United States v. 4500 Audek Model Number 5601 Am/fm Clock Radios, and Abbey Manufacturing Company, Claimant-Appellant

220 F.3d 539, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 16924, 2000 WL 974392
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 2000
Docket99-4080
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 220 F.3d 539 (United States v. 4500 Audek Model Number 5601 Am/fm Clock Radios, and Abbey Manufacturing Company, Claimant-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 4500 Audek Model Number 5601 Am/fm Clock Radios, and Abbey Manufacturing Company, Claimant-Appellant, 220 F.3d 539, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 16924, 2000 WL 974392 (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

On February 28, 1998, the United States Customs Service in Chicago, Illinois, seized 4500 clock radios from Abbey Manufacturing Company on the grounds that the radios contained counterfeit Underwriters Laboratories Certification Marks attached thereto. See 19 U.S.C. §§ 1526(e) & 1595a(c)(2)(C); 15 U.S.C. § 1127. This appeal involves Abbey’s attempt to regain possession of the 4500 clock radios. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties

Abbey Manufacturing Company has been engaged in the manufacture of OEM plastic injection molding since 1989. 1 In an effort to enter the electronics market, Abbey created a wholly owned subsidiary known as Audek Corporation in 1993 to develop a domestic clock radio manufacturing operation.

Underwriters Laboratories (UL), in Northbrook, Illinois, is a not-for-profit testing laboratory that examines and tests numerous products, including clock radios. Manufacturers submit samples of their products to UL for examination and testing so that UL may independently determine if the products meet specific standards and requirements for fire, electrical, and casualty hazards. If the product meets UL’s standards, the manufacturer *541 and UL enter into a “follow-up services agreement,” 2 and, at this point, manufacturers may attach UL’s certification mark to their product. The agreement provides that UL’s mark may only be used: 1) in connection with the covered product; 2) by the manufacturer named in the Procedure; and 3) at the location of the manufacture or assembly specified in the Procedure.

UL then prepares a document called a “Procedure.” The Procedure identifies and describes which products meet UL’s safety standards and may therefore use the UL certification mark; specifies the type of mark to be used; denotes the manufacturer who may use UL’s mark; and delineates the factory location at which covered products bearing UL’s mark may be manufactured. 3

B. The Agreement

On July 25, 1994, Audek and UL entered into a follow-up services agreement in which Audek sought approval to affix UL’s mark on its clock radios. After UL tested samples of the clock radios, it agreed to approve Audek’s request, and Audek commenced manufacturing radios with UL’s mark. 4

Pursuant to the agreement between Au-dek and UL, a Procedure was agreed upon and approved whereby Audek was allowed to affix UL’s mark to radios manufactured in China. However, Audek arranged and paid for UL inspections of the clock radios manufactured in the plant in China. Furthermore, Audek also paid UL to list the factory in China in the Procedure as an authorized manufacturing location.

In November 1996, Audek notified UL that it would no longer be manufacturing radios in China and that “all future production” would be completed “at 2140 West Fulton Street, Chicago.” The notice also advised UL that “[a]ny future inspections need to be conducted at [the Fulton Street] location.” Based on Audek’s representation, the Procedure was modified to eliminate references to the manufacturing facility in China, and UL ceased their periodic inspections of clock radios manufactured at the Chinese factory by the end of 1996. Since that time, neither Audek nor Abbey has paid UL for the testing, listing, or inspection of any clock radios manufactured in China.

In December 1996, Abbey notified UL that, as of January 1, 1997, Audek was being eliminated as a corporate entity and all future business would be done by Abbey. Accordingly, Abbey and UL entered into a follow-up services agreement dealing with Abbey’s rights to affix UL’s mark on its clock radios. . The agreement stated that, “[ejxcept where otherwise specifically authorized, the [UL] mark shall be applied to or used in connection with the covered product only by the Manufacturer named in the Procedure and only at the location of manufacture or assembly specified in the Procedure.”

The only manufacturing location listed on the January 15, 1997 Procedure (between Abbey and UL) was 2140 West Fulton Street, Chicago, Illinois. Furthermore, the Procedure authorized the use of UL’s mark “only at the above manufacturing location on such products which comply with this Procedure and any other applicable requirements.”

C. The Radios from China

In February 1998, Abbey attempted to import 4500 clock radios into the United *542 States, bearing UL’s mark, which it had assembled in China. However, the United States Customs Service in Chicago, Illinois, seized the clock radios and contacted UL to determine if the UL certification mark displayed on the clock radios was authorized.

After Customs notified UL that the radios had been seized, UL wrote to Abbey and requested an explanation as to why it was still importing radios manufactured in China with UL’s mark despite the fact that Abbey was now only authorized to manufacture radios bearing the UL mark in Chicago, Illinois. Abbey responded by claiming that in October of 1996, Mark Harkowski, an associate project engineer with UL, advised Audek that “in order to move the inspection location” for the clock radios to Chicago, “it would be necessary to provide the UL inspector with copies of invoices showing that UL approved parts were purchased for these radios by the manufacturer.” 5 Because, under the terms of the January 15, 1997 agreement with UL, Abbey was no longer authorized to manufacture clock radios in China for importation into the United States, UL informed Customs that Abbey’s attempt to import the 4500 radios was unauthorized. After receiving this information, the government commenced forfeiture proceedings on the 4500 clock radios in their possession.

D. The District Court

Upon completion of discovery, the government moved for summary judgment, arguing that the undisputed facts demonstrated that UL had not authorized the use of its mark on the seized radios. According to the district judge,

[i]t is undisputed that the Procedure issued to Audek did not allow Audek (or Abbey) to use the UL mark in conjunction with any products manufactured outside of the United States. This ex-elusion comports with the agreement’s stated rationale that UL would only authorize its mark to be used on goods manufactured at factories subject to its inspection. Because Abbey (and previously, Audek) did not pay UL for inspections of its factories in China during the time defendant radios were manufactured, UL did not inspect the factories, or the products manufactured there. Accordingly, by the terms of the agreement, any radios manufactured in China after the Procedure was issued should not have borne the UL mark.

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220 F.3d 539, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 16924, 2000 WL 974392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-4500-audek-model-number-5601-amfm-clock-radios-and-abbey-ca7-2000.