resume which the company receives from a candidate and then forwards to a corporate client for consideration. The word “Analytic” is given prominence on Analytic Recruiting’s written fee agreements with those clients. The word “Analytic,” and only that word, is on the company’s holiday greeting cards and on notes the company writes to send holiday gifts to its clients.

11. Analytic Recruiting over the years has promoted itself with merchandise bearing the name “Analytic”, e.g., tee shirts, pocket calenders, mouse pads and baseball caps all of which have been distributed by the hundreds to clients or candidates.

12. To the extent that either the local yellow pages or the National Directory for Executive Recruiters contains any classification of types of recruiting firms, the classification is of recruiting firms as either permanent or temporary (“contract”). There is no classification or type of recruiting firm known as an “analytic” recruiting firm.

13. In the ordinary course of business, Analytic Recruiting receives job descriptions from corporate clients for positions they wish to fill and advertises those descriptions in print and electronic media. To the extent that the descriptions contain the word “analyst” or some derivation of the word analysis, the word is invariably used in a context which provides some further description of the nature of the analytical position involved, e.g.: Business/Sales Analyst; Manager Risk Analysis; AVP Segmentation Analysis; Quantitative Business Analyst; Database Marketing Analyst.

14. Other than Analytic Resources, Analytic Recruiting has been the only recruiting firm using the word “analytic” or any derivation of the word “analysis” in its company name since its inception. David Carpenter (“Carpenter”), defendant’s principal, conducted a web search for companies using the name “analytic” and found a number of other companies doing something other than recruiting, i.e. companies involved in graphic design, advertising, legal consulting, and market research, using “analytic” as the dominant term in its company name, including two other companies with the name “Analytic Resources.”

15. Defendant Analytic Resources, LLC (“Analytic Resources”) is a limited liability company located in Ardmore, Pennsylvania. Carpenter is the defendant’s President and Director of Executive Recruiting. Analytic Resources began its operations in early February 2000.

16. Analytic Resources is a nationwide recruiting firm that specializes in - placing individuals with strong statistical, quantitative, and analytical backgrounds in contract positions in quantitative marketing, telecommunications, pharmaceutical and financial services (i.e. consumer credit, banks, retail credit) industries.

17.

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156 F. Supp. 2d 499, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10761, 2001 WL 855624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/analytic-recruiting-inc-v-analytic-resources-llc-paed-2001.