DayCab Company, Inc. v. Prairie Technology, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJune 23, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00063
StatusUnknown

This text of DayCab Company, Inc. v. Prairie Technology, LLC (DayCab Company, Inc. v. Prairie Technology, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DayCab Company, Inc. v. Prairie Technology, LLC, (E.D. Tenn. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE

DAYCAB COMPANY, INC., ) ) Case No. 3:20-cv-63 Plaintiff, ) ) Judge Travis R. McDonough v. ) ) Magistrate Judge Debra C. Poplin WILLIAM OSMAN, WANDA OSMAN, ) BIG TRUCK PARTS LLC, and PRAIRIE ) TECHNOLOGY, LLC, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before the Court are DayCab Company, Inc.’s (“DayCab”) motions for partial summary judgment (Doc. 184), to exclude the testimony of Greg Wandling (Doc. 197), to file excess pages (Docs. 205, 215), and to supplement its expert disclosures (Doc. 211). Also before the Court are Defendants William Osman, Wanda Osman, Prairie Technology LLC (“Prairie”), and Big Truck Parts LLC’s (“BTP”) (collectively, “Defendants”) motions for partial summary judgment1 (Doc. 199) and to exclude the testimony of Marc Wagers (Doc. 201). For the reasons herein, DayCab’s motions for partial summary judgment and to supplement its expert disclosures are DENIED. Its motion to file excess pages is GRANTED, and its reply will be deemed filed. DayCab’s motion to exclude the testimony of Greg Wandling is GRANTED IN PART. Defendants’ motion to strike the testimony of Marc Wagers is GRANTED IN PART, and its motion for partial summary judgment is GRANTED.

1 The parties style their motions as motions for partial summary judgment, but the Court’s decisions on the cross-motions resolve the entirety of the case. I. BACKGROUND A. DayCab and its XL Conversion Kits DayCab designs, manufactures, and sells conversion kits for tractor-trailer cabs that convert a sleeper tractor—which has a compartment designed for long-haul driving, with a sleeping unit for the driver—into a tractor that does not have a sleeper unit (a “daycab”). (Doc.

188, at 1.) Marc Wagers, the founder of DayCab, started his first conversion-kit business in his garage in 1997 and has been continuously involved in the design and manufacture of various conversion kits since that time. (Id. at 2, 6.) Wagers states that he was the first person to create extended-cab conversion kits, which he called his “Fat Albert” models. (Id. at 4.) At issue in this case are DayCab’s “XL” conversion kits for two types of Peterbilt rigs: the Unibilt and Ultracab. (Id. at 5.) DayCab introduced these models in or around 2004. (Id.) DayCab spent significant time and money marketing its products, nearly $534,726 from 2001 to 2018. (Id. at 30.) In 2004, DayCab sold 25 kits; in 2020, it sold 772. (Id.) Wagers avers that his goals in designing the XL models were to: (1) “allow more room

in the cab for the driver and/or for storage of more equipment than the flat-panel unit provided”; (2) “allow for the installation or use of an air-ride system or similar equipment, in some cases”2; and (3) “be distinctive in appearance so it would be recognizable by consumers.” (Doc. 188, at 6.) The Unibilt model (left) and Ultracab model (right) are pictured below.

2 Both parties generally agree that consumers replace the air-ride system, rendering obsolete the space to attach the shock absorbers. (Doc. 188, at 8–9.) y gh y a Ai en

