United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
__________________________
DEERE & COMPANY,
Appellant,
v.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION,
Appellee,
and
BOURDEAU BROTHERS, INC., OK ENTERPRISES,
and SUNOVA IMPLEMENT CO.,
Intervenors,
__________________________
2009-1016
__________________________
On appeal from the United States International Trade
Commission in Investigation No. 337-TA-487.
____________________________
Decided: May 26, 2010
____________________________
S. LLOYD SMITH, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC, of
Alexandria, Virginia, argued for appellant. With him on
the brief were BASSAM N. IBRAHIM and BRYCE J. MAYNARD.
MICHELLE WALTERS KLANCNIK, Attorney, Office of the
General Counsel, United States International Trade
Commission, of Washington, DC, argued for appellee. On
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 2
the brief were JAMES M. LYONS, General Counsel, and
MARK B. REES, Attorney. Of counsel was WAYNE W.
HERRINGTON.
DAVID P. MIRANDA, Heslin Rothenberg Farley & Me-
siti, PC, of Albany, New York, argued for intervenors.
With him on the brief were NICHOLAS MESITI and BRETT
M. HUTTON.
__________________________
Before MICHEL, Chief Judge, and NEWMAN and LOURIE,
Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge LOURIE, in
which Chief Judge MICHEL joins.
Opinion concurring in the remand, dissenting in part filed
by Circuit Judge NEWMAN.
LOURIE, Circuit Judge.
Deere & Company (“Deere”) appeals from the judg-
ment of the United States International Trade Commis-
sion, which determined that the sales of European-version
self-propelled John Deere forage harvesters in the United
States by Intervenors Bourdeau Brothers, Inc., OK En-
terprises, and Sunova Implement Co. (collectively, “Bour-
deau”) did not violate § 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as
amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1337. The Commission based its
decision on a finding that, although Bourdeau infringed
Deere’s trademarks through gray market importation, not
“all or substantially all” of Deere’s authorized sales of
harvesters in the United States were of the North Ameri-
can version, so Deere was not entitled to an exclusion
order. See In the Matter of Certain Agric. Vehicles &
Components Thereof, No. 337-TA-487, 2008 WL 4352378
(ITC Aug. 25, 2008) (“Commission Remand Opinion”).
3 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
Because the Commission improperly applied the “all or
substantially all” test, we vacate and remand.
BACKGROUND
Deere manufactures self-propelled forage harvesters
for sale in Europe, and it manufactures different self-
propelled forage harvesters for sale in the United States.
All of Deere’s harvesters are sold under its trademarks,
including, in the United States, U.S. Registered Trade-
marks 1,254,339; 1,502,103; and 1,503,576. New and
used Deere harvesters are sold through various distribu-
tion channels, including official 1 Deere dealers and inde-
pendent dealers. Independent dealers sell Deere products
without any oversight from Deere. Deere has official and
independent dealers in both the United States and
Europe. Bourdeau is an independent dealer in the United
States.
In February 2003, the Commission instituted an in-
vestigation based on a complaint filed by Deere. Deere
alleged violations of 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a)(1)(C), in which
Congress forbade, inter alia, importation of products that
were “produced by the owner of the United States trade-
mark or with its consent, but not authorized for sale in
the United States,” often called “gray market goods.”
Gamut Trading Co. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 200 F.3d 775,
777 (Fed. Cir. 1999). Deere contended that Bourdeau and
other independent and official Deere dealers based in both
the United States and Europe had infringed Deere’s
trademarks by unlawfully importing and selling Deere’s
European-version harvesters in the United States.
1 The parties use the term “official” to refer to deal-
ers that have entered into a dealership agreement with
Deere to sell new John Deere agricultural equipment, in
contradistinction to “authorized,” a term whose meaning
is at the heart of this case.
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 4
In May 2004, the Commission issued a general exclu-
sion order prohibiting importation of European-version
harvesters manufactured by or under the authority of
Deere bearing Deere’s trademarks, finding that they
infringed Deere’s U.S. trademarks. Bourdeau appealed,
and in March 2006, a panel of this court vacated in part
and remanded. See Bourdeau Bros., Inc. v. Int’l Trade
Comm’n, 444 F.3d 1317 (Fed. Cir. 2006). We held that
substantial evidence supported the Commission’s deter-
mination that there were material differences between
Deere’s North American-version and European-version
harvesters, supporting a finding of infringement and thus
the exclusion order. Id. at 1324–25.
However, we vacated in part and remanded the
Commission’s decision based on a particular requirement
for recovery, under our recent decision in SKF USA, Inc.
v. International Trade Commission, 423 F.3d 1307 (Fed.
