FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
August 12, 2013
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
WATER PIK, INC., a Delaware
corporation,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v. No. 12-1065
MED-SYSTEMS, INC., a Washington
corporation,
Defendant - Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
(D.C. NO. 1:10-CV-01221-PAB-CBS)
Lisel M. Ferguson (Heather A. Cameron, with her on the briefs), Procopio, Cory,
Hargreaves & Savitch LLP, San Diego, California, for Defendant - Appellant.
Lee F. Johnston (Scott P. Sinor, with him on the brief), Dorsey & Whitney LLP,
Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff - Appellee.
Before LUCERO, HARTZ, and HOLMES, Circuit Judges.
HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
The parties to this trademark dispute make consumer products for rinsing
sinus cavities. Med-Systems, Inc., the earlier entrant in this market, sells its
products under the federally registered trademark SinuCleanse and two similar
marks. Water Pik, Inc., which traditionally sold oral irrigators and showerheads,
registered the trademark SINUSENSE with the intention of selling sinus-irrigation
devices under the brand name “SinuSense.” It brought an action against
Med-Systems in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado,
seeking a declaratory judgment that its use of the SinuSense brand name did not
infringe on any of Med-Systems’ marks. Med-Systems counterclaimed for
trademark infringement and unfair competition under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C.
§§ 1051–1127. Ruling that the SinuSense brand was not likely to cause consumer
confusion, the district court awarded summary judgment to Water Pik on the
counterclaims and dismissed Water Pik’s declaratory-judgment claim as moot.
We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Med-Systems was founded in 1997 by Dr. Diane Heatley and David Gallo.
The company’s business is selling nasal-irrigation products. One product line is a
device known as a neti pot, which allows users to rinse their sinus passages with
saline solution. Med-Systems also sells squeeze bottles and saline refill packets
(which contain a powder to add to water to create the saline solution). These
products are sold through a number of pharmacies and retail chains nationwide.
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Med-Systems has obtained federal registration of three different trademarks
to brand its products: the stylized word mark SinuCleanse, registered in 1998;
the nonstylized word mark SINUCLEANSE, registered in 2008; and the
nonstylized word mark SINUCLEANSE SQUEEZE, also registered in 2008.
There is no dispute that these marks are statutorily incontestable under 15 U.S.C.
§ 1065 (2010). Photographs in the record indicate that the packaging for Med-
Systems’ products conspicuously features the stylized term “SinuCleanse,” with
the first component printed in plain type and the second component italicized.
Since the 1970s Water Pik has developed, manufactured, and sold oral
irrigators and showerheads. In 2008 it sought to enter the market for sinus-
irrigation products. It expressed interest in acquiring Med-Systems, but
negotiations between the two parties failed in December 2008. Water Pik began
developing its own nasal-irrigation line, which it ultimately decided to market
under the name “SinuSense.” In May 2009 it filed an intent-to-use application for
federal registration of the nonstylized word mark SINUSENSE, and in October
2009 the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) published the mark
for opposition. See 15 U.S.C. § 1051(b)(1) (2002) (allowing a person “who has a
bona fide intention . . . to use a trademark in commerce” to file for registration of
the mark); id. § 1062(a) (2000) (providing that if it appears to the PTO that an
applicant is entitled to registration, “the Director shall cause the mark to be
published in the Official Gazette of the [PTO]”); id. § 1063(a) (2006) (allowing
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those who believe that they will be damaged by registration to file an opposition
to registration of the mark). Med-Systems commenced an opposition proceeding
against the SINUSENSE mark before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board in
December 2009, but that proceeding has been stayed pending resolution of this
case.
Water Pik filed this action against Med-Systems in May 2010. It sought a
declaratory judgment (1) that its use of the SINUSENSE mark did not infringe on
any of Med-Systems’ registered trademarks under § 32 of the Lanham Act, id.
§ 1114 (2005); (2) that the trade dress for its SinuSense-branded products did not
infringe on the trade dress for any of Med-Systems’ SinuCleanse-branded
products under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act, id. § 1125(a) (2012); (3) that its use of
the SINUSENSE mark did not constitute unfair competition against Med-Systems
under § 43(a); (4) that its use of the mark did not constitute dilution of any of
Med-Systems’ trademarks under § 43(c) of the Lanham Act, id. § 1125(c); and (5)
that it had a right to register the SINUSENSE mark and to use it in connection
with its sinus-irrigation line.
Two months after Water Pik filed its complaint, SinuSense-branded
products began appearing in stores. They included neti pots, squeeze bottles,
electric nasal pulsators, and saline refill packets. Exhibits to Water Pik’s
complaint show the packaging for these products. They feature the word
“waterpik” in large, unitalicized white letters against a blue background, and,
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directly below it in larger letters, the word “SinuSense” in unitalicized blue letters
against a white background. The letter i in “waterpik” is modified to include
three vertically
stacked dots instead
of one:
Med-Systems raised seven counterclaims: (1) that Water Pik’s use of the
SINUSENSE mark infringed on Med-Systems’ registered trademarks in violation
of § 32; (2) that the packaging for Water Pik’s SinuSense-branded products
constituted trade-dress infringement under § 43(a); (3) that Water Pik’s use of the
SINUSENSE mark constituted unfair competition under § 43(a); (4) that Water
Pik’s activities had diluted Med-Systems’ trademarks under § 43(c); (5) that Med-
Systems was entitled to an injunction against Water Pik’s use of the SINUSENSE
mark under 15 U.S.C. § 1116 (2008); (6) that Water Pik had tortiously interfered
with Med-Systems’ contractual relations with a national retailer by inducing the
retailer to place SinuSense-branded products on its shelves in place of
SinuCleanse-branded products; and (7) that through the same conduct, Water Pik
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had also tortiously interfered with Med-Systems’ existing economic relations with
that retailer. Med-Systems later dismissed the sixth and seventh counterclaims
with prejudice, and the district court awarded summary judgment to Water Pik on
the remaining counterclaims. The court dismissed Water Pik’s claims for
declaratory judgment as moot. See Water Pik, Inc. v. Med-Systems, Inc., 848 F.
Supp. 2d 1262, 1283 (D. Colo. 2012).
Med-Systems’ only challenges on appeal are to the summary judgment on
its claims of trademark infringement and unfair competition. On those claims the
district court ruled that Med-Systems had not produced adequate evidence that
Water Pik’s use of the SINUSENSE mark was likely to cause confusion among
consumers. See id. at 1270–71. Med-Systems filed a motion to reconsider,
arguing, among other things, that the court had overlooked a report on likelihood
of confusion by one of its experts, Dr. Michael A. Belch. Dr. Belch’s report was
an analysis of a survey that measured consumer confusion arising from the
SINUSENSE mark. After examining the survey and report, the court determined
that they had too many methodological flaws to be of any probative value, so it
did not revise its previous analysis.
On appeal Med-Systems argues that the district court erred in ruling that no
genuine issue of fact existed regarding likelihood of confusion. It also suggests
that an improper grant of summary judgment would violate its Seventh
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Amendment right to a jury trial; but we need not address that issue because the
summary judgment was proper.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Likelihood of Confusion
Med-Systems claims that Water Pik’s use of the SINUSENSE mark
constitutes infringement of its registered trademarks as well as unfair
competition, both of which are violations of the Lanham Act. Section 32 of the
Act allows the owner of a registered mark to bring an infringement action against
any person who
use[s] in commerce any reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable
imitation of a registered mark in connection with the sale, offering
for sale, distribution, or advertising of any goods or services on or in
connection with which such use is likely to cause confusion, or to
cause mistake, or to deceive . . . .
15 U.S.C. § 1114(1)(a) (emphasis added). And § 43(a) of the Act provides:
Any person who, on or in connection with any goods or services, or
any container for goods, uses in commerce any word, term, name,
symbol, or device, or any combination thereof, or any false
designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, or false
or misleading representation of fact, which . . . is likely to cause
confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive as to the affiliation,
connection, or association of such person with another person, or as
to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of his or her goods, services,
or commercial activities by another person . . . shall be liable in a
civil action by any person who believes that he or she is or is likely
to be damaged by such act.
