Dewberry Engineers Inc. v. Dewberry Group, Inc.
Citation77 F.4th 265
Date Filed2023-08-09
Docket22-1622
Cited12 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 22-1622
DEWBERRY ENGINEERS INC., a New York corporation,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v.
DEWBERRY GROUP, INC., f/k/a Dewberry Capital Corporation, a Georgia corporation,
Defendant - Appellant.
No. 22-1845
DEWBERRY ENGINEERS INC., a New York corporation,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v.
DEWBERRY GROUP , INC., f/k/a Dewberry Capital Corporation, a Georgia corporation,
Defendant - Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
Alexandria. Liam OâGrady, Senior District Judge. (1:20-cv-00610-LO-IDD)
Argued: May 3, 2023 Decided: August 9, 2023
Before GREGORY, THACKER, and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Gregory wrote the opinion, in which Judge Thacker
joined. Judge Quattlebaum wrote a dissenting opinion.
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ARGUED: Gail Ellen Podolsky, CARLTON FIELDS, PA, Atlanta, Georgia, for
Appellant. Elbert Lin, HUNTON ANDREWS KURTH, LLP, Richmond, Virginia, for
Appellee. ON BRIEF: Daniel Felsen, CARLTON FIELDS, PA, Washington, D.C., for
Appellant. Arthur E. Schmalz, Washington, D.C., Stephen P. Demm, Brian A. Wright,
David M. Parker, HUNTON ANDREWS KURTH LLP, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.
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GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
Two companies that operate in the real estate development industry have spent years
embroiled in a dispute over their shared name: âDewberry.â This appeal concerns their
latest spatâDewberry Engineers has sued Dewberry Group to quell the latterâs use of
several new insignias it developed as part of its rebrand. Dewberry Engineers owns federal
trademark rights to the âDewberryâ mark and claims Dewberry Groupâs rebranding efforts
infringe that mark and breach an agreement struck between the sparring corporations over
a decade ago. The district court sided with Dewberry Engineers in the proceedings below,
assessing a nearly $43 million profit disgorgement award against Dewberry Group for its
infringement, enjoining it from further breaches of its agreement with Dewberry Engineers,
and ordering it to pay attorneysâ fees for forcing Dewberry Engineers to litigate an
exceptional case of trademark infringement. We affirm the district courtâs judgments.
I.
A.
This dispute includes not one, but two businesses bearing the âDewberryâ name
while engaged in commercial real estate development. The first, Dewberry Engineers,
started in the mid-1950s as a civil engineering and surveying firm in Northern Virginia.
Over time, its business expanded to include real estate development services such as
architecture and site development, among other offerings. Although the firmâs title cycled
through different iterations involving the name âDewberryâ over the years, it presently
operates as Dewberry Engineers. Dewberry Engineers provides its services through
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affiliated entities under common ownership and control to clients all over the United
StatesâGeorgia, Virginia, Florida, and South Carolina in particular.
The second business, Dewberry Group, similarly provides real estate
development services through its affiliates, all of which are owned by real estate
developer John Dewberry. The Atlanta, Georgia-based Dewberry Group exclusively
serves John Dewberry and Dewberry Groupâs affiliates who in turn lease commercial
property to tenants in Georgia, Virginia, South Carolina, and Florida.
Whatever peaceful coexistence the parties enjoyed ended in 2006 when each
confronted the other over their competing âDewberryâ brands. Dewberry Groupâthen
called Dewberry Capitalâstruck first by sending Dewberry Engineers a cease-and-desist
letter that asserted âa likelihood of confusion or mistake exists between the partiesâ
respective marks.â J.A. 3714â15. It argued that, although Dewberry Engineers held a
federal trademark for âDewberry,â Dewberry Group had senior common law rights to the
use of âDewberryâ in connection with real estate development and related services.
Dewberry Engineers agreed that the marks are confusingly similar and escalated
matters to a lawsuit against Dewberry Group for trademark infringement. Dewberry
Engineers argued that it would be harmed by Dewberry Groupâs use of its âDewberryâ mark
because both parties used their marks in connection with real estate development services.
Dewberry Group counterclaimed for common law infringement, claiming that Dewberry
Engineersâ marks âso resemble Dewberry Capitalâs DEWBERRY CAPITAL mark . . . as to
be likely to cause confusion, mistake, or deception when used in connection with real estate
development services.â J.A. 2463â64. Pertinent to the partiesâ competing allegations, the
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U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (âUSPTOâ) had made an initial finding by then that there
was a likelihood of confusion between âDewberryâ and âDewberry Capital,â declining
registration of âDewberry Capitalâ on that basis.
That litigation did not reach the merits, however, because the parties signed a confidential
settlement agreement (the âCSAâ) in 2007. The CSA allows Dewberry Engineers to use its
registered marks freely, and prevents Dewberry Group from challenging these registrations:
4. [Dewberry Engineers] may use its DEWBERRY marks and names at any
time for any services or products it chooses throughout the United States and
elsewhere.
...
8. [Dewberry Group] ⌠shall withdraw any pending challenges to
[Dewberry Engineersâ] federal trademark registrations, and shall not
challenge or take action against Dewberryâs federal trademark registrations.
J.A. 1198â99 œœ B.4, B.8. By contrast, the CSA strictly limits Dewberry Groupâs use of
âDewberryâ:
2. Except as provided in Paragraph B.3, below, . . . [Dewberry Group] may
use the DEWBERRY CAPITAL name and mark in connection with its
promotion, offering and performance of real estate development services.
...
3. To the extent that [Dewberry Group] performs any ⌠real estate
development or related services in [Virginia, D.C., or Maryland], it shall do
so only under the name and mark DCC and not under the name or mark
DEWBERRY CAPITAL.
...
5. [Dewberry Group] will expressly abandon any pending applications to
register the DEWBERRY CAPITAL mark for real estate development and/or
real estate related services.
...
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6. [Dewberry Group] will not use the word DEWBERRY ⌠in connection
with any architectural or engineering services.
...
10. Where feasible, [Dewberry Group] shall continue to use its column logo
âŚ. [Dewberry Group] shall not use a logo or design mark that depicts a
âdewberryâ or âberry,â and [Dewberry Group] shall not use a logo or design
mark that is confusingly similar to [Dewberry Engineersâ] âdewberryâ logo
and design mark . . . .
Id.
Dewberry Engineers also agreed not to oppose Dewberry Groupâs then-pending
applications to register five specific Dewberry-related marks. And both parties agreed to
dismiss their claims in the prior litigation and released each other from any claims they
âcould have assertedâ there. J.A. 1200â01 œœ B.14âB.15.
For a time, the parties retreated to the status quo. The armistice dissolved in 2017,
however, when Dewberry Group decided to revamp its brand. After the successful launch
of The DewberryÂŽ hotel in Charleston, South Carolina, John Dewberry decided to change
the suffix âCapitalâ to âGroup,â which would better align with the companyâs expansion
into providing services for hospitality properties. John Dewberry also adopted several sub-
brands: âDewberry Living,â âDewberry Office,â and âStudio Dewberry.â Dewberry
Group went further by creating a new logo that featured the letter D within a circle. When
rebranding began, John Dewberry did not inform Dewberry Groupâs then-general counsel,
David Groce, of the prior litigation or the CSA. Instead, he asked Groce to âdo a searchâ
for related trademarks. J.A. 3217. That search revealed Dewberry Engineersâ âDewberryâ
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mark. Even after this, it appears that as of January 2018, Groce still was unaware of the
CSA between the parties.
As a part of its rebranding efforts, Dewberry Group applied to register âDewberry
Groupâ with the USPTO for â[c]ommercial real estate development services.â J.A. 1859â64.
The USPTO rejected this application on December 20, 2017, âbecause of a likelihood of
confusionâ with the Dewberry Marks. J.A. 1841. It explained that the âdominant wording
DEWBERRYâ in both marks was âidentical in sound, meaning and essentially identical in
appearanceâ and the partiesâ services were âhighly related.â J.A. 1841â42. A week later,
Dewberry Engineers sent Dewberry Group a letter objecting to its use of âDewberry Group.â
Groce responded on January 11, 2018, âregret[ting] any concernâ Dewberry Group caused and
claiming he had not been âaware of the prior litigation or the [CSA]â and âha[d] no intent to
infringe [Dewberry Engineersâ] valid trademark rights or to breach the terms of the settlement
agreement.â J.A. 3826. He further promised ânot to attempt to register the term DEWBERRY
GROUP for real estate development services,â or to âuse the term in connection with any
present or future real estate development or related services in Virginia, Maryland, or the
District of Columbia.â Id. Instead, he promised to âuse DCC or something else that is not
confusingly similar to [Dewberry Engineersâ] marks.â Id.
In February 2018, Dewberry Group abandoned its first âDewberry Groupâ
application but continued rebranding, using âDewberry Groupâ and âStudio Dewberryâ
marks on all âexisting & future marketing material,â J.A. 3227, including âall new leasing
materials,â J.A. 3239. It later used these marks on new letterhead, business cards, email
signatures, uniforms, and property signs.
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Despite Groceâs promises, Dewberry Group also applied to register four new
âDewberryâ marks in April 2018: âD Dewberry Group,â âStudio Dewberry,â âD Dewberry
Living,â and âD Dewberry Office.â All four were for real estate-related services. In
response, the USPTO required Dewberry Group to disclaim the words âGroup,â âStudio,â
âLiving,â and âOfficeâ (meaning Dewberry Group would not claim exclusive rights to those
descriptive terms), leaving âDewberryâ as the only distinctive element.
In June 2018, Dewberry Engineers sent its second cease-and-desist letter demanding
that Dewberry Group withdraw the applications for these new marks. Dewberry Engineers
warned that Dewberry Group was intentionally infringing Dewberry Engineersâ marks,
breaching the CSA, and breaking Groceâs recent promises. Dewberry Group refused to
abandon the applications, claiming that the partiesâ marks were not confusingly similar, and
that the CSA allowed its use of âDewberryâ marks other than âDewberry Capitalâ for non-
architectural services. Dewberry Engineers responded with a third cease-and-desist letter in
July 2018, insisting again that Dewberry Group abandon its âDewberryâ marks. It explained
that Dewberry Group had misread the CSA, and that Dewberry Groupâs new marks only
increased the likelihood of confusion by eliminating âCapitalââwhich provided the financial
connotation serving to distinguish the partiesâ marks. Dewberry Engineers also warned that
Dewberry Groupâs marks had already âcaused confusion in both the Charlottesville[, Virginia]
area and the Northern Virginia area.â J.A. 3831.
Meanwhile, Dewberry Engineers challenged Dewberry Groupâs applications at the
USPTO. The USPTO rejected these applications due to a âlikelihood of confusionâ with
Dewberry Engineersâ marks. J.A. 2078. Like âDewberry Group,â it found, for example,
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that âStudio Dewberryâ was âconfusingly similarâ to Dewberry Engineersâ marks, and the
partiesâ services were âsimilar and related,â particularly Studio Dewberryâs âinterior and
exterior design for real estate.â J.A. 2079. The USPTO reaffirmed those rejections after
Dewberry Group had asked for reconsideration.
B.