Cir. 2005), that Deere also show that all or substantially
all of Deere’s authorized domestic products are materially
different from the accused gray market goods. Bourdeau,
444 F.3d at 1325–27. In other words, Deere had to show
that substantially all of the Deere harvesters being sold in
the United States that were authorized by Deere were
North American-version harvesters, as opposed to Euro-
pean-version harvesters. In discussing the “all or sub-
stantially all” requirement, we stated:
As we noted in SKF, the sale by a trademark
owner of the very same goods that he claims are
gray market goods is inconsistent with a claim
that consumers will be confused by those alleged
gray market goods. “To permit recovery by a
trademark owner when less than ‘substantially
all’ of its goods bear the material difference . . .
would allow the owner itself to contribute to the
confusion by consumers that it accuses gray mar-
ket importers of creating.” That is, a trademark
5 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
owner has the right to determine the set of char-
acteristics that are associated with his trademark
in the United States; however, a trademark owner
cannot authorize the sale of trademarked goods
with a set of characteristics and at the same time
claim that the set of characteristics should not be
associated with the trademark.
Id. at 1321 (quoting SKF, 423 F.3d at 1315) (alterations in
original).
In our remand instructions, we noted that Deere
might have authorized some or all sales of European-
version harvesters in the United States and that there
was a presumption, which Deere could rebut on remand,
that all sales by official Deere dealers were authorized.
Bourdeau, 444 F.3d at 1327. Thus, we remanded to give
Deere an opportunity to show that sales of European-
version harvesters in the United States by official U.S.
and European dealers were not in fact authorized by
Deere and, to the extent that any such sales were author-
ized by Deere, that substantially all of its authorized
domestic sales were nevertheless of North American-
version harvesters. Id.
The Commission remanded the investigation to the
administrative law judge (“ALJ”) for proceedings consis-
tent with our decision in Bourdeau. On remand, the ALJ
issued an initial decision in December 2006. In the Matter
of Certain Agric. Vehicles & Components Thereof, No. 337-
TA-487, 2006 ITC Lexis 862 (ITC Dec. 20, 2006) (“ALJ
Remand Opinion”). The ALJ found that the original
record showed that Deere did not authorize the sales of
European-version harvesters in the United States. Id. at
*39–43. With respect to new evidence concerning alleged
Deere financing of European-version harvesters sold by
its dealers, the ALJ found that that evidence did not show
authorization; hence the ALJ found infringement. Id.
The ALJ also found that the number of sales that Bour-
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 6
deau alleged were authorized was, in any event, so small
that “substantially all” of Deere’s authorized U.S. sales
were of North American-version harvesters. Id. at *47–
48. Thus, even if the ALJ had agreed with Bourdeau’s
contentions, any unauthorized European-version har-
vester sales would have been infringing. The parties each
petitioned the Commission for review.
In August 2008, the Commission reversed the ALJ.
Commission Remand Opinion, No. 337-TA-487. The
Commission first determined that the ALJ had failed to
consider whether official Deere dealers had had apparent
authority to sell European-version harvesters in the
United States, despite the absence of actual authority.
Id., slip op. at 12–13. The Commission reasoned that,
because trademark law focuses on the potential for third-
party confusion in the marketplace, apparent authority is
sufficient to constitute “authority” under our remand
instructions. Id. at 16–17.
The Commission then found “substantial evidence”
that Deere’s U.S. and European dealers had apparent
authority to sell European-version harvesters. Id. at 13.
The Commission explained that third parties reasonably
could have and did construe Deere’s acts and omissions as
condoning the importation and sale of European-version
harvesters. Id. at 17. According to the Commission, our
remand instructions included a presumption that all
official Deere dealer sales were authorized by Deere, and
Deere had failed to rebut that presumption. Id. at 19.
The Commission found that Deere had presented only
conclusory testimony to argue that it had not authorized
its official European dealers to sell European-version
harvesters in the United States, and it found that Deere
had been on notice that the sales activities of its official
European dealers were at issue in the remand. Id. at 19–
22. Thus, the Commission presumed that all sales of
European-version harvesters to the United States by
7 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
Deere’s official European dealers were authorized. Id. at
22–23. (If they had not been authorized, then such sales
surely would have been infringing.) It also presumed,
based on a lack of evidence from Deere, “that the volume
of such sales was sufficiently great that a full accounting
would have demonstrated” that a substantial number of
Deere’s sales of harvesters in the United States were of
the European version and hence that Deere was itself
contributing to consumer confusion, supporting a conclu-
sion of noninfringement. Id. at 23–24.
The Commission also found that official U.S. Deere
dealers and Deere itself sold and/or facilitated the sale of
European-version harvesters in the United States. Ac-
cording to the Commission, Deere was aware for five
years of the growing market penetration of European-
version harvesters in the United States but did not dis-
courage such sales until the end of the period. Id. at 29.
