United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
REVISED JULY 22, 2004
June 28, 2004
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Charles R. Fulbruge III
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Clerk
_____________________
No. 03-30470
_____________________
BRENNAN’S INC; OWEN E BRENNAN, JR; JAMES C BRENNAN; THEODORE
M BRENNAN
Plaintiffs - Appellants - Cross-Appellees
v.
DICKIE BRENNAN & COMPANY INC; RICHARD J BRENNAN, JR;
Defendants - Appellees - Cross-Appellants
RICHARD J BRENNAN; COUSINS RESTAURANTS INC; SEVEN SIXTEEN
IBERVILLE LLC
Defendants - Appellees
_________________________________________________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
_________________________________________________________________
Before KING, Chief Judge, and BENAVIDES and CLEMENT, Circuit
Judges.
KING, Chief Judge:
The plaintiffs, owners of a famous New Orleans restaurant
that bears their family name, brought trademark and contract
claims against certain relatives who operated other restaurants
that used the family name in ways that allegedly caused confusion
in the marketplace. The district court ruled that the two
contracts that are the basis of the breach-of-contract claims
barred the plaintiffs from pursuing trademark-related claims.
The remaining claims proceeded to trial, and the jury returned a
verdict in the plaintiffs’ favor on one of their contract claims.
Both sides appeal, challenging various aspects of the proceedings
below. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
As habitués of New Orleans are well aware, members of the
Brennan family are uncommonly blessed with a talent for
restaurateuring. This case involves a dispute between two
branches of the family over the names that may be used on certain
restaurants.
The family’s first restaurant, known since the 1950s as
Brennan’s Restaurant, was opened by Owen E. Brennan, Sr. In
time, this restaurant came to be owned 60% by Owen Sr.’s widow
Maude and their three sons--Owen Jr., James, and Theodore (“the
brothers”)--and 40% by the brothers’ aunts and uncles, including
Richard Brennan, Sr. (“Richard Sr.”). The family registered
BRENNAN’S as a federal trademark, and the family opened other
restaurants as well. A disagreement arose between the two sides
of the family in the early 1970s, resulting in a partition of the
family restaurant enterprise. The original Brennan’s Restaurant
went to Owen Sr.’s widow and sons, while the family’s other
restaurants went to the brothers’ aunts and uncles.
2
The partition did not solve all of the difficulties, and the
Brennan’s Restaurant side of the family sued the other side of
the family in 1976 for trademark infringement. The litigation
came to a close in 1979 with a settlement agreement (“the 1979
Agreement”) and a consent judgment that defined the two camps’
rights in the BRENNAN’S mark. Owen Sr.’s widow and sons received
exclusive rights to the mark in Louisiana and all other states
except Texas and Georgia, where Richard Sr. and his siblings held
exclusive rights. The agreement further provided that (with some
exceptions) no party would “open[] or operate[]” a new restaurant
in Louisiana using the Brennan name, though the agreement also
allowed the parties to “aid” their descendants’ efforts to own or
operate restaurants “under any name.” Regarding future disputes
that might arise, the 1979 Agreement stated that neither side
would assert its trademark rights against the other for uses
permitted by the agreement, but it also said that it did not bar
future claims that might arise out of a breach of the agreement.
Owen Sr.’s widow later died, and the three brothers continued to
own and operate the original Brennan’s Restaurant through
Brennan’s, Inc. (“Brennan’s”).
Business proceeded without incident for around twenty years.
During that time, Richard Sr.’s son Richard Jr., known as
“Dickie,” began to establish his own name in the restaurant
business. Unlike Richard Sr., Dickie was not a signatory to the
1979 Agreement. In the late 1990s, Richard Sr. gave Dickie and
3
another child a majority interest in the Palace Café restaurant,
which began to be known as Dickie Brennan’s Palace Café. At
around the same time, Richard Sr., Dickie, and others decided to
open a new restaurant, also in New Orleans, called Dickie
Brennan’s Steakhouse.