Id. § 1125(a) (emphasis added). Although Med-Systems does not clarify whether
it is appealing summary judgment on its § 32 counterclaim, its § 43(a)
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counterclaim, or both, the central inquiry is the same: whether the junior user’s
mark is likely to cause confusion with the senior user’s mark. See, e.g., Team
Tires Plus, Ltd. v. Tires Plus, Inc., 394 F.3d 831, 832–33 (10th Cir. 2005) (§ 32
claim); Cardtoons, L.C. v. Major League Baseball Players Ass’n, 95 F.3d 959,
966 (10th Cir. 1996) (§ 43(a) claim); see also Jordache Enters., Inc. v. Hogg
Wyld, Ltd., 828 F.2d 1482, 1484 (10th Cir. 1987) (noting that similar tests govern
claims under both provisions).
Likelihood of confusion is a question of fact, but the court may grant
summary judgment in appropriate circumstances. See Sally Beauty Co., Inc. v.
Beautyco, Inc., 304 F.3d 964, 972 (10th Cir. 2002). In evaluating whether there
is a likelihood of confusion, we examine six nonexhaustive factors: (1) evidence
of actual confusion; (2) the strength of the contesting mark; (3) the degree of
similarity between the competing marks; (4) the intent of the alleged infringer in
adopting the contested mark; (5) the degree of care that consumers are likely to
exercise in purchasing the parties’ products; and (6) the similarity of the parties’
products and the manner in which they market them. See Vail Assocs., Inc. v.
Vend–Tel–Co., Ltd., 516 F.3d 853, 863 (10th Cir. 2008). The importance of any
particular factor in a specific case can depend on a variety of circumstances,
including the force of another factor. For example, if the two marks are not at all
similar, the degree of consumer care is unlikely to make a difference. As we have
said, “These [six] factors are interrelated and no one factor is dispositive.” Sally
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Beauty, 304 F.3d at 972. “At all times . . . the key inquiry is whether the
consumer is likely to be deceived or confused by the similarity of the marks.”
Team Tires, 394 F.3d at 833 (internal quotation marks omitted).
B. Standard of Review
We review a summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard that
the district court should have applied. See id. at 832. “Summary judgment is
appropriate if the pleadings, depositions, other discovery materials, and affidavits
demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact and that the moving
party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Sally Beauty, 304 F.3d at 971;
see Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A factual issue is genuine “if the evidence is such that
a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Sally Beauty,
304 F.3d at 972 (internal quotation marks omitted). The nonmoving party is
entitled to all reasonable inferences from the record; but if the nonmovant bears
the burden of persuasion on a claim at trial, summary judgment may be warranted
if the movant points out a lack of evidence to support an essential element of that
claim and the nonmovant cannot identify specific facts that would create a
genuine issue. See id. at 971–72. As the party alleging infringement under § 32
and unfair competition under § 43(a), Med-Systems bears the burden of proving a
likelihood of confusion at trial. See John Allan Co. v. Craig Allen Co., 540 F.3d
1133, 1138 (10th Cir. 2008) (§ 43(a) unfair-competition claim); Jordache, 828
F.2d at 1484 (§ 32 infringement claim).
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C. Application to This Dispute
Med-Systems contends that summary judgment was inappropriate because
likelihood of confusion was a genuine issue of fact. We apply our six-factor test
to evaluate likelihood of confusion between the SinuCleanse and SinuSense
marks, addressing Med-Systems’ specific arguments challenging the district
court’s evaluation of the factors. 1 As we shall see, only the sixth factor favors
Med-Systems and the factors as a whole strongly favor Water Pik.
1. Actual Confusion
“[A]ctual confusion in the marketplace is often considered the best
evidence of likelihood of confusion.” King of the Mountain Sports, Inc. v.
Chrysler Corp., 185 F.3d 1084, 1092 (10th Cir. 1999) (internal quotation marks
omitted). For one thing, such empirical data can be a reality check on the more
theoretical analysis under the other factors. Med-Systems cites two different
kinds of evidence of actual confusion: survey evidence gathered by Dr. Belch;
and some emails, blog posts, and affidavits. We first address the survey evidence.
a. Survey Evidence
“Evidence of actual confusion is often introduced through the use of
surveys, although their evidentiary value depends on the methodology and
1
We do not consider Med-Systems’ SINUCLEANSE SQUEEZE mark,
because its opening brief does not provide any argument relating to the mark. Cf.
Utah Lighthouse Ministry v. Found. for Apologetic Info. & Research, 527 F.3d
1045, 1049 n.1 (10th Cir. 2008) (“Arguments inadequately briefed in the opening
brief are waived.”).
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questions asked.” Vail Assocs., 516 F.3d at 864 n.8 (internal quotation marks
omitted). To test consumer confusion, Dr. Belch designed a questionnaire that
respondents completed over the Internet. After first answering a few questions
for demographic identification and to establish their experience with purchasing
healthcare products, respondents were shown the unitalicized typewritten words
“SinuCleanse,” “SinuSense,” and “NeilMed” in varying orders and were asked
(Question 3) what came to mind when they saw those marks. Aplt. App., Vol. 6
at 1434. (NeilMed is a third competitor in the sinus-irrigation market.) They
then viewed packages for SinuCleanse-branded products, SinuSense-branded
products, and NeilMed-branded products in varying orders and were asked to
rank, on a scale of one to seven, how appealing they found the design of each
package. These initial questions were to disguise the goal of the survey while
focusing attention on the packages.
Next, respondents were shown packaging for saline refill packets that
carried the SinuCleanse, SinuSense, and NeilMed brands. After viewing each
brand’s package in isolation, then all three packages side by side, respondents
were given a sequence of three questions aimed at measuring confusion. The first
asked whether they thought that two or more of the displayed products were made
by the same company. The second asked whether they thought that one or more
of the companies whose brands were displayed had a business relationship with
one of the other companies. And the third asked whether they thought that one or
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more of the companies whose brands were displayed had obtained permission or
approval from one of the other companies. Respondents were presented with the
second question only if they responded no or not sure to the first, and they were
presented with the third question only if they had responded no or not sure to the
second. Respondents who answered yes to any one question were asked to
identify which two or three brands they thought were related and why. The
survey also used this same procedure, with the same questions, to gauge reactions
to neti pots branded as SinuCleanse, SinuSense, and NeilMed. In both cases,
after the three-question sequence all respondents answered a final question in
which they were shown three pairs of typewritten words—“SinuCleanse and
SinuSense,” “NeilMed and SinuCleanse,” and “SinuSense and NeilMed”—and
were asked (Question 10) to rank the similarity between the paired words on a
scale from 1 to 7. Id. at 1446.
The district court ruled that the results of Dr. Belch’s survey were “devoid
of any probative value and therefore irrelevant,” id. Vol. 8 at 2244 (Order at 22,
Water Pik, Inc. v. Med-Systems, Inc., Civ. No. 10-cr-01221-PAB-CBS (D. Colo.
June 13, 2012)), because it perceived several serious methodological flaws in the
survey: (1) Dr. Belch selected respondents from those whom he regarded as
potential purchasers of sinus remedies in general, not potential purchasers of
sinus-irrigation products in particular (which account for only 1% of sinus-
remedy sales), thus creating an overinclusive survey universe; (2) Dr. Belch,
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based on the opinion of Med-Systems’ CEO Gallo regarding the composition of
the sinus-remedy market, skewed the survey population to ensure that 42% of
respondents were older than 55, but an independent market study indicated that
fewer than 29% of sinus-remedy consumers belonged to that age group; (3)
Questions 3 and 10 did not present the marks as they would appear to a consumer
because both marks were shown in a typewritten format, divorced from
packaging, and without any italics; and the SinuSense mark was unaccompanied
by the distinctive “waterpik” logo that appears on packaging for SinuSense
products; (4) the survey presented images of Water Pik’s products and images of
Med-Systems’ products side by side, thereby failing to recreate the true
conditions of the marketplace; and (5) the questions were leading and suggestive
because they encouraged respondents to entertain the possibility of an affiliation
between SinuCleanse- and SinuSense-branded products when they might not have
considered such a possibility on their own.
Med-Systems argues that the district court erred in finding flaws and that
far from being methodologically unsound, Dr. Belch’s survey provides strong
evidence that consumer confusion is likely.
