FCC Hotel Tower, LLC v. Drummond

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 8, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-00702
StatusUnknown

This text of FCC Hotel Tower, LLC v. Drummond (FCC Hotel Tower, LLC v. Drummond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FCC Hotel Tower, LLC v. Drummond, (M.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION FCC HOTEL TOWER, LLC, a Florida limited liability company, Plaintiff, Vv. Case No.: 2:23-cv-702-SPC-KCD THOMAS A. DRUMMOND, MBOR INVESTMENTS, LLC, MBOR AMENITIES, LLC and MBOR RENTALS, LLC, Defendants. / OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court are Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 83), Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 86), and the parties’ respective responses, replies, and exhibits. Background This case centers on a real estate development called Marco Beach Ocean Resort in Marco Beach, Florida. Plaintiff FCC Hotel Tower, LLC is a real estate development company. It claims ownership of two registered

trademarks—MARCO BEACH OCEAN RESORT and the crest design ““"#*", which acts as a logo for the resort—and the unregistered trademark MBOR. Defendants’ own condominium units in the resort, offer those units to

customers for short-term rental, and manage amenities and short-term rentals for owners of other units in the building. Defendants have used FCC’s marks

in relation to those services. FCC sues Defendants for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and cyberpiracy. Defendants countersue for cancellation of the crest design mark and raise various defenses, including abandonment of the word mark. Both parties now move for partial summary

judgment. The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. The Marco Beach Ocean Resort is a beachside real estate development with condominiums, a restaurant, a spa, and other amenities. FCC owns the commercial units in the development, but no condominiums. Beginning in

2001, FCC operated a “hotel program” for condominium owners. Under the program, FCC would manage rentals of the privately owned condominiums and share the revenue with the owners. The Hotel Unit Management Agreement provided that the hotel program would remain in effect so long as

it was financially viable and met certain thresholds. On February 1, 2022, FCC notified members it would terminate the hotel program on May 2, 2022, because the program fell below those thresholds. FCC owns U.S. Trademark Registration No. 2,733,637 for the mark

MARCO BEACH OCEAN RESORT, which lists the following services: “Real estate development, development of commercial and residential buildings, namely a hotel and condominium,” and “Restaurant services and bar services.” (Doc. 86-16). FCC also owns U.S. Trademark Registration No. 5485376 for the crest design mark, which lists these services:

Class 43: Hotels; resort hotel; hotel; restaurant services; bar services, catering; providing banquet and social function facilities for special occasions; providing conference rooms; providing convention facilities; providing facilities for exhibitions; providing temporary accommodation; resort lodging services; hospitality services in the nature of resort hotel services; spa services, namely, providing temporary accommodations and meals to clients of a health spa; and providing information, in the fields of the aforesaid services, via a global computer network

Class 44: Massage services; health spa services for health and wellness of the body and spirit offered at a health resort; health spa services, namely, cosmetic body care services; and providing information, in the fields of the aforesaid services, via a global computer network

(Doc. 86-17). FCC used both marks to promote the resort at least as early as 1998. Between 2018 and 2021, FCC spent on average more than $500,000 a year marketing services under the marks. In guest surveys conducted from 2018- 2021, about 92% of respondents said they were somewhat or extremely satisfied with their stay, more than 25% were repeat guests, about 35% learned of the resort through an internet search, and just over 60% visited FCC’s website before booking. FCC has not owned any condominium units or offered room rental/lodging services since ending the hotel program, but it continues to offer valet services, catering, banquet facilities, and conference rooms under its trademarks. An entity related to FCC called FCC Beach & Yacht, LLC

operates a bar and restaurant on the property and uses FCC’s trademarks in relation to those services under what FCC considers an implied license. FCC claims it intends to resume its hotel services, but Defendants argue FCC has no actual plans to do so.

On January 4, 2024, FCC submitted a Combined Declaration of Use and Incontestability under Sections 8 & 15 to the USPTO in connection with the crest design mark: For International Class 043, the mark is in use in commerce on or in connection with all of the goods/all of the services, or to indicate membership in the collective membership organization, listed in the existing registration for this specific class: Hotels; resort hotel; hotel; restaurant services; bar services, catering; providing banquet and social function facilities for special occasions; providing conference rooms; providing convention facilities; providing facilities for exhibitions; providing temporary accommodation; resort lodging services; hospitality services in the nature of resort hotel services; spa services, namely, providing temporary accommodations and meals to clients of a health spa; and providing information, in the fields of the aforesaid services, via a global computer network; and the mark has been continuously used in commerce for five (5) consecutive years after the date of registration, or the date of publication under Section 12(c), and is still in use in commerce on or in connection with all goods/all services, or to indicate membership in the collective membership organization, listed in the existing registration for this class.

… For International Class 044, the mark is in use in commerce on or in connection with all of the goods/all of the services, or to indicate membership in the collective membership organization, listed in the existing registration for this specific class: Massage services; health spa services for health and wellness of the body and spirit offered at a health resort; health spa services, namely, cosmetic body care services; and providing information, in the fields of the aforesaid services, via a global computer network; and the mark has been continuously used in commerce for five (5) consecutive years after the date of registration, or the date of publication under Section 12(c), and is still in use in commerce on or in connection with all goods/all services, or to indicate membership in the collective membership organization, listed in the existing registration for this class.

(Doc. 86-9 at 7-8). Jennifer Nicholson, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for the entity that oversees FCC, signed the declaration on January 5, 2024. Defendant Thomas A. Drummond owns 26 condominium units in the resort. He is the sole managing officer of co-defendants MBOR Investments, LLC, MBOR Rentals, LLC, and MBOR Amenities, LLC, which are in the business of owning units and providing rental and amenity services to units in the property. Defendants currently manage 80 of the 103 condominium units and provide services like valet parking, bellman services, cleaning, laundry, and beach amenities. They advertise the units on AirBnB, VRBO, and their website www.marcobeachoceansuites.com, which Drummond registered on September 19, 2023, shortly after FCC filed this action. Prior to that Drummond used www.marcobeachocean.com, which he registered on January 17, 2022, and which now forwards visitors to the new domain. Drummond began using the MARCO BEACH OCEAN RESORT mark on his VRBO and Airbnb listings around January 2012. He ceased using it

around September 2023, and began using the term Marco Beach Ocean Suites.

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FCC Hotel Tower, LLC v. Drummond, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fcc-hotel-tower-llc-v-drummond-flmd-2025.