I.M. WILSON, INC. v. OTVETSTVENNOSTYOU "GRICHKO"

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 12, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-05194
StatusUnknown

This text of I.M. WILSON, INC. v. OTVETSTVENNOSTYOU "GRICHKO" (I.M. WILSON, INC. v. OTVETSTVENNOSTYOU "GRICHKO") is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
I.M. WILSON, INC. v. OTVETSTVENNOSTYOU "GRICHKO", (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA ILM. WILSON, INC,, : Plaintiff, : CIVIL ACTION v. : OTVETSTVENNOSTYOU “GRICHKO”; : Defendants! : NO, 18-5194 MEMORANDUM / / PRATTER, J. JULY 2022 The pas de deux—a dance for two—is the centerpiece of many ballets. In its modern form, the pas de deux follows a standard structure: The pair enters, and the two dance together, with the danseur supporting the danseuse in a series of lifts and poses. Each then performs a solo variation, with the danseur showing off pirouettes and leaps before the danseuse demonstrates her balance and strength in pointe work. The pair then reunites in a powerful finale. At its core, the pas de deux is about partnership—the conflict and coordination between two dancers.” This case features a pas de deux disrupted. Grishko handmakes ballet shoes in Russia. For nearly 30 years, Grishko partnered with I.M. Wilson, its exclusive distributor in the United States, to sell its handmade shoes under the GRISHKO trademark. With Grishko’s permission, I.M. Wilson registered the GRISHKO trademark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office, and ILM. Wilson spent significant money promoting the mark in the United States, But then the business relationship deteriorated, and Grishko revoked the distribution agreement.

' The parties have used different spellings of the names for the different individuals and entities involved throughout in this case. The Court adopts the spellings used by the parties in their most recent round of briefing. ? See Sandra N. Hammond, Pas de Deux, The International Encyclopedia of Dance (Selma J, Cohen and Dance Persps. Found., eds. 2005}; Robert Greskovic, Ballet /0/: A Complete Guide to Learning and Loving the Ballet 194-95 (2005); Tobi Tobias, Ballet Partners—Matches Not Made in Heaven, N.Y, Times (Aug. 17, 1975).

Their dance abruptly ended, Grishko and ILM. Wilson now fight over who had ownership of the GRISHKO mark when the music stopped. ILM. Wilson asserts that Grishko permanently gave it the rights to the mark in exchange for promoting the mark in the United States. Grishko says that it did no such thing; I.M. Wilson was supposed to sign the trademark over to Grishko once their distribution agreement terminated. If LM. Wilson is right, then it owns the mark and may sell its new made-in-China ballet shoes under the GRISHKO mark. If Grishko is right, then LM. Wilson is liable for holding the mark hostage. Both Grishke and I.M. Wilson have moved for summary judgment. Each insists that it was the victor in the split, pointing to the evidence in the record that supports its narrative. But the facts are not nearly so certain. The jury, not this Court, must sort through the evidence and decide who is the true owner of the GRISHKO mark. The Court thus denies each party’s motion for summary judgment in primary part. BACKGROUND I. The parties sign an exclusive distribution agreement Irene Wilson, a former ballet dancer, decided that she wanted to start a business importing Russian products into the United States. On a tour of Russia in 1990, she met Nikolay Grishko. Mr. Grishko and his team of cobblers had been handmaking pointe shoes in the Soviet Union for several years. Though Mr. Grishko had been selling 3,000 to 4,000 pairs of ballet slippers in the Soviet Union, Europe, and Japan each month, he did not yet have a ballet business presence in the United States. Seeing a business opportunity, Ms. Wilson and Mr. Grishko agreed to start a partnership. Through his collective Kooperativ Tanyets, Mr. Grishko would produce the pointe shoes, and Ms. Wilson would market and sell the shoes in the United States through her company I.M. Wilson.