Indeed, the Commission found that Deere honored Euro-
pean warranties on European-version harvesters that
were sold in the United States. Id. The Commission
further found that Deere could have stopped or curtailed
gray market imports by its official dealers if it had wished
to do so. Id. at 33–34. The Commission also found that
Deere’s global website, machinefinder.com, which acts as
an international clearing house for used harvesting
equipment, would have given customers the impression
that Deere condoned the international sale of its harvest-
ers, including European-version harvesters in the United
States. Id. at 43–46. Moreover, the Commission found
that Deere’s credit arm, JD Credit, would have given a
purchaser or dealer the impression that European-version
harvester sales in the United States were authorized
because JD Credit financed such sales. Id. at 46–48.
Finally, the Commission determined that not “all or
substantially all” of the authorized harvesters sold in the
United States were North American-version harvesters.
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 8
Id. at 26–28, 49–51. The Commission reasoned that
harvesters are highly specialized and expensive and
therefore are sold for high prices at low sales volumes. Id.
at 49. In finding low sales volumes, the Commission
credited the ALJ’s finding that the total number of au-
thorized sales of North American-version harvesters in
the United States, both new and used, was approximately
4400. Id. at 49 n.9. With such low sales volumes, accord-
ing to the Commission, the introduction of even a small
number of European-version harvesters could cause
substantial confusion. The Commission then found such
confusion.
The Commission next found that 40 to 57% of the
European-version harvesters sold in the United States
were sold by official Deere dealers. 2 Id. at 51. To arrive
at its numbers, the Commission divided the number of
authorized European-version harvesters by the total
number of European-version harvesters sold in the United
States. The Commission found that at least 141 Euro-
pean-version harvesters were sold in the United States by
official Deere dealers. Id. at 28, 50. The Commission
indicated that the record showed a possible 14 more
authorized European-version harvesters sold in the
United States. Id. at 27 (stating that “Stanley purchased
between 3 and 17 [European-version harvesters] from
official European John Deere dealers” but only adding 3
to arrive at the final 141 count). The Commission found
that a total of 247 to 347 European-version harvesters
2 In the parties’ briefs and in the Commission’s
opinions, the specific numbers of harvesters sold have
been marked as confidential. However, at oral argument
the parties waived the confidentiality of the numbers in
order to facilitate their ability to argue and our ability to
explain our decision in this case. See Oral Arg. 15:03–45, Jan.
4, 2010, available at http://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/mp3/2009-
1016.mp3. We therefore do not treat any of the numbers of
harvesters sold as confidential information.
9 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
were sold in the United States, by both official and inde-
pendent (in some cases, accused) dealers. Id. at 50–51.
Dividing the smaller number of official European-
version harvesters sold in the United States (141) by the
total number of European-version harvesters sold in the
United States (247 to 347), the Commission arrived at its
40 to 57% number. Id. at 51. The Commission did not
use as its denominator the total number of authorized
harvesters sold in the United States, which would have
been the number of authorized North American-version
harvesters (4400) plus the number of authorized Euro-
pean-version harvesters (141), or 4541. The Commission
thus concluded that official Deere dealers were responsi-
ble for introducing a “substantial quantity” of noncon-
forming goods into U.S. commerce. Id.
Deere timely appealed the Commission’s final deter-
mination that it was not entitled to recover for a violation
of § 337 for gray market trademark infringement. We
have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(6).
DISCUSSION
Pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, we re-
view the factual findings of the Commission for substan-
tial evidence. See 19 U.S.C. § 1337(c); 5 U.S.C.
§ 706(2)(E). We thus will not overturn the Commission’s
factual findings if they are supported by “such relevant
evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate
to support a conclusion.” Finnigan Corp. v. Int’l Trade
Comm’n, 180 F.3d 1354, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (quoting
Surface Tech., Inc. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 801 F.2d 1336,
1340–41 (Fed. Cir. 1986)). We review the Commission’s
legal determinations de novo. See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A);
Checkpoint Sys. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 54 F.3d 756, 760
(Fed. Cir. 1995).
Deere argues that all or substantially all of Deere’s
sales of harvesters in the United States were of the North
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 10
American version, so, according to Deere, the Commission
erred in determining that Bourdeau did not infringe. In
other words, Deere asserts that an insubstantial number
of its authorized harvester sales in the United States
were of the European-version harvesters. Deere argues
that the Commission erred first in its determination of
the number of authorized European-version harvesters
sold in the United States such that those sales did not
contribute to consumer confusion. Deere argues, second,
that even using the number of authorized European-
version harvesters sold in the United States that the
Commission found, the Commission still erred in applying
the “all or substantially all” test by using the incorrect
denominator (the total number of European-version
harvesters sold in the United States, 247 to 347, instead
of the total number of authorized harvesters sold in the
United States, 4541). Thus, according to Deere, even
accepting the Commission’s numbers but using the correct
denominator (4541), an insubstantial number of the
harvesters sold in the United States were of the European
version. We address those two main arguments in turn.