In July 1998, Theodore happened to notice a sign announcing
the construction of Dickie Brennan’s Steakhouse several blocks
away from Brennan’s Restaurant, and he informed his brothers.
The brothers held a meeting with Dickie in September at which the
parties discussed how to manage the use of the family name in
connection with their respective restaurants. According to the
brothers, Dickie concealed from them the fact that his father,
Richard Sr., held ownership interests in the two restaurants
bearing Dickie’s name. The meeting produced an agreement between
Brennan’s and Dickie (“the 1998 Agreement”) in which Brennan’s
promised that it “shall not object” to Dickie’s operation of
restaurants under the names “Dickie Brennan’s Palace Café” and
“Dickie Brennan’s Steakhouse” “so long as”: Dickie did not use
the name “Brennan’s” separately from “Dickie,” the words “Dickie
Brennan’s” were not made more prominent than the rest of the
name, Dickie did not use certain typefaces, and Dickie did not
imply any connection with the original Brennan’s Restaurant.
Dickie also promised that he would not use the Brennan name in
ways other than those specified in the agreement. The agreement
further required Dickie to notify the brothers and take remedial
4
action if he became aware that his restaurants were being
confused with the original Brennan’s Restaurant.
Over the course of the next few years, the staff at
Brennan’s Restaurant noticed a number of instances in which the
consuming public apparently confused their restaurant with Dickie
Brennan’s Steakhouse and vice versa, such as people going to one
restaurant when they were looking for the other. Attorneys for
Brennan’s wrote to Dickie in March 2000 to request a meeting to
discuss the apparent confusion, Dickie’s alleged breaches of the
1998 Agreement, and remedial measures that Dickie could take.
After meetings and letters failed to resolve the dispute,
Brennan’s sued Dickie and Dickie Brennan & Co. (the corporation
through which the plaintiffs believed that Dickie was operating
the restaurants) for breach of the 1998 Agreement, federal and
state trademark claims, and other claims. The defendants filed a
motion to dismiss for failure to join parties. Attached to the
motion were affidavits stating that the Palace Café and
Steakhouse restaurants were actually owned and operated by
Cousins Restaurants, Inc. (“Cousins”) and Seven Sixteen
Iberville, L.L.C. (“Seven Sixteen”), respectively. The
affidavits further stated that Richard Sr. and Dickie both held
ownership interests in the two companies and that Dickie and the
two companies were acting as successors to Richard Sr.’s rights
under the 1979 Agreement. In response, Brennan’s amended its
complaint to add a claim for breach of the 1979 Agreement, to
5
join Richard Sr. and the two companies as defendants, and to join
the brothers (who, like Richard Sr., were signatories to the 1979
Agreement) as plaintiffs. The defendants filed counterclaims
asserting breach of the 1979 Agreement and, later, breach of the
1998 Agreement.
The district court made several rulings that narrowed the
issues for trial. Relevantly for purposes of this appeal, the
district court held that: (1) Richard Sr. had breached the 1979
Agreement by owning a minority share of Cousins and Seven Sixteen
and otherwise contributing to those businesses; according to the
district court, Richard Sr.’s activity amounted to the
contractually forbidden “open[ing] or operat[ing]” of a
restaurant, not the “aid” to a descendant permitted under the
agreement; (2) the 1979 Agreement barred the plaintiffs from
bringing trademark-related claims against Richard Sr., and the
plaintiffs were accordingly limited to pursuing contract remedies
against Richard Sr.; (3) the 1998 Agreement barred the plaintiffs
from pursuing trademark-related claims against Dickie; the
plaintiffs would therefore be limited to remedies for breach of
contract unless they could show that the contract should be
rescinded because of fraud or a serious breach; and (4) Cousins
and Seven Sixteen could exercise the rights given to Dickie under
the 1998 Agreement, and so the plaintiffs could not pursue
trademark-related claims against those companies either. After
the district court’s pretrial rulings, the only matters that
6
remained for trial were the plaintiffs’ claim that Dickie had
breached the 1998 Agreement and their claim that Dickie had
fraudulently induced them to enter into the agreement.1
The liability phase of the bifurcated trial began on October
28, 2002. On November 7, the jury returned its liability
verdict. It found that the plaintiffs had not proved that Dickie
fraudulently induced them to enter into the 1998 Agreement. On
the breach-of-contract claim, the jury found that Dickie had
breached the 1998 Agreement with respect to his Steakhouse
restaurant--but not with respect to his Palace Café restaurant--
by using the Brennan name in a manner not permitted under the
contract and by failing to take proper remedial measures to
remedy the marketplace confusion of which he had become aware.
