Fnb Sioux Falls v. First Nat. Bank South Dakota

655 F. Supp. 2d 979, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 82980
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Dakota
DecidedSeptember 11, 2009
DocketCiv. 06-4101
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 655 F. Supp. 2d 979 (Fnb Sioux Falls v. First Nat. Bank South Dakota) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fnb Sioux Falls v. First Nat. Bank South Dakota, 655 F. Supp. 2d 979, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 82980 (D.S.D. 2009).

Opinion

AMENDED COURT TRIAL MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

LAWRENCE L. PIERSOL, District Judge.

A court trial was held on the Second Amended Complaint (Doc. 61) of the Plaintiff The First National Bank in Sioux Falls (FNB Sioux Falls). In this Second Amended Complaint FNB Sioux Falls has sought relief for alleged violations of the Lanham Act, common law service mark infringement, and common law unfair competition, as well as for the alleged violation of a preliminary injunction previously issued by this Court in The First National Bank In Sioux Falls v. First National Bank South Dakota, No. 95-4116 (D.S.D. April 14, 1997). 1 In its March 31, 2008 Memorandum Opinion, 2008 WL 895931, this Court, after considering the changes of location, advertising and promotional activities of the parties in the cases at hand and the factors of § 24 of The Restatement (Second) of Judgments, rejected the Defendants’ argument that res judicata barred FNB’s Sioux Falls’ claims in the case now before the Court. 2

*982 FACTUAL FINDINGS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiff, The First National Bank in Sioux Falls

Plaintiff, The First National Bank in Sioux Falls (FNB Sioux Falls), is a nationally chartered bank with its principal offices in Sioux Falls, South Dakota which offers retail and commercial banking services. FNB Sioux Falls, which has also been known as the “Baker Bank,” was originally chartered as Minnehaha National Bank of Sioux Falls in 1885. William Lafayette Baker became an owner and president of the bank around 1910. After surviving the Great Depression and the Bank Holiday, Minnehaha National Bank changed its name to First National Bank & Trust Company. In 1952 the name was then changed to The First National Bank in Sioux Falls. 3 In around 1976, FNB Sioux Falls razed its predecessor building and built its current main office on the corner of 9th Street and Phillips Avenue in downtown Sioux Falls. At about that time FNB Sioux Falls adopted the red “Flying F’s logo,” F’s in a pentagonal shape, which is often used in connection with its mark “First National Bank.”

The sign on the main office building is “First National Bank.” This sign, added at the top of the bank building in the 1980’s, is in copper metallic letters. Additional Branches using the term “First National Bank” exist in Minnehaha, Lincoln and Moody Counties in Sioux Falls, Brandon, Baltic, Dell Rapids, Harrisburg and Flandreau. The Farmer’s State Bank, Flandreau, was acquired by FNB Sioux Falls’ holding company in 1981. The name of that Bank was renamed the Flandreau Branch of First National Bank in Sioux Falls on April 1, 2007. FNB Sioux Falls has consistently used its marks to promote its services in connection with television, radio, billboard and print media in Minnehaha, Lincoln and Moody Counties. A plethora of news articles, advertisements, acknowledgments and announcements displaying the “Flying F’s logo” and the mark, “First National Bank,” and “First National” were received into evidence at trial. FNB Sioux Falls has spent approximately a half million dollars in advertising for each of the last ten years preceding the trial of this action.

FNB Sioux Falls has a Certificate of Registration for the Service Mark, “THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN SIOUX FALLS,” which was issued by United States Patent and Trademark Office on March 25, 1997. In this Court’s decision in 1997 this Court concluded that “First National,” “First National Bank,” and “The First National Bank in Sioux Falls” were descriptive marks, that these marks had attained secondary meaning to consumers in the Sioux Falls market area, and that FNB Sioux Falls possessed common law service marks in these marks within a ten-mile radius of its main office at the corner of 9th Street and Phillips Avenue in downtown Sioux Falls.

William Ludlow Baker, the great grandson of William Lafayette Baker was elected President and Chief Executive Officer of FNB Sioux Falls in 2001 and at the time *983 of the trial was also the Chairman of FNB Sioux Falls. Baker testified that FNB Sioux Falls had substantial growth in the past twelve years. FNB Sioux Falls which had assets of around $500 million at the time of the earlier trial now has assets of over a billion dollars, its loans and deposits have about doubled and it now has 20 locations in Minnehaha, Lincoln, and Moody Counties. FNB Sioux Falls receives a majority, approximately 2/3 of its revenue and loan volume, from business and commercial entities. In Baker’s estimate, FNB Sioux Falls competes with FNB South Dakota for business and commercial banking services. Baker does not see a distinction between the market FNB Sioux Falls services and the market FNB South Dakota claims to be approaching. Baker classifies both banks as full service banks. At the time of the 2008 trial Baker and Stephanie Gongopoulos, Vice President and Marketing Director of FNB Sioux Falls, testified that other than the Defendants, FNB Sioux Falls was the only bank operating under “First National” and “First National Bank” in Minnehaha, Lincoln, and Moody Counties. 4

FNB Sioux Falls provides retail merchant services under the name First National Bank Merchant Services. Retail merchant services are offered to business enterprises that accept payment from plastic credit or debit cards. However, FNB Sioux Falls out sources the processing of these transactions through a contractual arrangement with a vendor in Colorado that authorizes and settles payments electronically with the credit and debit card issuing companies. FNB Sioux Falls manages the relationship with the local retail merchants. FNB Sioux Falls’ merchant services produces an annual $150,000 net income and does no television or radio advertising.

FNB Sioux Falls takes part in numerous community affairs, such as the display of Christmas trees, and has been a substantial contributor to the Sioux Empire United Way and a community supporter of other sports, civic, educational and cultural events and organizations such as the South Dakota Symphony and the President’s Bowl in Sioux Falls. The employees of FNB Sioux Falls are encouraged to volunteer in the community and are given 8 hours of paid time annually for such volunteer work.

Defendants

Defendant First National Bank South Dakota (FNB South Dakota), is a nationally charted bank with its principal offices in Yankton, South Dakota. FNB South Dakota offers full-service banking in Yankton, Huron, Mitchell and Woonsocket, South Dakota. These towns are in Yankton, Beadle, Hanson and Sanborn Counties, respectively. The First National Bank in Yankton previously operated under the name “Valley Bank.” The banks in Huron, Mitchell and Woonsocket previously operated under the name “Commercial Bank,” but since about 1999 when they were acquired by FNB South Dakota from Commercial Bank & Trust, they have operated under the service mark “First National Bank South Dakota.” FNB South Dakota uses a circle 1 logo with green coloration. In 2000, FNB South Dakota established a processing center at North Potsdam in Northeast Sioux Falls. FNB South Dakota has operated its automobile finance operation from this location since 2000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
655 F. Supp. 2d 979, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 82980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fnb-sioux-falls-v-first-nat-bank-south-dakota-sdd-2009.