Dewberry Engineers filed this action in May 2020, claiming breach of contract and
trademark infringement under the Lanham Act and Virginia common law. The district
court entered summary judgment in favor of Dewberry Engineers on both claims. See
Dewberry Engârs, Inc. v. Dewberry Grp., Inc. (Dewberry I), No. 1:20-CV-00610, 2021
WL 5217016, at *1 (E.D. Va. Aug. 11, 2021).
With respect to breach of contract, the district court found the plain language of the
CSA unambiguous. Id. at *2. Then it held that Dewberry Group violated paragraphs B.2,
B.3, B.6, and B.10. Id. Supporting that conclusion, the district court looked to Dewberry
Groupâs admitted use of the âDewberryâ mark within its promotional materials for âStudio
Dewberry,â which Dewberry Group touts for its architectural designs. Id. at *2â3. Next,
the district court found that â[a]ccording to the terms of the CSA, [Dewberry Group] was
obliged to continue using the column logo. Instead, [Dewberry Group] chose a new logo
as part of its larger rebranding efforts.â Id. at *4. That, the district court reasoned, directly
violated the CSA. Id. Finally, the district court held that â[w]here [Dewberry Group] is
shown to have performed real estate development activities in the Commonwealth of
Virginia either (1) under the mark âDewberry Capitalâ or (2) not under the mark âDCC,â it
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is in breach.â Id. at *5. Because it was ânot difficult to find examples of such activitiesâ
the district court concluded that Dewberry Group violated paragraphs B.2 and B.3. Id.
As to trademark infringement, the court decided that Dewberry Engineers âestablished
that the âDewberryâ mark is valid, legally protected, and, having been in continuous use for
more than five years following its registration, incontestable.â Id. at *6. The question left to
decide was whether application of a nine-factor test left any dispute that there was a likelihood
of confusion between the partiesâ respective marks. The district court found no dispute on that
question given: the similarity of the marks; the parties services and the regions in which they
operate; the instances of actual marketplace confusion in the record; the investment by
Dewberry Engineers into the goodwill of its trademark; and the evidence of negative publicity
threatening to tarnish that goodwill due to confusion between Dewberry Engineersâ and
Dewberry Groupâs marks. Id. at *11.
The district court later held a three-day bench trial to calculate damages. Dewberry
Engârs, Inc. v. Dewberry Grp., Inc. (Dewberry II), No. 1:20-CV-00610, 2022 WL
1439826, at *1 (E.D. Va. Mar. 2, 2022). Following this Courtâs test set forth in Synergistic
International, LLC v. Korman, 470 F.3d 162, 175 (4th Cir. 2006), the district court found
profit disgorgement appropriate. Dewberry II, 2022 WL 1439826, at *8â9. But because
Dewberry Group provided its infringing services to affiliate companies under common
ownership, the court found that the revenues associated with Dewberry Groupâs conduct
appeared on the affiliatesâ balance sheets. Id. at *9. Consequently, the court treated
Dewberry Group and its affiliates as a single corporate entity for the purpose of calculating
revenues and profits generated by Dewberry Groupâs use of infringing marks. Id. at *10.
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The court determined that the tax information Dewberry Group presented did not reflect
the âeconomic realityâ of Dewberry Groupâs relationship with its affiliates. Id. And to
account for some revenues unrelated to infringement, as well as costs, the district court
reduced Dewberry Engineersâ requested award of $53,719,657 by twenty percentâ
awarding Dewberry Engineers $42,975,725.60 in disgorgement profits. Id. at **13â14.
Finally, the district court found this to be an âexceptional caseâ meriting an attorneysâ fees
award under the Lanham Act. Id. at *13.
In a later order, the district court issued a permanent injunction that prevents
Dewberry Group from using the âDewberryâ mark in connection with real estate
development services, except as permitted by the CSA. See Dewberry Engineers Inc. v.
Dewberry Grp., Inc. (Dewberry III), No. 1:20-CV-610-LO-IDD, 2022 WL 1439105, at *5
(E.D. Va. May 6, 2022).
Dewberry Group timely appealed all three district court orders.
II.
Dewberry Group first challenges the district courtâs grant of summary judgment to
Dewberry Engineers on its breach of contract and trademark infringement claims. We
review summary judgment decisions de novo. Lee v. Town of Seaboard, 863 F.3d 323,
327 (4th Cir. 2017). âThe narrow questions before us on summary judgment are whether
any genuine issues of material fact exist for the jury and if not, whether the district court
erred in applying the substantive law.â Id. Thus, we will grant summary judgment âonly
if, taking the facts in the best light for the nonmoving party, no material facts are disputed
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and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Ausherman v. Bank of
Am. Corp., 352 F.3d 896, 899 (4th Cir. 2003).
A.
Beginning with the breach of contract claim, Dewberry Group argues that material
disputes of fact warrant reversal of the district courtâs conclusions that Dewberry Group
violated the CSA. A claim for breach of contract consists of â(1) a legally enforceable
obligation of a defendant to a plaintiff; (2) the defendantâs violation or breach of that
obligation; and (3) injury or damage to the plaintiff caused by the breach of obligation.â
Navar, Inc. v. Fed. Bus. Council, 784 S.E.2d 296, 299 (Va. 2016). No one disputes that
the CSA is a valid and enforceable contract. The district court found the CSA
unambiguous, and that Dewberry Group breached several paragraphs therein.
Paragraph B.6 of the CSA reads: â[Dewberry Group] will not use the word
DEWBERRY in the name of, or as a mark for, any architectural and/or engineering
company, or in connection with any architectural or engineering services.â J.A. 1198. The
district court found that Dewberry Group violated that provision on account of its
promotional materials, like the Studio Dewberry webpage touting its architectural designs,
see J.A. 2606â09, its promotional article in Architectural Record magazine, see J.A. 3616â
18; 1262, and its architectural filings for the Dewberry Charlottesville building, see J.A.
2614â30; see also J.A. 1193 (crediting âStudio Dewberryâ as one of its architects on leasing
packages provided to clients). Each of these instances presented uncontroverted evidence
that Dewberry Group used the âDewberryâ mark while providing architectural or
engineering services. In addition, the district court found that these services benefited third
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parties, despite Dewberry Groupâs argument that it only provided internal services. For
example, Dewberry Group prepared drawings in connection to a zoning approval for a
downtown City of Charlottesville building project on behalf of the projectâs owner, Deerfield
Square Associates, II, LLC. Even more, the court found that âthe services performed by
[Dewberry Group] were in order to serve as a distinguishing mark of luxury, for the benefit
of the tenants, investors, and brokers.â Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *4.
Paragraph B.10 states that â[w]here feasible, [Dewberry Group] shall continue to
use its column logo in its current format . . . or in a substantially similar format.â J.A.
1199. The district court concluded that because Dewberry Group âchose a new logo as
part of its larger rebranding effortsâ it breached its obligation that it âshall continueâ to use
the column logo. Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *4.
Paragraph B.2 provides:
Except as provided in Paragraph B.3, below, [Dewberry Group] may use the
DEWBERRY CAPITAL name and mark in connection with its promotion,
offering and performance of real estate development services as a real estate
developer, including purchasing real property, arranging for the construction
of commercial and residential buildings and mixed use properties, and
leasing and managing properties.
J.A. 1198. Paragraph B.3, in turn, mandates that Dewberry Group âshallâ use âthe name and
mark DCC and not under the name or mark DEWBERRY CAPITALâ if it âperforms any
present or future real estate development or related services in the Commonwealth of Virginia,
the State of Maryland, or the District of Columbia.â Id. The district court held that â[e]very
time [Dewberry Group] performed such real estate development activities in Virginiaâ
whether procuring financing, purchasing property, or submitting plans to the Board of
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Architectural Reviewâdoing so under the âDewberryâ mark (or conversely, not under the
DCC mark), it was in breach of the CSA.â Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *5.
Dewberry Group raises four arguments why we should set this analysis aside. But
each fails to persuade us of any latent error in the district courtâs conclusions.
First, Dewberry Group revives its argument, rejected by the district court, that the
CSA is ambiguous as to the meaning of âwhere feasibleâ in paragraph B.10 but it adds
nothing of substance to convincingly suggest ambiguity. And our review reveals none.
Second, Dewberry Group argues that the district court should have considered parol
evidence that the parties intended paragraphs B.2 and B.3 to apply only to âpublic facingâ
project names. Opening Br. 49. In Virginia, however, parol evidence is inadmissible if
the CSA was âintended also as a complete and exclusive statement of the terms of the
agreement.â Va. Code Ann. § 8.2-202. And the CSA paragraph B.22 explicitly states that
the â[p]arties expressly agree that they will not attempt in the future to argue that there
were any other written or oral understandings or agreements between the [p]arties, as of
the date of this Agreement, that are not expressly contained in this Agreement.â J.A. 1203.
Third, Dewberry Group argues that its âin-houseâ activities were not technically
architectural because they âdo not require an architectural license.â Opening Br. at 48.
That distinction is fanciful and unsupported. As a matter of Virginia law, â[t]he âpractice
of architectureâ means any service wherein the principles and methods of architecture are
applied, such as consultation, investigation, evaluation, planning and design, and includes
the responsible administration of construction contracts.â Va. Code Ann. § 54.1-400.
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There is no dispute that Dewberry Groupâs activities (such as the Charlottesville project)
provided some of these services.
Its fourth and final argument is that Dewberry Engineers did not establish an injury
stemming from these breaches. The district court concluded that Dewberry Groupâs
ânegative publicity damages [Dewberry Engineersâ] positive reputational standing.â
Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *10 (cleaned up). For example, Dewberry Engineers
provided evidence of negative publicity that mistakenly attributed Dewberry Groupâs
Charlottesville development projectâwhich news articles described as an âeyesoreâ and
âblight,â J.A. 2751â52, a âlong-languishingâ âskeletal building,â J.A. 2731, âviolat[ing]
building code[s],â J.A. 2743, and containing âso many ratsâ that âit looked like the ground
was moving,â id.âto Dewberry Engineers because the project bore the âDewberryâ name.
Such reputational harm is sufficient to demonstrate irreparable injury flowing from
the breach of a settlement agreement restricting the breaching partyâs use of a trademark.
See, e.g., Dynamic Aviation Grp. Inc. v. Dynamic Intâl Airways, LLC, No. 5:15-CV-00058,
2016 WL 1247220 at *28â29 (W.D. Va. Mar. 24, 2016) (collecting cases supporting the
proposition that â[l]oss of goodwill and industry reputation can constitute irreparable harm
forâ both a contract and infringement claim); see also Worrie v. Boze, 62 S.E.2d 876 (Va.
1951) (acknowledging irreparable injury may be shown without showing actual damage
attendant to the breach of a non-competition agreement). Accordingly, we find no fault with
the district courtâs conclusion that Dewberry Engineers suffered a cognizable injury
stemming from Dewberry Groupâs breach of the CSA.
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B.
Dewberry Group also claims that it did not infringe Dewberry Engineersâ trademark
in violation of the Lanham Act. The Lanham Act protects trademark registrants from âany
reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation of a registered markâ by allowing
the registrant to commence a civil action against trademark infringers for disgorgement of
profits or other damages. 15 U.S.C. § 1114(1). To demonstrate trademark infringement, a
plaintiff must show both (1) âthat it owns a valid and protectable mark,â and (2) âthat the
defendantâs use of a âreproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitationâ of that mark
creates a likelihood of confusion.â CareFirst of Md., Inc. v. First Care, P.C., 434 F.3d
263, 267 (4th Cir. 2006) (quoting § 1114(1)(a)).
