Lontex Corp v. Nike Inc

107 F.4th 139
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2024
Docket22-1417
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 F.4th 139 (Lontex Corp v. Nike Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lontex Corp v. Nike Inc, 107 F.4th 139 (3d Cir. 2024).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________

Nos. 22-1417 & 22-1484 ___________

LONTEX CORPORATION

v.

NIKE, INC.

Lontex Corp., Appellant in No. 22-1484 Nike, Inc., Appellant in No. 22-1417 ____________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 2-18-cv-05623) Honorable Michael M. Baylson ____________

Argued on January 17, 2024

Before: HARDIMAN, MATEY, and PHIPPS, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: July 10, 2024) Ilana H. Eisenstein Ben C. Fabens-Lassen DLA Piper LLP 1650 Market Street One Liberty Place, Suite 5000 Philadelphia, PA 19103

Michael D. Hynes Marc E. Miller DLA Piper LLP 1251 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10020

Stanley J. Panikowski [Argued] DLA Piper LLP 4365 Executive Drive Suite 1100 San Diego, California 92121

Gina L. Durham DLA Piper LLP 555 Mission Street, Suite 2400 San Francisco, California 94105

Counsel for Appellant

Craig C. Crockett Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP 3 Embarcadero Center, Suite 800 San Francisco, CA 94111

Michael A. Schwartz Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP

2 3000 Two Logan Square Eighteenth & Arch Streets Philadelphia, PA 19103

Misha Tseytlin [Argued] Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP 227 W. Monroe St., Suite 3900 Chicago, Illinois 60606

Ben L. Wagner Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP 11682 El Camino Real, Suite 400 San Diego, CA 92130

Counsel for Appellee

___________

OPINION OF THE COURT ____________

HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.

This dispute involves a registered trademark for “Cool Compression.” The holder of the mark, Lontex Corporation, is a small Pennsylvania business that manufactures and sells compression apparel to professional athletes and the sporting public. Lontex sued Nike, Inc. for trademark infringement.

After a trial on the merits, the jury awarded Lontex $142,000 in compensatory damages and $365,000 in punitive damages. Both parties appeal multiple issues involving the

3 jury’s findings and the District Court’s pre-trial and post-trial orders. We will affirm the District Court on all issues except for its orders awarding attorney’s fees to Lontex, which we will vacate and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I

A

In 2008, the United States Patent and Trademark Office approved Lontex’s application and registered the “Cool Compression” trademark. The mark consisted of “standard characters without claim to any particular font, style, size or color” when used in connection with athletic compression clothing. App. 2597 (capitalization removed). Lontex initially used the phrase “Cool Compression” at in-person product presentations. But after obtaining the trademark, the company started displaying the phrase on its website and printing it on some of its product labels. It sold Cool Compression apparel under the “Sweat it Out” brand to many professional sports teams and the public alike.

In 2015, Nike rebranded a line of its base-layer athletic clothing as “Nike Pro.” The rebranding included a category of “Cool” products designed to absorb sweat and reduce body temperature. Nike Pro clothing also came in various fits such as “compression” and “fitted.” App. 1151–52, 2366. That same year, Nike started using the words “Cool” and “Compression” together in the names of Nike Pro products that were sold online and in Nike catalogs. “Cool Compression” also appeared in product names on Nike’s tech sheets (internal documents used to explain Nike products to Nike employees and some third-

4 party retail partners). The phrase “Cool Compression” did not appear on Nike’s physical products or product tags.

B

After discovering Nike’s use of “Cool Compression,” Lontex sent Nike a cease-and-desist letter in April 2016, demanding that it stop using the phrase on nike.com and with its distributors. Based on communications with Nike, Lontex’s owner believed that Nike might stop using the phrase on nike.com, but the parties did not discuss whether Nike would ask its third-party retailers to remove the phrase from their online listings as well. While third-party retailers often write their own product descriptions for their websites, Nike typically names the products, as retailers are “not expected to come up with their own product name[s].” App. 1211.

After receiving the cease-and-desist letter, Nike’s lawyers directed the company to stop using the phrase “Cool Compression” in product names “as soon as possible.” App. 2346. Nike’s lawyers also assumed that the issue would be resolved in the course of the company’s efforts to streamline its naming conventions because Nike planned to start using “tight” instead of “compression.” App. 2346, 2402–03.

In the subsequent months, Nike removed the phrase “Cool Compression” from product names on its website and took steps to remove it from its catalogs, though the phrase still appeared in Nike catalogs over a year later. There is no evidence that Nike removed “Cool Compression” from its tech sheets.

About two years after the cease-and-desist letter issued, Nike reached out to all third-party retailers authorized to sell

5 Nike products online and asked them to stop using “Compression” in product names. In doing so, Nike made no mention of Lontex’s cease-and-desist letter and simply presented the change as an update to Nike’s product naming convention. At the time, multiple retailers were still marketing products with “Cool Compression” in their names.

As relevant here, Lontex sued Nike for: (1) trademark infringement based on its use of “Cool Compression”; (2) contributory trademark infringement based on Nike’s continued supply of “Cool Compression” products to third- party retailers; and (3) counterfeiting. See Lontex Corp. v. Nike, Inc., 384 F. Supp. 3d 546, 551–52 (E.D. Pa. 2019). The District Court dismissed Lontex’s counterfeiting allegation under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, holding that Nike’s use of “Cool Compression” was not “substantially indistinguishable” from Lontex’s use of the phrase. Id. at 558 (citation omitted).

C

At trial, multiple Nike employees testified that they had never heard of Lontex—much less its trademark—before the company received the cease-and-desist letter. Although it was Nike’s policy to submit its product names through a trademark search tool, the company did not conduct a trademark search on “Cool Compression” because employees viewed the phrase as merely a descriptive term for the product style and fit. Nike’s Product Line Manager for the Nike Pro line, whose responsibilities included ensuring “compl[iance] with . . . direction from Legal,” App. 2323, explained that Nike’s lawyers had instructed his team to “separate” the words “Cool” and “Compression” from each other, App. 2322–23. And he viewed compliance with this directive as mandatory.

6 Lontex customers testified that they associated the phrase “Cool Compression” with Lontex. But some had also seen the phrase used with Nike products. Two customers saw a sign for Nike “Cool Compression” products in a Dick’s Sporting Goods store, and two others saw the phrase in Nike catalogs. These four customers wondered whether there was an association between Lontex and Nike, but there is no evidence they ever asked about, or actually bought, a Nike product under the mistaken belief it was a Lontex product.

The jury returned a verdict for Lontex, finding Nike liable for willful infringement and for contributory infringement based on Nike’s sales to third-party retailers. As for damages, the parties’ testimony varied dramatically.

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