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FILED United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit July 31, 2015 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Elisabeth A. Shumaker Clerk of Court TENTH CIRCUIT GENERAL STEEL DOMESTIC SALES, LLC, d/b/a General Steel Corporation, a Colorado limited liability company, Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross- Appellee, Nos. 14-1119 and 14-1121 v. (D.C. No. 1:10-CV-01398-PAB-KLM) (D. Colo.) ETHAN DANIEL CHUMLEY, individually; ATLANTIC BUILDING SYSTEMS, LLC, a Delaware corporation, d/b/a Armstrong Steel Corporation, Defendants-Appellees/Cross- Appellants. ORDER AND JUDGMENT * Before HARTZ, GORSUCH, and MATHESON, Circuit Judges. Most everyone expects a little audacity â maybe even a little mendacity â in their advertising. Sometimes it can even prove amusing. Like the local greasy spoonâs boast that it pours the âworldâs best cup of coffee.â Or the weight loss * This order and judgment is not binding precedent except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1. companyâs promise that its miracle pill will âliterally melt the pounds away.â But sometimes advertising crosses the line from harmless hyperbole into underhanded deception with material commercial consequences. Thatâs when laws like the federal Lanham Act step in, allowing those harmed by false advertising to recover for their injuries. In the district courtâs judgment thatâs the position General Steel found itself in: entitled to relief under the Act after a campaign of misleading ads by its competitor, Armstrong Steel. Neither by the end of it all can we find any reversible error in that judgment. * The trouble began with a disgruntled employee. Ethan Chumley worked as a salesperson for General Steel, a company that sells prefabricated steel buildings directly to consumers. But the relationship eventually soured and, though the parties dispute what led to his termination, everyone agrees the parting was hardly friendly. Before long Mr. Chumley founded Armstrong, a rival in the steel building business, and the company launched an aggressive online marketing campaign. Thatâs where the lies began. One Internet posting purported to detail Armstrongâs community service efforts in the Middle East, offering quotations from the companyâs Vice President of International Affairs, J.P. Remington, III. The problem? The charity didnât exist. Neither did Mr. Remington. And the false claims didnât stop with phony philanthropy: soon General Steel was in the 2 crosshairs. Ads on Google, for example, claimed that Armstrong sold âGeneral Steelâ buildings. It didnât. The companyâs website claimed that Armstrong fabricates the steel it uses to assemble its buildings. It doesnât. And one ad on Armstrongâs website â entitled âMay the Best Building Winâ â offered a side- by-side comparison of Armstrongâs and General Steelâs products and claimed that General Steel provided consumers with fewer options than, in truth, it did. So it is that General Steel sued, pursuing claims under both the Lanham Act and the Colorado Consumer Protection Act. While the district court granted summary judgment to Armstrong and Mr. Chumley on the Colorado statutory claims, the federal Lanham Act claims survived to a bench trial. There the court found for General Steel and awarded monetary and injunctive relief for three false statements â that Armstrong fabricated its own steel; that Armstrong offered âgeneral steelâ buildings for sale; and that General Steel failed to offer pregalvanized steel or stainless fasteners for its buildings. Both sides now appeal. Armstrong and Mr. Chumley challenge the district courtâs award of relief under the Lanham Act, while General Steel argues that summary judgment was inappropriate on its Colorado statutory claims. * We start with Armstrongâs appeal. To win a false advertising claim under the Lanham Act, a plaintiff generally must establish among other things that the defendantâs commercial advertising contained a false or misleading representation 3 of fact that was likely to cause confusion about the defendantâs products or services and that injured the plaintiff. 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a); Sally Beauty Co. v. Beautyco, Inc., 304 F.3d 964, 980 (10th Cir. 2002). Armstrong argues that General Steel failed to demonstrate all of these essential elements and we take each argument in turn. To show a qualifying false or misleading statement, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendantâs statement was either (1) literally false or (2) literally true or ambiguous but implicitly false, misleading in context, or likely to deceive. Hot Wax, Inc. v. Turtle Wax, Inc., 191 F.3d 813, 820 (7th Cir. 1999); accord Cottrell, Ltd. v. Biotrol Intâl, Inc., 191 F.3d 1248, 1252 (10th Cir. 1999). The district court found the three statements mentioned above â that Armstrong fabricated steel, that Armstrong sold âgeneral steelâ buildings, and that General Steel didnât provide pregalvanized steel or stainless fasteners â satisfied the first test because they were literally false. The parties spend much time fighting