A. Substantial Evidence Supports the Commission’s
Determination that the Sales of European-Version Har-
vesters in the United States by Official Deere Dealers
Were Authorized
Deere argues that the Commission erred in the first
part of the Bourdeau analysis by finding that Deere had
authorized any of the sales of European-version harvest-
ers in the United States. Deere first asserts that the
Commission erroneously included in “authorized sales”
those by official European Deere dealers to unauthorized
dealers in the United States, even though this court only
instructed it to look at sales “in the United States.” Also,
according to Deere, basic principles of U.S. trademark law
require considering only sales in the United States.
11 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
Deere also argues that it did not have an opportunity
to introduce evidence that its official European dealer
sales should not be considered “authorized.” Thus, Deere
asserts that the Commission should have remanded again
to the ALJ for more evidence instead of deciding the
authorization issue in the first instance. Further, accord-
ing to Deere, before the remand the ALJ had already
found, and we did not reverse, that Deere was unaware
that its official European dealers were selling European-
version harvesters for importation into the United States.
Thus, Deere asserts that law of the case precludes a
finding of authorization. Moreover, Deere argues that
under European law, Deere could not have stopped the
importation even if it had been aware of it. Thus Deere
argues that its lack of knowledge prohibited a finding of
authorization.
Finally, Deere asserts that substantial evidence did
not support the Commission’s determinations. According
to Deere, the ALJ had considered the issue of apparent
authority in its pre-remand initial determination, and
none of the ALJ’s findings of fact have been overturned.
Deere asserts that the Commission’s finding of apparent
authority relied on independent dealer sales, contradict-
ing the ALJ’s pre-remand findings. According to Deere,
the Commission also should not have relied on the machi-
nefinder.com website, which was informational only.
Finally, Deere asserts that the Commission should not
have relied on the financing of the sale of a few European-
version harvesters through the JD Credit subsidiary,
which Deere did not know about or control. Thus, Deere
argues that the Commission’s decision should be reversed
for a lack of substantial evidence.
Bourdeau and the government respond that the
Commission properly accounted for sales by official Euro-
pean dealers to the United States. According to Bourdeau
and the government, 19 U.S.C. § 1337 forbids importa-
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 12
tion, so sales by Deere’s official European dealers that
result in importation should be considered in the authori-
zation analysis. Bourdeau and the government also
assert that the remand instructions from this court do not
differentiate between sales by European and U.S. dealers,
indicating that we intended the calculation to include
sales by official European dealers.
In response to Deere’s argument that it did not have
an opportunity before the Commission to introduce evi-
dence, Bourdeau and the government argue that Deere
had such an opportunity and simply failed to introduce
arguments or evidence to overcome the presumption of
authorization; indeed, the Commission requested addi-
tional briefing on the authorization issue. According to
Bourdeau and the government, Deere introduced no
documentary proof that it had tried to prohibit its official
European dealers from selling European-version harvest-
ers in the United States. Further, Bourdeau and the
government argue that Deere has no support for its claim
that European trademark law prohibited Deere from
stopping the importation.
Finally, Bourdeau and the government respond that
substantial evidence supported the Commission’s deter-
minations. According to Bourdeau and the government,
Deere actively supported the conduct of its official dealers,
including their sale of European-version harvesters.
Further, Bourdeau and the government assert that Deere
promoted European-version harvesters on its machine-
finder.com website and financed their sale through JD
Credit. Because the Commission reviews the ALJ’s
findings de novo and makes its own findings, Bourdeau
and the government assert that the Commission commit-
ted no error in making different findings from the ALJ’s.
We agree with Bourdeau and the government that the
Commission permissibly found that sales by official Deere
dealers of European-version harvesters in the United
13 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
States were authorized. As the Commission correctly
held, apparent authority constitutes “authority” for pur-
poses of this case. Apparent authority arises from buyers’
reasonable belief, based on the acts and omissions of
Deere, that sales were authorized. See Whetstone Candy
Co. v. Kraft Foods, Inc., 351 F.3d 1067, 1078 (11th Cir.
2003) (“Apparent authority [may] exist[ ] when . . . the
principal knowingly permits the agent to act as if the
agent is authorized, or ‘by silently acting in a manner
which creates a reasonable appearance of an agent’s
authority.’” (citation omitted)); Bethany Pharmacal Co. v.
QVC, Inc., 241 F.3d 854, 859–60 (7th Cir. 2001); Grajales-
Romero v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 194 F.3d 288, 293 (1st Cir.
1999). The Commission properly looked to one of the
policies underlying trademark law—avoiding third-party
confusion in the marketplace—to hold that apparent
authority should suffice to find sales “authorized.” Com-
mission Remand Opinion, slip op. at 13; see Westinghouse
Elec. Corp. v. Gen. Circuit Breaker & Elec. Supply, 106
F.3d 894, 899 (9th Cir. 1997) (focusing, for trademark
infringement purposes, on likelihood of confusion in the
minds of consumers).
