Societe De Developments Et D'Innovations Des Marches Agricolesimentaires-SODIMA-Union De Cooperatives Agricoles v. International Yogurt Co.

662 F. Supp. 839, 3 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1641, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4907
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 15, 1987
DocketCiv. 86-706-PA
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 662 F. Supp. 839 (Societe De Developments Et D'Innovations Des Marches Agricolesimentaires-SODIMA-Union De Cooperatives Agricoles v. International Yogurt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Societe De Developments Et D'Innovations Des Marches Agricolesimentaires-SODIMA-Union De Cooperatives Agricoles v. International Yogurt Co., 662 F. Supp. 839, 3 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1641, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4907 (D. Or. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

PANNER, Chief Judge.

Plaintiffs SODIMA, General Mills Products Corp. (General Mills), and Yoplait USA, Inc. bring this action for infringement of their federally registered trademarks YOPLAIT and YOCREME. Defendants International Yogurt, Inc. and Global Gourmet, Inc. have been using the name YOCREAM and 800-YO CREAM. They deny any likelihood of confusion between YOPLAIT and YOCREAM, challenge plaintiffs’ YOCREME mark as void, and counterclaim for infringement of their common law trademarks YOCREAM and 800-YO CREAM. The parties agree that YOCREME and YOCREAM are confusingly similar. The central issue in this case is whether plaintiffs abandoned or warehoused their YOCREME mark. The case was tried to the court beginning February 24, 1987. I find no likelihood of confusion between YOPLAIT and YOCREAM. I cancel plaintiffs’ federal YOCREME trademark, and I assign common law trademark rights to the parties according to priority of use.

FACTS

Plaintiff SODIMA is a French agricultural cooperative company. It owns the U.S. trademark registrations on YOPLAIT Nos. 980, 605,1,134,239, and 1,224,432, and the registration on YOCREME No. 1,186,-981. SODIMA first began to sell its YO-PLAIT yogurt in the United States in 1974. In October 1977, SODIMA granted an exclusive license to General Mills to produce and market YOPLAIT. YOPLAIT was manufactured and distributed through General Mills’ wholly-owned subsidiary, Yoplait USA, Inc. It has since been marketed continuously. YOPLAIT sales in 1978 were about $16 million. They are now nearly $200 million annually.

In 1978 Yoplait USA formulated a five-year plan which targeted refrigerated yogurts, frozen yogurts, refrigerated desserts, and soft cheeses as potential additional product lines, following the trend toward yogurt consumption in the American market. Top priority was assigned to a refrigerated dessert line of custard-style yogurt. The name YOCREME was coined at a January 1979, name-generating session. By August 1979 plaintiffs rejected the name for the new custard-style yogurt. Nevertheless, they liked the French-sounding name with its implications of creaminess, and decided to register it as a trademark.

For the sole purpose of registering the trademark YOCREME, Yoplait USA sold four products in interstate commerce: a mousse, a plain custard-style refrigerated yogurt, a frozen yogurt, and a refrigerated soft cheese. This October 1979 sale to a friend in Wisconsin totalled $2.52. SODI-MA filed the trademark application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office in January 1980. The trademark office granted the registration in January 1982.

In 1979 and again in 1980, plaintiffs negotiated with two parties other than defendants who were using or considering using the name “Yo Cream.” One was a small Maryland retailer who agreed to abandon use of the name. The other was a major competitor, Land O’ Lakes, who agreed to abandon use of the name in exchange for uncontroverted use of the name YOCHEESE.

From 1979 until early 1982, plaintiffs did not develop any products associated with the name YOCREME or market anything as YOCREME. In March 1982, a report prepared for Yoplait USA suggested that the name might be good for use with proposed soft cheese products. Plaintiffs followed up on that suggestion in May 1982, by using YOCREME as one of fourteen different potential names in a taste test for *842 prototype non-yogurt cheese products. YOCREME scored among the five top names for the cheese product. In a July 1982 name evaluation test for the cheese product, YOCREME ranked fourth among a list of 232 names. However, plaintiffs never again considered the name for that product and they never marketed the cheese product.

Simultaneously, plaintiffs were experimenting with a non-yogurt pudding product. YOCREME topped the list of preferred names for the pudding in a July 1982 test. It was the first and last time the mark was considered in that connection.

In response to competition in the burgeoning yogurt business, plaintiffs experimented with a premium fruit-on-the-bottom yogurt line. The proposed product was significantly higher in butterfat content than the competitor’s product. In April and May 1983, plaintiffs tested the YO-CREME name, along with sample advertisements, on this product. Market tests failed to indicate sufficient sales for the premium product. Consequently, in the summer or fall of 1983, plaintiffs reduced the richness of the product and discontinued the YOCREME mark for that product.

Finally, in early 1984, plaintiffs developed a formula for high fat yogurt, a concept new to the American market that was based upon German and Swiss yogurts. In May 1984, the name YOCREME was assigned to the new product. In December 1984, it was made a top priority project. Between late 1984 and August 1986, twelve tests costing about $368,800 thoroughly examined YOCREME for taste, flavors, packaging, likely volume of sales, advertising, and pricing. The name YOCREME — and only the name YOCREME — was used in each test. Plaintiffs capitalized the project at $3 million, and invested an additional $6 million on consumer coupons, trade promotion, and print and television advertising. YOCREME began to be sold in grocery stores in July 1986 and achieved full national distribution by September 1986. By February 1987, YOCREME had achieved about $10 million in sales nationwide.

In May 1985, plaintiffs learned that defendants were marketing frozen yogurt under the name 800-YO CREAM.

Defendants entered the frozen yogurt business in 1976. They were experienced in business and in the use of trademarks. Their product was a liquid mix designed for stores, institutions or other outlets with soft ice cream machines. It could also be refrigerated and sold as a hard pack. Between 1977 and 1982, defendants operated stores in Washington and Oregon and franchised others under the name “The Yogurt Stand” and “The Healthi Deli.” In 1982 they experimented with an upgraded pref-lavored product containing a higher butterfat content. They called it YOCREAM. In late 1982 it was sold in Oregon and Washington; in 1983 it was also sold in Alaska, Hawaii and California.

In October 1983, defendants conducted a trademark search which showed the existence of plaintiffs’ YOCREME registration. Defendants telephoned plaintiffs to inquire about their intentions for the mark. Defendants verified that YOCREME was not being marketed at that time.

At first YOCREAM was identified simply by signs on the dispensing machines or elsewhere in the stores. By spring of 1984 the name was printed on the cartons shipped to the buyers. Since 1984 defendants vigorously promoted YOCREAM at trade and restaurant shows and by direct solicitation to distributors throughout most of the country. A telephone number, 800 YO-CREAM, was acquired in mid-1984 to take orders and inquiries.

Defendants never attempted to register YOCREAM but did, in March 1985, file an application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to register 800-YO CREAM, claiming June 1984 as the date of first use. The application was rejected in May 1985 on the basis of conflict with YOCREME. In June 1985, John Hanna of the defendants telephoned Richard Berman, plaintiff’s in-house counsel, regarding use of the mark. In October 1985, Mr. Hanna filed a declaration with the Trademark Office stat *843

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
662 F. Supp. 839, 3 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1641, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/societe-de-developments-et-dinnovations-des-marches-ord-1987.