“Before expert testimony can be admitted, Federal Rule of Evidence 702
requires the district court to ‘ensure that any and all scientific testimony or
evidence admitted is not only relevant, but reliable.’” In re Williams Sec.
Litig.—WCG Subclass, 558 F.3d 1130, 1137 (10th Cir. 2009) (quoting Daubert v.
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Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 589 (1993)). “We review for an abuse
of discretion the manner in which the district court exercises its Daubert
‘gatekeeping’ role in deciding whether to admit or exclude survey evidence.”
Vail Assocs., 516 F.3d at 864 n.8.
In our view the district court’s concerns about the survey’s methodology
were reasonable. And we see no error in its deciding that the survey failed to
support a likelihood of confusion.
First, Questions 3 and 10 presented both marks in a format that did not
accurately reproduce the manner in which consumers ordinarily view them. We
address each mark in turn. The SinuCleanse mark was typewritten without italics.
Med-Systems argues that use of the nonstylized mark was proper because
consumers frequently encounter it in that form. But the record indicates
otherwise. Every photograph of a Med-Systems package conspicuously features
the stylized term “SinuCleanse,” with the first component printed in plain type
and the second component italicized. To be sure, the narrative on some packages
contains a nonstylized mark in small type, and the nonstylized mark appears on
Med-Systems’ website and elsewhere on the Internet; but the nonstylized mark is
generally accompanied by a more prominent stylized mark. These uses of the
nonstylized mark are of minimal consequence. They are likely to escape the
attention of consumers, as they escaped the attention of Med-Systems’ CEO
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Gallo, who testified as follows at his deposition after being shown the stylized
mark (Exhibit 4) and the nonstylized mark (Exhibit 5).
Q. And is it correct that the SinuCleanse mark that’s been marked
as Exhibit 4 is the—is the way you present SinuCleanse on
your product packaging?
A. Has been on everything since 1997. Yeah.
....
Q. Let me hand you what’s been marked as Exhibit 5. . . .
Is this another trademark that you have for SinuCleanse?
A. Yes.
Q. And is the manner in which SinuCleanse is depicted in
Exhibit 5 ever used with product packaging?
A. No.
Q. Is it ever used on your website?
A. No.
Q. Is it ever used with respect to direct mailing or other types of
marketing activities?
A. No.
....
Q. My point was, is that, as SinuCleanse is depicted in Exhibit 5,
the end customers aren’t going to encounter that when they go
to a store to buy a nasal irrigation device?
A. No. We always use the style as [stylized?] mark . . . .
Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 157–58.
As for the SinuSense mark, it was typewritten without the “waterpik”
logo—with the three dots stacked vertically above the letter i—which appears
prominently and in close proximity to the SinuSense mark on packaging for
SinuSense products. The same logo appears prominently on packaging for other
Water Pik products as well. In other words, the logo functions as a “house
mark”—that is, “a mark used on several different goods or services which
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themselves use a particular ‘product mark.’” 4 J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy
on Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 23:43, at 23-218 (4th ed. 2013)
(4 McCarthy). Examples of house marks appended to product marks include
“APPLE MACINTOSH computer, FORD MUSTANG auto and VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE hand lotion.” Id.
Marks should be compared “as a whole as they are encountered by
consumers in the marketplace.” King of the Mountain, 185 F.3d at 1090 (internal
quotation marks omitted); cf. 6 J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy on Trademarks
and Unfair Competition § 32:163, at 32-357 (6 McCarthy) (“[T]he closer the
survey methods mirror the situation in which the ordinary person would encounter
the trademark, the greater the evidentiary weight of the survey results.”). By
presenting the SinuCleanse mark differently from the way that it actually appears
on packaging, and by failing to include the “waterpik” house mark next to the
SinuSense product mark, Questions 3 and 10 exaggerated the similarities between
the two marks, likely increasing the confusion of the respondents.
Second, when the survey did ask respondents to react to the marks as they
actually appeared on product packaging, it presented the marks side by side along
with the NeilMed mark. But a side-by-side comparison ordinarily is not the
proper method of determining likelihood of confusion. The marks “must be
compared in light of what occurs in the marketplace, not in the courtroom.” Beer
Nuts, Inc. v. Clover Club Foods Co. (Beer Nuts I), 711 F.2d 934, 941 (10th Cir.
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1983) (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, in Jordache, 828 F.2d at 1488,
we affirmed the decision by the district court to give minimal weight to a survey
that used a side-by-side comparison because it bore “little resemblance to the
actual workings of the marketplace.” But see Squirtco v. Seven-Up Co., 628 F.2d
1086, 1089 n.4, 1091 (8th Cir. 1980) (using side-by-side comparison). See
generally 6 McCarthy § 32:173.50 (noting that one expert approves of side-by-
side comparisons to compare two weak marks if products are simultaneously or
sequentially accessible in the marketplace). A side-by-side comparison can
emphasize differences in marks that might not be noticed by the actual shopper
(thereby decreasing the respondents’ likelihood of confusion), or it may bring to
mind the senior mark when the respondent would not otherwise have thought of it
(thereby increasing the respondents’ likelihood of confusion). As the district
court noted, Med-Systems cited no evidence that SinuCleanse and SinuSense
were sold side-by-side in stores. Although Med-Systems did point to screenshots
of search results from online shopping websites, where both SinuCleanse products
and SinuSense products are featured, these screenshots do not support its
contention that a side-by-side comparison was the proper survey design. In none
of the screenshots are SinuCleanse, SinuSense, and NeilMed products isolated
and displayed next to one another; rather, they are scattered among a host of other
sinus remedies, which bear names like “NasalCare,” “SinuPulse,” and “SinuAir.”
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Aplt. App., Vol. 6 at 1464, 1467, 1469–70. The district court could properly
distrust the survey’s side-by-side format.
Third, the district court could reasonably view the survey questions as
improperly leading. Respondents were shown only three products and were asked
whether two or more of the products were made by the same company; whether
two or more of the products’ makers had a business affiliation; and whether one
or more of the makers had received permission or approval from one of the
others. They could answer yes, no, or not sure. “A survey question that begs its
answer by suggesting a link between plaintiff and defendant cannot be a true
indicator of the likelihood of consumer confusion.” Scott Fetzer Co. v. House of
Vacuums, Inc., 381 F.3d 477, 488 (5th Cir. 2004). In Scott Fetzer the leading
question was similar to what was asked in Med-Systems’ survey. Respondents
were shown an ad for the defendant and were asked whether the defendant was
“in any way affiliated with, connected with, associated with or authorized by” the
plaintiff’s company. Id. at 487–88 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Nintendo Co., Ltd., 746 F.2d 112, 118 (2d Cir.
1984) (“To the best of your knowledge, was the Donkey Kong game made with
the approval or under the authority of the people who produce the King Kong
movies?” (internal quotation marks omitted)); IDV N. Am., Inc. v. S & M Brands,
Inc., 26 F. Supp. 2d 815, 831 (E.D. Va. 1998) (“Do you think there is any
connection between (BAILEYS Irish Cream/BAILEYS liqueur/BAILEYS alcohol,
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if mentioned) and Bailey’s cigarettes?” (internal quotation marks omitted)); see
generally 6 McCarthy §§ 32:172, 32:175; cf. id. § 32:175 at 32-405 (“In the
author’s view, it is not improperly leading to present the respondent with a fair
and accurate representation of the contesting marks and ask in a neutral manner if
the respondent thinks there is or is not some connection, affiliation or sponsorship
relation between the owners of the marks—or that the respondent doesn’t
know. . . . However, it will probably be improperly leading to suggest the desired
response in the form of a yes or no question.”) By suggesting the possibility that
SinuSense might be connected with another brand, and limiting the candidates to
SinuCleanse and NeilMed, the survey questions risked sowing confusion between
SinuSense and SinuCleanse when none would have arisen otherwise. The district
court could reasonably conclude that the question suggested the very answer most
helpful to Med-Systems’ cause rather than eliciting responses as they might occur
spontaneously in the marketplace.