The jury also found, however, that Dickie had acted in good faith
and that the breach was not so serious as to justify dissolving
the 1998 Agreement.
Since the 1998 Agreement remained in force, the district
court’s prior rulings limited the plaintiffs to contract remedies
in the damages phase of the trial. During the liability phase,
the plaintiffs had already presented testimony tending to show
that some customers actually were confused as between Brennan’s
1
Although the court had granted summary judgment for the
plaintiffs on their claim that Richard Sr. breached the 1979
Agreement, they did not pursue contract damages against Richard
Sr. at trial. They instead elected to reserve their right to
argue on appeal that trademark remedies were available.
7
Restaurant and Dickie Brennan’s Steakhouse. In the damages
phase, the plaintiffs presented evidence from a single expert
witness, William Legier.2 The defendants countered with their
own expert, who severely criticized Legier’s testimony. On
November 8, the jury returned an award of $250,000 to compensate
the plaintiffs for Dickie’s breach of contract, compared to the
$2.2 million that plaintiffs’ counsel had requested in closing
arguments. The district court entered judgment on the verdict
and ordered Dickie to bring his conduct into compliance with the
1998 Agreement.
The plaintiffs now appeal, raising several issues. Most
importantly, they challenge the district court’s rulings that the
1979 and 1998 Agreements bar them from pursuing all trademark-
related claims against the defendants. They additionally contend
that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law on their
fraudulent inducement claim or, at least, that they are entitled
to a new trial on that claim because the district judge erred in
preventing them from asking Dickie a certain question on cross-
examination. They also complain that the judge erred in barring
them from presenting evidence of the value of a reasonable
royalty in the damages phase of the trial. Dickie and Dickie
Brennan & Co. have cross-appealed, contending that the district
2
The circumstances surrounding Legier’s testimony form
the basis of a cross-appeal and are discussed in greater detail
in Part III.A.
8
court should have excluded the plaintiffs’ expert testimony on
damages and that, without said testimony, the damages award
cannot stand.
II. PLAINTIFFS’ ISSUES ON APPEAL
A. Rule 50 motion on fraudulent inducement
At trial, the plaintiffs asserted that Dickie had
fraudulently induced them into signing the 1998 Agreement. The
jury found to the contrary. The plaintiffs moved for judgment as
a matter of law under Rule 50, but the district court refused to
set aside the verdict.
We review the district court’s ruling de novo, applying the
same Rule 50 standard as did the district court. See Coffel v.
Stryker Corp., 284 F.3d 625, 630 (5th Cir. 2002). Judgment as a
matter of law is appropriate with respect to an issue if “there
is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury
to find for [a] party on that issue.” FED. R. CIV. P. 50(a)(1).
This occurs when the facts and inferences point so strongly and
overwhelmingly in the movant’s favor that reasonable jurors could
not reach a contrary verdict. Coffel, 284 F.3d at 630. In
considering a Rule 50 motion, the court must review all of the
evidence in the record, drawing all reasonable inferences in
favor of the nonmoving party; the court may not make credibility
determinations or weigh the evidence, as those are jury
functions. Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S.
