Wsm, Inc. v. Wheeler Media Services, Inc., Nashville Network, Inc., and Ian Wheeler

810 F.2d 113
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1987
Docket85-5149
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 810 F.2d 113 (Wsm, Inc. v. Wheeler Media Services, Inc., Nashville Network, Inc., and Ian Wheeler) 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
Wsm, Inc. v. Wheeler Media Services, Inc., Nashville Network, Inc., and Ian Wheeler, 810 F.2d 113 (6th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

ENGEL, Circuit Judge.

Defendants appeal an order of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee awarding plaintiff $35,785.79 in attorney fees under the “exceptional cases” provision of section 35 of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). 1 The district judge held that plaintiff was entitled to the fees because defendants unnecessarily prolonged the litigation after September 27, 1982. We reverse.

The underlying controversy concerned the right to use the service mark “The Nashville Network.” The defendants reserved the corporate name “Nashville Network, Inc.” with the Tennessee Secretary of State in October 1980, and incorporated the “Nashville Network, Inc.” under that name in September 1981. The defendants also registered the trademark with the Secretary of State in September 1981. However, the defendants never used the mark in the sense of having provided services under the mark, a circumstance which was later to be their undoing. Plaintiff, which is part of Opry Land, Inc., an entertainment corporation that owns the Grand Ole’ *115 Opry, claimed that it owned the mark and that defendants were liable for infringement and unfair competition.

In a Memorandum filed October 3, 1983 the district judge found that plaintiff was the owner of the mark in dispute and on this basis granted plaintiff partial summary judgment. The judge noted that while plaintiff also claimed infringement and unfair competition by defendants, those claims were not before the court at that time. The court later granted plaintiff summary judgment on those claims in a Memorandum filed May 29, 1984. At the same time, the district court denied plaintiffs request for attorney fees:

WSM also seeks an award of attorney fees from the point in time when the defendants knew that they did not own the mark. WSM contends that this point in time is September 17, 1982, when defendants were apprised that the character of their use as set out in defendants' depositions would not, as a matter of law support defendants’ claim of ownership. This Court does not agree. Given the admissions of the defendants and the undisputed evidence on the issue of likelihood of confusion, this Court initially favored the imposition of attorney fees on the defendants. Nevertheless, the plaintiff’s concession that the defendants’ selection of the mark was without knowledge of WSM’s use convinces this Court that the defendants’ acts of infringement were not malicious, fraudulent, deliberate or willful so as to make this an exceptional case to justify requiring the defendants to bear the plaintiff’s attorney fees. 15 U.S.C. § 1117.

Plaintiff moved for reconsideration of the denial of attorney fees, and on June 27, 1984 the court decided to grant plaintiff the fees it had incurred after September 17, 1982. 2 The court stated:

The Court awarded defendants' profits to WSM. The Court declined to exercise its discretion to declare the case an exceptional one under 15 U.S.C. § 1117 because of the innocent adoption of the term by the defendants.
WSM now moves for reconsideration and for further monetary award equal to WSM’s attorney fees after September 17, 1982 for the award of defendants’ profits. The court deems the plaintiff’s motion unopposed due to the defendants’ failure to respond. Local Rule 8(b)(3).
WSM contends that defendants’ innocent adoption should be a shield against an award of attorney fees only until such time as that innocence was dissipated. There can be no doubt that by September 17, 1982, defendants knew the ultimate outcome of the case. Defendants had admitted that WSM had used the mark; had admitted that defendants had not used the mark; had asserted a likelihood of confusion; and had been fully apprised of the law.

On January 18, 1985 the court set the fees 3 and stated that they were incurred after September 27, 1982. September 17, 1982 was the date of a letter from plaintiff to defendants in which plaintiff offered to settle the litigation. Plaintiff proposed foregoing any claims for damages or attorney fees if defendants would abandon their claim of rights to the disputed mark by September 27,1982. This letter was apparently the basis for the district court’s grant *116 of attorney fees. The seeming discrepancy between the court's first order setting September 17 as the date on which defendant should have stopped litigating, and the second order setting September 27 as the date is undoubtedly related to the fact that plaintiff’s September 17 letter gave defendant 10 days in which to desist.

First, we reject appellant’s argument that section 1117 only authorizes an award of attorney fees in cases involving registered trademarks. Without deciding whether this case might in any event involve a registered trademark since plaintiff brought suit upon that theory originally, we believe, with the Eleventh Circuit in Rickard v. Auto Publisher, Inc., 735 F.2d 450 (11th Cir.1984), that all of the section 1117 remedies, including attorney’s fees, apply to actions brought pursuant to 1125(a).

The district judge applied two different standards in deciding the attorney fees question. In his May 29, 1984 Memorandum he asked whether defendants’ use was “malicious, fraudulent, deliberate or willful,” but in his June 27, 1984 Memorandum he applied a more lenient standard. This inconsistency is understandable in light of the uncertainty in the law governing attorney fees in trademark cases.

Conflicting views on the proper standard in these cases are presented in Noxell Corp. v. Firehouse No. 1 Bar-B-Que Restaurant, 771 F.2d 521 (D.C.Cir.1985). A majority held that the enactment of section 1117 by Congress indicated a desire to allow attorney fees to be recovered by prevailing parties in “exceptional” circumstances and that such exceptional circumstances were not limited by those in which a party “acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons.” Id. at 526 (quoting Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U.S. 240, 258-59, 95 S.Ct. 1612, 1622, 44 L.Ed.2d 141 (1975)). Observing that this traditional “bad faith” exception to the American rule already allowed awards of attorney fees, the majority concluded: “Something less than ‘bad faith,’ we believe, suffices to mark a case as ‘exceptional.’ ... [W]e think ‘exceptional,’ as Congress used the word in section 35 of the Lanham Act, is most reasonably read to mean what the word is generally understood to indicate— uncommon, not run-of-the-mine.”

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Bluebook (online)
810 F.2d 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wsm-inc-v-wheeler-media-services-inc-nashville-network-inc-and-ian-ca6-1987.