M & D International Corp. v. Chan

901 F. Supp. 1502, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14468, 1995 WL 576685
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedJuly 3, 1995
DocketCiv. 93-00888HG
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 901 F. Supp. 1502 (M & D International Corp. v. Chan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M & D International Corp. v. Chan, 901 F. Supp. 1502, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14468, 1995 WL 576685 (D. Haw. 1995).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

GILLMOR, District Judge.

Plaintiff and counterclaim-defendant M & D International Corporation and Defendants and counterclaimants Kevin Chan and King Lum, Inc. having appeared before this Court in the above-entitled action, this Court having considered the arguments, evidence and testimony presented, the Court issues the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

I.FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Defendant and counter claimant King Lum, Inc. (King Lum) is a Hawaii corporation and has been in the business of manufacturing and selling crystal sculptures since 1987. Defendant and eounterclaimant Kevin Chan is the president and founder of King Lum, Inc. From 1981 to 1986, Kevin Chan sold manapua from a cart and ran a gift shop in Honolulu.

2. Other companies, including Diamond Head Mercantile and Crystal Selection, were displaying and marketing crystal sculptures in Hawaii upon King Lum’s entry into the market in 1987. TR III at 72-73. Kit Ju-man Wong has been employed by King Lum as a maker of crystal sculptures since 1987. From approximately 1983 until 1987, Mr. Wong was employed by Diamond Head Mercantile.

3. Plaintiff M & D International Corporation (M & D) is a Hawaii corporation. Michael Chan is the president of M & D; his brother Daniel Tran is its vice president. From 1984 to 1989, M & D marketed toys and electronics exclusively. TR I at 83. Plaintiff has been in the business of manufacturing and selling crystal sculptures since 1990. Id.

4. Plaintiff alleges copyright infringement of seven crystal sculpture designs (the M & D Sculptures) bearing the following names on their respective copyright registration certificates:

a. Hibiscus Crystal;
b. (Crystal top) Pineapple;
c. Flower (hibiscus)/(gold top) Pineapple;
d. (Crystal) Rose;
e. Mini (gold top) Pineapple Clock;
f. Oyster Clock;
g. (Crystal top) Pineapple/Oyster/Rainbow. 1

5. Defendants have filed counterclaims alleging copyright infringement of six crystal sculpture designs (the King Lum Sculptures) bearing the following names on their respective copyright registration certificates:

a. Crystal Hibiscus Display;
b. Crystal Pineapple;
c. Crystal Gold Pineapple and Hibiscus Display;
d. (Crystal) Rose;
e. Oyster Clock;
f. Gold Pineapple Clock;

6. Defendants entered the crystal sculpture business in Hawaii three years before Plaintiff. Plaintiff and Defendants attended and displayed their crystal sculptures at the same trade shows after Plaintiff’s entry into the market in 1990. Michael Chan, Daniel Tran and Kevin Chan circulated through these trade shows and had ample opportunity to view the crystal sculptures displayed there by one another’s companies, including the M & D Sculptures and the King Lum Sculptures. Plaintiff and Defendants are competi *1505 tors in WaikiM and Honolulu’s geographically concentrated and largely immigrant and family-run market for crystal sculptures. Kevin Chan, Michael Chan and Daniel Tran are all members of the small community of Cantonese-speaking ethnic Chinese who settled in Honolulu after leaving Vietnam at the end of the Vietnam War.

Plaintiff and Defendants sell their crystal sculptures to retail stores and boutiques closely arrayed in large part in the International Market Place and other open-air marketplaces, hotel lobbies and courtyards in and around Waikiki and Ala Moana Shopping Center. Crystal sculptures are conspicuously displayed by Honolulu retailers and are easily seen by passers-by. TR I at 81. Plaintiff and Defendants have at times had common retail customers for their crystal sculptures. Defendant Kevin Chan visited his customers from time to time both before and after Plaintiffs entry into the crystal sculpture market. Defendants had access to Plaintiffs crystal sculptures, including the M & D Crystal Sculptures, at the relevant times.

7. Before 1990, Plaintiff supplied electronics and toys to a number of Waikiki retail stores and boutiques purchasing, displaying and marketing Defendants’ crystal sculptures. Before 1990, Daniel Tran, Plaintiffs vice president, discussed the sale of crystal sculptures with the owner of one such boutique, Ann Choe of Maxim’s Jewelry in Hilton Hawaiian Village. Ann Choe is Defendant Kevin Chan’s sister-in-law. Before 1990, Michael Chan observed Defendants displaying their crystal sculptures at a trade show in Honolulu. TR I at 74.

Before 1990, Michael Chan and Daniel Tran assisted their father in running his jewelry business from a store in Waikiki. “Archies”, a seller of tourist souvenirs in Waikiki’s International Market Place, displayed and sold Defendants’ crystal sculptures from a cart near their father’s shop during this period. Michael Chan recalled observing crystal sculptures being sold at Archie’s. TR I at 79. Plaintiff had access to Defendants’ crystal sculptures, including the King Lum Crystal Sculptures, at the relevant times.

8. Hibiscus Crystal. The exemplar of Plaintiffs Hibiscus Crystal submitted as Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 1 consists of five identical petal-shaped crystal pieces joined in the shape of an open flower. A nylon stem with three tiny red crystal anthers and a somewhat larger red crystal stigma protrudes from a red crystal ovary. Small, circular red dots are clustered on the portion of the petals nearest the ovary. The exemplar of Defendants’ Hibiscus Crystal submitted as Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 3 consists of five petal-shaped pieces identical to one another and, apart from their somewhat smaller size, to those comprising Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 1. The red crystal anthers and ovary are somewhat larger than those used in Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 3. Plaintiffs Hibiscus Crystal has seven red dots per petal; Defendants’ Crystal Hibiscus has four dots per petal. The two flowers are depicted in similarly open positions.

Plaintiffs Copyright Registration Form No. VA 438 948 for this work lists a January 11, 1991 registration date, September 23, 1990 date of first publication, and a 1990 date of creation. Defendants’ Copyright Registration Form No. VA 468 094 for “Crystal Hibiscus”, originally evidenced by Defendants’ Exhibit No. 5, lists a April 10, 1991 registration date, May 8, 1987 date of first publication and 1987 date of creation.

Defendants’ Exhibit No. 5 consists of a Certificate of Copyright Registration bearing the seal of the United States Copyright Office, a color photograph of a crystal hibiscus on a mirror base and a drawing of the work from above and in profile. The pattern of dots in the photograph differs considerably from the pattern in the drawing. The pattern of dots in the photograph is more similar in number and arrangement to the exemplar of Defendants’ Hibiscus Crystal submitted as Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 3.

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Bluebook (online)
901 F. Supp. 1502, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14468, 1995 WL 576685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-d-international-corp-v-chan-hid-1995.