Norwood Promotional Products, LLC v. Kustomkoozies, LLC

835 F. Supp. 2d 685, 2011 WL 6415537, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 148558
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedDecember 21, 2011
DocketNo. 1:09-cv-1378-JMS-WGH
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 835 F. Supp. 2d 685 (Norwood Promotional Products, LLC v. Kustomkoozies, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norwood Promotional Products, LLC v. Kustomkoozies, LLC, 835 F. Supp. 2d 685, 2011 WL 6415537, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 148558 (S.D. Ind. 2011).

Opinion

ENTRY ON CROSS MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

JANE MAGNUS-STINSON, District Judge.

Trademark litigation can be steeped in technical issues and analysis, but is often born of more pedestrian disputes. Such is the case with this lawsuit. What do you call those spongy things that people wrap around a beverage can or bottle to keep it cool? Some people call them “koozies.” The parties to this lawsuit both do, and as a result they are no strangers to each other or litigation. The parties each previously sought trademarks involving the word “koozie,” and their competing claims were at the heart of previous litigation between Plaintiffs predecessor (“Old Nor-wood”) and the Defendants. That lawsuit was settled in 2006, and as a result the parties entered into both a settlement agreement and a licensing agreement. Plaintiff Norwood Promotional Products, LLC (“Norwood”) has initiated this iteration of the dispute, filing a five-count Second Amended Complaint, asserting that Defendants KustomKoozies, LLC and Robert Liddle (collectively “Kustom”)1 breached the earlier settlement and license agreements, infringed Norwood’s trademark, and engaged in unfair competition. Norwood also seeks a declaratory judgment to the effect that it has not breached the license agreement with Kustom and that Kustom may not challenge the validity of the Norwood’s trademark. By way of counterclaim, Kustom seeks to invalidate Norwood’s mark and claims Norwood has breached the license agreement. Both seek partial summary judgment on a variety of claims, or portions thereof, and defenses.

I. Factual Background

Norwood is a large promotional products company which sells imprinted promotional products through various distributors. Kustom is an internet retailer, owned and operated by Robert Liddle and his wife. Kustom sells insulated beverage can and bottle holders with customizable promotional imprinting, directly to end-customers in quantities as small as a dozen. Included in the array of advertising products sold by Norwood, through its stable of independent distributors, are insulated holders for beverage cans, which, like those sold by Kustom, are suitable for the imprint of promotional information or advertising.

As previously mentioned, Kustom and Old Norwood were adverse parties in two lawsuits filed in 2005 over the use of the term “koozie.” At the time of those two lawsuits, Old Norwood had an application pending before the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) for registration of “KOOZIE” as its mark, and Kustom had an application before the USPTO for registration of “KUSTOM KOOZIES” as its mark. The parties reached a settlement of those lawsuits and, as a part of that settlement, Kustom [688]*688agreed to abandon its pursuit of the registration of KUSTOM KOOZIE as its mark and accept a royalty-free license from Old Norwood for the conditional and limited right to use Old Norwood’s claimed mark to sell foam and collapsible insulated beverage containers (purchased from Nor-wood’s manufacturing supplier) under the “KOOZIE” name and from a particular website. The license and settlement agreement did not require that Kustom sell only the “KOOZIE” brand, but did require that the use of the mark be consistent with certain brand standards, including a prohibition against the use of the mark in a generic fashion. Kustom also received a payment of $40,000 as part of the litigation settlement. The agreement further prohibited Kustom from challenging Norwood’s “KOOZIE” mark or assisting anyone else in doing so.

Key provisions of the settlement and license agreements along with the corresponding paragraph number are summarized and/or quoted below:

Confidential Settlement Agreement
1. Old Norwood pays $40,000 to Kustom.
2. Both parties dismiss their lawsuits.
3. Both parties agree to mutual general releases.
4. Old Norwood agrees not to sue Kustom for its use of the terms “KOO-ZIE” or the business name “Kustom Koozies” or the internet website www. kustomkoozies.com, “Except to the extent that such use constitutes a breach of this Agreement or the License Agreement executed contemporaneously herewith.”
5. Kustom must abandon its effort to register KUSTOM KOOZIES with USPTO and agrees “not seek to obtain ownership of any mark, trade name or internet domain (except to the extent permitted by the license granted herein) anywhere throughout the world that incorporates the term ‘koozie’ or any similar mark.” Kustom agrees not to oppose or assist anyone else in opposing Old Nor-wood’s application to register “KOO-ZIE” as its mark.
6. Old Norwood agrees to grant a conditional license to Kustom and incorporates the same as an exhibit.
9. “Each party shall cooperate and use its best efforts to take all actions necessary to effectuate all of the terms and conditions of this Agreement.”
10. The agreement applies to successors.
13. No waiver of any right or condition under the agreement will operate as a continuing waiver of that right or condition or of any other rights or conditions.
License Agreement
1. Old Norwood asserts an exclusive right to the Licensed Mark “KOO-ZIE” and Kustom has disputed that assertion, but the parties agree to a license arrangement as a part of a settlement of that dispute. Kustom seeks and Old Norwood wishes to grant the use of the Licensed Mark “on certain goods to be marketed and sold only as provided in this Agreement.”
2. A royalty-free, non-exclusive, nontransferable limited license is granted by Old Norwood to Kustom to:
a. “use the Licensed Mark in connection with the advertisement, promotion, marketing, and retail sale, on the Internet at a website identified by the domain name KUSTOM KOOZIES.COM, and through associated mail-orders and facsimile orders, of foam and collapsible insulated beverage containers purchased from [Old Norwood] (the [689]*689“Licensed Goods”) to [Kustom’s] customers ..., and in connection with the advertisement, promotion, and marketing, whether on the Internet or elsewhere, of that domain name, provided, however, that sales to [Kustom’s] customers may not be for more than 3000 Licensed Goods
b. “use the name “KustomKoozies, LLC,” “KustomKoozies,” and “Kustom Koozies,” to refer to the corporate entity .... ”
c. “operate the website identified by the domain name KUSTOMKOO-ZIES.COM and the web address www.kustomkoozies.com to advertise, promote, market and sell the Licensed Goods .... ”
d. use the names “KustomKoozies,” “Kustom Koozies” and “www. kustomkoozies.com” as service marks.
“For clarity, and not by way of limitation, [Kustom] shall not:
a. use any name other than the Licensed Mark as a trademark identifying the source of the Licensed Goods, or
b. use, or authorize any other party to use, the Licensed Mark or any mark similar to the Licensed Mark, except to the extent permitted by the license granted in this Agreement.”
3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
835 F. Supp. 2d 685, 2011 WL 6415537, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 148558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norwood-promotional-products-llc-v-kustomkoozies-llc-insd-2011.