9
133, 150 (2000). In reviewing the record as a whole, the court
“must disregard all evidence favorable to the moving party that
the jury is not required to believe. That is, the court should
give credence to the evidence favoring the nonmovant as well as
that evidence supporting the moving party that is uncontradicted
and unimpeached, at least to the extent that that evidence comes
from disinterested witnesses.” Id. at 151 (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted).
The jury in this case was instructed that, under Louisiana
law, fraud is “a misrepresentation or a suppression of the truth
made with the intention either to obtain an unjust advantage for
one party, or to cause a loss or inconvenience to the other.”
They were further instructed that fraud can occur through silence
or inaction, as well as through affirmative misrepresentations.
The plaintiffs’ argument relies heavily on the fact that
Dickie admittedly did not inform the brothers during the
September 1998 meeting that Richard Sr. was involved with
Dickie’s restaurants. Moreover, the brothers testified at trial
that Dickie made several specific remarks during the meeting that
tended to suggest that Sr. would not be involved: that Richard
Sr. had “retired,” for example, and that Dickie was “going out on
his own” to establish his own name. Dickie did not deny making
those statements but instead testified that he could not remember
whether he made them. The brothers also testified that they
certainly would not have entered into the 1998 Agreement had they
10
known that Richard Sr. was involved. Dickie admitted that he was
aware of the animosity between Richard Sr. and the brothers’
branch of the family, and he likewise admitted that he was aware
that the 1979 Agreement limited his father’s use of the family
name. On the basis of such evidence, the plaintiffs contend that
a reasonable jury would be required to conclude that Dickie
fraudulently induced the brothers into signing the 1998 Agreement
by concealing Richard Sr.’s involvement.
We disagree. A rational jury could have ruled as this jury
did. The evidence before the jury showed that it was the
brothers who requested the meeting with Dickie, the brothers who
proposed entering into an agreement concerning use of the
BRENNAN’S mark, and the brothers who drafted the 1998 Agreement
for Dickie to sign. The jury also heard evidence that Dickie
believed that he did not need the 1998 Agreement or any
permission from Brennan’s in order to open his restaurants under
his name, casting doubt on his motive to deceive them. Moreover,
although the brothers testified that they were unaware of Richard
Sr.’s involvement in Dickie’s restaurants, there was evidence
that permitted a rational inference that Dickie would have
expected the brothers to have been exposed to this information
through media reports and local scuttlebutt. In sum, the jury
rationally could have concluded that Dickie did not undertake
fraudulently to induce the brothers into executing the 1998
Agreement.
11
B. Request for a new trial on fraudulent inducement
The plaintiffs next ask for a new trial on their fraudulent
inducement claim, contending that the district court improperly
prevented them from inquiring into Dickie’s state of mind. In
particular, the plaintiffs assert that the district court
committed reversible error when it sustained defense counsel’s
objection to the question whether Dickie believed that the
brothers would have entered into the 1998 Agreement had they
known that Richard Sr. was involved in Dickie’s restaurants. The
error is said to have occurred in the following exchange:
Q: Do you think they would have entered into the 1998
Agreement if they knew that your father was involved
with the restaurant?
A: Mr. Colbert, when I look back over all the information
that we have seen, I don’t know how they weren’t aware
that my dad was involved.
[Plaintiffs’ counsel]: Could I please have the
question read back.
The court reporter read back the question, but, before Dickie
answered, his attorney asked to approach the bench. Dickie’s
attorney then objected to the question on the ground that it
sought an answer to the ultimate question to be answered by the
jury. The plaintiffs’ attorney responded that the question went
to whether Dickie had a motive to conceal Richard Sr.’s
involvement. The court sustained the objection.
