Neles-Jamesbury, Inc. v. Valve Dynamics, Inc.

974 F. Supp. 964, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14392, 1997 WL 539656
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1997
DocketCivil Action H-96-1419
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 974 F. Supp. 964 (Neles-Jamesbury, Inc. v. Valve Dynamics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neles-Jamesbury, Inc. v. Valve Dynamics, Inc., 974 F. Supp. 964, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14392, 1997 WL 539656 (S.D. Tex. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER *

ATLAS, District Judge.

Plaintiff Neles-Jamesbury, Inc. (“Plaintiff’ or “Neles-Jamesbury”), a valve manufacturer, has brought this action against Defendants Valve Dynamics, Inc. (“Valve Dynamics”), a valve reseller, and Bill’s Valves, Inc. (“Bill’s Valves”), a valve reeonditioner, alleging trademark infringement and unfair competition for Defendants’ resale of reconditioned valves originally manufactured by Neles-Jamesbury. Pending before the Court are Neles-Jamesbury’s Motion for [Partial] Summary Judgment Against Valve Dynamics [Doc. #35], Motion for [Partial] Summary Judgment Against Bill’s Valves [Doe. # 36], Motions to Strike Affidavits [Docs. # 103 and 104], and Motion for Leave to File a Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses [Doc. # 111]. In addition, Defendant Valve Dynamics has filed a Motion for a Second Alternative Dispute Resolution Proceeding [Doe. # 92],

*966 The Court has considered the Motions, the Responses and Replies, all other matters of record in this case, and the relevant authorities. For the reasons stated below, both of Plaintiffs Motions for [Partial] Summary Judgment [Docs. # 35 and 36] are now DENIED, Plaintiffs Motions to Strike Affidavits [Docs. # 103 and 104] are DENIED, and Plaintiffs Motion for Leave to File a Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses [Doc. # 111] is GRANTED. Defendant Valve Dynamics’ Motion for a Second Alternative Dispute Resolution Proceeding [Doc. # 92) is GRANTED.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

For more than 35 years, Neles-Jamesbury has manufactured and sold industrial valves that are used to store and regulate the release of gases in such applications as petrochemical plants and fueling operations. Neles-Jamesbury has acquired a reputation for producing high quality valves and has achieved widespread product name recognition in its industry. 1 Its trademarks, which have been registered with the United States Patent and Trademark Office since 1968, 2 are cast on its valve bodies.

Defendant Bib’s Valves reconditions and resells secondhand Neles-Jamesbury valves that either have been previously used or have been bought and left unused. 3 The reconditioning process includes activities such as sandblasting, cleaning, refitting the valve seats, “machining” the valve faces, putting together components, and testing the valves. See Deposition of Vasilios Kallergis (President of Bill’s Valves), Exhibit D to Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment Against Bill’s Valves (“Motion Against Bill’s Valves”) [Doc. #36], at 22. When it resells the valves, Bill’s Valves retains the Neles-Jamesbury trademark on the valve bodies. It does not, however, consistently mark the valves to indicate that they have been reconditioned. Neles-Jamesbury alleges that there is no evidence that Bill’s Valves ever marks the valves it resells to identify itself as a reconditioner. Bill’s Valves, on the other hand, claims that it “usually” stamps the bodies of its valves with a marking that reads “RECON BVI” (abbreviation for “Reconditioned, Bill’s Valves, Inc.”) after the valves are sold but before they leave Bill’s Valves’ facility. Bill’s Valves has admitted, however, in its owner’s deposition, that its employees often fail to stamp the valves before they are resold. 4

Neles-Jamesbury alleges that Bill’s Valves’ practice of reconditioning and reselling these valves without effectively indicating to future purchasers that they are not firsthand Neles-Jamesbury valves produces a likelihood of confusion among buyers, who may attribute the secondhand valves’ inferior quality to perceived defects in Neles-Jamesbury’s manufacturing process. Neles-Jamesbury claims that such confusion harms its reputation as a high quality valve manufacturer and may even expose it to potential liability from purchasers of inferior quality reconditioned valves. It further alleges that such confusion may pose a physical danger to the public if secondhand valves, which no longer have the proper safety features, are mistakenly treated as firsthand valves. 5

*967 The other defendant in this action, Valve Dynamics, is a valve reseller. Unlike Bill’s Valves, Valve Dynamics does not itself recondition valves. Instead, it acts merely as an intermediary seller of new and used valves. 6 Valve Dynamics claims that when it purchases valves from a reseller such as Bill’s Valves, it does not always know whether or not the valves have been reconditioned. Valve Dynamics does not alter any marking on the valve bodies.

This lawsuit arose after Neles-Jamesbury became aware of Defendants’ practices, when ten reconditioned Neles-Jamesbury valves that were installed in a fuel operating system for the Greater Cleveland Rapid Transit Authority (“GCRTA”) did not function properly. The end-user, GCRTA, who was apparently unaware that the valves were not factory new, 7 had received the valves through its general contractor as part of an installation within a natural gas fueling project. After GCRTA contacted Neles-Jamesbury to inquire about its problems with the valves, Plaintiff investigated and discovered that the valves had arrived at the GCRTA after passing through the hands of several intermediary distributors. The valves had been reconditioned by Bill’s Valves but had not been marked as reconditioned. Bill’s Valves then sold the valves to Valve Dynamics, who then delivered them to Wilson Technologies, Inc., a California corporation that was the contractor for the GCRTA project. 8

Concerned upon learning that reconditioned Neles-Jamesbury valves were being sold to end-users without markings indicating that they were no longer firsthand, Neles-Jamesbury conducted a test purchase by ordering two of its valves, one new and one reconditioned, from Valve Dynamics. Valve Dynamics sold the requested valves to Neles-Jamesbury. The new valve was, as requested, a factory new Neles-Jamesbury valve. The reconditioned valve, which had been reconditioned by Davis Valve, Inc., 9 was apparently not conspicuously and legibly marked as reconditioned.

Neles-Jamesbury brought this action against Bill’s Valves and Valve Dynamics, alleging that Defendants, who are not authorized Neles-Jamesbury distributors, sold used valves still bearing the Neles-Jamesbury trademark as “new” and unlawfully failed to mark the valves as reconditioned. 10 *968 In its Second Amended Complaint (“Complaint”) [Doe. # 56], Plaintiff states causes of action for trademark infringement, false representations and false designations of product origins, unfair competition, conversion, unjust enrichment, violations of federal and state anti-dilution statutes, and conspiracy.

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974 F. Supp. 964, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14392, 1997 WL 539656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neles-jamesbury-inc-v-valve-dynamics-inc-txsd-1997.