over the standard of review we should apply to these determinations and whether Armstrong properly preserved all of the arguments for reversal it now advances. But nothing turns on these disputes, for we would affirm the district court even assessing all of Armstrongâs arguments and doing so de novo. Take Armstrongâs representation that it fabricated its own steel. The district court held this suggestion literally false because the evidence at trial showed that Armstrong isnât a steel manufacturer but purchases steel from others 4 and then assembles it into buildings. Armstrong contends that its statements were at least ambiguous because, when discussing âeach piece of steel we fabricate,â a reader couldâve taken the company to mean that it merely supplies buildings made of steel that others fabricate. But we agree with the district court: thatâs just not a plausible reading. In referring to âeach piece of steel we fabricate,â Armstrongâs ads conveyed not only that the company supplies steel buildings or assembles pieces of steel made by others, but that it fabricates the steel pieces itself. And that much is just not true. Next come Armstrongâs representations that it offered âgeneral steelâ buildings for sale. The district court found these statements literally false because Armstrong wasnât licensed to (and didnât) sell its rivalâs products. Again Armstrong claims ambiguity, arguing that its references to âgeneral steelâ didnât necessarily mean âArmstrong makes âGeneral Steelâ (i.e., the plaintiffâs) buildingsâ because they could also mean âArmstrong makes âgeneralâ (i.e., all- purpose) steel buildings.â Again, we cannot see how. Thereâs no credible evidence in the record that the term âgeneral steelâ is used in the industry to describe steel buildings sold by anyone else. Armstrongâs ads, meanwhile, included side-by-side comparisons between its products and those offered by the General Steel company. They even used General Steelâs logo and sometimes capitalized âGeneral Steel.â In this light, thereâs just no doubt what Armstrongâs ads were talking about â or that they were literally false. 5 Last in line are Armstrongâs statements about âpre-galvanized secondary framingâ and âstainless steel fasteners.â Armstrong says its advertisements â representing that it provided these accessories where General Steel didnât â were literally true because Armstrong includes these items unless the customer declines them while General Steel doesnât include them unless the customer requests them. But Armstrongâs âMay the Best Building Winâ web advertisements failed to draw any distinctions of this sort. They didnât, for example, compare âstandardâ features. Instead, they flatly compared features supposedly available in Armstrong buildings against those supposedly available in General Steel buildings. And the ads were literally false because the evidence at trial showed that both companies provide these features at additional cost and that customers can choose whether to purchase them. Failing to persuade us of error in the district courtâs falsity analysis, Armstrong next directs our attention to the question of materiality. Though not explicitly mentioned in the text of the Lanham Act, many courts require plaintiffs to prove that a false or misleading advertisement is âlikely to influence the purchasing decisionâ before permitting recovery based on it. Cashmere & Camel Hair Mfrs. Inst. v. Saks Fifth Avenue, 284 F.3d 302, 311 (1st Cir. 2002) (quoting Clorox Co. P.R. v. Proctor & Gamble Commercial Co., 228 F.3d 24, 33 n.6 (1st Cir. 2000)); see also 5 J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy on Trademarks and Unfair Competition §§ 27:24 n.1, 27:35 (2015). Circuits that have imposed a materiality 6 requirement are, however, split over who bears the burden of proof: some keep it with the plaintiff while others are willing to presume that at least some misstatements â usually literally false ones â are material. Compare, e.g., Cashmere & Camel Hair Mfrs. Inst., 284 F.3d at 310-11 (keeping the burden with the plaintiffs), with, e.g., Pizza Hut, Inc. v. Papa Johnâs Intâl, Inc., 227 F.3d 489, 497 (5th Cir. 2000) (presuming that a literally false statement is material). This court has yet to decide whether the Lanham Act imposes a materiality inquiry and, if so, the lines that inquiry should follow or the standard we would use to review a district courtâs materiality determination. But here again this case does not require us to answer these questions. It doesnât because, on the record before us, we would find one of Armstrongâs false statements â that only Armstrong offered pregalvanized steel or stainless fasteners â material under any conceivable standard. Thatâs because Armstrongâs own evidence at trial established that the statement was likely to influence consumer purchasing decisions. Armstongâs Chief Operating Officer testified that steel fasteners and pregalvanized framing were important to Armstrongâs brand, giving the company a competitive edge and improving the quality of its buildings. That leaves the other two statements: Armstrongâs claim that it fabricated its own steel and