Tumblebus Inc v. Cranmer

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 2005
Docket04-5060
StatusPublished

This text of Tumblebus Inc v. Cranmer (Tumblebus Inc v. Cranmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tumblebus Inc v. Cranmer, (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 05a0021p.06

UNITED STATES COURTS OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X Plaintiff-Appellee, - TUMBLEBUS INC., - - - No. 04-5060 v. , > MEREDITH CRANMER, d/b/a Tumblebus of Louisville, - Defendant-Appellant. - N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky at Louisville. No. 03-00466—Charles R. Simpson, III, District Judge. Argued: September 14, 2004 Decided and Filed: January 13, 2005 Before: MOORE and CLAY, Circuit Judges; HAYNES, District Judge.* _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: Jack Allen Wheat, STITES & HARBISON, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellant. James R. Higgins, Jr., MIDDLETON REUTLINGER, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jack Allen Wheat, Bethany A. Breetz, STITES & HARBISON, Louisville, Kentucky, Samuel F. Miller, STITES & HARBISON, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant. James R. Higgins, Jr., Julie A. Gregory, Robert J. Theuerkauf, MIDDLETON REUTLINGER, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellee. _________________ OPINION _________________ KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Defendant-Appellant Meredith Cranmer (“Cranmer”), d/b/a Tumblebus of Louisville, appeals from the district court’s order granting Plaintiff-Appellee Tumblebus Incorporated’s (“Tumblebus Inc.”) motion for a preliminary injunction restricting Cranmer’s use of the TUMBLEBUS mark and related trade dress during the pendency of the underlying infringement action. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM in part, VACATE in part, and REMAND to the district court for further consideration of Tumblebus Inc.’s motion for a preliminary injunction.

* The Honorable William J. Haynes, United States District Judge for the Middle District of Tennessee, sitting by designation.

1 No. 04-5060 Tumblebus Inc. v. Cranmer Page 2

I. BACKGROUND In 1987, Brenda Scharlow (“Scharlow”) launched Tumblebus Inc., a company which provides gymnastics and physical education instruction to children. Tumblebus Inc., which bills itself as a “mobile gym on wheels,” furnishes such instruction on-site at day-care centers, birthday parties, and the like through the use of school buses retrofitted with gymnastics and other athletic equipment. Tumblebus Inc. currently operates three to four buses on a regular basis, marketing its services in the greater Louisville, Kentucky area. Tumblebus Inc.’s business has also expanded to include the sale of retrofitted school buses to other persons wishing to enter the mobile-gymnastics-instruction market. Tumblebus Inc. has sold over two hundred retrofitted school buses to persons across the United States. Buses sold by Tumblebus Inc. seem to be similar in appearance to those used by Tumblebus Inc. in its own gymnastics-instruction business. Tumblebus Inc. permits purchasers to use the “Tumblebus” name when marketing their services, and many purchasers operate under names that include the word “Tumblebus.” For approximately six years, Tumblebus Inc.’s training session for new bus purchasers has included a presentation by Donna Dugan (“Dugan”), owner of the Hot Fonts printing company, who offers for sale pre-designed letterhead, flyers, and other marketing materials containing the Tumblebus name and iconography. According to Scharlow, Tumblebus Inc.’s expansion into selling retrofitted buses to other operators began somewhat informally, and the decision was made early on not to structure the business as a franchise because franchising would require too much on-site monitoring of individual franchisees’ operations. Tumblebus Inc.’s record-keeping also appears rather informal, and according to Scharlow, Tumblebus Inc. does not have a complete list of all persons who have purchased retrofitted buses. Tumblebus Inc., however, has maintained contact with some purchasers, distributing new lesson plans and business development ideas. In November 2001, Tara Pate (“Pate”) purchased a retrofitted bus from Tumblebus Inc. When Pate first discussed her potential purchase with Scharlow, she indicated that she planned to operate in Lexington, Kentucky. Scharlow, however, informed Pate that two other persons were already operating in Lexington, but suggested that Pate could instead service Elizabethtown, Brandenburg, Mt. Washington, Bardstown, and Radcliff, Kentucky. According to Scharlow and her husband, Pate orally agreed to operate in this area but not to expand into Louisville, where Tumblebus Inc. was based. The Scharlows admit, however, that they forgot to put this agreement in writing. Testimony at the hearing also indicates that during a meeting between Pate, Pate’s mother, and Scharlow, Scharlow refused to include a territory provision in Pate’s purchase contract. When asked what would prevent Pate from operating in the Louisville area, Scharlow apparently responded that there would be nothing that she could do to stop Pate from soliciting1 customers in the Louisville area, but that she was confident in her customers’ loyalty to Tumblebus Inc. In January 2002, Scharlow learned that Pate had distributed flyers advertising her business to day- care centers in the Louisville area. Scharlow contacted Pate, reminding Pate that she was not supposed to be operating in that area. Pate explained that she was having difficulty in obtaining customers in Elizabethtown and the surrounding areas, to which Scharlow responded that Pate could expand her operations into north Bullitt County, Kentucky, which included a day-care center that Tumblebus Inc. previously had serviced. Ultimately, however, Pate decided to leave the mobile-gymnastics-instruction market and listed her bus for sale in a Louisville newspaper.

1 A few of Tumblebus Inc.’s sales contracts do include written geographic restrictions. According to Scharlow, she has “agreements with every person that buys a bus from [her], an oral agreement. But then it happens that some of the people on the east coast, they want it in written [sic]. They’re a little less trustworthy, so the five [written agreements with geographic restrictions that were produced during discovery] were the five [she] had in writing.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 87 (D. Ct. Hr’g Tr. at 89). No. 04-5060 Tumblebus Inc. v. Cranmer Page 3

Cranmer noticed Pate’s advertisement in the Louisville newspaper and contacted Tumblebus Inc. in order to determine, for comparison purposes, what a newly retrofitted bus from Tumblebus Inc. would cost. Scharlow testified that when Cranmer called, she noticed that Cranmer’s telephone number had a Louisville area code, so she asked Cranmer from where she was calling. When Cranmer explained that she was calling from Louisville, Scharlow apparently responded that she would not sell Cranmer a bus in Louisville because other Tumblebus operators were already in that area. Cranmer then stated that her sister was interested in purchasing a bus for operation in Bloomington, Indiana, and the discussion continued. In April 2002, Cranmer purchased Pate’s Tumblebus and began operating in the Louisville area under the name “Tumblebus.” Upon learning that Cranmer was operating in Louisville, Scharlow contacted Cranmer. Cranmer and Scharlow discussed the possibility of Cranmer changing or adding something to the name of Cranmer’s business, and Scharlow suggested such names as “Meredith’s Tumblebus,” “Fun Bus,” and “Gym on Wheels.” Cranmer eventually listed her business in the fall 2002 Louisville telephone book (with the same Louisville telephone number previously used by Pate) under the name “Tumblebus of Louisville.” Tumblebus Inc. also appeared in the fall 2002 Louisville telephone book, but was listed after “Tumblebus of Louisville,” appeared in smaller typeface, and included a New Albany, Indiana telephone number. Scharlow then began insisting that Cranmer remove the word “Tumblebus” from her business’s name. Scharlow claims that Tumblebus Inc.

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