Further, substantial evidence supports the Commis-
sion’s finding that Deere’s official dealers, including its
official European dealers, had apparent authority to sell
Deere European-version harvesters. As the Commission
permissibly concluded, Deere’s acts indicated that it
condoned such sales. For example, Deere promoted its
machinefinder.com website, which allowed dealers to
advertise European-version harvesters for sale in the
United States by official Deere dealers. Although Deere
argues that the website was informational only, substan-
tial evidence supported the Commission’s conclusion that
even an informational website could lead users to the
conclusion that the sales it was promoting were supported
by Deere. JD Credit’s financing of purchases of Euro-
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 14
pean-version harvesters in the United States by official
dealers also supported the Commission’s conclusion that
those official dealers had apparent authority to sell the
harvesters. Although Deere argues that it had no control
over its JD Credit subsidiary, again the Commission
appropriately relied on the public’s perception of Deere’s
actions in allowing such financing to take place, rather
than the direct control that Deere exercised.
The Commission also did not err in including sales by
Deere’s official European dealers in the United States in
its calculation. As Bourdeau and the government point
out, authorized sales by European dealers of European-
version harvesters introduced into the United States must
be included in total “authorized sales” because, absent
such authorization, they would constitute “importation
into the United States . . . of articles that infringe” a U.S.
trademark. 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a)(1)(C). We also agree with
the government and Bourdeau that, under our remand
instructions, sales by Deere’s official European dealers to
the United States should be counted in the calculation of
authorized European harvesters. Our earlier opinion
never distinguished between U.S. and European Deere
dealers. Instead, our remand instructions stated that, in
general, “the [Commission] must presume that sales by
authorized dealers were in fact authorized by Deere,” and
that “Deere bears the burden of proving that sales of
European forage harvesters by its authorized dealers
were not authorized sales.” Bourdeau, 444 F.3d at 1327.
Indeed, we consistently referred to both types of official
dealers throughout the Bourdeau opinion. See, e.g., id. at
1325 (“Appellants asserted that more than fifty used
European forage harvesters were sold to them by author-
ized Deere dealers in the United States and in Europe.”);
id. (On the machinefinder.com website, “the worldwide
network of authorized Deere dealers” allows “United
States consumers [to] search for European forage har-
15 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
vesters offered for sale by authorized Deere dealers in
Europe.”).
Finally, we agree with Bourdeau and the government
that Deere did in fact have an opportunity to introduce
evidence regarding authorization of its official European
dealer sales. As Bourdeau and the government point out,
the Commission even requested additional briefing on the
authorization issue. As for Deere’s claim that European
trademark law precluded Deere from stopping the impor-
tation, the Commission permissibly found that the “claim
was not sufficiently developed during the remand pro-
ceeding to permit the Commission to draw any conclu-
sions as to what is permissible under EU law.”
Commission Remand Opinion, slip op. at 26 n.5. We
further agree with Bourdeau and the government that the
Commission was permitted to look beyond the ALJ’s
findings, as it reviews all of the ALJ’s findings de novo.
See 5 U.S.C. § 557(b) (giving agencies “all the powers
which it would have in making the initial decision except
as it may limit the issues on notice or by rule”); 19 C.F.R.
§ 210.45(c) (implementing 5 U.S.C. § 557(b) by allowing
the Commission to “make any findings or conclusions that
in its judgment are proper based on the record in the
proceeding”); see also Kay v. Fed. Commc’ns Comm’n, 396
F.3d 1184, 1189 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (holding that an agency
need not accept any of the ALJ’s findings, “even if the
ALJ’s findings rested on his evaluation of the credibility
of the witnesses”). Thus, the Commission was within its
power to find facts beyond those found by the ALJ and to
request briefing on the issue of apparent authority.
The dissent argues that we need not discuss and de-
cide the question of authorization of the sales of Euro-
pean-version harvesters in the United States by official
Deere dealers. The dissent also questions our reasons for
concluding that the sales were authorized. However, as
conceded by the dissent, the “all or substantially all”
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 16
calculation requires dividing the number of authorized
European-version harvesters sold in the United States,
the numerator, by the total number of authorized har-
vesters sold in the United States, the denominator. In
order to divide the numerator by the denominator, we
need to have calculated the numerator. Thus, in order to
enable the Commission to reapply the “all or substantially
all” test on remand, we must give the Commission guid-
ance on whether it appropriately calculated the numera-
tor. We therefore must decide whether the sales were
authorized by Deere. Furthermore, although the dissent
may disagree with our reasoning, we must affirm if the
Commission’s decision on authorization was supported by
substantial evidence, and we believe it was.