sold âgeneral steelâ buildings. But here, too, Armstrong fails to provide a basis for reversing the district courtâs judgment. For while the 7 company didnât concede at trial that these false statements were material to consumer purchasing decisions, the company does accept on appeal the premise that âstatements that misrepresent an inherent quality or characteristic of a productâ are always material. Appellee/Cross-Appellantâs Br. 19-20 (citing Sunlight Saunas, Inc. v. Sundance Sauna, Inc., 427 F. Supp. 2d 1032, 1060 (D. Kan. 2006)). The district court found these statements misrepresented inherent qualities of Armstrongâs products and thus qualified for the presumption of materiality. On appeal, Armstrongâs brief offers no convincing reason why this was error. Maybe such a reason exists, but if it does it hasnât been presented to this court. Moving past materiality to injury, the argument proceeds this way. The district court found that Armstrongâs false statements appear in direct side-by- side comparative advertising. It found, too, that Armstrong made these false statements willfully. Given these two facts, the district court held that it would presume they caused injury to General Steel. In doing so, the court relied on cases that have employed such a presumption âin comparative advertising cases where money damages are sought and where there exists proof of willful deception.â Porous Media Corp. v. Pall Corp., 110 F.3d 1329, 1336 (8th Cir. 1997); see also Hutchinson v. Pfeil, 211 F.3d 515, 522 (10th Cir. 2000). Armstrong accepts this presumption as a matter of law, so we will assume (without deciding) that it is a correct statement of the law. The company argues, 8 however, that the presumption isnât warranted here because, as a factual matter, some of its false statements simply were not made in the course of a comparative advertisement. Yes, they were all found in its âMay the Best Building Winâ webpage â and, yes, that advertisement expressly compared Armstrong and General Steel products. But Armstrong attaches significance to the fact that two of the three statements at issue were located in small print after side-by-side columnar comparisons between the two brands. And the small print, Armstrong says, is for all practical purposes a separate advertisement unto itself. We disagree. Every statement complained of was found on a single web page (no clicking through needed). All followed under the heading âMay the Best Building Winâ and the logos of General Steel and Armstrong. So Armstrongâs suggestion that we should cleave this single piece in two â treating the columns and the small print as separate ads â seems a bit like suggesting we should find two separate ads in the sales pitch at the front end of a thirty-second radio spot and the fast-talking disclaimers at the end â or in the large print at the top of a newspaper ad and the small print at the bottom. Neither does the case on which Armstrong primarily relies, Pom Wonderful LLC v. Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc., No. CV 09-00565 DDP (RZx), 2011 WL 4852472 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 12, 2011), suggest such an unlikely conclusion. Indeed, the court there didnât attempt to sever a single ad into multiple ones. Instead, it held that the case before it didnât involve a comparative advertisement at all because the defendantâs advertising â 9 however false and misleading â never referred to the plaintiffâs product by name. Id. at *2. And thatâs just not a problem we face for, as weâve seen, Armstrongâs âMay the Best Building Winâ advertisements expressly referenced General Steelâs products. Moving beyond liability to the question of remedy, the court ordered disgorgement of profits, a move Armstrong doesnât challenge in principle. In calculating the amount of disgorgement, the district court adopted a burden- shifting framework that required General Steel to prove Armstrongâs gross profits during the period in question and Armstrong to prove which portion of those profits wasnât attributable to its Lanham Act violations. Armstrong never came forward with the latter type of evidence, and it now argues that the whole burden- shifting endeavor was an improper way to go about figuring the appropriate amount of profits to disgorge. Once again we cannot agree. The Actâs remedial provision says that when a plaintiff proves false advertising or trademark infringement, he is âentitled, . . . subject to the principles of equity, to recover . . . defendantâs profits.â 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). The statute goes on: âIn assessing profits the plaintiff shall be required to prove defendantâs sales only; defendant must prove all elements of cost or deduction claimed.