Moreover, as pointed out by Water Pik’s expert in the district court, Med-
Systems’ survey, even if assumed to be methodologically sound, does not show a
likelihood of confusion. To arrive at this conclusion, we must discuss how
likelihood of confusion is computed from surveys. The key questions in Med-
Systems’ survey were those that asked whether the SinuCleanse and SinuSense
products were made by the same company, whether the companies had a business
relationship, or whether one of the companies had obtained permission or
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approval from the other to make its product. The raw confusion rate was the
percentage of respondents who answered yes to one of these questions. For the
trial in which respondents viewed packaging for saline packets, 203 respondents
participated and 47 answered yes to one of the three questions, yielding a raw
confusion rate of about 23%. For the trial involving packaging for neti pots, 198
participated and 29 answered yes, producing a raw confusion rate of 14.6%.
Such raw figures are usually unhelpful, however, in predicting likelihood of
confusion, because they can be inflated by “background noise,” or false positives
arising from something other than the particular confusion that is alleged and that
the survey aims to capture. 6 McCarthy § 32:187, at 32-433. “In any survey,
there will always be some interviewees who are bored, hurried or just plain
contrary and whose responses must be filtered out . . . .” Id. (We would add
another cause of false positives—poor survey design that stimulates confusion.)
Surveys can adjust for this background noise by using controls. To isolate
confusion arising specifically from the contested mark, survey designers will
substitute for the contested mark a control mark that shares as many
characteristics with the contested mark as possible, “with the key exception of the
characteristic whose influence is being assessed.” THOIP v. Walt Disney Co.,
690 F. Supp. 2d 218, 240 (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (internal quotation marks omitted);
see, e.g., First Nat’l Bank in Sioux Falls v. First Nat’l Bank S.D., 679 F.3d 763,
770–71 (8th Cir. 2012) (when two marks at issue were “First National Bank South
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Dakota” and “First National Bank in Sioux Falls,” the use of “First Bank & Trust”
as a control was proper (internal quotation marks omitted)); AHP Subsidiary
Holding Co. v. Stuart Hale Co., 1 F.3d 611, 613 (7th Cir. 1993) (using “Mazola”
and “Wesson–Lite” cooking sprays as controls when the contested mark was
“Pan–Lite” and the contesting mark was “PAM”). By discounting for confusion
arising from the control, the survey can measure net confusion, or “the difference
between the raw confusion percent and the control confusion percent.”
6 McCarthy § 32:187, at 32-435; see AHP, 1 F.3d at 613–14 (control confusion of
7% was subtracted from raw confusion of 45%, yielding net rate of 38%).
Here, the control used in the survey was NeilMed. The net confusion rate
in each trial, then, was the rate of confusion between SinuCleanse and SinuSense,
minus the rate of confusion between SinuCleanse and NeilMed. Stated
differently, the net rate of confusion was the net number of confused respondents
divided by the total number of respondents. This number was insubstantial for
both trials. In the saline-packet trial, 34 of the 203 respondents, or 16.7%,
expressed confusion between SinuCleanse and NeilMed. Subtracting these
respondents from the 47 who were confused between SinuCleanse and SinuSense,
one arrives at a net confusion rate of 13 divided by 203, or less than 6.5%. 2
2
Some respondents thought that all three products were affiliated, say
because they were made by the same company. Such responses could be ignored.
If the respondent thought that SinuCleanse and SinuSense were made by the same
company, it would be proper to add 1 to the raw number of confused respondents.
(continued...)
-21-
In the neti-pot trial, 29 of the 198 total respondents, or 14.6%, expressed
confusion between SinuCleanse and SinuSense. But 30 respondents (15.2%)
expressed confusion between SinuCleanse and NeilMed. Therefore, the net
confusion rate for the neti-pot trial was negative 0.5% (1 divided by 198). Net
confusion rates of 6.5% and negative 0.5% do not create a genuine factual issue
of likelihood of confusion. See 1-800 Contacts, Inc. v. Lens.com, Inc., Nos. 11-
4114, 11-4204, 12-4022, 2013 WL 3665627, at **13–15 (10th Cir. July 16, 2013)
(net confusion rates of 7.5% and 7.3% were too low); and because the
methodological shortcomings identified by the district court probably increased
the net confusion rate, the survey is even more harmful to Med-Systems.
Dr. Belch’s report cited net confusion rates higher than the ones calculated
above, but only by using a nonsensical analysis. Rather than repeating all his
computations, we present only one, which is typical and illustrative. In the
saline-packet trial, 22 of the 203 respondents answered that two or more brands
had a business affiliation; 14 said that the two brands were SinuCleanse and
SinuSense, whereas 6 said that they were SinuCleanse and NeilMed. The proper
analysis would be that the raw confusion rate from this question was 14 over 203,
or roughly 6.9%, and that the net confusion rate was the net number of confused
2
(...continued)
But since the respondent also thought that SinuCleanse and NeilMed were made
by the same company, it would then be necessary to subtract 1 in calculating net
confusion.
-22-
respondents (14 minus 6) divided by the total number of respondents (203), or
3.9%.
Dr. Belch, however, divided the net number of respondents confused
between SinuCleanse and SinuSense (14 minus 6) by the number of respondents
confused between any pair of brands (or by all three)—that is, those who
answered that any two or more of the three brands had a business relationship.
The number of such confused respondents was 22, so he arrived at a net confusion
rate of 8 over 22, or 36%. This approach greatly exaggerates the confusion rate.
The 36% figure does not measure the net percentage of consumers who were
confused between SinuCleanse and SinuSense; as stated above, that would be
3.9%. The absurdity of Dr. Belch’s approach can be shown by an illustration.
Say, 2 respondents out of 203 (or out of 1,000, for that matter) confused
SinuCleanse and SinuSense while 1 respondent confused SinuCleanse and
NeilMed. Dr. Belch’s net confusion rate would then be 33%, the net number of
confused respondents (2 minus 1) divided by the total number of confused
respondents (3). Yet the true raw confusion rate would be less than 1% (2
divided by 203) and the true net confusion rate would be less than 0.5% (1
divided by 203). Dr. Belch’s calculation is irrelevant.
We also hold that the likelihood of confusion is not shown by the
respondents’ answers to Question 10. Question 10 presented respondents with
three different pairs of marks at once—SinuCleanse (not stylized) and SinuSense;
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SinuCleanse (not stylized) and NeilMed; and SinuSense and NeilMed—and asked
them to rate the similarity of each pair on a scale from 1 (“Not at all similar”) to
7 (“Very similar”). Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 404. We have already noted the
problem created by not comparing the marks as they actually appear (with
SinuCleanse stylized and SinuSense accompanied by the waterpik house mark).
But there is an even more fundamental problem. Dr. Belch never explained, and
we have no way of knowing, whether any particular score indicates a likelihood
of confusion and why. We may say that siblings look very similar yet never
confuse them. Cf. Beer Nuts I, 711 F.2d at 942 (commenting that the district
court “erroneously equated likelihood of confusion with similarity”); J.B.
Williams Co., Inc. v. Le Conté Cosmetics, Inc., 523 F.2d 187, 192 (9th Cir. 1975)
(“The marks may be similar in appearance . . . yet not likely to cause confusion as
to their source, particularly when all the factors are considered.”). All that can be
drawn from the data is the unsurprising conclusion that people saw SinuCleanse
and SinuSense as more similar than SinuCleanse and NeilMed or SinuSense and
NeilMed. This conclusion is of little assistance in assessing whether confusion
was likely.
In short, the Med-Systems survey strongly suggests an insignificant
likelihood of confusion.
b. Nonsurvey Evidence
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In addition to Dr. Belch’s survey, Med-Systems cites four pieces of
evidence that it says show actual confusion: (1) a text message to cofounder
Gallo in February 2011 from a friend and customer who claimed to have seen an
ad for SinuCleanse products on the Weather Channel, where Med-Systems
apparently does not advertise (although there is no evidence that the ad seen by
the friend was for SinuSense); (2) a March 2011 post by a coupon blog that
featured a photograph of a SinuSense-branded squeeze bottle along with the
caption “WaterPik SinuCleanse” 3; (3) a June 2011 post on the online auction site
eBay featuring a photograph of SinuSense-branded saline packets along with the
caption “Sinucleanse 60 Soothing Saline Packs Easy Pour Waterpik”; and (4) a
declaration by a consumer that she was confused between the two brands when
she purchased a neti pot at Walgreens.
