Blanco GMBH + Co. KG v. Vito Antonio Laera

620 F. App'x 718
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 2015
Docket14-11814
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 620 F. App'x 718 (Blanco GMBH + Co. KG v. Vito Antonio Laera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanco GMBH + Co. KG v. Vito Antonio Laera, 620 F. App'x 718 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Defendant Vito Antonio Laera (“Defendant”) appeals from a number of post-judgment orders issued by the district *720 court in a trademark infringement case. Upon review of the record and the parties’ briefs, and for the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the orders of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Blanco GmbH + Co. KG (“Plaintiff’) is a German corporation that manufactures sinks, faucets, and kitchen accessories, which products the company distributes internationally, including in the United States. Defendant is President of co-defendants Vlanco Industries, LLC (“Vlanco”) and G-Tech-I, Inc. (“G-Tech-I”; with Vlanco, the “Corporate Defendants”; with Defendant and G-Tech-I, “Defendants”), which companies also manufacture and distribute kitchen fixtures. 1

In August 2012 Plaintiff filed a trademark infringement lawsuit against Defendants, alleging the latter were “blatantly infringing its BLANCO marks by selling VLANCO-branded products” identical to Plaintiffs sinks and faucets. Plaintiff further alleged that it wrote to Defendants upon discovery of the allegedly infringing actions to request that they desist selling their VLANCO products and assign to Plaintiff their mark in the name. Defendants did not desist, however, but allegedly doubled-down by appropriating Plaintiffs marketing efforts for their own use, filing twenty-three applications with the United States Trademark Office, petitioning the Trademark Office to cancel one of Plaintiffs marks, and registering “a large number of domain names containing the infringing designations BLANCO or VLANCO, with the specific intention of diverting consumers from consummating 'sales of Plaintiffs goods bearing the BLANCO Marks.”

Plaintiffs lawsuit did not last long — at least initially — proceeding only to the motion to dismiss stage, at which point the parties reached a settlement during mediation. Consequently, on April 3, 2013, they jointly filed a Stipulation of Dismissal and request for the court to enter a final judgment. The district court obliged shortly thereafter by entering its Final Judgment Upon Consent (the “Consent Judgment”), over which it retained jurisdiction to ensure the parties’ compliance, and closing the case.

Generally, the terms of the Consent Judgment (1) enjoined Defendants from attempting to register as a mark with the Trademark Office or as an internet domain any term similar to “Blanco[,j” and from opposing Plaintiffs applications with the Trademark Office regarding such term; (2) obligated Defendants to cancel a number of pending trademark applications; and (3) required Defendants to transfer to Plaintiff the infringing internet domain names they previously registered. Should Defendants breach any of the terms of the Consent Judgment, a liquidated damages clause required them to pay Plaintiff $150,000 per violation and reimburse Plaintiff for any attorneys’ fees and costs it incurred recovering those damages.

Not long after the district court closed the case, Plaintiff moved the court to reopen it and impose sanctions upon Defendants after discovering they had violated several provisions of the Consent Judgment. In short, Plaintiff learned that Defendants, through the use of aliases, fictitious persons, or agents, (1) filed applications with the Trademark Office that concerned ' prohibited marks, (2) registered fifty-five new domain names containing versions of the prohibited marks, (3) redirected those domain names and *721 twenty-three others to a website “using the Prohibited Designation BLANCO[,]” and (4) refused to transfer domain names to Plaintiff in accordance with the Consent Judgment, transferring them to third parties instead.

A second, subsequent motion for contempt alerted the court that Defendant was committing further violations of the Consent Judgment by prosecuting two lawsuits — both in federal court, one in the District of South Carolina and one in the Southern District of Florida — in which he sought to circumvent the Consent Judgment by obtaining verdicts that would enable the Corporate Defendants to use the prohibited marks. 2 And Defendant’s violations of the Consent Judgment did not stop there: he also moved the Trademark Office to “suspend the cancellation/opposition proceedings instituted by Plaintiff against [Defendant’s] trademark applications that are the subject of the consent judgment, and thereby disregard[ed]” the district court’s order to the contrary.

The district court referred Plaintiffs motions to a magistrate judge for review, who issued his first Report and Recommendations on December 12, 2013. In relevant part, the magistrate judge recommended that the district court grant the motions for contempt, having found that Plaintiff made a prima facie showing that Defendants violated the Consent Judgment, which the Defendants failed to rebut. As sanctions, in accordance with the Consent Judgment’s liquidated damages clause, the magistrate judge recommended imposing four fines of $150,000 against Defendants — one for each category of violation committed, i.e., the lieensipg of and registering domain names for prohibited marks, filing trademark applications for prohibited marks, registering prohibited domain names, and failing to transfer certain domain name registrations to Plaintiff. While the Consent Judgement technically would have authorized a fine of $150,000 for each -violation Defendants committed, the magistrate judge felt that such an award would be excessive given that all the violative actions traced back to Defendant, Plaintiffs injuries were not quantifiable, and an award of $600,000 would effect the purpose of the liquidated damages clause by coercing Defendant’s compliance with the terms of the Consent Judgment. In addition, the magistrate judge recommended that the court grant Plaintiff various injunctive relief and award it attorneys’ fees and costs, both in accordance with the Consent Judgment.

After considering the motions, evidence, and the parties’ objections, the district court agreed that Plaintiff established a prima facie case of contempt, which Defendants failed to rebut, and adopted the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendations. Accordingly, the court found that Plaintiff was entitled to $600,000 in liquidated damages, attorneys’ fees and costs, and injunctive relief as provided for in the Consent Judgment. Additionally, the court ordered the Trademark Office to “dismiss” three applications filed by an alias or agent of Defendant. 3

*722 Following the district court’s adoption of the magistrate judge’s December 12, 2013 Report and Recommendations and issuance of its corresponding orders, the parties filed a number of motions, two of which are pertinent to this appeal. First, Plaintiff filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the court’s Amended Order adopting the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendations upon uncovering further conduct of Defendants that violated the Consent Judgment.

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Related

Blanco GmbH + Co. KG v. Vlanco Industries, LLC
642 F. App'x 934 (Eleventh Circuit, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
620 F. App'x 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanco-gmbh-co-kg-v-vito-antonio-laera-ca11-2015.