Pantone, Inc. v. Esselte Letraset, Ltd.

878 F.2d 601, 11 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1454, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 9548, 1989 WL 71776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1989
Docket997, Docket 88-7775
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 878 F.2d 601 (Pantone, Inc. v. Esselte Letraset, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pantone, Inc. v. Esselte Letraset, Ltd., 878 F.2d 601, 11 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1454, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 9548, 1989 WL 71776 (2d Cir. 1989).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal concerns the interpretation of two expressly interrelated agreements executed in 1972 (the “1972 Agreements” between Pantone, Inc. (“Pantone”) and Es-selte Letraset, Ltd. (“Letraset”)). Pursuant to these agreements Pantone granted a license to use its trademark “Pantone” (the “Trademark Agreement”) and transferred certain assets to Letraset (the “Purchase Agreement”). These agreements included: (i) a limited covenant by Pantone not to compete with Letraset and (ii) provided Le-traset with a qualified right of first refusal concerning the use of the mark on new products developed by Pantone.

In 1987 Pantone entered into negotiations with Daler-Rowney Limitéd (“Daler-Rowney”) concerning the licensing of the Pantone mark to Daler-Rowney for use on a line of products newly developed by Pan-tone. Upon notification of these negotiations in 1988, Letraset objected that such an agreement would violate the terms of the 1972 Agreements and threatened to seek an injunction. Pantone then initiated the present suit for declaratory relief, to which Letraset counterclaimed. The district court held that the proposed agreement between Pantone and Daler-Rowney violated the covenant not to compete, and accordingly, the district court enjoined Pan-tone and Daler-Rowney from executing the agreement. Pantone appealed from that decision. We affirm but on somewhat different grounds.

BACKGROUND

1. The 1972 Agreements

The 1972 Agreements concern a group of products known collectively as the “Pan-tone Matching System” (“PMS”). PMS is a color communication, specification and reproduction system developed by Pantone in the 1960's that affords graphic artists a means to ensure color fidelity when their work is reproduced in final printed form. The system’s key element is a copyrighted organizational scheme that matches particular colors with individual identification *603 numbers. This enables graphic artists to select from PMS publications number-coded, tear-out color chips to identify various art materials by color identification number.

As of 1972 Pantone had introduced three lines of products into the PMS color system: (i) Pantone Color Paper; (ii) Pantone Color/Tint Overlay; and (iii) Pantone Color Marker. The parties refer to these particular products, as well as any material changes in and material improvements of such products, as “GAM”, an acronym for “graphic art materials.” In addition, Pan-tone had also licensed a large number of printing ink manufacturers to produce ink corresponding to and identified by the PMS system.

Although PMS was a widely used method of specifying color in the graphic arts industry by 1972, Pantone’s sales of commercial artist products at that time were relatively modest because of its limited distribution network. Letraset, on the other hand, had manufacturing facilities, an established worldwide marketing organization for commercial artist supplies, and experience in selling products comparable to PMS. Letraset’s products were not tied to a color system, however. Letraset and Pan-tone thus possessed complementary assets and, consequently, they entered into the agreements in question in order to syner-gize Pantone’s color system and Letraset’s distributional organization.

Under Article II of the Trademark Agreement “Pantone ... grant[ed] to Le-traset ... an exclusive license ... to use ... the mark ‘PANTONE’ (or any other Licensed Trademark) on or in connection with any GAM.” Article I, in turn, defined GAM as “art material products [ (Pantone Color Paper, Pantone Color/Tint Overlay, Pantone Color Marker) ] displaying color or capable of color reproduction, in which said color displayed or reproduced is one of the colors of ‘The Pantone Matching System.’ ” Under Article VI and Exhibit C, Letraset agreed to pay to Pantone a royalty amounting to 7V2 percent of Letraset’s net sales of GAM bearing the Pantone label.

Under Article IV(10), the Trademark Agreement provided a mechanism for dealing with “new products generally recognized as commercial artist supplies developed by Pantone during the term of [the] agreement.” That provision states in pertinent part:

(a) Pantone shall first offer the exclusive right of manufacture and sale to Letraset.
(b) If Letraset fails to accept the offer described in subparagraph (a), above, within the six months following the making of such offer Pantone shall have the right to offer such manufacture and distributorship to any other party, but the product to be encompassed by such offer shall be in the same state of development that it was in when the offer was made pursuant to subparagraph (a) above; provided, however, that the offer of such distributorship and manufacture by Pan-tone to such other parties shall be upon business terms which shall not be more favorable than those proposed by Pan-tone pursuant to subparagraph (a) above. We turn now to the provisions of the

Purchase Agreement. It effected a transfer from Pantone to Letraset of the assets or the PMS manufacturing and distribution business. In Paragraph 28(2) of the Purchase Agreement, Pantone agreed to refrain from licensing or allowing anyone else to use the Pantone mark

(i) on or in connection with any products which are in direct competition with GAM,
(ii) on any products generally recognized as commercial artist supplies, except as provided in Article IV(10)(b) of the [Trademark Agreement].

The meaning of this provision and its relationship to Article IV(10) of the Trademark Agreement are central to the present dispute.

2. The PCS System

The 1972 Agreements benefit both parties. Sales of GAM increased from $665,-000 in 1972 to approximately $19,000,000 in 1988. Pantone, meanwhile, has sought to expand its product line beyond the printing industry and into other fields such as archi *604 tecture, interior design, beauty, fashion and industrial design. In 1982 Pantone began development of a new color communications system, the Pantone Professional Color System (“PCS”), which is designed to provide color selection in every non-print medium, including carpets, paints, fabric, textiles and cosmetics. In 1984, Pantone introduced its first PCS product, the Pan-tone Professional Color Guide (“PCG”). Pantone offered Letraset the right to be the exclusive distributor of the PCGs in return for an initial order for 10,000 books. Letraset rejected that proposal, and, instead, the parties agreed that Letraset would purchase 1,000 books on a non-exclusive basis. Pantone itself has sold 30,000 PCGs since 1985.

In addition to the PCGs, Pantone is now offering licenses to dye manufacturers that will permit them to develop dyes coordinated with the PCS color identification system. Finally, in order to complete the PCS system, Pantone is seeking to develop materials tied to the PCS color coding system that can be used by interior designers, fashion designers and architects.

In October 1984 Pantone approached Le-traset with a proposal for Letraset to develop and market a PCS marker. Pantone told Letraset that Pantone intended to distribute the marker and other PCS products through home decorating centers and paint stores.

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878 F.2d 601, 11 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1454, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 9548, 1989 WL 71776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pantone-inc-v-esselte-letraset-ltd-ca2-1989.