O&M HALYARD, INC. v. SRI TRANG USA, INC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 2023
Docket4:22-cv-00622
StatusUnknown

This text of O&M HALYARD, INC. v. SRI TRANG USA, INC (O&M HALYARD, INC. v. SRI TRANG USA, INC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O&M HALYARD, INC. v. SRI TRANG USA, INC, (E.D. Tex. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS SHERMAN DIVISION

O&M HALYARD, INC. § § v. § CIVIL NO. 4:22-CV-622-SDJ § SRI TRANG USA, INC. ET AL. §

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Defendants have filed a motion to stay proceedings in this trademark infringement case pending the resolution of related cancellation actions brought by Defendants in the United States Patent and Trademark Office’s (USPTO) Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB). The motion will be denied. Defendants have not shown that any potential efficiencies to be gained by awaiting the TTAB’s decision warrant a stay. To the contrary, granting the stay motion would unnecessarily delay the final adjudication of this suit. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff O&M Halyard develops, manufactures, and sells medical products and supplies, including medical gloves, worldwide. (Dkt. #1 ¶¶ 11–12). Relevant to the instant case, O&M Halyard owns U.S. Trademark Registration Numbers 2596539 and 3099894 for purple and grey medical gloves. Defendants Sri Trang Gloves (Thailand) Public Company Limited; its United States subsidiary, Sri Trang USA, Inc.; and Sri Trang Agro-Industry Public Company Limited (collectively, “Sri Trang”) are likewise glove manufacturers. (Dkt. #10 at 5). At some point, Sri Trang began manufacturing medical gloves like those allegedly protected by O&M Halyard’s trademarks, and O&M filed this lawsuit to protect the marks. (Dkt. #1 ¶¶ 24–28). In its complaint, O&M Halyard brings federal claims against Sri Trang for

trademark infringement, trademark counterfeiting, and trademark dilution, as well as false designation of origin, passing off, and unfair competition. O&M Halyard also asserts a claim for trademark dilution under Texas statutory law, as well as claims under Texas common law for trademark infringement, unfair competition, false designation of origin, unjust enrichment, and intentional interference with economic advantage.

Less than two months after this lawsuit was initiated, Sri Trang filed Cancellation Numbers 92080571 and 92080584 before the TTAB requesting that the TTAB cancel O&M Halyard’s trademark registrations for purple and grey medical gloves. (Dkt. #10 at 6). The TTAB consolidated the cancellation requests and suspended the actions pending the outcome of this litigation. (Dkt. #14 at 3). Sri Trang asks the Court instead to stay proceedings in this case pending the outcome of the TTAB actions.

II. LEGAL STANDARD The Court has broad discretion to stay a pending matter to control its docket and serve the interest of justice. In re Ramu Corp., 903 F.2d 312, 318 (5th Cir. 1990). Proper consideration of a stay “calls for the exercise of judgment, which must weigh competing interests and maintain an even balance.” Landis v. N. Am. Co., 299 U.S. 248, 254–55, 57 S.Ct. 163, 81 L.Ed. 153 (1936). If there is “even a fair possibility” that a stay will damage someone else, then the proponent bears the burden of showing “a clear case of hardship or inequity.” Id. at 255. The Court’s discretion to order a stay includes the authority to stay a matter pending the resolution of proceedings in the USPTO. See Ethicon, Inc. v. Quigg, 849 F.2d 1422, 1426–27 (Fed. Cir. 1988); Gould

v. Control Laser Corp., 705 F.2d 1340, 1341 (Fed. Cir. 1983). III. DISCUSSION Sri Trang argues that staying this case pending the resolution of the TTAB actions will simplify the issues to be decided and reduce costs for the Court and the parties. The Court disagrees that the potential efficiencies referenced by Sri Trang warrant a stay. A. The Doctrine of Primary Jurisdiction is Inapplicable to this Trademark Infringement Case. Although not expressly stated, Sri Trang’s stay motion is grounded in the doctrine of primary jurisdiction, a judge-made doctrine that “comes into play when a court and an administrative agency have concurrent jurisdiction over the same

matter, and no statutory provision coordinates the work of the court and of the agency.” Mercury Motor Express, Inc. v. Brinke, 475 F.2d 1086, 1091 (5th Cir. 1973). When applicable, the doctrine operates to postpone judicial consideration of a case to allow for an administrative determination of important questions by an agency with “special competence in the area.” Id. at 1091–92. The Court finds the Second Circuit’s decision in Goya Foods, Inc., v. Tropicana Products, Inc., 846 F.2d 848 (2d Cir. 1988), which considered the same question of

whether to stay trademark infringement litigation pending the outcome of registration proceedings before the TTAB, to be instructive on the application of the primary jurisdiction doctrine in this context. In Goya, the Second Circuit began by noting that the doctrine’s scope is “relatively narrow,” encompassing only lawsuits that raise “an issue, frequently the validity of a commercial rate or practice,

committed by Congress in the first instance to an agency’s determination, ‘particularly when the issue involves technical questions of fact uniquely within the expertise and experience of an agency.’” Id. at 851 (quoting Nader v. Allegheny Airlines, Inc., 426 U.S. 290, 304, 96 S.Ct. 1978, 48 L.Ed.2d 643 (1976)). The Goya court went on to observe that courts typically refuse to apply the doctrine when “the issue at stake is legal in nature and lies within the traditional realm of judicial

competence.” Id. With these observations in place, and after examining the nature of TTAB registration proceedings and infringement actions, the Goya court reached two conclusions. First, the court concluded that the basic framework of federal trademark registration differs from other statutory regimes that implicate primary jurisdiction because the Lanham Act allows a litigant disappointed with a TTAB decision to file an action in federal district court that is “intended to be a trial de novo.” Id. at 853;

see also B&B Hardware, Inc. v. Hargis Indus., Inc., 575 U.S. 138, 144, 135 S.Ct. 1293, 191 L.Ed.2d 222 (2015) (noting that, “[i]n district court, the parties can conduct additional discovery and the judge resolves registration de novo”). Such a scheme of review, the Goya court reasoned, “is thus some distance from the traditional arena of primary jurisdiction, ‘a doctrine allocating the law-making power over certain aspects of commercial relations.’” Id. (cleaned up) (quoting United States v. W. Pac. R.R. Co., 352 U.S. 59, 65, 77 S.Ct. 161, 1 L.Ed.2d 126 (1956)). Second, the Goya court recognized that the nature of the TTAB’s registration

determination itself also weighed against “according excessive deference” to pending TTAB proceedings. Id. A TTAB registration decision, the court explained, does not involve “a regulated industry in which policy determinations are calculated and rates are fixed in order to calibrate carefully an economic actor’s position within a market under agency control.” Id. Likewise, a TTAB decision to permit, deny, or cancel registration also “is not the type of agency action that secures ‘[u]niformity and

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O&M HALYARD, INC. v. SRI TRANG USA, INC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/om-halyard-inc-v-sri-trang-usa-inc-txed-2023.