The plaintiffs face an uphill battle in appealing this
ruling, for the district court’s decisions regarding whether to
12
admit or to exclude testimony are generally reviewed only for
abuse of discretion. Green v. Adm’rs of Tulane Educ. Fund, 284
F.3d 642, 660 (5th Cir. 2002). Further, we will not reverse
unless the error prejudices a party’s substantial rights. FED.
R. EVID. 103(a); FED R. CIV. P. 61.
We conclude that there was no reversible error here. Dickie
indirectly answered the question the first time it was posed by
stating that the brothers must have been aware of Richard Sr.’s
involvement. His response amounted to a “yes” answer to defense
counsel’s question: Dickie said that the brothers must have known
about Richard Sr.’s involvement, yet they signed the 1998
Agreement; therefore, according to Dickie, they would still sign
even if they knew. There is no reason to think that Dickie would
have provided a different answer if plaintiffs’ counsel had been
permitted to pursue the matter. Further, the court’s ruling in
no way prevented the plaintiffs from making their case. Even
without Dickie’s answer to this question (which answer would not
have helped them), there was ample evidence from which a rational
jury could have concluded that Dickie intended to deceive the
brothers. The plaintiffs recount that evidence in detail and
indeed argue, as explained in the previous section of this
opinion, that no rational jury could reach a different conclusion
based on the evidence before it. The plaintiffs’ failure to
convince the jury of fraud cannot reasonably be attributed to the
13
judge’s decision to exclude this single question, even if the
judge erred in sustaining the objection.
C. Effect of the 1998 and 1979 Agreements on the plaintiffs’
ability to bring trademark-related claims
We turn next to considering whether the district court erred
in concluding that the 1998 and 1979 Agreements barred the
plaintiffs from pursuing their trademark infringement and related
claims3 against Dickie, Cousins and Seven Sixteen, and Richard
Sr. We conclude that the district court erred in certain
respects, but we also conclude that there are significant
limitations on the plaintiffs’ ability to obtain additional
relief on remand.
1. Trademark claims against Dickie
The district court held that the 1998 Agreement barred
Brennan’s from pursuing trademark-related causes of action
against Dickie. The court adopted the defendants’ position that
Brennan’s was limited solely to contract remedies as long as the
agreement remained in force; trademark remedies would be
available only if Brennan’s could avoid the agreement by proving
fraud in the inducement or could prove a breach sufficiently
serious to warrant dissolving the contract. The jury found that
there was no fraudulent inducement and, although the jury found a
breach of the agreement, it found that the breach was not so
3
The plaintiffs’ theories of recovery included not only
standard trademark infringement but also other related theories
of dilution and unfair competition.
14
serious as to vitiate the contract. The 1998 Agreement thus
remaining in force, the district court limited Brennan’s to
pursuing contract damages during the second phase of the trial.
A good portion of the argument in this court has involved
the question whether the 1998 Agreement is a license agreement on
the one hand or a consent-to-use agreement on the other. A
license gives one party the right to use another party’s mark
(i.e., to engage in otherwise infringing activity), generally in
exchange for a royalty or other payment. 2 MCCARTHY ON TRADEMARKS
AND UNFAIR COMPETITION § 18:79 (4th ed. 2004). A consent-to-use
agreement, again in the paradigm case, is a contract in which
party A, the owner of a mark, consents to party Z’s
defined usage of a mark. In effect, A promises not to
sue Z so long as Z keeps within the limits of the defined
zone of use. . . . That is, A admits that such defined
usage is not an infringement and that A will therefore
not sue Z for such usage.
Id. In other words, a consent-to-use agreement “‘[i]s not an
attempt to transfer or license the use of a trademark . . . but
fixes and defines the existing trademark of each . . . [so] that
confusion and infringement may be prevented.’” Exxon Corp. v.