The two companies signed a distribution agreement in April 1990. Under the agreement, Tanyets would provide “ballet shoes, toe shoes and such other footwear” to 1.M. Wilson to sell in the United States. Doc. No, 230-6, at 272. In turn, ILM. Wilson would “promot[e] [and] market[]” the goods. /d. at 279. And I.M. Wilson would have an exclusive license in the GRISHKO mark: XV, License The Seller hereby grants the Buyer an exclusive right, for the duration of this Agreement, to use the name “Grishko” in connection with the sale of the Goods in the United States. In consideration of such right, the Buyer shall pay the Seller a royalty equal to 10% of the value of each shipment of Goods. id. The agreement would last for one year, and would automatically renew unless a party provided at least 90-days’ notice prior to the renewal. For the length of the agreement and for one year after, Tanyets could not “sell or otherwise supply to any other purchaser in the United States the Goods set forth in Appendix I hereto”—ballet slippers and three models of pointe shoes, one of which remains in production today—“‘or any Goods that are substitutes therefor.” /d. Two years later, in 1992, after the Soviet Union fell, Tanyets became Grishko, Inc., a private company. I.M. Wilson and Grishko, Inc. re-executed the distribution agreement, substituting Grishko, Inc. for Tanyets. The substance of the distribution agreement remained the same. Il. LM. Wilson registers the trademarks Shortly after the parties re-executed the distribution agreement, Ms. Wilson decided that she did not want to be a mere exclusive licensee. ILM. Wilson would be investing significant resources into promoting the mark, so Ms. Wilson wanted to own the mark. According to 1.M. Wilson, Ms. Wilson requested permanent ownership, and Mr. Grishko agreed, Mr. Grishko disputes this. He does not recall ever discussing ownership of the mark with Ms. Wilson. And he insists that he never agreed that I.M. Wilson would own the mark, much less permanently. But, he

says, he did agree that ILM. Wilson should register the GRISHKO mark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (or USPTO). Four months later, in July 1992, I.M. Wilson filed an application with the USPTO. The USPTO rejected the application. The mark “suggest[ed] a connection with Nikolai Grishko, a renowned manufacturer of dancing shoes in Russia,” but ILM. Wilson had not submitted proof that it had Mr. Grishko’s permission to register the mark in the United States. Doc. No, 13-3, at 35, Under the USPTO’s guidelines, if a domestic applicant seeks to register a mark used by a foreign manufacturer in a foreign county, the domestic applicant must provide proof that it has the right to register the mark in the United States. See Trademark Manual of Examining Procedure § 1201.06(a). To do so, the domestic applicant can show that (1) the foreign manufacturer consented to the domestic distributor registering the mark in the distributor’s name, (2) the foreign manufacturer agreed or acknowledged in writing that the domestic distributor owns the mark in the United States, or (3) the foreign owner assigned its ownership of the mark to the domestic distributor. Ie. To prove it had the right to register the GRISHKO mark, LM. Wilson submitted an August 5, 1992 letter from Mr. Grishko stating, “I agree that I. M. Wilson, Inc. is the owner of the Trademark, GRISHKO, and its goodwill in the Unites [sic] States of America. I further consent to the use of my name in that trademark.” Doc. No. 230-7, at 240. Mr. Grishko did not draft this text, but the parties cannot remember who did—it could have been I.M. Wilson, its counsel, or the USPTO, Either way, Mr. Grishko placed the text given to him on Grishko Inc. letterhead and signed and stamped it. The USPTO accepted this registration letter, but once again rejected the application because Mr, Grishko had not expressly consented to registration of his name. So LM. Wilson

submitted another letter from Mr. Grishko, dated March 30, 1993. This letter stated, “In addition to the consent to |. M. Wilson, Inc. that I previously granted on August 5, 1992, I hereby grant Wilson, Inc.

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I.M. WILSON, INC. v. OTVETSTVENNOSTYOU "GRICHKO", Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/im-wilson-inc-v-otvetstvennostyou-grichko-paed-2022.