The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Dewberry Engineers
because it found a likelihood of confusion between Dewberry Engineersâ âDewberryâ
trademark and Dewberry Groupâs âDewberryâ branding. But Dewberry Group finds two
problems with the district courtâs analysis. As a threshold matter, Dewberry Group faults
the district court for failing to address its defense that it used the âDewberryâ mark prior
to Dewberry Engineersâ first use. Dewberry Group also disputes the district courtâs
likelihood-of-confusion determination. We ultimately agree with the district court.
1.
We first address Dewberry Groupâs contention that Dewberry Engineers is not
entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Dewberry Group has priority over the
âDewberryâ mark.
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The notion that âfederal law does not create trademarksâ is a foundational precept
of United States trademark law. See 2 J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy On Trademarks
and Unfair Competition § 16:18 (5th ed.) (collecting cases). Instead, â[o]ne who first uses
a distinct mark in commerce [] acquires rights to that mark.â B & B Hardware, Inc. v.
Hargis Indus., Inc., 575 U.S. 138, 142 (2015). Consequently, the Lanham Act helps to
âprotect marksâ already in use. Id. To that end, it allows the owner of a trademark to
register that mark, granting the registrant substantial benefits. Registration provides
âconstructive notice of the registrantâs claim of ownershipâ of the mark, 15 U.S.C. § 1072,
and serves as âprima facie evidence of the validity of the registered mark,â § 1057(b). Even
more, a mark can become âincontestableâ once it has been registered for five years upon
the satisfaction of four other criteria. See id. §§ 1065, 1115(b).
Another way the Lanham Act aids trademark registrants is the private right of action it
authorizes against alleged infringers. In an infringement suit involving a mark that has become
incontestable, âregistration is conclusive evidence of the registrantâs exclusive right to use the
mark, subject to [some] conditionsâ found in § 15 and âthe seven defenses enumerated in
§ 33(b) itself.â Park âN Fly, Inc. v. Dollar Park & Fly, Inc., 469 U.S. 189, 196 (1985) (holding
that a trademark may not be challenged as merely descriptive once it becomes incontestable);
see also 15 U.S.C. § 1115(a). Because a mark ultimately belongs to whomever used it first,
âprior useâ is one of those enumerated defenses available to defeat a trademark registrantâs
claim that a mark has become incontestable. See 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b)(5).
When Dewberry Group raised this defense below, the district court responded
simply that Dewberry Engineers âestablished that the âDewberryâ mark is valid, legally
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protected, and, having been in continuous use for more than five years following its
registration, incontestable.â Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *6. But it spoke nothing
of Dewberry Groupâs prior use defense, which remains available to refute an incontestable
trademark. Dewberry Group now urges reversal because its reading of the record evidence
creates a genuine dispute of fact about which party first used the âDewberryâ name.
The district courtâs silence on the issue notwithstanding, Dewberry Groupâs priority
argument cannot succeed. On its version of the facts, Dewberry Group has long used
âDewberryââas early as the 1980sâwhile Dewberry Engineers claimed its first use in
2003. Assured of a competent juryâs facility with arithmetic, Dewberry Group contends
the prior use question should be reserved for trial. Whatever the merits of this argument,
it is foreclosed by a key piece of evidence: paragraph B.8 of the CSA states that Dewberry
Group âshall not challenge or take action against Dewberry[] [Engineersâ] federal
trademark registrations.â J.A. 1199 (emphasis added). Claiming prior use of a trademark
is a challenge against its validity. See Marcon, Ltd. v. Helena Rubenstein, Inc., 694 F.2d
953, 956 (4th Cir. 1982). Dewberry Group thus waived the priority issue when it agreed
to the CSA. See Beer Nuts, Inc. v. King Nut Co., 477 F.2d 326, 328 (6th Cir. 1973) (holding
that a prior settlement agreement recognizing the validity of the plaintiffâs trademark
precluded the defendantâs claim that the mark had become descriptive in a later
infringement suit as âan attack upon the validity of the trademarkâ).
Dewberry Group pushes back, claiming that a âprior use defense is not a challenge to
the validity of Dewberry Engineersâ trademark registrations. . . . Rather it is a recognized
defense to an infringement action.â Reply Br. at 3. In the context of this case, however, that
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is a distinction without a difference. The Lanham Act allows litigants to raise prior use either
as a ground for cancelation of a registration mark, Marcon, 694 F.2d at 956, or as an
affirmative defense to infringement of a registered mark, § 1115(b)(5). Those avenues are
distinct to be sure. Recall, though, that whoever âfirst uses a distinct mark in commerce []
acquires rights to that mark.â B & B Hardware, Inc., 575 U.S. at 142. A trademark merely
provides prima facie evidence, or conclusive evidence in the case of an incontestable mark,
of the markâs âvalidityâ and the âregistrantâs ownership and exclusive right to use the
registered mark.â 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b) (emphasis added). And registration is no guarantee
of ownership because the validity of even incontestable marks is susceptible to proof of the
affirmative defenses found in § 1115(b), one of which is prior use. So, whether a party
claims prior use to preempt the creation of a federal trademark registration, to cancel an
existing mark, or in defense of a federal trademark infringement suit, the result is the same:
an attack on the validity of that mark.
We therefore need not delve into Dewberry Groupâs claimed dispute about priority
of use. Dewberry Group may very well have priority over the mark, but it waived its right
to assert that claim when it agreed not to challenge Dewberry Engineersâ trademark
registrations. Thus, our review yields nothing to disturb the district courtâs conclusion that
Dewberry Engineersâ trademark is incontestable.
2.
a.
We now evaluate Dewberry Groupâs position that disputes of fact remain about
whether a likelihood of confusion exists between its own branding and Dewberry
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Engineersâ âDewberryâ mark. The likelihood of confusion piece to the infringement
puzzle is âa matter of varying human reactions to situations incapable of exact
appraisement.â Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. L & L Wings, Inc., 962 F.2d 316, 318 (4th Cir.
1992) (internal quotation marks omitted). Short of an exact measurement of the confusion
that may exist between two marks, courts have devised nine factors useful to the analysis:
â(1) the strength or distinctiveness of the plaintiffâs mark as actually used in the
marketplace;â â(2) the similarity of the two marks to consumers;â â(3) the similarity of the
goods or services that the marks identify;â â(4) the similarity of the facilities used by the
[parties];â â(5) the similarity of advertising used by the [parties];â â(6) the defendantâs
intent;â â(7) actual confusion;â â(8) the quality of the defendantâs product;â âand (9) the
sophistication of the consuming public.â Grayson O Co. v. Agadir Intâl LLC, 856 F.3d
307, 314 (4th Cir. 2017).
In considering the question of confusion, it is important to maintain perspective. The
above-listed factors are ânon-exclusive and non-mandatory,â âserve as a guide rather than âa
rigid formulaââ and âare not all of equal importanceâ or ârelevant in every case.â Swatch
AG v. Beehive Wholesale, LLC, 739 F.3d 150, 158â59 (4th Cir. 2014) (quoting George &
Co., LLC v. Imagination Ent. Ltd., 575 F.3d 383, 393 (4th Cir. 2009)). And, although this
element is âfrequently a fairly disputed issue of fact on which reasonable minds may differ,â
Anheuser-Busch, Inc., 962 F.2d at 318, summary judgment can still be appropriate when
the record does not create a genuine issue of material fact, RXD Media, LLC v. IP
Application Dev. LLC, 986 F.3d 361, 375 (4th Cir. 2021) (âNevertheless, as with any other
issue of fact, summary judgment remains appropriate when no jury reasonably could have
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ruled in the non-moving partyâs favor.â). 1 Hence, the district court held that Dewberry
Engineers is entitled to summary judgment after finding just seven factors relevant but
concluding that six supported a likelihood of confusion. Dewberry Group contests all but
one of those six factors. We consider each in turn.
i.
The first factor the district court considered was the strength or distinctiveness of
the Dewberry Engineersâ mark as actually used in the marketplace. This factor is
ââparamountâ in determining the likelihood of confusionâ because consumers are unlikely
to associate a weak or undistinctive mark with a unique source âand consequently will not
confuse the allegedly infringing mark with the senior mark.â Grayson O, 856 F.3d at 314â
15 (quoting Pizzeria Uno Corp. v. Temple, 747 F.2d 1522, 1527 (4th Cir. 1984)). The
markâs overall strength or distinctiveness âcomprises both conceptual strength and
commercial strength.â Id. at 315.
âMeasuring a markâs conceptual or inherent strength focuses on the linguistic or
graphical âpeculiarityâ of the mark, considered in relation to the product, service, or
collective organization to which the mark attaches.â CareFirst, 434 F.3d at 269 (quoting
Perini Corp. v. Perini Constr., Inc., 915 F.2d 121, 124 (4th Cir. 1990)). The markâs
1
See also, CareFirst of Md., Inc., 434 F.3d at 274 (affirming summary judgment
for the defendant where no factor supported a likelihood of confusion); Scotch Whisky
Assân v. Majestic Distilling Co., 958 F.2d 594, 598â99 (4th Cir. 1992) (affirming summary
judgment for defendant because the Court âsimply d[id] not believe that there [was] a
genuine issue of fact as to whether the public [would] be deceivedâ); Polo Fashions, Inc.
v. Craftex, Inc., 816 F.2d 145, 148â49 (4th Cir. 1987) (â[W]e think that the likelihood of
confusion was so unassailably established as to warrant the district courtâs entry of
summary judgment for the plaintiff as to liability.â).
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âpeculiarityâ is measured by âplacing the mark âinto one of four categories of
distinctiveness: (1) generic; (2) descriptive; (3) suggestive; or (4) arbitrary or fanciful.ââ
Grayson O, 856 F.3d at 315 (quoting George & Co., 575 F.3d at 393â94).
In the proceedings below, Dewberry Group argued that the âDewberryâ mark is
conceptually weak because it is a surname, rendering it descriptive. The district court rejected
that claim because â[t]aken as a whole, the mark and the âberryâ logo do not suggest a
surname.â Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *7. Instead, it considered the USPTOâs decision
not to require proof of secondary meaning, indicating that it did not consider the mark
descriptive. Id. âThese facts, read in conjunction with the fact that âDewberryâ neither
suggests nor describes the services provided by [Dewberry Engineers],â the court continued,
âlead to the finding that the mark is arbitrary, which is conceptually strong.â Id.
On appeal, Dewberry Group asserts that the district court made short shrift of its
argument that the surname âDewberryâ weakens the distinctiveness of the âDewberryâ
mark. It contends that â[s]urnames are never assumed to be âdistinctiveââ and courts are
loath to constrain and âto prohibit an individual from use of his or her name in commerce.â
Opening Br. at 29 (citing John B. Stetson Co. v. Stephen L. Stetson Co., 128 F.2d 981, 984
(2d Cir. 1942)).
