Volunteer Beer, Inc. v. Johnson, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 1997
Docket01A01-9703-CH-00126
StatusPublished

This text of Volunteer Beer, Inc. v. Johnson, Jr. (Volunteer Beer, Inc. v. Johnson, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volunteer Beer, Inc. v. Johnson, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE WESTERN SECTION AT NASHVILLE

VOLUNTEER BEER, INC., ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Davidson Chancery No. 96-13-III ) VS. ) Appeal No. 01A01-9703-CH-00126 ) ) RALPH W. JOHNSON, JR., ) ) Defendant/Appellee. )

APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF DAVIDSON COUNTY AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE THE HONORABLE ROBERT S. BRANDT, CHANCELLOR

FILED October 31, 1997

Cecil W. Crowson G. KLINE PRESTON, IV Appellate Court Clerk Nashville, Tennessee Attorney for Appellant

LAURENCE M. McMILLAN, JR. CUNNINGHAM, MITCHELL, HICKS & McMILLAN Clarksville, Tennessee Attorney for Appellee

REVERSED AND REMANDED

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J.

CONCUR:

W. FRANK CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.

DAVID R. FARMER, J. Plaintiff Volunteer Beer, Inc. (VBI), appeals the trial court’s final judgment dismissing

its claim for fraudulent registration of trademark against Defendant/Appellee Ralph W.

Johnson, Jr. The trial court granted summary judgment to Johnson based on the court’s

conclusion that Johnson did not intend to deceive anyone when he made a false statement

on his trademark application. We reverse because we conclude that Johnson’s affidavit

regarding his state of mind at the time he completed the trademark application was an

insufficient basis upon which to grant summary judgment.

This lawsuit began in January 1996, when VBI filed a complaint against Johnson

seeking declaratory and other relief. Specifically, VBI’s complaint alleged that Johnson

submitted an application to register the trademark Volunteer Beer to the Tennessee

Secretary of State’s office in August 1989; that Johnson falsely represented on his

application that the mark was first used in Tennessee on August 18, 1989, the date of

application; that the trademark Volunteer Beer, in fact, never was used in Tennessee by

Johnson; that Johnson fraudulently procured registration of such trademark; and that VBI

was the rightful owner of the Volunteer Beer mark. The complaint sought cancellation of

Johnson’s registration of the trademark, a declaration that VBI was the lawful registrant of

the mark, and an award of damages pursuant to section 47-25-510 of Tennessee’s Model

Trademark Act.

Johnson filed an answer and counterclaim in which he sought damages for

trademark infringement, an injunction against VBI’s further use of the Volunteer Beer mark,

and other relief.

VBI subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment contending, inter alia, that

the undisputed facts showed that Johnson fraudulently obtained registration of the

trademark Volunteer Beer.

Johnson also moved for summary judgment. Johnson’s answers to interrogatories

indicated that he had neither brewed Volunteer Beer nor made any sales of Volunteer Beer

2 in Tennessee. Accordingly, in opposing VBI’s motion for summary judgment, Johnson

conceded that his registration of the Volunteer Beer mark was subject to cancellation

because Johnson never had sold goods under the mark. To rebut VBI’s claim that he had

fraudulently registered the Volunteer Beer trademark, however, Johnson filed a sworn

affidavit in which he explained why he wrote August 18, 1989, as the date of first use on

his trademark application:

2. In 1989, I submitted an application to the Tennessee Secretary of State for registration of the mark VOLUNTEER BEER for use on Class 48 goods, malt beverages and liquors. Originally, when I completed the blanks on the application form, I left blank the date of first use on the application. . . .

3. Upon my inquiry regarding what was meant by the date of first use of the VOLUNTEER BEER mark, a female employee of the Tennessee Secretary of State’s office instructed me to fill in the application date of August 18, 1989, this being the date I made this inquiry (which was in person at the Tennessee Secretary of State’s office). Based on this instruction, I wrote August 18, 1989, on the application as the date of first use. . . .

....

5. I am not an attorney, nor was I represented by an attorney during the application and registration of the mark VOLUNTEER BEER. I was unfamiliar with the provisions of Tennessee’s trademark law and statutes at the time that I submitted my application. In connection with the application process, I made no representations or declarations, verbally or in writing, that were false or fraudulent, nor was it my intention to mislead anyone in any way. To the contrary, in stating the date of my first use of the mark VOLUNTEER BEER, I acted upon the advice of the representative of the Tennessee Secretary of State’s office.

Based on the undisputed evidence that Johnson never used the trademark within

the meaning of section 47-25-501(b)(1) of the Model Trademark Act, the trial court entered

a judgment canceling Johnson’s registration of the mark Volunteer Beer. The trial court

further ruled that VBI had priority in all of its trademarks bearing the Volunteer Beer mark

by virtue of VBI’s prior use of such mark. Lastly, the trial court dismissed all of Johnson’s

counterclaims.

3 In its final judgment, the trial court dismissed VBI’s remaining claim for damages

under section 47-25-510 of the Model Trademark Act based on VBI’s failure to submit any

proof that Johnson made a false or fraudulent misrepresentation in his August 1989

trademark application. The trial court reasoned:

The Model Trademark Act establishes liability against one who procures the filing or registration of a [trademark] “by knowingly making any false or fraudulent [representation].” [T.C.A.] § 47-25-510. The asserted misrepresentation is the insertion of “8-18-89" on the form where it asks for the date the applicant first used the mark.

Johnson’s version of how that happened is undisputed. He typed in the information requested by the fill-in-the-blank form and took it to the Secretary of State’s office. He did not fill out the “first used” blank as he was unsure what “used” meant. When he asked someone in the Secretary of State’s office what was meant by “first used,” Johnson was instructed to insert the then current date. He did so.

Use, according to the Act, means that the goods were sold or otherwise distributed. [T.C.A.] § 47-25-501(b)(1). Johnson’s version of the beer had never been sold or distributed, so when he filled in the blank with a date, he made a false statement. The question is . . . whether the false statement [was] made “knowingly.”

The Model Trademark Act does not describe “knowingly.” Courts defining the term have usually done so in the context of criminal statutes that require that acts be committed “knowingly” before they constitute crimes. In that context, knowingly means that the person charged possessed facts which made him aware he could not lawfully do the act charged. State v. Summers, 692 S.W.2d 439, 446 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1985).

The damage section of the Model Trademark Act is captioned “fraudulent registration” and refers to “any other fraudulent means.” This implies that for a false statement to have been made knowingly, it must have been done with some intent to deceive someone.

There is no evidence that Johnson’s misrepresentation that he had used the [trademark] was done with any intent to deceive anyone. To the contrary, he did not know what to put down and only followed the instruction or suggestion of someone in the Secretary of State’s office. Johnson was obviously uncertain what “used” meant. His misrepresentation made out of ignorance was not made knowingly.

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