B. The Commission Misapplied the “All or Substantially
All” Test
Deere argues that, irrespective of the Commission’s
finding that Deere authorized certain European-version
harvester sales in the United States, the Commission
erred in its application of the “all or substantially all”
test. According to Deere, the Commission failed to follow
our remand instructions in Bourdeau, which required a
comparison of authorized sales of European-version
harvesters in the United States (which the Commission
found to be 141) with total authorized harvester sales in
the United States (the sum of the authorized North
American-version harvesters, which the Commission
found to be 4400, and authorized European-version har-
vesters, which the Commission found to be 141, or a total
of 4541). Thus, according to Deere, even using the Com-
mission’s findings of authorized sales, only 3.1%
(141/4541) of the authorized harvesters sold in the United
States were of the European version.
Deere further argues that 3.1% is an insignificant
number under the “all or substantially all” test. Deere
17 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
illustrates that argument by pointing to Warner-Lambert
Co. v. Northside Dev. Corp., 86 F.3d 3 (2d Cir. 1996), in
which the Second Circuit found that authorization of 4.4%
of sales was a small enough number to allow a trademark
owner relief. Thus, according to Deere, if 4.4% is small
enough to be considered insignificant, 3.1% is even more
insignificant, such that all or substantially all (96.9%) of
Deere’s authorized harvesters were of the North Ameri-
can version.
Deere finally asserts that the Commission erred by
comparing the number of authorized European-version
harvesters (which the Commission found to be 141) with
total European-version harvesters in the United States
regardless of source (which the Commission found to be
between 247 and 347), to arrive at 40 to 57%
(141/347 = 40% and 141/247 = 57%). According to Deere,
the Commission’s denominator of 247 to 347 instead of
4541 violates the reasoning behind the “all or substan-
tially all” test. Deere argues that the test is intended to
avoid consumer confusion based on the differences be-
tween gray market goods and authorized goods. The
Commission did not state that it was precluded from
applying the correct test due to insufficient evidence, and
Deere asserts that the government cannot now argue that
there was insufficient evidence.
Bourdeau and the government respond that Deere
failed to submit comprehensive proof of its official Euro-
pean dealers’ sales to the United States or the total num-
ber of used harvesters sold. Bourdeau and the
government assert that, because Deere had the burden of
proof, the Commission permissibly inferred a large ratio.
The government further argues that, even using the
Commission’s number of authorized European-version
harvesters, which was 141, the Commission properly
found it to be substantial given the total number of Euro-
pean-version harvesters sold in the United States (be-
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 18
tween 247 and 347). In other words, the government
asserts that Deere does not deserve to prevail when it
caused a substantial portion of the consumer confusion
that it now complains of. The government also argues
that the Commission reasonably concluded that the
introduction of even a small number of European-version
harvesters would cause consumer confusion. According to
the government, there is no benchmark ratio of 4.4%, as
Deere argues; instead, the government argues that under
SKF, “substantially all” depends on the facts of the case,
and that this court entrusted such fact-finding to the
Commission.
Finally, Bourdeau asserts that the percentage of non-
conforming sales is only one factor that Deere must
establish to meet the “all or substantially all” test. Ac-
cording to Bourdeau, under SKF, Deere also must show
that the infringing sales measurably diminish the final
value of an already partially devalued mark. Bourdeau
asserts that Deere failed to establish any diminishment in
the value of its trademark as a result of Bourdeau’s sales.
We agree with Deere that the Commission misapplied
the “all or substantially all” test. In SKF, we reasoned
that
the consuming public, associating a trademark
with goods having certain characteristics, would
be likely to be confused or deceived by goods bear-
ing the same mark but having materially different
characteristics. Conversely, then, a trademark
owner’s argument that consumers would be con-
fused by gray goods lacking an asserted material
difference from the authorized goods is inconsis-
tent with the owner’s own sale of marked goods
also lacking that material difference from its own
authorized goods. To permit recovery by a trade-
mark owner when less than “substantially all” of
its goods bear the material difference from the
19 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
gray goods thus would allow the owner itself to
contribute to the confusion by consumers that it
accuses gray market importers of creating.
423 F.3d at 1315 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Thus, applying that reasoning to this case (in Bourdeau),
our remand instructions stated that Deere would prevail
if it could establish by a preponderance of the evidence
“that the number of sales of European forage harvesters
was so small that substantially all of Deere’s sales in the
United States were of North American forage harvesters,
such that substantially all of the authorized sales were of
goods bearing the asserted material differences.” 444
F.3d at 1327.
Our remand thus set out a test for the Commission to
follow. The question was whether “substantially all of the
authorized sales,” i.e., the sum of authorized North
American-version and authorized European-version
harvester sales, were of North American-version harvest-
ers. The denominator therefore should have been total
authorized sales, not total European-version harvester
sales, in the United States.