Dewberry Groupâs surname argument is unpersuasive. For one, it does not
meaningfully dispute the district courtâs reasoning that âDewberryâ does not suggest or
describe the services provided by Dewberry Engineers. And, given that âDewberryâ
plainly may refer to fruit, it is an arbitrary mark, much like âApple computersâ refers both
to a fruit and a consumer computer products company without describing the companyâs
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services or products. See Sara Lee Corp. v. Kayser-Roth Corp., 81 F.3d 455, 464 (4th Cir.
1996) (âExamples [of arbitrary marks] include Tea RoseÂŽ flour, CamelÂŽ cigarettes, and
AppleÂŽ computers.â). It is also undisputed that, as the district court noted, the USPTO did
not require proof of secondary meaning when it registered Dewberry Engineersâ
âDewberryâ mark, as would be required for a descriptive mark. See Lone Star Steakhouse
& Saloon, Inc. v. Alpha of Virginia, Inc., 43 F.3d 922, 936 n.15 (4th Cir. 1995) (âThe fact
that the Trademark Office did not require proof of secondary meaning can be determined
from analyzing a title copy of the registration the Office issued.â). So, the district court
did not merely âassumeâ the âDewberryâ markâs distinctiveness as a surname; it made its
distinctiveness determination based on uncontroverted evidence in the record.
Additional record facts only bolster the district courtâs conclusion. For instance,
Dewberry Engineers offered branding studies indicating that consumers in the real estate
industry ârefer to [Dewberry Engineers] simply as âDewberryââ and associate the mark
with âknowledge, quality and strong client service.â J.A. 7743. A branding awareness
study can be an effective yardstick for determining a markâs distinctiveness. See, e.g.,
Citigroup Inc. v. Cap. City Bank Grp., Inc., 637 F.3d 1344, 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2011)
(considering âcorporate studies tracking awareness of the CITIBANK markâ). Dewberry
Groupâs only response to this evidence is a naked assertion that âa factfinder may reject
such studies.â Reply Br. at 7. Speculation does not create a genuine dispute of fact,
however. Without evidence to the contrary, the record supports the district courtâs finding
that the mark is distinctive and that this factor favors Dewberry Engineers.
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ii.
Turning to the similarity of the marks, the district court found that âthe partiesâ
marks share the same dominant and distinctive term: âDewberryââ and found â[t]he
addition of the generic terms (e.g. âgroup,â âStudio,â âOffice,â etc.)â to Dewberry Groupâs
new marks irrelevant. Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *7. Dewberry Group offers a
different analysis. In its view, âthe marks in fact have different connotationsâ because
Dewberry Engineersâ âDewberryâ mark and design refers to a fruit while its own mark
refers to its owner, John Dewberry. Opening Br. at 31. We disagree.
â[I]n evaluating the similarity of two marks, . . . the marks need only be sufficiently
similar in appearance, with greater weight given to the dominant or salient portions of the
marks.â Lone Star Steakhouse, 43 F.3d at 936. The dominant portion of a trademarkâ
that is, âwhatever is most noticeable in actual conditionsââreceives âmore weight when
assessing similarity because consumers are more likely to confuse marks with dominant
similar features than marks with less noticeable similar features.â Grayson O, 856 F.3d at
317. But courts âneed not engage in a technical dissectionâ of the marks, because
consumers âtypically do not engage inâ such ânuanced, piecemeal comparison[s].â Id.
The application of those principles to this case is straightforward. The partiesâ
marks feature the word âDewberryâ in conjunction with other, more generic prefixes and
suffixes (e.g., Dewberry âEngineersâ versus Dewberry âGroupâ and âStudioâ Dewberry).
The district court was correct to isolate âDewberryâ as the dominant word. When
Dewberry Group sought registration of its rebranded marks, like âDewberry Livingâ and
âStudio Dewberry,â the USPTO required it to disclaim the right to the descriptive terms
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âStudioâ and âLiving,â leaving âDewberryâ as the only distinctive element in both partiesâ
marks. See Pizzeria Uno, 747 F.2d at 1529â30 (observing that where a mark consists of
more than one word, the word which is not disclaimed is the dominant term); see also In
re Dixie Rests. Inc., 105 F.3d 1405, 1407 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (finding âdeltaâ the dominant
part of the mark âTHE DELTA CAFĂ because CAFĂ was disclaimedâ). The dominant
term in the partiesâ marks is thus identical. âThis identity of the dominant term in both
marks is a strong indicator of that similarity in appearance and sound which would result
in confusion.â Pizzeria Uno Corp., 747 F.2d at 1534. Therefore, the record does not
support a genuine dispute that the marks are similar.
iii.
The district court also found the services that the marks identify sufficiently similar.
Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *8. Dewberry Group contests this conclusion, too,
quibbling this time with the district courtâs focus on âthe words listed in Dewberry Engineersâ
trademark registrations.â Opening Br. at 32. Had the district court looked elsewhere,
Dewberry Group contends, it would have gleaned from the record that Dewberry Engineers
provides architectural and engineering services on a wholly different level of the broad real
estate market than Dewberry Groupâs real estate development business.
âWith regard to this element, the products [and services] in question need not be
identical or in direct competition with each other. Because confusion may arise even where
products are merely ârelated,â the court is to consider âwhether the public is likely to
attribute the products and services to a single source.ââ Renaissance Greeting Cards, Inc.
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v. Dollar Tree Stores, Inc., 227 F. Appâx 239, 244 (4th Cir. 2007) (unpublished) (quoting
CAE, Inc. v. Clean Air Engâg, Inc., 267 F.3d 660, 679 (7th Cir. 2001)).
Dewberry Group is right to frame the question here as one about how the marks are
used in the marketplace for their services. But, on that score, there is plenty of evidence
demonstrating both partiesâ use of their âDewberryâ marks in related ways to generate real
estate development business. Dewberry Group concedes its stake in the commercial real
estate market. Dewberry Engineers, in comparison, competes no less in the real estate
development services industry. Take, for example, the testimony of Joanna Legarreta, the
director of real estate services for Providence Corporation. She testified that Providence
Corporation does business as âDewberry Real Estate Servicesâ and provides services, such
as âobtaining financing for property acquisition and constructionâ and ânegotiating and
arranging for the acquisition of property for development purpose,â on behalf of Dewberry
Engineers. J.A. 2829. Consider also John Dewberryâs suggestion to Sid Dewberry, a co-
founder of Dewberry Engineers, that their two companies enter a partnership developing a
real estate project in Virginia. This record evidence points not only to the relatedness of the
partiesâ services, but to their relationship as complementary services as well. See Comms.
Satellite Corp. v. Comcet, Inc., 429 F.2d 1245, 1253 (4th Cir. 1970) (âComplementary
products, or services, are particularly vulnerable to confusion.â).
iv.
The district court also evaluated the similarity of the partiesâ advertising. For this
inquiry, a court may consider â[(1)] the media used, [(2)] the geographic areas in which
advertising occurs, [(3)] the appearance of the advertisements, . . . [(4)] the content of the
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advertisementsâ and (5) the amount of advertising between the plaintiff and defendant.
Valador, Inc. v. HTC Corp., 241 F. Supp. 3d 650, 667(E.D. Va.), affâd,707 F. Appâx 138
(4th Cir. 2017). The district court concluded this factor favored a likelihood of confusion
given that both companies market their services in Virginia, Florida, and Georgia; and
âboth parties promote their architectural and interior design services in Architectural
Record magazine.â Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *8. Dewberry Group disputes this
factor, arguing that the Architectural Record reference was to an article written about its
hotel, not a solicited advertisement.
Putting the Architectural Record magazine dispute aside, the partiesâ advertisements
appear in overlapping geographical areas. Dewberry Engineers and Dewberry Group display
their marks on website designs, leasing signage, leasing packages, and letterhead. And as
the district court noted, each markets its respective brands in Virginia, Florida, and Georgia.
That evidence also favors a likelihood of confusion.
Dewberry Group retorts that a genuine dispute exists because Dewberry Engineers
uses social media to advertise its real estate services, while Dewberry Group does not. That
Dewberry Engineers also markets on social media is not enough to create a genuine dispute.
A disparity in the amount of advertising done by one party as compared to the other certainly
may indicate dissimilarity in advertising. See CareFirst, 434 F.3d at 273 (noting that
advertising was dissimilar where one party âspends less than $2,000 per year on advertisingâ
and the other âspends millions of dollars every yearâ). But the fact that Dewberry Engineers
advertises on social media does not indicate that it spends significantly more money on its
advertising efforts than Dewberry Group. And considering the partiesâ disparate use of
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social media in comparison with the record evidence that each party markets in similar
ways and in overlapping markets, at most this factor neither favors nor disfavors Dewberry
Engineersâ claim of confusion.
v.
The district court next found an intent to confuse or infringe. Intent may be inferred
from the junior userâs knowledge of the senior userâs mark. Variety Stores, Inc. v. Wal-
Mart Stores, Inc., 888 F.3d 651, 665 (4th Cir. 2018) (citation omitted). Following that
reasoning the district court found that Dewberry Group not only knew of Dewberry
Engineersâ mark, but entered the CSA and then breached it in favor of its ârebrandingâ
efforts, which re-purposed Dewberry Engineersâ âDewberryâ mark. Dewberry I, 2021 WL
5217016, at *8. In view of these details, the court held this factor also âfavors a finding of
a likelihood of confusion.â Id.
Dewberry Group advances two unpersuasive arguments why it believes the district
court erred. It first contends that the district court did not construe the CSA drawing
inferences in its favor. By Dewberry Groupâs reading, the CSA allows it to use other
âDewberryâ marks because paragraph B.3 merely permits Dewberry Group to use the
âDewberry Capitalâ mark in connection with its real estate development businessâit does
not proscribe the use of other âDewberryâ marks. But we read the CSA as more restrictive
than that. Elsewhere in the CSA, it ensures the priority of Dewberry Engineersâ
âDewberryâ trademark by eliminating Dewberry Groupâs ability to claim the right to use
âDewberryâ beyond the permission expressed therein. And the CSA restricts Dewberry
Groupâs use of âDewberryâ to the âDewberry Capitalâ mark to real estate development
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services outside of Virginia, D.C., and Maryland. 2 When conducting business inside one
of those three locations, Dewberry Group must use the âDCCâ mark. None of that
language strikes us as offering Dewberry Group free rein to use âDewberryâ as it pleases.
To conclude otherwise would undermine the very purpose behind the CSA to settle
Dewberry Engineersâ prior claim that Dewberry group infringed its federal âDewberryâ
trademark. See Pocahontas Min. LLC v. CNX Gas Co., LLC, 666 S.E.2d 527, 531 (Va.
2008) (âA courtâs primary focus in considering disputed contractual language is to
determine the partiesâ intention, which should be ascertained, whenever possible, from the
language the parties employed in their agreement.â).
Second, Dewberry Group argues that its decision to engage in a trademark search
prior to its name change is evidence of a genuine dispute about its intent. That evidence
might lead to a reasonable inference of good faith had the parties not previously litigated
these same issues and signed a CSA outlining Dewberry Engineersâ right to its âDewberryâ
trademark. On this record, however, Dewberry Groupâs breach of the CSA is compelling
evidence of its intent to confuse and a strong indication that there is a likelihood of confusion.