We have consistently recognized, however, that isolated, anecdotal
instances of actual confusion may be de minimis and may be disregarded in the
confusion analysis. What is required for a claim of trademark infringement under
the Lanham Act is a likelihood of confusion, not merely the possibility of
3
The district court did not consider the blog post to be evidence of actual
confusion, apparently because the author of the post later stated that her
erroneous caption “was a typographical error and that she was not confused with
regard to SinuSense TM and Sinu Cleanse®.” Water Pik, 848 F. Supp. 2d at 1274
n.7. Even if we take her word and assume that she was not consciously confused,
the blog post could still support a reasonable inference that her mind associated
the two brands on some level. We will therefore assume that her post was a
specimen of actual confusion.
-25-
confusion. See 4 McCarthy § 23:3. In Universal Money Centers, Inc. v. AT & T
Co., 22 F.3d 1527, 1535 (10th Cir. 1994), for example, the plaintiff submitted an
affidavit by a customer that he had been confused by the defendant’s mark, and
two affidavits by the plaintiff’s employees that they had received a number of
accounts of similar confusion from consumers. We ruled that this evidence,
together with survey data reflecting a 2.6% rate of actual confusion, was de
minimis. See id. at 1534–35. And in King of the Mountain we ruled that evidence
of seven episodes of actual confusion was de minimis. See 185 F.3d at 1092–93.
The district court characterized Med-Systems’ nonsurvey evidence as de
minimis, see Water Pik, 848 F. Supp. 2d at 1274, and we agree. As the D.C.
Circuit observed in a trademark-infringement case predating the Lanham Act,
“Probable confusion cannot be shown by pointing out that at some place, at some
time, someone made a false identification.” McGraw–Hill Publ’g Co. v. Am.
Aviation Assocs., 117 F.2d 293, 295 (D.C. Cir. 1940) (Vinson, J.). The four
instances cited by Med-Systems are isolated episodes with minimal probative
value on whether reasonable consumers as a whole are actually confused by
Water Pik’s trademark.
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Med-Systems has wholly failed to show sufficient actual confusion to
support a claim of likelihood of confusion. 4 This factor strongly favors Water
Pik.
2. Strength of Med-Systems’ Mark
Likelihood of confusion depends partly on the senior mark’s strength—that
is, its “capacity to indicate the source of the goods or services with which it is
used.” Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition § 21 cmt. i (1995). Strength
has two aspects: conceptual strength, or the mark’s place on the spectrum of
distinctiveness, and commercial strength, or its level of recognition in the
marketplace. See King of the Mountain, 185 F.3d at 1093.
The strength of the contesting mark can be important in several contexts.
For example, if the mark is particularly strong, use of that mark by another can
give rise to likelihood of confusion even if the use occurs in connection with a
totally distinct product line. The Fourth Circuit has offered a helpful illustration:
“If the trade mark is a coined word, such as Kodak, it is more probable that all
goods on which a similar designation is used will be regarded as emanating from
the same source than when the trade-mark is one in common use on the variety of
goods, such as ‘Gold Seal’ or ‘Excelsior.’” Arrow Distilleries, Inc. v. Globe
4
Water Pik argues that a consumer survey of its own, conducted by
Dr. Gary Ford, confirms the absence of actual confusion. Because Med-Systems’
survey and nonsurvey evidence is insufficient to show actual confusion even
without considering Water Pik’s expert evidence, we need not address Dr. Ford’s
survey.
-27-
Brewing Co., 117 F.2d 347, 349 (4th Cir. 1941) (internal quotation marks
omitted); see id. at 350 (“English courts have prevented one from putting forth
Kodak bicycles, at the suit of the originator of the name for a totally different
article.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). On the other hand, if a mark is
weak, use of a similar mark even on similar goods is unlikely to cause confusion
if minor differences distinguish one party’s mark from another. See First Sav.
Bank, 101 F.3d at 655 (“When the primary term [in a mark] is weakly protected to
begin with, minor alterations may effectively negate any confusing similarity
between the two marks.”). The latter principle is what applies here. As we shall
see, the SinuCleanse mark is a weak one. The differences between it and Water
Pik’s mark therefore make confusion highly unlikely.
We begin by analyzing the conceptual strength of the SinuCleanse mark.
a. Conceptual Strength
In measuring conceptual strength, the spectrum of distinctiveness ranges
along the following five categories of marks (from least to most distinctive): (1)
generic, meaning that the mark identifies only a general class of goods to which a
specific product may belong; (2) descriptive, meaning that it reflects one or more
of the product’s characteristics or qualities; (3) suggestive, meaning that it
suggests or evokes, rather than describes, the nature of the product, requiring “the
consumer to use imagination and perception to determine the product’s nature”;
(4) arbitrary, meaning that the mark is a word or symbol already in common use
-28-
that does not have any apparent relation to the product (as in Apple computers);
and (5) fanciful, meaning that the mark is a novel word or design that has been
coined for the sole purpose of serving as a trademark (as in Kodak or Exxon).
Sally Beauty, 304 F.3d at 975–76. Generic marks are not protected as trademarks,
and a descriptive mark can receive trademark protection “only when it has
acquired a secondary meaning by becoming distinctive of the [owner’s] goods in
commerce.” Id. at 976 (internal quotation marks omitted). Unlike descriptive
marks, “[s]uggestive, fanciful, and arbitrary marks are considered inherently
distinctive” and need not acquire secondary meaning to warrant protection as
trademarks. Id.
The mark “SinuCleanse” is a weak one. For two reasons. First, the “Sinu”
component of SinuCleanse is a widely used prefix that is essentially generic. See
First Savings Bank, 101 F.3d at 655 (noting that the word BANK “is clearly
generic”). Although Med-Systems disputes Water Pik’s assertion that the prefix
“Sinu” is commonly used by third parties, Water Pik produced scores of third-
party trademark registrations in which sinu or sinus appeared, including several
sinus-irrigation products. Med-Systems does not challenge their existence or
authenticity. Further, Med-Systems CEO Gallo answered yes at his deposition to
the question, “[A]s the marketplace exists today, there are a number of companies
that use the prefix ‘Sinu’ to describe some type of product dealing with your
sinuses?” Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 159–60. This extensive third-party use of a
-29-
component of a disputed term undermines the strength of the term as a whole.
See First Savings, 101 F.3d at 655 (widespread third-party use of “FIRST BANK”
and variations made it a weak term, undermining the strength of the mark “First
Bank System”). In particular, “third-party registrations are relevant to prove that
some segment of the composite marks which both contesting parties use has a
normally understood and well-recognized descriptive or suggestive meaning,
leading to the conclusion that that segment is relatively weak.” Id. at 654
(internal quotation marks omitted); see 2 J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy on
Trademarks and Unfair Competition § 11:90 (4th ed. 2013) (2 McCarthy) .
More importantly, SinuCleanse is a weak mark because it is merely
descriptive, rather than suggestive (as Med-Systems contends). Although “[t]he
distinction between descriptive and suggestive marks is difficult” and “often
based on intuitive reactions rather than analytical reasoning,” we have endorsed a
helpful test for distinguishing between the two categories: “suggestive terms are
those which require the buyer to use thought, imagination, or perception to
connect the mark with the goods,” whereas “[d]escriptive terms are those which
directly convey to the buyer the ingredients, qualities, or characteristics of the
product.” Educ. Dev. Corp. v. Econ. Co., 562 F.2d 26, 29 (10th Cir. 1977)
(emphasis added). “SinuCleanse” falls on the side of descriptiveness. It is a term
previously unknown in the English language, but it is plainly a composite of the
common words “sinus” and “cleanse,” which, when fused together,
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straightforwardly communicate the nature and purpose of Med-Systems’ products:
they cleanse the sinuses. Indeed, Med-Systems’ cofounder Dr. Heatley testified
that the founders “wanted a name that described what it was” and that
SinuCleanse “described better [than a previously selected name] the cleaning or
cleansing process of putting a solution through the nose to clear your sinuses
out.” Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 117. The ordinary consumer has little need for
imagination to reach this conclusion.