â Id. Pretty plainly this language anticipates the sort of burden shifting the district court applied. Indeed, this framework is routinely used in trademark infringement cases. See, e.g., Mishawaka Rubber & Woolen 10 Mfg. Co. v. S.S. Kresge Co., 316 U.S. 203, 206-07 (1942); Lindy Pen Co. v. Bic Pen Corp., 982 F.2d 1400, 1408 (9th Cir. 1993). And many courts have employed it in false advertising cases too. See, e.g., Merck Eprova AG v. Gnosis S.p.A, 760 F.3d 247, 251, 261-62 (2d Cir. 2014); Rexall Sundown, Inc. v. Perrigo Co., 707 F. Supp. 2d 357, 359 (E.D.N.Y. 2010); Aviva Sports, Inc. v. Fingerhut Direct Mktg., Inc., 829 F. Supp. 2d 802, 819 (D. Minn. 2011). That shouldnât come as much of a surprise, for not only does the statutory text speak to both sorts of claims in the same voice, it more or less tracks common law remedies for false advertising. At common law, after all, once a plaintiff proved slander per se or libel, general damages were often presumed. See 50 Am. Jur. 2d Libel and Slander § 478; Marc A. Franklin & Daniel J. Bussel, The Plaintiffâs Burden in Defamation: Awareness and Falsity, 25 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 825, 826 & n.4 (1984). The cases Armstrong cites in support of its contrary position donât address the propriety of a burden-shifting regime for determining the quantum of monetary relief â let alone reject it. Instead, they stand for the proposition that âunless there is some proof that plaintiff lost sales or profits, or that defendant gained them, the principles of equity do not warrant an award of defendantâs profits.â Balance Dynamics Corp. v. Schmitt Indus., Inc., 204 F.3d 683, 695 (6th Cir. 2000); see also Logan v. Burgers Ozark Country Cured Hams Inc., 263 F.3d 447, 464 (5th Cir. 2001). We donât question the propriety of this principle, only its relevance when it comes to determining not whether monetary relief should be 11 awarded but whether (as here) to employ the statutorily prescribed burden- shifting procedure to ascertain its amount. Without an argument based in statutory text or precedent, Armstrong at times seems to suggest that employing a burden-shifting process in false advertising cases might create a policy problem that does not arise in trademark infringement cases. Trademark infringement cases involve discrete product lines, the argument goes, so disgorgement of profits can be easily limited to affected lines. But a product lineâbyâproduct line analysis is impossible in false advertising cases, so when ordering disgorgement of profits in those cases thereâs a risk a court will wrongly award disgorgement for product lines unaffected by any wrongdoing. We just donât see this dichotomy. We have no difficulty imagining a trademark case involving the wrongful use of a mark that affects multiple product lines (for example, if Armstrong had stamped various separate product lines with General Steelâs logo). Likewise, we can imagine a false advertising case in which the misstatements are limited to one product line and not others (for example, a car company falsely advertising qualities of its luxury sedan but not its other models). Of course, it very well may be that when ordering disgorgement a district court should (if possible) disaggregate affected and unaffected product lines to avoid overcompensation, whether the case involves trademark infringement or false advertising. But Armstrong doesnât identify any problem of this sort here for it doesnât claim to produce any product line unrelated to its false 12 advertising. To the contrary, its ads all concerned the steel buildings it sells and, as best we can tell from the record, steel buildings are all it sells. Armstrongâs only other response is to direct us to the Supreme Courtâs decision in Mishawaka and the Ninth Circuitâs ruling in Lindy Pen. But itâs not clear to us how either case helps the companyâs cause for both endorse the very burden-shifting regime Armstrong challenges, if again in the trademark context. See Mishawaka, 316 U.S. at 206 (âInfringement and damage having been found, the Act requires the trade-mark owner to prove only the sales of articles bearing the infringing mark . . . . If it can be shown that the infringement had no relation to profits made by the defendant, . . . the burden of showing this is upon the poacher.â); Lindy Pen, 982 F.2d at 1408 (âOnce the plaintiff demonstrates gross profits, they are presumed to be the result of the infringing activity.â). 1 1 In passing Armstrong suggests another reason why disgorgement here was improper: its representations that it fabricated steel or sold âgeneral steelâ buildings didnât appear on the âMay the Best Building Winâ webpage during the particular period of time covered by the district courtâs disgorgement order. But the company doesnât dispute that its statement about stainless fasteners was on the website during the relevant time. Neither does it dispute that it sponsored Google ads during the relevant period claiming to sell âGeneral Steelâ buildings, using capitalization in a clear reference to its rival. So it would still fall to Armstrong to show which of its profits from the relevant time period werenât attributable to false statements that it made in comparative ads. Something it has never attempted to do: it has only attacked the district courtâs use of the burden- shifting process and never suggested its ability to nullify or reduce the relief the court awarded using that process. Put differently, any challenge under Lindy Pen or Mishawaka to the courtâs application of