Deere also points out that the Commission actually
found both the number of authorized North American-
version and the number of authorized European-version
harvester sales, and it did not assert that either number
was based on insufficient evidence. Contrary to Bourdeau
and the government’s arguments, the Commission was
therefore not entitled to infer, based on its findings, that
the ratio was “large.” Indeed, the Commission added up
all of the authorized European-version harvesters sold in
the United States, compiling numbers from different
sources, and found that “the record indicates that at least
141” were authorized. Commission Remand Opinion, slip
op. at 27–28; see id. at 49–51. The Commission indicated
that the record showed a possible 14 more authorized
European-version harvesters sold in the United States.
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 20
Id. at 27. Thus, the Commission found the number of
authorized European-version harvester sales in the
United States to be between 141 and 155. The Commis-
sion credited the ALJ’s estimate of approximately 4400 as
the number of Deere’s authorized sales of North Ameri-
can-version harvesters in the United States. Id. at 49 n.9;
see ALJ Remand Opinion, 2006 ITC Lexis 862 at *59–60.
Thus, the Commission found the total number of author-
ized harvester sales in the United States to be between
4541 (141 + 4400) and 4555 (155 + 4400).
Using the ratio that was dictated by our remand in-
structions and using the Commission’s findings, we con-
clude that a total of 3.1 to 3.4% of the authorized
harvesters sold in the United States were European-
version harvesters, or that 96.6 to 96.9% of the authorized
harvesters sold in the United States were of the North
American version. In other words, if one takes the Com-
mission’s lower-end finding, 141/(4400 + 141) = 3.1% of
the authorized harvesters sold in the United States were
European-version harvesters, and if one accepts the
Commission’s highest numbers, 155/(4400 + 155) = 3.4%
of the authorized harvesters sold in the United States
were European-version harvesters.
Those figures may be insubstantial. However, that is
for the Commission, not this court, to determine on the
basis of all of the relevant facts. We therefore remand for
the Commission to determine whether 3.1 to 3.4% is an
insubstantial percentage, such that substantially all of
the authorized harvesters sold in the United States were
of the North American version. The cutoff as to what is to
be considered “substantially all” is a question of fact. See
SKF, 423 F.3d at 1317 (“The determination[ ] by the
Commission that . . . all or substantially all of the goods
were not [the materially different foreign version is a]
finding[ ] of fact, subject to substantial evidence deference
by this court.”). On the one hand, we note the Commis-
21 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
sion’s indication that the “relatively high prices and low
sales volumes” of Deere’s harvesters might lead to the
conclusion that “the introduction of even a small number
of [European-version] harvesters into the U.S. market
could cause substantial confusion by consumers and have
a significant impact on the marketplace.” Commission
Remand Opinion, slip op. at 49–50. On the other hand,
only 3.1 to 3.4% of the authorized harvesters sold in the
United States being nonconforming might not cause
confusion. We also note that the ALJ considered the “all
or substantially all” test and found, using a reasonable
numerator and denominator, that the percentage of
authorized sales in the United States that were of North
American-version harvesters was large enough to meet
the “all or substantially all” test. See ALJ Remand Opin-
ion, 2006 ITC Lexis 862 at *46–65. Furthermore, in SKF,
we discussed what percentage might be considered “sub-
stantially all.” We disagreed with Martin’s Herend Im-
ports, Inc. v. Diamond & Gem Trading USA, Co., 112 F.3d
1296 (5th Cir. 1997), which held “that the sale of even one
authorized item lacking a material difference defeats
infringement.” SKF, 423 F.3d at 1316. We determined
that “[i]nstead, the ‘all or substantially all’ benchmark
recognizes that something less than 100% compliance will
suffice and certainly permits a small amount of noncon-
forming goods. A single sale of a nonconforming item
typically should not defeat a trademark owner’s protec-
tion.” Id. We also cited Warner-Lambert, 86 F.3d 3.
SKF, 423 F.3d at 1311, 1316. In Warner-Lambert, the
court indicated that, if “only 4.4%” of the plaintiff’s cough
drops were found to be nonconforming goods, that would
favor a finding of infringement. 86 F.3d at 8 n.1. Thus,
as a general matter, 95.6% might well be considered to be
“substantially all.”
Furthermore, because of our reversal of the Commis-
sion’s decision, the Commission is not entitled to rely, as
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 22
it did in the previous remand proceeding, on the ratio of
authorized European-version harvesters to the total
number of European-version harvesters sold in the United
States. Although one could conceive of a test that deter-
mines whether the trademark owner contributed less
than, as much as, or more than the accused infringer to
consumer confusion, the contribution cannot be relevant
unless enough authorized products are sold to likely cause
consumer confusion. Thus, the benchmark is instead
whether consumers would likely have been confused by
the trademark owner’s actions. As the Commission itself
noted in the authorization context, “the focus of trade-
mark infringement law is on the potential for third party
confusion in the marketplace.” Commission Remand
Opinion, slip op. at 13. Our remand instructions focused
on the potential for consumer confusion, and therefore the
Commission should determine in this remand whether
96.6 to 96.9% is “substantially all.”