True, the term “SinuCleanse” by itself may not tell consumers every detail
of the associated products—for example, that a neti pot is used to pass saline
solution through one’s nose. But to be descriptive, a mark “need not directly
convey all of a product’s characteristics, uses, or functions”; rather, it “need only
impart directly a crucial, important aspect of the product.” Educ. Dev. Corp.,
562 F.2d at 29 (emphasis added). In Educational Development Corp. the senior
user had adopted the mark “‘Continuous Progress’” for its educational product, “a
rectangular box holding various cards, pamphlets, and cassette tapes,” or what
was “known in the educational publishing industry as a ‘laboratory.’” Id. at 28.
We said that “Continuous Progress” was descriptive because (1) the term had
been used among educators for decades to describe a concept of teaching that
“allows a student to commence a program of study at a level best suited to his
knowledge of the subject and to progress at a rate suited to his individual
capability,” id. at 27, and (2) the term therefore “directly conveyed to educators
-31-
the most important characteristic of [the] product,” id. at 29, even though it did
not, by itself, “indicate the format, laboratory nature, or other features of the
product,” id. Similarly, in Bardahl Oil Co. v. Atomic Oil. Co. of Okla., Inc., 351
F.2d 148, 150 (10th Cir. 1965), we said that it was “perfectly clear to us that the
word ‘Savmotor,’” when used in connection with motor-oil concentrates and
additives, was “descriptive of the qualities and the functions of the products.”
“SinuCleanse” is at least as descriptive as “Continuous Progress” and
“Savmotor.” It clearly conveys the sinus-cleansing function of Med-Systems’
products, their most salient property. That it does not fully explain how the
products work does not prevent it from being a descriptive mark. We note that
Med-Systems produced no evidence that its mark was suggestive rather than
descriptive. We conclude that the term “SinuCleanse” is descriptive and thus has
little conceptual strength.
b. Commercial Strength
Commercial strength is “the marketplace recognition value of the mark.”
King of the Mountain, 185 F.3d at 1093 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Evidence of a mark’s commercial strength can make up for conceptual weakness
because a conceptually weak mark may become strong by virtue of acquired
consumer awareness. “For example, marks such as AMERICAN airlines,
PAYLESS shoe stores, FORD autos and KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN fast-
food outlets would, at birth, have been characterized as inherently ‘weak’ terms.
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But they have all become famous and well recognized by the consuming public.”
2 McCarthy § 11:83, at 11-232. By the same token, a mark with conceptual
strength may ultimately be weak if its commercial strength is negligible. See
George & Co. LLC v. Imagination Entm’t Ltd., 575 F.3d 383, 395–96 (4th Cir.
2009) (assuming that the mark “LCR” was suggestive but ruling that it was weak
because the record lacked adequate evidence that consumers associated it with
plaintiff).
Commercial strength is a concept analogous to secondary meaning.
Secondary meaning refers to the level of distinctiveness that a descriptive mark
must attain in the minds of consumers before it is eligible for trademark
protection. See Donchez v. Coors Brewing Co., 392 F.3d 1211, 1216 (10th Cir.
2004). “To acquire secondary meaning, a descriptive mark must have been used
so long and so exclusively by one producer with reference to his goods or articles
that, in the trade and to that branch of the purchasing public, the mark has come
to mean that the article is his product.” J.M. Huber Corp. v. Lowery Wellheads,
Inc., 778 F.2d 1467, 1470 (10th Cir. 1985) (brackets and internal quotation marks
omitted). The difference between commercial strength and secondary meaning is
that the former is a range, while the latter is a threshold: a mark may enjoy
anything from a high degree of commercial strength to a low degree, but either it
has secondary meaning or it does not. See generally 2 McCarthy § 11:82.
Nevertheless, “the same evidentiary findings” are generally probative of both;
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“[t]he stronger the evidence of secondary meaning, the stronger the mark, and the
more likely is confusion.” 5 Vail Assocs., 516 F.3d at 866 (internal quotation
marks omitted); see George & Co., 575 F.3d at 395 (“The second step [in the
strength analysis] considers the mark’s commercial strength, a concept similar to
the ‘secondary meaning’ inquiry considered in evaluating a mark’s validity.”);
Herman Miller, Inc. v. Palazzetti Imports & Exports, Inc., 270 F.3d 298, 316 n.8
(6th Cir. 2001) (“When determining the commercial or marketplace strength of a
mark, the courts look to the same kind of evidence of real world recognition of
the mark as is used to decide the presence or absence of secondary meaning to
determine whether a non-inherently distinctive designation is or is not a valid
mark.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
The factors we have identified as helpful in evaluating secondary meaning
are “direct evidence, such as consumer surveys or testimony from consumers,”
and “circumstantial evidence regarding: (1) the length and manner of [the
mark’s] use, (2) the nature and extent of advertising and promotion of the mark
and (3) the efforts made in the direction of promoting a conscious connection, in
5
Perhaps in part because secondary meaning and commercial strength can
be proved with similar evidence, the parties debate whether the SinuCleanse mark
has secondary meaning. But Water Pik does not dispute that the mark is
incontestable, so secondary meaning per se has no relevance to this appeal. See
Beer Nuts, Inc. v. Clover Club Foods Co. (Beer Nuts II), 805 F.2d 920, 924 (10th
Cir. 1986) (“An incontestable mark cannot be challenged as lacking secondary
meaning . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
-34-
the public’s mind, between the name or mark and a particular product or venture.”
Donchez, 392 F.3d at 1218 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The evidence in district court did not indicate commercial strength. Med-
Systems produced evidence that it has sold products under the SinuCleanse name
since 1997 but it has wholly failed to show the nature and extent of its advertising
and promotion of the mark or efforts to promote a conscious connection in the
public’s mind between its mark and its products. Evidence that its products had
millions of users and that its products were sold through well-known retailers
does not tell us whether the sales were stimulated by the mark. That its products
were shown on the Oprah Winfrey Show on at least one occasion is not enough to
establish that consumers thereafter connected the mark and the product. Even
CEO Gallo’s testimony that Med-Systems had set its advertising budget at 30% of
sales since 1997 does not tell us how much was spent on advertising, and even if
that figure had been established, “evidence of a mark’s promotion [although]
relevant to prove the strength of a mark, standing alone without a context . . . may
not be sufficient to prove that a mark is very strong.” Vail Assocs., 516 F.3d at
867 (internal quotation marks omitted); see Bose Corp. v. QSC Audio Products,
Inc., 293 F.3d 1367, 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (“Raw numbers of product sales and
advertising expenses may have sufficed in the past to prove fame of a mark, but
raw numbers alone in today’s world may be misleading. . . . Consequently, some
context in which to place raw statistics is reasonable.”). We have no evidence of
-35-
the amount of funds and effort expended by Med-Systems to acquire consumer
recognition, the nature of any such advertising, or the effect of its actions. 6
Indeed, Dr. Heatley conceded that “the average person on the street” would not
“know what SinuCleanse is.” Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 131. And Med-Systems’
marketing consultant had no data on whether the average consumer was aware of
the brand. A jury could only guess whether SinuCleanse enjoys substantial
consumer recognition. The commercial-strength component, like the conceptual-
strength component, favors Water Pik.
3. Similarity of the Marks
Given the weakness of the SinuCleanse mark, the likelihood of confusion is
small unless the challenged mark is very similar. See First Sav. Bank, 101 F.3d at
655. The requisite similarity is missing here.
“We test the degree of similarity between marks on three levels: sight,
sound, and meaning.” King of the Mountain, 185 F.3d at 1090. In conducting the
comparison, we do not independently examine each syllable of the marks but
consider “the marks as a whole as they are encountered by consumers in the
marketplace.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). This rule “is based on a
6
Med-Systems’ opening brief refers to documents in the record that are not
authenticated and therefore cannot be considered on a summary-judgment motion.
See Hansen v. PT Bank Negara Indonesia (Persero), 706 F.3d 1244, 1249–50
(10th Cir. 2013) (phone conversations not authenticated); Adler v. Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc., 144 F.3d 664, 671 (10th Cir. 1998). Although Water Pik pointed out
this shortcoming in its brief, Med-Systems’ reply brief did not try to defend its
use of the documents.