: wee 1 1 NY AA ae —_ Pi eo (Doc. 188, at 7). Wagers identified the XL models’ trade dress as follows: (1) a slant-back design with specific angles and radii, including a 144-degree slant towards the cab and rolled edges with radii of 1.5 inches; (2) a conversion-kit depth of 5.375 inches; (3) rounded edges with specific angles and radii; and (4) grey colors. (Ud. at 5, 9.) DayCab states that the kit depth of 5.375 inches “allows additional room inside the cab” and the slant-back design “‘allows space for the attachment of air-ride equipment.” (Doc. 199-2, at 77-78.) B. Big Truck Parts and Prairie Technology’s Competing Kits BTP and Prairie are both owned by Bill Osman and located in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. (Doc. 189, at 7.) Osman began making conversion kits in 1998. (/d. at 56.) He performed his first Peterbilt conversion in 1999, and in 2000, the U.S. Patent Office awarded Osman Patent Number 6,076,884 for a “Truck Cab Conversion Panel.” (/d. at 42.) The ‘884 Patent summarizes the invention as “[a] one-piece fiberglass panel [that] is provided for the retrofit conversion of a sleeper truck cab into a day cab.” (/d. at 46.) In 2015, Osman started Prairie and BTP. (Ud. at 53-54.) Prairie manufactures conversion kits, and BTP sells the manufactured kits. Ud.) These kits sell for $1,325 to $2,060. Ud. at 54.) Each kit is manufactured and sold with an

identification card with Prairie’s logo embedded in the fiberglass and is shipped in a box bearing Prairie’s logo. (Id. at 55, 60–61.) Additionally, BTP places a placard on the driver’s side door of reconfigured cabs bearing its name and logo. (Id. at 64.) BTP and Prairie named their conversion-kit products “Cousin Albert,” Uncle Albert,” and “Fat Boy.” (Doc. 188, at 20–23; Doc. 189, at 2–10.)

At some point, Prairie posted a promotional video on its website that featured Ray Shirle, a Canadian body-shop owner, wearing a shirt with the Ray’s Sandblasting and Custom Trucks (“Ray’s”) logo on it. (Doc. 199-2, at 50.) Ray’s logo bears substantial similarity to DayCab’s logo, which is registered through the United States Patent and Trademark Office. (Doc. 172, at 13.) Shirle averred that the logo was obtained from the public domain in Canada, and that he has ceased using the logo. (Doc. 199-2, at 50.) Furthermore, he stated that Ray’s has no affiliation with Defendants beyond being a certified installer for Prairie products. (Id.) C. Fibertech and Installation Confusion Arvil Lewis runs a company that competes with DayCab and Prairie named FiberTech.

(Doc. 189, at 19–20.) Lewis testified that there are very few players in the daycab-conversion market—just DayCab, FiberTech, Prairie, and Peterbilt. (Id. at 20–21.) He further testified that he cannot distinguish between DayCab and Prairie’s models when the converted rigs are on the road. (Id. at 27.) James Stegall—a Missouri truck-shop owner—also testified regarding the similarities between DayCab and BTP’s kits. (Doc. 189, at 70.) According to Stegall, a customer brought in a rig to be converted from a sleeper into a daycab, and Stegall completed the installation with a kit the customer provided. (Id. at 71.) After the installation was completed, the rig needed an interior, so the customer ordered a DayCab interior, as both Stegall and the consumer believed the conversion kit to have been manufactured by DayCab. (Id. at 72.) However, when the interior arrived, it did not fit because the kit was actually manufactured by Prairie, rather than DayCab. (Id. at 74–75.) D. The Instant Suit DayCab instituted the present action on January 8, 2020, asserting claims under the

Lanham Act and Tennessee Consumer Protection Act for trade-dress infringement. (Id.) Defendants brought a counterclaim for a declaratory judgment that DayCab’s trade dress is functional and that they have not infringed on DayCab’s trade dress or trademark. (Doc. 175.) On April 11, 2022, both Defendants and DayCab filed cross-motions for summary judgment (Docs. 184, 199). On the same day, DayCab filed a Daubert motion as to Defendants’ expert Greg Wandling (Doc. 197), and, shortly after, Defendants filed a motion to strike the testimony of Marc Wagers (Doc. 201). These motions are now ready for the Court’s review. II. MOTIONS TO EXCLUDE EVIDENCE A. Standard of Law

Federal Rule of Evidence

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DayCab Company, Inc. v. Prairie Technology, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daycab-company-inc-v-prairie-technology-llc-tned-2022.