Soft Sheen Products, Inc. v. Revlon, Inc.

675 F. Supp. 408, 4 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1519, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12776, 1987 WL 22325
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 23, 1987
Docket86 C 1753
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 675 F. Supp. 408 (Soft Sheen Products, Inc. v. Revlon, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soft Sheen Products, Inc. v. Revlon, Inc., 675 F. Supp. 408, 4 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1519, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12776, 1987 WL 22325 (N.D. Ill. 1987).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

McGARR, District Judge.

This case came on for a hearing before the court on May 4, 1987, on the petition of plaintiff Soft Sheen Products, Inc. (“Soft Sheen”) for injunctive relief against defendants Revlon, Inc. (“Revlon”) and Roux Laboratories, Inc.’s (“Roux”) alleged infringement of Soft Sheen’s trademark and trade dress for hair care products designed principally for and sold to the ethnic community of black America. The court heard extensive evidence and argument on the subject and is in receipt of post-trial memo-randa and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The findings of fact and conclusions of law of the court follow.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The Parties

1. Plaintiff Soft Sheen is a Delaware corporation with its offices and principal place of business at 1000 East 87th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60619 (admitted, Answer to Complaint, Para. No. 1). Soft Sheen is a manufacturer of a line of hair care maintenance products especially designed for and directed to the black hair care market (Tr. 9). Soft Sheen’s “Care Free Curl” line of products is directed to black wearers of a hair style known as the “curl look” (Tr. 9-10).

2. Defendant Revlon is a Delaware corporation with its offices and principal place of business at 767 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10153 (admitted, Answer to Complaint, Para. No. 2). Defendant Roux is a New York corporation with its offices and principal place of business at 3733 University Boulevard West, Jacksonville, Florida 32217-2134. Roux is wholly owned by Revlon.

Soft Sheen’s “Care Free Curl” Products

3. In May, 1979, Soft Sheen began marketing in salons “Care Free Curl” hair care products directed to the “curl look” (Tr. 8; 87-89). About a year later, in 1980, these products were made available to mass re *410 tail merchandisers (Tr. 87-88). The “curl look” is a hair style in which the naturally, tightly curled hair of blacks is first loosened or straightened, and then restyled into a larger curl (Tr. 9-10). The “curl look” hair style is generally obtained from a professional stylist, and requires maintenance products to retain the hair style (Tr. 9; 87-88).

4. Soft Sheen’s products for the maintenance of the “curl look” hair style are sold at both professional outlets such as beauty salons, and at retail outlets, including beauty supply outlets, food or grocery stores, drug stores, and discount department stores (Tr. 193-194). These maintenance products include “Care Free Curl” brand Shampoo (PX-11), Instant Moisturizer (PX-164), Curl Activator (PX-190), and Gel (PX-209) (Tr. 302-303). “Care Free Curl” maintenance products, particularly the moisturizer and activator, have been sold to retail customers in beauty salons in a distinctive bright yellow and red container substantially identical to PX-164 since about August, 1979 (Tr. 85-89). The shampoo (PX-11) has been sold since at least July, 1980 (Tr. 22). The gel (PX-209) has been sold since at least 1983, and was marketed prior to the Revlon gel product (PX-8) (Tr. 138).

5. Soft Sheen’s “Care Free Curl” bright yellow and red retail trade dress in dispute (“bright yellow and red trade dress”) is substantially identical to PX-164, and comprises the following visual elements: a substantially cylindrical, bright yellow bottle; bold red graphics, substantially along the upper half of the bottle; and a red bottle cap. The overall colors and trade dress were chosen and have been synergistically and extensively promoted with a view toward distinctively identifying those colors and that trade dress with Soft Sheen (Tr. 76; 99-100; 134-135; 229). Soft Sheen has also obtained a U.S. trademark registration for the word/design mark “Care Free Curl” in red lettering on a yellow background (U.S. Trademark Registration No. 1.301,111; PX-158; PX-159; Tr. 90-92).

6. In 1985, Care Free Curl Shampoo (PX-11) was the top-selling ethnic shampoo. Within two years, it had dropped to the second-ranked shampoo in total sales (Tr. 254-257), while the Revlon product rose to first place.

7. Care Free Curl Instant Moisturizer (PX-164) and Care Free Curl Activator (PX-190) have been the overall top-selling ethnic hair care products, as evidenced by direct testimony and the commercial reporting service, Towne-Oller (Tr. 202-203; PX-178; 179; 180).

Revlon’s Competing Products

8. Revlon, through its Roux subsidiary, sells a “Creme of Nature” Shampoo (PX-5), Instant Moisturizer (PX-188), and Moisturizing Gel (PX-8) in the ethnic market (Tr. 115-116.) Creme of Nature Shampoo was sold, between 1973 and 1984, in various trade dresses, none resembling a bright yellow cylindrical container having a red cap and also having bold red graphics substantially along the upper half of that cylinder (Tr. 873).

9. Among the variety of competing products marketed by both plaintiff and defendant, the evidence indicates a likelihood of confusion is limited to only two of them, that is, the Revlon Shampoo bottle and the Revlon Instant Moisturizer.

10. In late 1984, Revlon changed the trade dress of its shampoo bottle from the beige and maroon of PX-9 (Crane testimony p. 47) to the bright yellow and red of PX-5 (Crane testimony, pp. 17-18).

11. In early 1985, Revlon introduced an instant moisturizer (PX-188) in a bright yellow and red trade dress (Crane testimony p. 31).

12. Revlon’s post-1984 trade dress for its competitive shampoo and instant moisturizer, as exemplified by PX-5 and PX-188, comprises the following visual elements; a substantially cylindrical bright yellow bottle; bold red graphics, substantially along the upper half of the bottle; and a red cap.

Soft Sheen’s Sales, Advertising, Promotion and Secondary Meaning

13. From 1979 through 1986, Soft Sheen Products, Inc. has sold about $375,-000,000 of goods. An estimated 80-88% of such goods, or at least $300,000,000, were *411 sold in containers bearing Soft Sheen’s bright yellow and red trade dress of PX-11 (Tr. 100-102). Through the end of 1984, Soft Sheen Products, Inc. sold about $203,-000,000 of goods, with at least 80% or $160,000,000 in sales, in Soft Sheen’s bright yellow and red trade dress (Tr. 100-102).

14. Soft Sheen has engaged in extensive color advertising and promotion to establish, in the minds of consumers, an association betwen Soft Sheen and its bright yellow and red trade dress (Tr. 8; 169-191). In addition, since 1979, millions of shipping cartons (PX-191), which consumers can often see at retail stores, have been produced in the bright yellow and red combination (Tr. 93-94). Buttons, visors, sunglasses, T-shirts, wristbands, luggage, jogging suits, mugs, and other promotional items in bright yellow and red are distributed (Tr. 100; 170). Soft Sheen employees at trade shows wear yellow and red clothing (Tr. 100).

15. Virtually all of Soft Sheen’s print advertising includes, and emphasizes, the bright yellow and red trade dress (PX-211-233) (Tr. 169-191). This print advertising has appeared in nationally distributed magazines, including magazines particularly directed to the black market, such as Ebony and Essence (Tr. 169-170; 171-172); in transit or bus advertising (Tr.

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675 F. Supp. 408, 4 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1519, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12776, 1987 WL 22325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soft-sheen-products-inc-v-revlon-inc-ilnd-1987.