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common sense observation of customer behavior: the typical shopper does not
retain all of the individual details of a composite mark in his or her mind, but
retains only an overall, general impression created by the composite as a whole.”
4 McCarthy § 23:41, at 23-213. Thus, in Universal Money Centers, 22 F.3d at
1531, in which both marks used the term “UNIVERSAL,” we rejected the
argument that because the additional words “MONEY CARD,” “MONEY
CENTER,” and “MONEY” on the plaintiff’s cards had been disclaimed by the
PTO as descriptive, they should be omitted from the comparison. Likewise, in
Sabinsa Corp. v. Creative Compounds, LLC, 609 F.3d 175, 181 (3d Cir. 2010),
where the issue was whether the defendant’s use of the mark “Forsthin” in
connection with a weight-loss product was likely to create confusion with the
plaintiff’s “ForsLean” mark, the Third Circuit held that the district court had
erred in basing its comparison on only the components “thin” and “lean” rather
than the marks as a whole. Id. at 184 (internal quotation marks omitted). We
therefore compare the full words “SinuCleanse” and “SinuSense,” not just the
components “Cleanse” and “Sense.”
Comparing “SinuCleanse” and “SinuSense” in appearance, we grant that
the two marks have several visual similarities. Both appear in a serif font; both
begin with “Sinu” in unitalicized type; both feature a capital letter after this term;
and both end in “nse.” But the italicization of “Cleanse” in Med-Systems’ mark
is a dramatic distinction, as Water Pik does not italicize “Sense” in its mark. As
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for the “sound” factor, both marks feature “Sinu,” and in both marks the second
component contains a short “e” sound. But in “SinuCleanse” the short “e” occurs
between a hard “kl” sound and a “z” sound, whereas in “SinuSense” it comes
between two “s” sounds. These differences are significant to the ear.
With respect to “meaning,” the marks are less similar still. “SinuCleanse”
conveys an accurate impression of what a sinus-irrigation product actually
does—namely, cleanses the sinuses. By contrast, “SinuSense” is vague: whether
the word “Sense” functions as a transitive verb, as in “sensing the sinuses,” or as
a noun, as in “good sense for the sinuses,” it hardly offers a descriptive account
of what the product does or how it works, instead leaving such matters to the
consumer’s imagination.
Overall, there is more than enough distinction between the two marks to
prevent any likelihood of confusion.
Med-Systems argues that the report of one of its experts, Dr. David Yerkes,
should change our analysis. Dr. Yerkes is a professor of English whose report
explains, at great length and with reference to numerous authorities on linguistics
and psychology, why the marks in this case are similar in sight, sound, and
meaning. Although we do not doubt Dr. Yerkes’s credentials as a scholar, the
report covers a matter on which the trier of fact does not need expert advice. Cf.
Fed. R. Evid. 702(a) (permitting expert testimony if “the expert’s scientific,
technical, or other specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand
-38-
the evidence or to determine a fact in issue” (emphasis added)). In
Chesebrough–Pond’s, Inc. v. Faberge, Inc., 666 F.2d 393, 397–98 (9th Cir.
1982), the Ninth Circuit upheld a summary judgment on the issue of likelihood of
confusion even though the plaintiff’s expert, an associate professor of English,
had opined that the words “‘Match’” and “‘Macho’” were similar in sight, sound,
and meaning. The court said that “[t]he similarity or dissimilarity of these two
words is a matter easily evaluated by laymen within the realm of their common
knowledge and experience”; that “[i]t is highly doubtful that expert testimony on
the subject, of the type presented by the [expert’s] affidavit, would be of any real
assistance to the trier of fact”; and that it would have been “well within the
discretion of the trial judge to exclude” this evidence under Rule 702. Id. at 398.
Even though the district court apparently had not excluded the report, the Ninth
Circuit nevertheless ruled that because “the issue of fact concerned matters of
common knowledge and experience,” the court was free to draw its own
conclusions on similarity and to grant summary judgment even though its opinion
differed from that of the expert. Id. A leading treatise agrees with the Ninth
Circuit’s approach. See 4 McCarthy § 23:2.75, at 23-23 (“It is proper for a judge
to give little weight to expert testimony on an obvious question, such as an
analysis of how the appearance and pronunciation of the conflicting marks differ.
Such expert evidence cannot prevent a summary judgment to the contrary of the
expert’s view.”). We also agree.
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Moreover, another consideration strongly supports a determination that the
marks here are not similar. As we have explained, and as the district court noted
in criticizing Questions 3 and 10 of Dr. Belch’s survey, the SinuSense mark does
not appear in isolation when used in commerce. Rather, it is routinely
accompanied by the “waterpik” house mark. “Conflicting marks must be
compared in their entirety, including any ‘house mark’ which one party may
append to its mark.” Id. § 23:43, at 23-217 to 218. Thus, in Universal Money
Centers we analyzed whether the defendant’s “‘AT &T Universal Card’” was
similar in sight, sound, and meaning to the plaintiff’s “UNIVERSAL MONEY,”
“UNIVERSAL MONEY CARD,” and “UNIVERSAL MONEY CENTER”
trademarks. 22 F.3d at 1531. Emphasizing that “each mark is to be considered as
a whole,” we noted “the distinctive AT & T house mark prominently displayed on
the front of” the defendant’s card. Id. The presence of this house mark figured
heavily in our ultimate ruling that “the differences between the marks greatly
outweigh[ed] any similarities.” Id. Just as the presence of the house mark in
Universal Money Centers helped persuade us that the defendant’s mark was not
similar to the plaintiff’s, the presence of the “waterpik” house mark confirms our
view that the similarity factor weighs in Water Pik’s favor.
4. Water Pik’s Intent
The district court ruled that Water Pik’s intent favored Med-Systems
because Water Pik knew of the SinuCleanse mark before adopting the brand name
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“SinuSense,” and it developed its SinuSense brand after unsuccessfully trying to
acquire Med-Systems’ line of sinus-irrigation products. See Water Pik, 848 F.
Supp. 2d at 1273. The court noted in particular an email sent in 2008 by Michael
Wakeman, vice president of marketing for Water Pik, which said: “[R]egarding
squeeze bottle designs, let’s pursue both a ‘hybrid’ of the NeilMed/SinuCleanse
designs and a ‘gooseneck’ angular nozzle design (note the suggested
improvements for each in the attached report).” Aplt. App., Vol. 3 at 775.
Water Pik argues that the district court erred in its analysis of this factor
because it mistakenly focused on whether Water Pik intended to copy Med-
Systems’ products, not whether it intended to deceive consumers about the source
of those products by copying Med-Systems’ trademarks. Water Pik contends that
Med-Systems has cited no evidence of this latter intent.
We agree with Water Pik’s description of the intent that should be the
central concern of this factor. When we have said that evidence of intent to copy
may justify an inference of likelihood of confusion, we have been referring to
copying a particular mark, not copying a competitor’s product. See, e.g., Utah
Lighthouse Ministry, 527 F.3d at 1055 (“Evidence that the alleged infringer chose
a mark with the intent to copy, rather than randomly or by accident, typically
supports an inference of likelihood of confusion.” (emphasis added)); Sally
Beauty, 304 F.3d at 973 (“Proof that a defendant chose a mark with the intent of
copying the plaintiff’s mark may, standing alone, justify an inference of
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likelihood of confusion.” (emphasis added)). And more specifically, the intent in
copying the mark should be “the intent to derive benefit from the reputation or
goodwill of plaintiff.” Id.; see Universal Money Centers, 22 F.3d at 1532
(stressing that the record contained “absolutely no facts to support an inference
that AT &T adopted the word ‘Universal’ with the intent to derive benefit from
[the plaintiff’s] marks”).
This focus on an intent to cause confusion by adopting a similar mark
reflects the language of the Lanham Act. The Act speaks in terms of whether the
use of a mark is likely to confuse consumers, not necessarily whether the design
of a product is likely to do so. 7 Section 32 proscribes the “use in commerce” of
“any reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation of a registered mark”
that “is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive.” 15 U.S.C.