See Pizzeria Uno Corp., 747 F.2d at 1535 (âIf there is intent to confuse the buying public,
this is strong evidence establishing likelihood of confusion, since one intending to profit from
2
This point also undermines Dewberry Groupâs claim that the district court gave no
consideration to âDewberry Engineersâ explicit consentâ in the CSA to Dewberry Groupâs
use of the âDewberry Capitalâ mark. Opening Br. at 27. Dewberry Engineersâ âconsentâ
was limited in scope. Whatever influence this isolated provision of the CSA has on this
litigation, it cannot overcome the great weight of evidence favoring likelihood of
confusion.
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anotherâs reputation generally attempts to make his signs, advertisements, etc., to resemble
the otherâs so as deliberately to induce confusion.â).
vi.
Finally, the district court was persuaded by the evidence of actual confusion in this
case. The district court credited Dewberry Engineersâ evidence of actual confusion: an expert
survey finding that at least twenty percent of respondents confused âDewberry Groupâ for
âDewberry Engineersâ and specific instances where representatives from Dewberry
Engineersâ client, the University of Virginia, confused Dewberry Group for Dewberry
Engineers. Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *9. Because Dewberry Group rebutted that
evidence only with immaterial distinctions rather than evidence of no confusion, the district
court sided with Dewberry Engineers on this factor. We agree with the district court.
Although â[i]t is well established that no actual confusion is required to prove a case of
trademark infringement,â its presence âcan be persuasive evidence relating to a likelihood of
confusion.â Louis Vuitton Malletier S.A. v. Haute Diggity Dog, LLC, 507 F.3d 252, 263 (4th
Cir. 2007). Conversely, âthe absence of any evidence of actual confusion over a substantial
period of time . . . creates a strong inference that there is no likelihood of confusion.â CareFirst,
434 F.3d at 269. Actual confusion can be shown through survey evidence. Tools USA & Equip.
Co. v. Champ Frame Straightening Equip., Inc., 87 F.3d 654, 661 (4th Cir. 1996).
On appeal, Dewberry Group reiterates its arguments below: each instance of confusion
occurred prior to its rebrand and Dewberry Engineers never raised an issue of actual confusion
before instituting this action, as required by the CSA. We reject both claims as the district
court did. First, as the court noted, whether the actual confusion occurred before or after the
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rebrand does not meaningfully impact its relevance to this inquiry. If anything, the fact that
Dewberry Engineersâ clients confused the two before Dewberry Group rebranded would
suggest that introducing more names using the âDewberryâ mark would lead to more
confusion. Second, while in theory the fact that Dewberry Engineers never raised the issue of
actual confusion with Dewberry Group might suggest an inference that none existed, it does
not erase the actual instances of confusion in the record. Finally, even putting those points
aside for the sake of considering facts in a light favorable to Dewberry Group,3 Dewberry
Group still does not rebut Dewberry Engineersâ survey evidence showing at least a twenty
percent actual confusion rate, which alone serves as âclear evidence of actual confusion for
purposes of summary judgment.â RXD Media, LLC, 986 F.3d at 373 (a âconfusion rate of 17
percentâ is âclear evidenceâ). Thus, there is no genuine dispute on this factor.
b.
After considering these factors, the district court held that there was a likelihood of
confusion between the partiesâ marks, even while acknowledging that they deal with
sophisticated consumers. Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *10. We agree. The parties
share an identical, arbitrary dominant word and disclaim different suffixes (and prefixes in
some cases) in the marks at issue. The record shows they also employ those marks in related,
overlapping, and complementary services. Those details go some distance toward creating a
3
That said, there are more instances in the record. See, e.g., J.A. 2725â29 (A
businesswoman demanded compensation from Dewberry Engineers for injuries sustained
at Dewberry Groupâs property); J.A. 2723â24 (A rental business contacted Dewberry
Engineers about Dewberry Groupâs failure to pay a bill).
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likelihood of confusion as to the origin of either partyâs âDewberryâ mark. See Pizzeria Uno
Corp., 747 F.2d at 1530 (observing that where the dominant word is suggestive and is identical
except for a different prefix in the challenged mark, there is sufficient similarity to create a
likelihood of confusion if the products involved belong to the same general service); see also
Am. Throwing Co. v. Famous Bathrobe Co., 250 F.2d 377, 381 (CCPA 1957) (suggesting the
same reasoning applies to arbitrary marks).
There is more yet. In this case, âpublic confusion will adversely affect [Dewberry
Engineersâ] ability to control [its] reputation among its laborers, lenders, investors, or other
group[s] with whom [Dewberry Engineers] interacts.â Perini Corp., 915 F.2d at 128. In fact,
the evidence suggests it already has. That much is clear from the brand confusion survey
Dewberry Group did not contest below, or the uncontroverted instances of actual confusion
among the public and Dewberry Engineersâ own client. And we may infer intent to create all
this confusion from Dewberry Groupâs brazen attempt to revamp its brand using âDewberryâ
variations in geographic areas prohibited by the CSA. Even drawing reasonable inferences in
Dewberry Groupâs favor, it offers too few record facts among its many arguments to
undermine the evidence of confusion gathered by the district court. In other words, âno jury
reasonably could have ruledâ in Dewberry Groupâs favor. RXD Media, LLC, 986 F.3d at 375.
* * *
Because Dewberry Group does not offer persuasive arguments or record evidence
to surmount the district courtâs analysis, we affirm the district courtâs finding of trademark
infringement.
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III.
Failing on the merits, Dewberry Group falls back on its objections to the remedies
Dewberry Engineers received as compensation for Dewberry Groupâs infringement. The
district court permanently enjoined Dewberry Group from using the âDewberryâ mark
except in the manner permitted by the CSA. In addition, the district court ordered
Dewberry Group to disgorge the $43 million of its profits that stemmed from Dewberry
Groupâs infringing activity. Then, the court awarded Dewberry Engineers reasonable
attorneysâ fees and costs as authorized by the Lanham Act. We review those decisions for
an âabuse of discretion, accepting the courtâs factual findings absent clear error, while
examining issues of law de novo.â Dixon v. Edwards, 290 F.3d 699, 710 (4th Cir. 2002).
A.
Our review of the remedies the district court granted starts with its injunction order.
The Lanham Act vests courts with the âpower to grant injunctions, according to the principles
of equity and upon such terms as the court may deem reasonable, to preventâ trademark
infringement. 15 U.S.C. § 1116(a). In fact, we have held that an injunction is âthe preferred
remedyâ for such infringements. Lone Star Steakhouse, 43 F.3d at 939 (citation omitted).
Because the district court found that Dewberry Group infringed Dewberry Engineersâ
âDewberryâ mark and breached its contract, it entered a permanent injunction order. It
enjoined Dewberry Group from use of the âDewberryâ âname or markâ or âany name or markâ
incorporating âDewberryâ âon or in connection with any real estate-related products or
services, including but not limited to leasing of real estate, real estate investment, real estate
management, real estate development, real estate site selection, architectural services, interior
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design and engineering servicesâ except as already permitted by the CSA. Dewberry III, 2022
WL 1439105, at *5. This language, in Dewberry Groupâs view, is overly restrictive because
it âessentially precludes Mr. Dewberry from using his surname in his commercial real estate
development businesses.â Opening Br. at 51. We do not share that view.
It is well-understood that âinjunctive relief must not extend beyond the threatened
injury.â Catalog Mktg. Servs., Ltd. v. Savitch, 873 F.2d 1438 (4th Cir. 1989) (unpublished
table opinion). And Dewberry Group is correct that courts are âreluctan[t]â to prevent
individuals from using their own names in business. See e.g., E. & J. Gallo Winery v.
Gallo Cattle Co., 967 F.2d 1280, 1288 (9th Cir. 1992). But the injunction language, read
in context, merely enjoins Dewberry Group from violating the terms of the CSA to which
it previously agreed. It does not, as Dewberry Group suggests, command it in terms beyond
the scope of the CSA. And to the extent Dewberry Group finds the district courtâs order
ambiguous, it âcan always seek clarification or modification of the decree from the district
court.â United States v. Apex Oil Co., 579 F.3d 734, 740 (7th Cir. 2009).
B.
1.
We decide next whether the district court erred in awarding disgorgement profits to
Dewberry Engineers. In a successful trademark infringement action, the Lanham Act
entitles a plaintiff âto recover (1) [the] defendantâs profits, (2) any damages sustained by
the plaintiff, and (3) the costs of the action.â 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). Further:
The court shall assess such profits and damages or cause the same to be
assessed under its direction. In assessing profits the plaintiff shall be required
to prove defendantâs sales only; defendant must prove all elements of cost or
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deduction claimed. In assessing damages the court may enter judgment,
according to the circumstances of the case, for any sum above the amount
found as actual damages. . . . If the court shall find that the amount of the
recovery based on profits is either inadequate or excessive the court may in its
discretion enter judgment for such sum as the court shall find to be just,
according to the circumstances of the case. Such sum in either of the above
circumstances shall constitute compensation and not a penalty.
Id.
We have outlined six equitable factors for district courts to consider in connection with
the disgorgement-of-profits remedy for infringement under 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). These
factors are: â(1) whether the defendant had the intent to confuse or deceive, (2) whether sales
have been diverted, (3) the adequacy of other remedies, (4) any unreasonable delay by the
plaintiff in asserting his rights, (5) the public interest in making the misconduct unprofitable,
and (6) whether it is a case of palming off.â Synergistic Intâl, 470 F.3d at 175.
There is no disagreement in this case that we confront a record lacking in evidence of
diverted sales4 or palming off. 5 Even still, the district court ordered disgorgement. With
respect to Dewberry Groupâs intent to confuse or deceive, the district court observed that
Dewberry Group pursued its infringing activities despite several âred flagsâ cautioning
against its conduct. Dewberry II, 2022 WL 1439826, at *8. These red flags ranged from
4
Without evidence of lost profits by Dewberry Engineers through diverted sales,
Dewberry Group contends the disgorgement award does nothing but âpunish [it] for
supposedly misinterpreting both the Coexistence Agreement [i.e., the CSA] and the ability
of a John Dewberry company to utilize his surname.â Reply Br. at 17. Because this
contention merely rehashes its failed merits argument that Dewberry Group did not breach
the CSA, we are satisfied to reject it.
5
Palming off âinvolves the issue of whether the defendant used its infringement of
the plaintiff's mark to sell its products, misrepresenting to the public that the defendantâs
products were really those of the plaintiff.â Synergistic Intâl, 470 F.3d at 176.
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Dewberry Groupâs own admissions prior to the CSA that the marks are confusingly similar,
the CSAâs terms, Dewberry Engineersâ cease-and-desist letters, and the USPTOâs denial of
the âDewberry Groupâ registration application. Id. at *2â4. We share the courtâs conclusion
that Dewberry Groupâs conduct leaves little doubt of its intent to deceive. And, although
Dewberry Engineers did not produce evidence of lost sales resulting from Dewberry Groupâs
infringement, that factor still weighs in favor of disgorgement because âthe parties operate in
overlapping marketsâ and âmarket to the same kinds of parties.â Id. at *8 (citation omitted).