CONCLUSION
We have considered the parties’ remaining arguments
and do not find them persuasive. Accordingly, the judg-
ment of the Commission is
VACATED and REMANDED
United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
__________________________
DEERE & COMPANY,
Appellant,
v.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION,
Appellee,
AND
BOURDEAU BROTHERS, INC., OK ENTERPRISES,
and SUNOVA IMPLEMENT CO.,
Intervenors.
__________________________
2009-1016
__________________________
Appeal from United States International Trade Com-
mission in Investigation No. 337-TA-487.
NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, concurring in the remand, dis-
senting in part.
The court today vacates the decision of the Interna-
tional Trade Commission on the ground that the Commis-
sion misapplied the test set forth in SKF USA Inc. v.
International Trade Commission, 423 F.3d 1307 (Fed. Cir.
2005). I agree that SKF was not correctly applied, and I
agree with the remand for its reapplication in accordance
with Part B of the court’s opinion. In SKF this court held
that the owner of the United States “SKF” trademark
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 2
could not exclude authentic bearings made by SKF com-
panies in other countries, because although the foreign-
origin products were materially different in the amount of
customer service they received in the United States
market, only 87.4% of SKF USA’s sales were of domestic
manufacture, and thus did not meet the “all or substan-
tially all” criterion set by the court. In contrast, applying
this reasoning to the German-manufactured forage har-
vesters marked with the German “Deere” trademark, the
“all or substantially all” criterion may well be met. Since
the SKF rule is controlling precedent, on that basis I
agree that a remand is in order for application of the
correct percentage.
I respectfully dissent, however, from the analysis and
conclusions in Part A, in which the panel majority holds
that the importation and sales of the German-
manufactured “Deere” harvesters are deemed to be au-
thorized by Deere-US. Section 1337 of the Tariff Act
prohibits “[t]he importation into the United States, the
sale for importation, or the sale within the United States
after importation by the holder, importer, or consignee, of
articles that infringe a valid and enforceable United
States trademark,” “if an industry in the United States,
relating to the articles protected by the
. . . trademark, . . . exists or is in the process of being
established.” 19 U.S.C. §1337. The majority’s analysis
misperceives various aspects of trademark law and Tariff
Act law. The reliance in Part A of the court’s opinion on
such matters as the relation of the trademark infringe-
ment issue to such aspects as the existence of the machi-
nefinder.com website, the occasional financing of a foreign
harvester by Deere’s independent finance company, and
the question of whether European law precludes imposing
restraints on European sales for export, is irrelevant. The
court improperly requires the trademark owner to prove
that it tried and was unable to impose restrictions on its
3 DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC
independent official dealers both in the United States and
overseas. Trademark infringement is not averted because
a consumer is not confused as to the source of the infring-
ing goods. None of these aspects constitutes authorization
to infringe. Nor does §1337 require the holder of a valid
United States trademark to exhaust all other possible
remedies or controls before seeking exclusion under the
Tariff Act. Deere’s persistent nine-year litigation to
exclude these imports of itself negates any inference that
Deere consents to the importation.
In Part A this court now affirms the Commission’s
reasoning that “apparent authority should suffice to find
sales ‘authorized’” because it furthers “one of the policies
underlying trademark law—avoiding third-party confu-
sion in the marketplace.” Majority Op. at 13. However,
the Supreme Court made clear in A. Bourjois & Co. v.
Katzel, 260 U.S. 689, 692 (1923), that the holder of a
United States trademark has the right to exclude authen-
tic foreign goods bearing an authentic foreign mark, even
when there is no consumer confusion as to the origin of
the goods. Further, §1337 is designed to prevent economic
injury to a domestic industry. Thus I do not endorse Part
A of the court’s opinion, for it is incorrect to hold that the
infringing sales are “authorized” by a concoction of “ap-
parent authority.”
Nonetheless, as the court explains in Part B, even on
its theory that all of the official dealers’ sales of foreign
Deere forage harvesters are “authorized,” and using the
highest estimated number of “authorized” foreign Deere
forage harvesters in the United States as discussed in
Part A, between 96-97% of the total “authorized” forage
harvesters in the United States are of United States
manufacture. 1 I agree with Part B that the Commission
1 Absent reliance on “apparent authority,” fewer
sales—if any—can be deemed “authorized.” The ITC’s
DEERE & COMPANY v. ITC 4
miscalculated this percentage. The applicability of the
SKF criterion of “all or substantially all” is not disputed
by any party or by the Commission, and is binding on this
panel. On this precedent, I concur in the court’s vacatur
of the Commission’s ruling and remand.
administrative law judge found that only 0.45% of foreign
Deere forage harvester sales in the United States were
authorized and that 99.55% of the total authorized forage
harvesters in the United States were of United States
manufacture. In re Certain Agricultural Vehicles and
Components Thereof, No. 337-TA-487 (Int’l Trade Comm’n
Dec. 20, 2006) at 33.