§ 1114(1)(a) (emphasis added). Likewise, § 43(a) imposes liability on any person
who “uses in commerce any word, term, name, symbol, device, or any
combination thereof,” that “is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to
deceive” as to affiliation, connection, origin, sponsorship, or approval of the
person’s product. Id. § 1125(a). Such language reflects an interest in preventing
competitors from using deceptive marks to mislead consumers about the source of
7
We recognize that in some circumstances a product’s design may be
protected as trade dress, and in such cases the product design will essentially be
the mark. See Hartford House, Ltd. v. Hallmark Cards, Inc., 846 F.2d 1268, 1271
(10th Cir. 1988). Although Med-Systems did allege trade-dress infringement in
this case, it does not argue that claim on appeal.
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their goods or services. The relevance of intent is that one can infer a likelihood
of confusion from a defendant’s selection of a mark with the intent to cause
confusion.
Our fellow circuits have made the same point. For example, in Streetwise
Maps, Inc. v. VanDam, Inc., 159 F.3d 739, 741–42 (2d Cir. 1998), the plaintiff
appealed the rejection at a bench trial of its claim that its “Streetwise” trademark,
used in connection with foldable, laminated street maps, was infringed by the
defendant’s use of “StreetSmart” in connection with similar maps. The district
court found, among other things, that the defendant had not adopted its mark in
bad faith; it explained that the defendant had “probably copied the size and
concept of [the] Streetwise[] map, but not in an effort to mislead consumers into
believing that they were buying” the plaintiff’s product. Id. at 745. The Second
Circuit agreed with this reasoning, noting: “The intent to compete by imitating
the successful features of another’s product is vastly different from the intent to
deceive purchasers as to the source of the product.” Id.
In A & H Sportswear, Inc. v. Victoria’s Secret Stores, Inc., 237 F.3d 198,
206 (3d Cir. 2000), the district court found after a bench trial that the defendant’s
use of “Miracle Bra” in connection with swimwear was not likely to cause
confusion with the plaintiff’s “Miraclesuit” mark, also used for swimwear.
Addressing the district court’s finding that the defendant had not adopted its mark
with the intent to confuse consumers, the Third Circuit explained:
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[A] defendant’s mere intent to copy, without more, is not sufficiently
probative of the defendant’s success in causing confusion to weigh
such a finding in the plaintiff’s favor; rather, defendant’s intent will
indicate a likelihood of confusion only if an intent to confuse
consumers is demonstrated via purposeful manipulation of the junior
mark to resemble the senior’s.
Id. at 225–26 (emphasis added). The appeals court held that the district court’s
finding on this factor was not clear error because the record indicated that the
defendant had “brought the mark into swimwear because of its success in
lingerie,” not “in an effort to ride on [the plaintiff’s] good name.” Id. at 226.
And in Sensient Technologies Corp. v. SensoryEffects Flavor Co., 613 F.3d
754, 758–60 (8th Cir. 2010), the Eighth Circuit, affirming a summary judgment
that the defendant’s “SensoryEffects” mark was not likely to cause confusion with
the plaintiff’s “Sensient Flavors” mark, agreed with the district court that even if
the defendant had selected its mark with advance knowledge of the plaintiff’s
mark, such knowledge alone did not compel the conclusion that the defendant
possessed the intent relevant to the likelihood-of-confusion analysis. See id. at
766–68. Instead, the appeals court emphasized that “knowledge of another’s
product and an intent to compete does not correspond with an intent to mislead.”
Id. at 767.
Med-Systems has failed to establish the requisite intent by Water Pik.
Water Pik points to evidence that the process of choosing the SinuSense name
was innocuous. Michael Wakeman, vice president of marketing for Water Pik,
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swore in an affidavit that Water Pik had “utilized the Sterling Rice Group and
Blue Sky Strategies, two outside vendors, to assist it in creating, testing (through
consumer focus groups and on-line surveys) and developing the
SinuSense TM brand.” Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 334. He testified in a deposition that
the name “SinuSense” was first proposed by Steve Costello of Blue Sky
Strategies and that it was one of multiple names vetted by Sterling-Rice. In an
October 2009 email to Wakeman, Chris Lohmann of Sterling-Rice stated: “[Two
colleagues] and I just met to review the names. We all feel strongly that
SinuSense is by far the best option.” Id., Vol. 3 at 720. One of Wakeman’s
emails earlier in the same email chain suggested that Wakeman actually wished to
avoid using any terminology too similar to an existing mark: he explained that
although “technically we could use Sinus Rinse/SinusRinse, we do not want to as
NeilMed uses it prominently on their package.” Id. at 721. Moreover, Water Pik
added the Water Pik housemark prominently to all SinuSense packaging,
suggesting an effort to avoid confusion rather than create it. This evidence
supports Water Pik’s contention that the SinuSense name arose not from an intent
to confuse consumers by copying SinuCleanse but from “a thorough process . . .
to create a trademark.” Aplee. Br. at 35.
Med-Systems’ evidence does not contradict Water Pik’s. Much of it
suggests only that Water Pik intended to manufacture products that were similar
to the SinuCleanse line and to sell them to similar consumers. For example,
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Water Pik apparently targeted most of the same distributors and retailers as Med-
Systems; manufactured the same types of sinus-irrigation items and sold saline
packets in the same denomination as Med-Systems; and designed its squeeze
bottle to resemble a hybrid of Med-Systems’ and NeilMed’s. But none of this
evidence relates to the SinuSense brand name; it would not allow a reasonable
juror to infer that Water Pik intended to confuse consumers through its adoption
and use of that brand name.
And Med-Systems reads too much into an email that Wakeman received in
May 2009 from an executive assistant to Water Pik’s CEO. The executive
assistant wrote that although she liked the name “SinuSense,” she was “concerned
that people may confuse it with SinuCleanse.” Aplt. App., Vol. 3 at 704. There
is no evidence, however, that the Water Pik decisionmakers decided that there
would be such confusion, or that they considered the confusion to be helpful
rather than harmful. 8
Given the weakness of the evidence of an improper intent, this factor is
neutral.
5. Degree of Care Likely to Be Exercised by Purchasers
8
Med-Systems suggests in its reply brief that Water Pik’s wrongful intent
with respect to its mark can be inferred from its copying the trade dress on
SinuCleanse packaging. (We note that it has not pursued on appeal its claim of
trade-dress infringement.) But we will not address this argument because it was
not raised in Med-Systems’ opening brief, thereby depriving Water Pik of an
opportunity to respond. See King of the Mountain, 185 F.3d at 1090 n.2
(argument waived when raised for the first time in appellant’s reply brief).
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If consumers are likely to exercise a high degree of care in deciding whose
product to buy, the likelihood of confusion is reduced. See Heartsprings, Inc. v.
Heartspring, Inc., 143 F.3d 550, 557 (10th Cir. 1998). The district court ruled
that this factor favored Water Pik because Med-Systems did not dispute Water
Pik’s contention that consumers are likely to be more discriminating than usual
when they purchase healthcare products. See Water Pik, 848 F. Supp. 2d at
1276–77. Although Med-Systems’ opening brief on appeal contains passing
remarks that consumers may not exercise much care when shopping for sinus-
irrigation products, these remarks are confined to the statement of facts, and Med-
Systems does not challenge the court’s ruling until its reply brief. “Arguments
inadequately briefed in the opening brief are waived.” Utah Lighthouse Ministry,
527 F.3d at 1049 n.1. We will not revisit the district court’s ruling on this factor.
The high degree of care that consumers are likely to exercise favors Water Pik.
6. Similarity of Products and Manner of Marketing
The evidence in the district court established that Water Pik’s sinus-
irrigation products are very similar to Med-Systems’ and are marketed through
nearly identical channels. This factor favors Med-Systems.
7. Overall Likelihood of Confusion
Our analysis has shown that only the last factor—similarity of products and
marketing—favors Med-Systems. The evidence of actual confusion strongly
favors Water Pik. And the weakness of the SinuCleanse mark, combined with the
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notable respects in which the SinuSense mark (particularly when considered with
the Water Pik house mark) differs from that mark, suggests that the absence of
evidence of actual confusion is no accident. Med-Systems has failed to raise a
genuine factual issue regarding likelihood of confusion. The district court
properly awarded summary judgment to Water Pik.
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Water Pik.
We GRANT the stipulated motion to supplement Water Pik’s supplemental
appendix.
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