Also favoring disgorgement is the need to compensate Dewberry Engineers for the
damage to its âpositive reputationâ and the dilution of âits significant investment in its
brand.â Id. And because the injunction the district court entered would address only future
infringement, we agree with the district courtâs reasoning that profit disgorgement is
necessary to make Dewberry Engineers whole for the damage already done. Id. Finally,
given the instances of actual consumer confusion in the record, the district court concluded
that the public interest in making Dewberry Groupâs misconduct unprofitable favors
disgorgement. Id. at *9. Taking these factors together, the district court found profit
disgorgement appropriate. We share that sentiment and discern no error so far.
Once it decided to disgorge profits, the district court needed to determine how much
Dewberry Group profited from its infringing activities. The parties disagreed about which
revenues belonged in this calculation in the proceedings below and again on appeal. The
core dispute stems from Dewberry Groupâs relationship with its affiliates. According to
Dewberry Group, it does not actually provide infringing services to third parties for a profit.
Instead, it produces infringing branding for its affiliates, who in turn generate profits using
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that branding on their lease, loan, and other promotional materials. Due to this
arrangement, Dewberry Group presented evidence that it âgenerated zero profits because
the Dewberry Group, Inc. tax entity showed losses on its tax returns.â Id. And while
Dewberry Group conceded that it is responsible for the accounting and cash management
for each of its affiliates, it argued âthat it is not the âeconomic engine that creates the
revenue that flowsââ to them. Id. (cleaned up).
On the other hand, Dewberry Engineersâ expert, Rodney Bosco, testified that âDewberry
Groupâs real estate business is structured so that it and its employees promoted, managed, and
operated all of the properties owned by the [affiliates], and did so using the Infringing Marks.â
Id. The district court observed that Dewberry Groupâs Executive Vice President of Finance
âprovided testimony consistent with Boscoâs conclusions.â Id.
Persuaded by Dewberry Engineersâ position, the district court treated Dewberry
Group and its affiliates as a single corporate entity for the purpose of calculating revenues
generated by Dewberry Groupâs use of infringing marks. Id. at *10. In addition to
weighing the expert testimony, the district court reasoned that âeven though the [affiliates]
do not and cannot perform the work and services necessary to generate revenues (but for
limited exceptions at the hotel), all revenues generated through Dewberry Group, Inc.âs
services show up exclusively on the [affiliatesâ] books.â Id. at *9. Moreover, given that
John Dewberry has contributed at least $23 million to cover Dewberry Groupâs extensive
losses over the past thirty years, the court determined that the tax information showing only
losses does not reflect the âeconomic realityâ of Dewberry Groupâs relationship with its
affiliates. Id. at *10
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After Dewberry Engineers established Dewberry Groupâs infringing revenues, the
burden shifted to Dewberry Group to present revenues unrelated to the infringement and the
costs that should be deducted. See 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). Dewberry Group met that burden only
as to one of those categories. The district court reduced Dewberry Engineersâ requested award
of $53,719,657 to reflect Dewberry Groupâs evidence that some leases pre-dated the use of the
infringing marks and that âDewberry Engineers did not allege that the use of THE
DEWBERRYÂŽ [hotel] for hospitality services is an infringement.â Dewberry II, 2022 WL
1439826, at *13. Despite Dewberry Groupâs failure to calculate exact figures or provide
evidence of deductions from infringement revenues for losses and expenses, the court equitably
reduced the requested award by twenty percent, to $42,975,725.60. Id. at *13â14. We find no
error of fact or law suggesting the district courtâs conclusions were an abuse of its discretion.
2.
Disagreeing with our view, Dewberry Group raises several problems it considers
fatal to the district courtâs analysis. Yet none displace our conclusions.
Dewberry Group first questions the propriety of profit disgorgement considering, as it
sees things, there was no evidence in the record of an intent to deceive. It cites CareFirst, for
the proposition that an intent to deceive requires evidence of an âinten[t] to capitalize on the
good will associated with the senior userâs mark.â 434 F.3d at 273. In CareFirst, the plaintiff
argued that the defendantâs âFirst Careâ mark infringed its own âCareFirstâ mark. Id. at 266.
The plaintiff further claimed that the defendantâs infringement amounted to bad faith,
evidenced by the defendantâs application for a state registration of its allegedly infringing
mark a month after the plaintiff sued the defendant. Id. Rejecting that position, we held that
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â[t]he fact of the state application, in and of itself, simply does not show an intent to capitalize
on the good will associated with CareFirstâs mark.â Id. Without more, we declined to âinfer
from this mere filing for state registration that First Care intended to capitalize on CareFirstâs
good will when this action would have done nothing to achieve that purpose.â Id.
Our CareFirst decision is too factually dissimilar to this case to undermine the
district courtâs finding that Dewberry Group intended to deceive the public. Unlike the
state trademark application in CareFirst, the federal trademark applications Dewberry
Group filed are not the only indicia of its bad faith. Before Dewberry Group decided to
rebrand from Dewberry Capital, its general counsel performed a trademark search, but
John Dewberry did not inform him of the CSA. Then, Dewberry Engineers sent Dewberry
Group multiple cease-and-desist letters demanding Dewberry Groupâs compliance with the
CSA and raising anecdotal instances of actual confusion between their marks. Dewberry
Group still pressed forward with its activities. Even the USPTO warned Dewberry Group
that its sought-after marks resembled Dewberry Engineersâ mark. Whatâs more, there is
evidence in the record that John Dewberry attempted to purchase Dewberry Engineers and
suggested the two companies work together on a business venture. These facts suggest
that Dewberry Group intended to use the âDewberryâ mark variants to rebrand and
generate business for itself. Taken together, they support the district courtâs finding that
Dewberry Group willfully infringed by using its rebranded âDewberryâ marks.
Dewberry Group also contends that the district court abused its discretion because
it ignored evidence that the fees Dewberry Group earned were not attributable to the
infringing marks. That criticism ignores the fact that the district court did consider
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Dewberry Groupâs evidence. The court detailed the opinions of Dewberry Groupâs expert
witness, Lisa Miller, that âmarket factorsâ rather than brand recognition, drive a
commercial tenantâs decision to lease commercial property. Dewberry II, 2022 WL
1439826, at *11. It also mentioned that many Dewberry Group revenue streams came from
prior existing leases. Id. at *12. But Dewberry Engineersâ expert, Bosco, also opined that
all the pre-existing leases used the infringing âDewberryâ marks, which could have
contributed to their renewal or maintenance of the pre-infringement revenues. He further
criticized Miller for failing to provide any basis for her conclusion that the infringing marks
could not have contributed to the maintenance of pre-infringement revenue streams.
Weighing Millerâs testimony against Boscoâs competing statements, the district court
found Boscoâs evidence more convincing.
There is more to Dewberry Groupâs concerns about Dewberry Engineersâ
disgorgement evidence, though. Dewberry Group posits that Boscoâs testimony could
not prove a connection between its infringing conduct and the revenues of its affiliates
that used the infringing materials. A âplaintiff of course is not entitled to profits
demonstrably not attributable to the unlawful use of his mark.â Mishawaka Rubber &
Woolen Mfg. Co. v. S.S. Kresge Co., 316 U.S. 203, 206 (1942). But Dewberry Group
did not carry its burden to demonstrate that its profits were not so attributable, which is
a question of fact to be determined by the district court and reviewed by this Court for
clear error. See Morris v. Wachovia Secs., Inc., 448 F.3d 268, 277 (4th Cir. 2006).
Given Boscoâs opinion that Miller did nothing to clearly demonstrate that there was no
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connection between the infringing materials and its revenues, the district courtâs factual
finding that there was such a connection is not clearly erroneous.
Advancing a related critique, Dewberry Group asserts the district court failed to
appreciate the corporate distinctions between Dewberry Group and its affiliates by piercing
their corporate veils. But we view the district courtâs decision differently. Rather than
pierce the corporate veil, the court considered the revenues of entities under common
ownership with Dewberry Group in calculating Dewberry Groupâs true financial gain from
its infringing activities that necessarily involved those affiliates. Dewberry Group argued
below that its tax structure is such that it does not generate revenues from the real estate
development efforts of its affiliates. Instead, it provides its affiliates with the infringing
promotion materials, the affiliates engage in business using those materials, and then the
affiliates pay Dewberry Group a fee for this internal service.
The district court relied on the Fifth Circuitâs holding in American Rice, Inc. v.
Producers Rice Mill, Inc. that the tax treatment of a corporate entityâs infringing behavior is
not a barrier to profit disgorgement. 518 F.3d 321, 340 (5th Cir. 2008). There, the defendant
argued that the district court erred in considering profits that the defendant did not retain due
to the nature of its business. Id. at 338. The plaintiff argued that the defendantâs business
structure was irrelevant to its disgorgement obligations as infringers, and the court agreed. Id.
at 339. The Fifth Circuit found that the defendant clearly earned a profit on its sales, and that
it passed those profits on to its patrons. Id. âThe âflow-throughâ of the profits to the farmers,â
it reasoned, âis certainly relevant to how [the defendant] is treated for tax purposes; however,
[the defendant] cites no authority for the proposition that tax treatment is relevant to the
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Lanham Act remedies.â Id. The court therefore held that âprofits earned by [the defendant]
are [the defendantâs] profits for purposes of the Lanham Act, regardless of how such profits
are passed on or how they are taxed.â Id. at 340.
Dewberry Group protests the district courtâs reliance on American Rice because the
defendant in that case earned a profit directly from the unlawful practices, and simply passed
the profit off to another entity. In contrast, Dewberry Group never held any direct profits
from its affiliatesâ uses of the infringing materials. While we recognize that distinction, we
find American Rice more illuminating than distinguishable. Dewberry Group admits that it
operates as a corporate shared-services entity under common, exclusive ownership with its
affiliates. It provides financial accounting, human resources, legal services, andâof
courseâthe infringing marks to those affiliates and their shared owner, John Dewberry. The
affiliates then lease commercial property to commercial tenants for a profit using those
marks. So, while Dewberry Group did not receive the revenues from its infringing behavior
directly, it still benefited from its infringing relationship with its affiliatesâjust as the
defendant in American Rice still benefited from its relationship with the farmers who
received its passed-off infringement profits.
A district courtâs grant of profit disgorgement is âsubject to the principles of equity,â 15
U.S.C. § 1117(a), and is ultimately a matter of the courtâs discretion, Synergistic Intâl,470 F.3d at 176
. The district court here âweigh[ed] the equities of the dispute and exercise[d] its
discretionâ to hold Dewberry Group to account for the revenues generated in part from infringing
materials used by its affiliates under common ownership. Id. Admonishing courts for using
their discretion in this fashion risks handing potential trademark infringers the blueprint for using
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corporate formalities to insulate their infringement from financial consequences. That, of course,
runs counter to Congressâs fundamental desire to give trademark registrants under the Lanham
Act âthe greatest protection that can be given them.â Park âN Fly, Inc., 469 U.S. at 193; see also
Am. Rice, 518 F.3d at 340 (noting that â[t]he purpose of section 1117 is to take all the economic
incentive out of trademark infringementâ).
