Kerr Corporation v. Freeman Manufacturing & Supply

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 2009
Docket08-3330
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kerr Corporation v. Freeman Manufacturing & Supply (Kerr Corporation v. Freeman Manufacturing & Supply) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr Corporation v. Freeman Manufacturing & Supply, (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 09a0219n.06 Filed: March 23, 2009

No. 08-3330

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

KERR CORPORATION, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR FREEMAN MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY ) THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF COMPANY, ) OHIO ) Defendant-Appellee. ) ) )

Before: MOORE, CLAY, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. Kerr Corporation (Kerr) appeals the grant of summary

judgment to Freeman Manufacturing & Supply Company (Freeman) on its breach-of-contract and

trademark-infringement claims. We reverse.

I.

A.

Kerr and Freeman both manufacture and sell jewelry injection waxes. In the late 1970s,

Freeman began manufacturing waxes for Kerr, which then sold them to end-users. In 1984, Kerr and

Freeman entered into a “Development Agreement,” under which Freeman agreed to develop new

waxes for Kerr. The Agreement provided: No. 08-3330 Kerr Corp. v. Freeman Mfg. & Supply Co.

FREEMAN agrees to use its best efforts to provide design, development and consultation services to KERR as described in projects to be proposed by KERR of and relating to the development of Wax Technology. Such projects including project expenditures, time schedules and objectives will be prepared in writing by KERR, approved by FREEMAN, and made a part hereof.

J.A. 82. The Agreement further provided that “[a]ll know-how, inventions, improvements or

discoveries, patentable or otherwise, if any, arising out of the work performed under this Agreement

(collectively ‘New Technology’) shall be the exclusive property of KERR.” J.A. 83.

Prior to 1987, Freeman developed and manufactured waxes for several other distributors in

addition to Kerr, and also sold waxes directly to end-users. In 1987, however, Kerr and Freeman

entered into an exclusive “Distributorship Agreement,” under which Freeman agreed to manufacture

waxes solely for Kerr.

Between 1984 and 2004, Kerr paid Freeman approximately $380,000 for its services under

the Agreement. Kerr claims that, in exchange, Freeman developed a number of waxes for Kerr,

including an “inlay dental wax”; a flexible wax named “Flex-Plast”; a low-cost “Pearls” wax; and

a carvable injection wax named “ACCU®Carve.”

Kerr alleges that it initiated the inlay-dental-wax and Flex-Plast projects by oral request to

Freeman. In any event, Freeman developed the inlay dental wax in 1985 and gave the wax’s formula

to Kerr. Freeman finalized the Flex-Plast wax in 1990, which Kerr sold under that name. Kerr

contends, however, that Freeman did not turn the Flex-Plast formula over to Kerr.

Kerr claims it initiated the Pearls project by writing a letter to Freeman in 1996. In the letter,

Kerr asked Freeman to develop a “second line of lower cost wax than what you are currently unable

[sic] to supply for us.” J.A. 434. Kerr requested that the new wax achieve a “.15 to .20 cent [per-

-2- No. 08-3330 Kerr Corp. v. Freeman Mfg. & Supply Co.

pound] savings” over the existing wax. Id. Freeman wrote a response letter to Kerr, in which it

referenced the retainer fee Freeman was to receive under the Development Agreement. J.A. 433.

The following year, Freeman stated in a quarterly report that “[a]fter an extensive development on

a pink flexible economy wax . . . lab color samples for the Jewelry wax pearls . . . were sent to Kerr

for final selection and approval.” J.A. 444. Freeman also wrote in a letter that, “[d]uring the past

year, Freeman and Kerr have accomplished a great deal by working closely together in developing

the ‘Pearls[.]’” J.A. 442.

Kerr likewise claims it initiated the ACCU®Carve project by sending a letter to Freeman.

On April 3, 1998, Kerr wrote that it was “interested in starting two new projects with Freeman[,]”

including a “‘carvable injection’ wax” that was “harder and less gummy” than its existing waxes.

J.A. 443. Freeman responded, noting that the requested wax “appear[s] to be very similar to existing

Jewelry Wax formulations we have successfully manufactured exclusively for Kerr for over ten (10)

years.” J.A. 442 (emphasis in original). It stated that it was “proceeding with [its] initial evaluation

of the ‘carvable injection wax’” and requested a “target purchase price” for that wax. Id.

Freeman denies, however, that it developed the Flex-Plast, Pearls, or ACCU®Carve waxes

“under” the Agreement. Freeman concedes that it developed the inlay dental wax under the

Agreement, and complied with the Agreement by giving Kerr the wax’s formula. It asserts that it

developed the wax without a written proposal, however, as a “favor” to Kerr. J.A. 630.

Kerr initially sold its waxes in both “brick” and “flake” form. By 2001, it was selling its

waxes only in “flake” form. At that time, it applied for, and received, trademark registration for its

“Flakes” mark. Kerr sold the waxes in eight colors under the following names: “Aqua Green

-3- No. 08-3330 Kerr Corp. v. Freeman Mfg. & Supply Co.

Flakes,” “Ruby Red Flakes,” “Turquoise Flakes,” “NYC Pink Flakes,” “Tuffy Green Flakes,” “Super

Pink Flakes,” “Flex-Plast Flakes,” and “ACCUCarve.” Kerr claims it spent over $600,000

advertising and marketing these waxes.

In 2004, Kerr and Freeman terminated the exclusive Distribution Agreement. Thereafter,

Freeman began (or, according to Freeman, resumed) marketing and selling waxes to other

distributors and end-users using the same wax formulas, colors, names, and flake form used by Kerr.

In February 2005, Freeman’s president, Lou Turco, sent a “clarification” letter to all major wax

distributors and purchasers, informing them that “Freeman ha[d] not sold or licensed its formulas

or manufacturing processes to Kerr Corporation[,]” and that “[t]he eight flake wax formulations that

were sold under the ACCU®-Flakes brand name through January 2005 are now manufactured and

sold exclusively under the Freeman Flakes™ brand name.” J.A. 177. Freeman later changed some

of the names under which it sold the waxes—to “Tuf Guy Flakes™,” “Filigree Pink Flakes™,”

“Flexible Blue Flakes™,” and “Carvable Purple Flakes”—but has referred to its new waxes as

“Formerly Tuffy Green™,” “Formerly NYC Pink™,” “Formerly Flexplast™,” and “Formerly

ACCU® Carve™.” It has continued to sell waxes named “Ruby Red,” “Aqua,” “Turquoise,” and

“Super Pink Flakes™.” In marketing materials, Freeman has stated that its waxes are “the exact

same formulations, colors and flake shapes that were sold under the Kerr brand for years.” J.A. 402.

B.

Kerr sued Freeman in 2005, alleging that Freeman breached the Development Agreement by

failing to give Kerr the formulas for the Pearls, ACCU®Carve, and Flex-Plast waxes, and that

-4- No. 08-3330 Kerr Corp. v. Freeman Mfg. & Supply Co.

Freeman infringed Kerr’s trademark rights by using Kerr’s wax names, color scheme, flake form,

and “Flakes” trademark.

The parties thereafter filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court then

granted summary judgment to Freeman on all claims except one. That remaining claim was later

dismissed. The court also ordered, sua sponte, that Kerr’s “Flakes” trademark be canceled from the

Supplemental Register.

This appeal followed.

II.

We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Herman Miller, Inc. v.

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