Burger King of Florida, Inc., and Burger King Restaurants, Inc. v. Gene Hoots and Betty Hoots, D/B/A Burger King

403 F.2d 904, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 706, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4765
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 25, 1968
Docket16706
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 403 F.2d 904 (Burger King of Florida, Inc., and Burger King Restaurants, Inc. v. Gene Hoots and Betty Hoots, D/B/A Burger King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burger King of Florida, Inc., and Burger King Restaurants, Inc. v. Gene Hoots and Betty Hoots, D/B/A Burger King, 403 F.2d 904, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 706, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4765 (7th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

*906 KILEY, Circuit Judge.

Defendants’ appeal presents a conflict between plaintiffs’ right to use the trade mark “Burger King,” which plaintiffs have registered under the Federal Trade Mark Act, 1 and defendants’ right to use the same trade mark which defendants have registered under the Illinois Trade Mark Act. 2 The district court resolved the conflict in favor of plaintiffs in this case of first impression in this Circuit. We affirm the judgment restraining the defendants from using the name “Burger King” in any part of Illinois except in their Mattoon, Illinois, market, and restraining plaintiffs from using their trade mark in the market area of Mattoon, Illinois. 3

Defendants do not challenge the district court’s findings of fact and have not included testimony of witnesses at the trial in the record on appeal.

Plaintiff Burger King of Florida, Inc. opened the first “Burger King” restaurant in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1953. By 1955, fifteen of these restaurants were in operation in Florida, Georgia and Tennessee; in 1956 the number operating in Alabama, Kentucky and Virginia was twenty-nine; by 1957, in these states, thirty-eight restaurants were in operation.

In July, 1961, plaintiffs opened their first Illinois “Burger King” restaurant in Skokie, and at that time had notice of the defendants’ prior registration of the same mark under the Illinois Trade Mark Act. Thereafter, on October 3, 1961, plaintiffs’ certificate of federal registration of the mark was issued. Subsequently, plaintiffs opened a restaurant in Champaign, Illinois, and at the time of the trial in November, 1967, were operating more than fifty “Burger King” restaurants in the state of Illinois.

In 1957 the defendants, who had been operating an ice cream business in Mattoon, Illinois, opened a “Burger King” restaurant there. In July, 1959, they registered that name under Illinois law as their trade mark, without notice of plaintiffs’ prior use of the same mark. On September 26, 1962, the defendants, with constructive knowledge of plaintiffs’ federal trade mark, opened a second similar restaurant, in Charleston, Illinois.

Both parties have used the trade mark prominently, and in 1962 they exchanged charges of infringement in Illinois. After plaintiffs opened a restaurant in Champaign, Illinois, defendants sued in the state court to restrain plaintiffs’ use of the mark in Illinois. Plaintiffs then brought the federal suit, now before us, and the defendants counter-claimed for an injunction, charging plaintiffs with infringement of their Illinois trade mark.

The district court concluded, from the unchallenged findings, that plaintiffs’ federal registration is prima facie evidence of the validity of the registration and ownership of the mark; that plaintiffs have both a common-law and a federal right in the mark superior to defendants’ in the area of natural expansion of plaintiffs’ enterprise which “logically included” all of Illinois, except where defendants had actually adopted and used the mark, innocently, i. e., without notice and in good faith; and that the defendants had adopted and continuously used the mark in the Mattoon area innocently and were entitled to protection in that market.

We hold that the district court properly decided that plaintiffs’ federal registration of the trade mark “Burger King” gave them the exclusive right to use the mark in Illinois except in the Mattoon market area in Illinois where the defendants, without knowledge of plaintiffs’ prior use, actually used the mark before plaintiffs’ federal registra *907 tion. The defendants did not acquire the exclusive right they would have acquired by their Illinois registration had they actually used the mark throughout Illinois prior to the plaintiffs’ federal registration.

We think our holding is clear from the terms of the Federal Trade Mark Act. Under 15 U.S.C. § 1065 of the Act, plaintiffs, owners of the federally registered trade mark “Burger King,” have the “incontestable” right to use the mark in commerce, except to the extent that such use infringes what valid right the defendants have acquired by their continuous use of the same mark prior to plaintiffs’ federal registration.

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b), the federal certificate of registration is “conclusive evidence” of plaintiffs’ “exclusive right” to use the mark. This Section, however, also provides a defense to an exclusive right to use a trade mark: If a trade mark was adopted without knowledge of the federal registrant’s prior use, and has been continuously used, then such use “shall” constitute a defense to infringement, provided that this defense applies only for the area in which such continuous prior use is proved. Since the defendants have established that they had adopted the mark “Burger King” without knowledge of plaintiffs’ prior use and that they had continuously used the mark from a date prior to plaintiffs’ federal registration of the mark, they are entitled to protection in the area which that use appropriated to them.

Plaintiffs agree that the defendants as prior good faith users are to be protected in the area that they had appropriated. Thus, the question narrows to what area in Illinois the defendants have appropriated by virtue of their Illinois registration.

At common law, defendants were entitled to protection in the Mattoon market area because of the innocent use of the mark prior to plaintiffs’ federal registration. They argue that the Illinois Trade Mark Act was designed to give more protection than they already had at common law, and that various provisions 4 of the Illinois Act indicate an intention to afford Illinois registrants exclusive rights to use trade marks throughout the state, regardless of whether they actually used the marks throughout the state or not. However, the Act itself does not express any such intention. And no case has been cited to us, nor has our research disclosed any case in the Illinois courts deciding whether a registrant is entitled to statewide protection even if he has used the mark only in a small geographical area.

Two decisions of this court, however, shed light on the defendants’ argument. In Philco Corp. v. Phillips Mfg. Co., 133 F.2d 663,148 A.L.R. 125 (7th Cir. 1943), this court, through Judge Kerner, 5 discussed the 1905 and 1920 Trade Mark Acts, and decided that Congress had the constitutional power to legislate on “merits of trade mark questions,” supra at 670 of 133 F.2d. It then stated that the policy of the Acts, to provide protection of federally registered marks used in interstate commerce, “may not be defeated or obstructed by State law” and that if state law conflicts with the policy it “must yield to the superior federal law.” The court held that Philco’s federal-registration rendered all questions of use and protection in interstate commerce questions of federal law, not state law.

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403 F.2d 904, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 706, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burger-king-of-florida-inc-and-burger-king-restaurants-inc-v-gene-ca7-1968.