In its remaining challenge to the disgorgement award, Dewberry Group claims that
the district courtâs calculations were speculative and did not account for costs. To calculate
the disgorgement award, the district court started with a âconservativeâ estimate of the
revenues Bosco calculated for the infringement period, then it subtracted twenty percent
from that number to account for pre-existing leases and revenues that theoretically might not
have had any relation to the infringing activities. Dewberry II, 2022 WL 1439826, at *11â
13. Any arbitrariness in that figure can be traced back to Dewberry Groupâs litigation
strategy to deny any connection between its affiliatesâ revenues and its infringing marks.
Dewberry Group offered no calculations for costs, nor did it provide calculations reflecting
the distinction between infringing and non-infringing revenues. It was Dewberry Groupâs
burden to provide this evidence, and we will not now fault the district court for the
approximations it was forced to make.
In sum, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding profit
disgorgement appropriate in this case or in its disgorgement calculations.
C.
Finally, we evaluate the district courtâs decision to award attorneysâ fees to
Dewberry Engineers. In âexceptional casesâ of federal trademark infringement, the
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prevailing party may be entitled to reasonable attorneysâ fees. 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). The
district court considered this an exceptional case because it found âbeyond a preponderance
of the evidence that Dewberry Group engaged in bad faith, intentional misconduct.â
Dewberry II, 2022 WL 1439826, at *14. Dewberry Group argues that the district court
misapplied the law because it did not consider whether âthere is an unusual discrepancy in
the merits of the positions taken by the parties, based on the non-prevailing partyâs position
as either frivolous or objectively unreasonableâ or whether âthe non-prevailing party has
litigated the case in an unreasonable manner.â Opening Br. at 56 (citing Verisign, Inc. v.
XYZ.COM LLC, 891 F.3d 483â84 (4th Cir. 2018)). But Dewberry Groupâs argument
misinterprets the upshot of Verisign.
In Verisign, the Court held that âa prevailing party need only prove an exceptional
case by a preponderance of the evidenceâ and clarified that âa prevailing party need not
establish that the losing party acted in bad faith in order to prove an exceptional case.â 891
F.3d at 482. It emphasized a prevailing party can prove an âexceptional caseâ by
demonstrating that âthere is an unusual discrepancy in the merits of the positions taken by
the parties, based on the non-prevailing partyâs position as either frivolous or objectively
unreasonable,â that âthe non-prevailing party has litigated the case in an unreasonable
manner,â or that âthere is otherwise the need in particular circumstances to advance
considerations of compensation and deterrence.â Id. at 483â84.
That language is disjunctive, not conjunctive. So, while the test includes the factors
Dewberry Group points to, it does not require a prevailing party to demonstrate the
presence of all three circumstances. The Verisign test instead draws from the Supreme
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Courtâs ânonexclusive list of factorsâ for use in determining whether to award attorneysâ
fees under a similar provision of the Copyright Act. See Georgia-Pacific Consumer Prods.
LP v. von Drehle Corp., 781 F.3d 710, 719â21 (4th Cir. 2015) (citing Octane Fitness, LLC
v. ICON Health & Fitness, Inc., 572 U.S. 545, 554 & n.6 (2014)). And, as the third factor
of the Verisign test suggests, district courts are not constrained to follow a âprecise rule or
formula for making these determinations but instead equitable discretion should be
exercised.â See Octane Fitness, 572 U.S. at 554 (cleaned up) (rejecting Federal Circuitâs
attorneysâ fees rule as âoverly rigidâ).
Given the district courtâs findings that Dewberry Group âpervasively breached the
CSA over Dewberry Engineersâ objection, in contravention of its General Counselâs false
assurances, and in the face of multiple red flags, which were cited by the Court on summary
judgment,â it found the award of attorneysâ fees appropriate. Dewberry II, 2022 WL
1439826, at *14. It is clear to us that the district court awarded fees in its equitable
discretion under the âparticular circumstances to advance considerations of compensation
and deterrence.â Verisign, at 484. We find no error in its judgment.
IV.
After conducting a de novo review of the district courtâs summary judgment
determination and finding no abuses of discretion in its awarded remedies, we affirm.
AFFIRMED
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QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judge, concurring in part 1 and dissenting in part:
I disagree with the majority on two issues related to Dewberry Engineersâ trademark
infringement claim. First, it should be for the jury, not a judge, to decide whether the
trademark is likely to create confusion. That element of Dewberry Engineersâ claim is
inherently fact-based and, under the record here, genuine disputes of material fact remain.
And as a result, I would vacate the district courtâs order awarding Dewberry Engineers
summary judgment along with the order awarding damages.
Second, even were summary judgment appropriate, the district court improperly
awarded disgorgement of profits damages. The Lanham Act permits, under certain
circumstances, a party that proves trademark infringement to recover the infringerâs profits
as damages. But in calculating those profits here, the district court added the profits of
companies whoâalthough affiliated with the Dewberry Groupâare separate entities and
not named defendants. That was improper. So even were Dewberry Engineers entitled to
summary judgment, I would vacate the damages award and send it back for the district
court to redo it. 2
1
I join Part IIâA of the majority opinion affirming the district courtâs order of
summary judgment on Dewberry Engineersâ breach of contract claim and Part IIâBâ1
of the majority opinion affirming the district courtâs rejection of the Dewberry Groupâs
priority of use defense to Dewberry Engineersâ trademark infringement claim.
2
Since I would send the issue of likelihood of confusion to the jury, I would vacate
the district courtâs damages award in its entirety. But were summary judgment on the
trademark infringement claim appropriate, I would join the majority opinion in Part IIIâ
A affirming the district courtâs order for injunction damages, Part IIIâBâ1 affirming the
district courtâs decision that Dewberry Engineers is entitled to disgorgement of profits
damages and Part IIIâC affirming the district courtâs award of attorneyâs fees. Like the
majority, I find no abuse of discretion as to those issues.
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I.
Liability for a Lanham Act violation requires, among other things, a finding of
likelihood of confusion between the owner of a protected mark and the alleged infringerâs
mark. CareFirst of Md., Inc. v. First Care, P.C., 434 F.3d 263, 267 (4th Cir. 2006). We
have established the following nine, non-exhaustive factors to consider in evaluating
likelihood of confusion:
(1) the strength or distinctiveness of the plaintiffâs mark as actually used in
the marketplace; (2) the similarity of the two marks to consumers; (3) the
similarity of the goods or services that the marks identify; (4) the similarity
of the facilities used by the markholders; (5) the similarity of advertising used
by the markholders; (6) the defendantâs intent; (7) actual confusion; (8) the
quality of the defendantâs product; and (9) the sophistication of the
consuming public.
Rosetta Stone Ltd. v. Google, Inc., 676 F.3d 144, 153 (4th Cir. 2012) (quoting George &
Co., LLC v. Imagination Ent. Ltd., 575 F.3d 383, 393 (4th Cir. 2009)).
These non-exhaustive factors cannot be applied formulaically. George & Co., LLC,
575 F.3d at 393. And the factors âare [not all] of equal importance.âId.
Given the testâs
flexibility, it is not surprising that likelihood of confusion is âfrequently a fairly disputed
issue of fact on which reasonable minds may differ.â Variety Stores, Inc. v. Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc., 888 F.3d 651, 660 (4th Cir. 2018) (quoting Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. L & L
Wings, Inc., 962 F.2d 316, 318 (4th Cir. 1992)). In fact
This pivotal trademark issue is particularly amenable to resolution by a jury
for two reasons. First, the jury, which represents a cross-section of
consumers, is well-suited to evaluating whether an ordinary consumer would
likely be confused. Second, the likelihood of consumer confusion is an
inherently factual issue that depends on the unique facts and circumstances
of each case. Likelihood of confusion is frequently a fairly disputed issue of
fact on which reasonable minds may differ and has long been recognized to
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be a matter of varying human reactions to situations incapable of exact
appraisement.
Anheuser-Busch, 962 F.2d at 318 (cleaned up).
Contrary to the conclusions of the district court and the majority, a juryâand not
the courtâshould decide likelihood of confusion here. I agree that the similarity of the
marks and the intent to infringe factors suggest a likelihood of confusion. And while the
evidence of actual confusion is scant, what little exists favors finding a likelihood of
confusion. 3 But in granting summary judgment, the district court concluded that the
strength of the mark, the services the mark identifies, the similarity of advertising and the
sophistication of Dewberry Engineersâ customers all support finding a likelihood of
confusion. I disagree. As shown below, when the evidence is construed in the light most
favorable to the Dewberry Group, as it must be at the summary judgment stage, there are
genuine disputes of material fact on these issues as well as on the overall consideration of
the likelihood of confusion factors. The juryânot the courtâshould decide whether there
is a likelihood of confusion between the partiesâ marks.
A.
First, the strength of Dewberry Engineersâ mark. This factor is âparamount in
determining the likelihood of confusion since a consumer is unlikely to associate a weak
or undistinctive mark with a unique source and consequently will not confuse the allegedly
infringing mark with the senior mark.â Variety Stores, Inc., 888 F.3d at 661 (cleaned up).
I also agree with the district court that the similarity of facilities and the quality of
3
the Dewberry Groupâs products are not applicable here.
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The key issue in the analysis of this factor is whether Dewberry Engineersâ âDewberryâ
mark is based on a surname or not. Surnames are descriptive marks 4, which âare not
inherently distinctiveâ and âare accorded protection only if they have acquired a âsecondary
meaning.ââ Grayson O Co. v. Agadir Intâl LLC, 856 F.3d 307, 315 (4th Cir. 2017) (quoting
Sara Lee Corp. v. Kayser-Roth Corp., 81 F.3d 455, 464 (4th Cir. 1996)).
The district court held that this factor favored a likelihood of confusion because,
â[t]aken as a whole, the mark and the âberryâ logo do not suggest a surname.â Dewberry
Engârs, Inc. v. Dewberry Grp., Inc. (Dewberry I), No. 20-cv-00610, 2021 WL 5217016
(E.D. Va. Aug. 11, 2021). It relied on the fact that the United States Patent and Trademark
Office did not require proof of a secondary meaning which it requires for a descriptive
mark and that ââDewberryâ neither suggests nor describesâ Dewberry Engineersâ services.
Id. I agree there is some evidence in the record supporting the conclusion that âDewberryâ
does not suggest a surname. But there is certainly evidence in the record that it does.
For starters, the founder of Dewberry Engineers is Sidney Dewberry. Since it began
doing business in the 1950âs, Dewberry has been in the name. It began as Greenhorne,
OâMara, Dewberry & Nealon. In 1968, it changed its name to Dewberry, Nealon & Davis.
In 1981, the firm changed its name again, this time to Dewberry & Davis. Then in 2011, it
changed its name to Dewberry Consultants. And finally, in 2017, the firm became known
as Dewberry Engineers. So, for roughly 60 years, the firm has contained the name
4
See Callman on Unfair Competition, Trademarks and Monopolies § 26:37 (4th ed.
2017) (âThe Lanham Actâs ultimate test is whether the primary significance of the mark is
that of a surname to the purchasing public. The classification is a question of fact.â).
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Dewberry. And for almost all of those 60 years, the surname Dewberry was combined with
other surnames as named partners of the engineering firm.