the statutory burden-shifting framework fails because Armstrong never contested or claimed deductions from General Steelâs sales data. 13 * Having concluded that none of Armstrongâs arguments warrants reversal, we turn to General Steelâs half of this appeal. Here our analysis can be a good deal briefer. The company argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Armstrong on General Steelâs claims under the Colorado Consumer Protection Act. The district court held that, at least at the time of summary judgment, General Steel had failed to come forward with evidence suggesting that it suffered sufficient harm at the hands of Armstrongâs deceptive trade practices to give rise to a state law claim. On appeal, General Steel argues that the district court erred by effectively requiring it (as the nonmoving plaintiff) to point to evidence of injury in the record to oppose summary judgment. According to General Steel, Armstrong should have first come forward with affirmative evidence showing a lack of injury. But these arguments, like the cases General Steel cites to support them, come from a pre-Celotex world. The Supreme Court long ago established that a defendant may support its motion for summary judgment on an issue on which the plaintiff bears the burden of proof by arguing that the record lacks any evidence in the plaintiffâs favor. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-25 (1986). Rule 56 doesnât require that âthe moving party support its motion with affidavits or other similar materials negating the opponentâs claimâ â so long as it explains why the record doesnât support the opponentâs position. Id. at 323. 14 And Armstrong did just that here: its motion for summary judgment explained why General Steelâs theories of injury were lacking under Colorado law. General Steelâs failure to come forward with any evidence to rebut this argument was thus a real problem, just as the district court held. See, e.g., Libertarian Party of N.M. v. Herrera, 506 F.3d 1303, 1309 (10th Cir. 2007) (âIf, however, the moving party does not bear the burden of persuasion at trial, it need not negate the nonmovantâs claim. Such a movant may make its prima facie demonstration by pointing out to the court a lack of evidence on an essential element of the nonmovantâs claim.â (citation omitted)); Thom v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., 353 F.3d 848, 851 (10th Cir. 2003) (same). 2 * At this point only a couple of odds and ends remain to tie up. First, General Steel would have us overturn the district courtâs finding that its CCPA claim was âgroundless.â But General Steel fails to explain how an alternate 2 In its opening appellate brief General Steel cites an interrogatory response in which it claimed injury. But under Rule 56, thatâs not enough to survive summary judgment: General Steel had an obligation to come forward with evidence suggesting injury, not a conclusory claim of one. Adler v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 144 F.3d 664, 674 (10th Cir. 1998) (âVague, conclusory statements do not suffice to create a genuine issue of material fact.â). Neither did General Steel meet its burden by pointing to several receipts for its own advertising expenses, for the company never explained how these costs were associated with any alleged injury. Finally, General Steelâs suggestion that it amassed evidence sufficient to support a state law claim after summary judgment is of course insufficient to undo the district courtâs ruling. See id. at 671 (noting that our review of a summary judgment disposition is limited to the same record that was before the district court at the time of the judgmentâs entry). 15 finding would make any difference. In addressing whether Armstrong is entitled to attorney fees under state law, the district court held that General Steelâs CCPA claims were âgroundlessâ but declined to award fees anyway because Armstrong couldnât satisfy other statutory prerequisites. Nor does General Steel suggest that the finding is relevant to some other presently live dispute. Second, Armstrong tells us the district court erred in finding that Mr. Chumley was responsible for creating a website that disparaged General Steel. But the court went on to hold â despite this finding â that Mr. Chumley and Armstrong should win on the trademark and unfair competition claims, the only claims for which this factual finding was relevant. And again Mr. Chumley fails to suggest this finding is relevant to any other live question. Without any explanation how these findings affect anyoneâs legal rights in these proceedings, or even collateral interests elsewhere, it appears these are but academic questions and for this reason we decline to tangle with them. Cf. Wyoming v. Depât of Interior, 587 F.3d 1245, 1247 (10th Cir. 2009) (â[U]nder Article III of our Constitution federal courts may answer only questions whose resolutions will have an actual effect in the real world.â). The district courtâs judgment is affirmed. ENTERED FOR THE COURT Neil M. Gorsuch Circuit Judge 16
Case Information
- Court
- 10th Cir.
- Decision Date
- July 31, 2015
- Status
- Precedential