True, âDewberryâ could refer to a fruit and not a name. But Dewberry Engineersâ
comparison of âDewberryâ to âAppleâ is, to say the least, a stretch. Steve Jobsâ last name
was not Apple. Sidney Dewberryâs last name is Dewberry. When this evidence is construed
in the light most favorable to the Dewberry Group, a reasonable factfinder could infer that
the most significant aspect of Dewberry Engineersâ marks results from the surname
Dewberry. And that would mean the marks are descriptive and thus entitled to less
protection. Said differently, properly applying the summary judgment standard to the
evidence here requires a conclusion that the strength of the mark factor weighs against, not
for, likelihood of confusion.
B.
Second, consider the services the marks identify. This factor is measured by each
partyâs âactual performance in the marketplace.â CareFirst of Md., 434 F.3d at 272. The
district court found this factor weighed in favor of likelihood of confusion. In reaching this
conclusion, it relied on the fact that Dewberry Engineers registered its mark under the real
estate development and development related services category and that the Dewberry
Group operates in that same area. Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *8. While the
evidence the court relied on may support its conclusion of overlapping services, it did not
consider evidence pointing the other way.
The Dewberry Group introduced evidence that it develops properties like office
buildings, shopping centers and hotels. In doing so, it acquires property, obtains financing
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for purchases and construction and supervises the construction and other improvements.
Afterward, it leases its properties to third-party tenants and provides management services
for those properties. In contrast, while perhaps under the larger umbrella of real estate
development services, Dewberry Engineers primarily provides engineering and
architectural services to government and commercial entities. 5 Even though they operate
in some of the same geographic areas, Dewberry Engineers and the Dewberry Group do
not compete for business. In fact, the Dewberry Group once hired Dewberry Engineers to
provide engineering services for one of the Dewberry Groupâs real estate development
projects.
The district court did not consider any of this evidence. But when this evidence is
construed in the light most favorable to the Dewberry Group, the similarity of services does
not favor likelihood of confusion.
C.
Third, the district court found that the partiesâ advertising favored a likelihood of
confusion largely because both Dewberry Engineers and the Dewberry Group operate and
5
True, Dewberry Engineers does some work that more closely resembles what the
Dewberry Group does. Through the Providence Corporation, it operates as âDewberry Real
Estate Services,â which âobtain[s] financing for property acquisition and constructionâ and
ânegotiat[es] and arrang[es] for the acquisition of property for development.â J.A. 2829.
But since its primary work is providing professional architectural and engineering services
to third parties, the different levels in which the parties operate in the real estate system
presents a question of fact on whether there would be a likelihood of confusion as to the
marks in relation to the normal consumers of the marks. See Homeowners Grp., Inc. v.
Home Mktg. Specialists, Inc., 931 F.2d 1100, 1109 (6th Cir. 1991) (âThe companies
operate at different levels in the broad real estate industry and sell to two completely
distinct sets of buyers.â).
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advertise in Virginia, Florida and Georgia and because both parties âpromote[d] their
architectural and interior design services in Architectural Record magazine.â Dewberry I,
2021 WL 5217016, at *8. While I agree this evidence generally weighs in favor of similar
advertising, the district court once again did not consider the record evidence suggesting
the partiesâ advertising was dissimilar.
The Dewberry Group introduced evidence that Dewberry Engineers advertises
through social media, electronic newsletters, conferences, trade shows, print media and
press releases, all geared towards government and commercial entities that procure
architectural and engineering services. It markets across the United States. Meanwhile, the
Dewberry Group does not advertise through television, radio or print services. It does not
advertise nationwide and does not market itself on social media. Instead, the Dewberry
Group advertises through financial leasing packages to prospective tenants and internal
fliers that are circulated to tenants within its developments. While both parties have
websites that display the respective marks, there is still a genuine dispute of material fact
for the jury to resolve as to the parties advertising.
This evidence, when construed in the light most favorable to the Dewberry Group,
weighs against likelihood of confusion.
D.
Fourth, the sophistication of the consuming public can be a persuasive factor in the
likelihood of confusion analysis. The district court appears to agree that Dewberry
Engineers offers its services to sophisticated buyers, which cuts against Dewberry
Engineersâ motion for summary judgment. Dewberry I, 2021 WL 5217016, at *10â11. But
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it then reasoned that âit would not be appropriate to conclude that the sophistication of the
buyer is dipositive, especially in cases where actual tenantsâthe buyers in questionâhave
demonstrated confusion.â Id. at *10. I agree that the sophistication of Dewberry Engineersâ
customers is not dispositive. Even so, applying the summary judgment standard, their
sophistication weighs against likelihood of confusion. See Perini Corp. v. Perini Constr.,
Inc., 915 F.2d 121, 128 (4th Cir. 1990) (â[W]e hold that in a market with extremely
sophisticated buyers, the likelihood of consumer confusion cannot be presumed on the
basis of the similarity in trade name alone, particularly without the benefit of trial.â).
E.
To summarize, as we have said in the past, weighing the likelihood of confusion
factors generally involves genuine disputes of material fact. Variety Stores, Inc., 888 F.3d
at 666; Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,962 F.2d at 318
. That is because not all the factors are
required to be considered or given the same importance. George & Co., LLC, 575 F.3d at
393. Thus, by its very nature, the application of these factors will involve weighing evidence
and crediting certain evidence over others. But doing that is inappropriate at the summary
judgment stage of the case. Variety Stores, Inc., 888 F.3d at 659.
And aside from weighing the factors, the evidence pertaining to each factor must be
construed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Id. 661â67. When that is
done here, many of the factors the district court determined weighed in favor of likelihood
of confusion actually point the other way. See id. at 666â67 (finding that although five of
the factors favored the plaintiff, four of the factorsâincluding the paramount âstrength of
the markââshowed a genuine dispute of material fact, requiring the order granting
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summary judgment on trademark infringement to be vacated). Under this record, the issue
of likelihood of confusion should go to the jury. As a result, I would vacate the order
granting summary judgment to Dewberry Engineers on its trademark violation claim, along
with the order of damages relating to that claim and remand the case for further
proceedings.
II.
But even were summary judgment on the trademark infringement claims proper, the
district courtâs use of revenues from separate companies affiliated with the Dewberry
Groupâwho are not parties to the caseâto assess the profits of the Dewberry Group was
not. Relying on testimony from an expert witness of Dewberry Engineers, the court held
that the Dewberry Group and its affiliated entities âwill be treated as a single corporate
entity when calculating the revenues and profits generated by [the Dewberry Groupâs] use
of the Infringing Marks.â Dewberry Engârs, Inc. v. Dewberry Grp., Inc. (Dewberry II), No.
20-cv-00610, 2022 WL 1439826, at *10 (E.D. Va. Mar. 2, 2022). It cited the Fifth Circuitâs
American Rice, Inc. v. Producers Rice Mill, Inc., 518 F.3d 321 (5th Cir. 2008), decision as
support for this holding. And it reasoned that to do otherwise, would âignore the economic
reality of how [the Dewberry Groupâs] business operatesâ and âundermine the equitable
purposes of the Lanham Actâs disgorgement remedy by enabling the entire Dewberry
Group enterprise to evade the financial consequences of its willful, bad faith infringement.â
Dewberry II, 2022 WL 1439826, at *9â10.
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The majority affirms this portion of the district courtâs order. It claims 15 U.S.C.
§ 1117(a)âs âsubject to the principles of equityâ language justifies including revenues from the
related companies. And it reasons that â[a]dmonishing courts for using their discretion in this
fashion risks handing potential trademark infringers the blueprint for using corporate formalities
to insulate their infringement from financial consequences.â Majority Op. at 42â43.
But the law does not insulate the Dewberry Group or any related entities that might have
infringed on Dewberry Engineersâ marks. There is no loophole that lets these entities infringe
with impunity. If the corporations affiliated with the Dewberry Group participated in infringing
activity, they would be subject to the reach of the Lanham Act. All Dewberry Engineers had to
do was sue them. Or it could also try to pierce the Dewberry Groupâs corporate veil to eliminate
the corporate separateness between it and those entities.6 But I know of no law that allows courts,
in assessing the profits of a defendant, to disregard those options and simply add the revenues
from non-parties to a defendantâs revenues for purposes of evaluating the defendantâs profits.
6
Assuming without deciding that Virginia law applies, piercing the corporate veil
requires the trial court to consider âthe particular factual circumstances surrounding the
corporation and the acts in question.â OâHazza v. Executive Credit Corp., 431 S.E.2d 318,
321 (Va. 1993). For example, in OâHazza the court considered the initial capitalization,
whether corporate formalities were disregarded, whether the corporation was started for a
legitimate purpose and whether monetary funds were improperly accessed. Id. at 321â22.
Virginia law has not designated a single fact or set of facts necessary to pierce the corporate
veil, but it is generally appropriate to do so when an individual uses the corporate entity
âto evade a personal obligation, to perpetrate fraud or a crime, to commit an injustice, or
to gain an unfair advantageâ or if there is âunity of interest and ownership . . . such that the
separate personalities of the corporation and the individual no longer exist and to adhere to
that separateness would work an injustice.â Dana v. 313 Freemason, 587 S.E.2d 548, 553â
54 (Va. 2003) (cleaned up). However, Virginia courts are âvery reluctant to permit
corporate veil piercing.â Id. at 554.
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After all, § 1117(a) speaks to the infringerâs profits. And Dewberry Engineers alleges that the
Dewberry Group, not third parties, was the infringer.
American Rice does not support Dewberry Engineersâ claim that revenues from
companies affiliated with the Dewberry Group can be considered in its disgorgement claim.
There, the defendant, Producers Rice Mill, was a cooperative that realized profits during
the infringing time period. When the plaintiff sought to disgorge those profits, Producers
Rice Mill claimed its liability should be reduced based on the amount of those profits that
it had passed on to its member farmers. American Rice, 518 F.3d at 326. The Fifth Circuit
held that profits generated by Producers Rice Mill and later distributed to its members were
nevertheless Producers Rice Millâs profits. Id. at 339â40. That makes sense. In deciding an
infringerâs net profits, legitimate costs can be deducted. But amounts distributed to
members are not a cost. So American Rice deals with what costs can be deducted to
determine an infringerâs net profits. It does not say anything about using the revenues of
separate companies to calculate net profits.
Unlike in American Rice, the revenues from the affiliated companies were never
realized by the Dewberry Group. Nor did the district court hold that the Dewberry Group
distributed profits it realized to its affiliated entities. To the contrary, because of what it
described as âthe economic reality of how [the Dewberry Groupâs] business operates,â it
treated the Dewberry Group and the related companiesâwhich it acknowledged were
separate corporate entitiesâas a single entity. Dewberry II, 2022 WL 1439826, at *9.
American Rice offers no support for such a ruling. The district courtâs consideration of
those revenues was incorrect as a matter of law.
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III.
Because I find that the district court did not properly consider the likelihood of
confusion factors in the light most favorable to the Dewberry Group, I would vacate the
order granting summary judgment as to Dewberry Engineersâ trademark infringement
claim and the order granting the injunctive, disgorgement of profits and attorneyâs fees
relief. And even were the order granting summary judgment proper, I would vacate the
award for disgorgement of profits award based on the improper consideration of revenues
from separate, non-party entities affiliated with the Dewberry Group.
I respectfully dissent.
57