Oxxford Clothes, Inc., 109 F.3d 1070, 1076 (5th Cir. 1997)
(alterations in original) (quoting Waukesha Hygeia Mineral
Springs Co. v. Hygeia Sparkling Distilled Water Co., 63 F. 438,
441 (7th Cir. 1894)). Courts ordinarily will not find a
licensing relationship when “an authorization of trademark use is
structured in such a way as to avoid misleading or confusing
15
consumers as to the origin and/or nature of the respective
parties’ goods.” Id. According to those principles, the 1998
Agreement is best described as a consent-to-use agreement rather
than a license. Indeed, it expressly provides that the parties’
aim in executing the agreement is “avoiding any confusion of the
trade or public.” It expressly requires Dickie to take remedial
action to combat any consumer confusion that develops even in the
absence of any breach.
With regard to licenses, the prevailing view is that one who
exceeds the scope of the license is potentially liable not just
for breach of the license agreement but also for trademark
infringement. E.g., Franchised Stores of N.Y., Inc. v. Winter,
394 F.2d 664, 668-69 (2d Cir. 1968); Digital Equip. Corp. v.
AltaVista Tech., Inc., 960 F. Supp. 456, 473-78 (D. Mass. 1997);
see also 2 MCCARTHY § 18:42; 4 id. § 25:30.
According to the defendants, the situation is very different
with regard to consent-to-use agreements. A party aggrieved by
the breach of such an agreement, they claim, has recourse only to
contract damages and may not sue for trademark infringement
unless the contract is rescinded. That is, the defendants argue
that the mark-holder who consents to a defined use is, so long as
the contract persists, unable to pursue trademark remedies even
when the consentee uses the mark in unauthorized ways. They cite
the McCarthy treatise in support of that proposition, but while
the treatise does discuss several aspects of consent-to-use
16
agreements, it does not set forth the proposition the defendants
advance (though neither does it expressly reject it). In a case
that McCarthy cites as one of the earliest reported decisions to
consider a consent-to-use agreement, the court seems to permit an
action predicated on trademark infringement, not merely breach of
contract, for a use that fell outside of the contract’s
permissions (though the hundred-year-old opinion is admittedly
rather obscure). See Waukesha Hygeia, 63 F. at 441.
In support of their position that the existence of the
contract bars trademark actions, the defendants rely heavily on
Affiliated Hospital Products, Inc. v. Merdel Game Manufacturing
Co., 513 F.2d 1183 (2d Cir. 1975). There, game manufacturer
Affiliated sued competing game manufacturer Merdel for trademark
infringement, and the parties settled their dispute by executing
a settlement agreement that regulated Merdel’s use of certain
names on its games. Id. at 1185-86. The agreement provided that
Affiliated would not object to Merdel’s use of the names as long
as Merdel did not use them in a fashion more prominent than it
was using them as of the date of the agreement, and it
specifically provided that Merdel would not use the names to
describe their game board. Id. at 1186. Finally, the agreement
stated that there would be no restriction on Merdel’s use of the
names after a period of three years had elapsed. Id. A few
years after executing the agreement, Affiliated sued Merdel
again, claiming that Merdel had breached the agreement and
17
infringed its marks. Id. at 1184-85. The court of appeals ruled
that the settlement agreement governed the parties’ rights and
that Affiliated would be limited to contract remedies--and have
no recourse to trademark remedies--unless it could show that the
contract should be rescinded because of fraud or grave breaches.
Id. at 1186.
We do not think that Affiliated is controlling here.
Although Affiliated complained that Merdel had acted outside the
permissions in the contract during the three-year term, it also
wished to bring an infringement action based on uses that the
contract expressly permitted. Recall that the key feature of the
parties’ contract in Affiliated was that it allowed Merdel
unrestricted use of Affiliated’s marks after a period of three
years. That contractual surrender of any right to object to
Merdel’s use of the marks is the main reason that the contract
had to be avoided or rescinded before Affiliated could pursue an
infringement case. That consideration is not present in today’s
case. We do not read Affiliated so broadly as to mean that any
party that enters into a consent-to-use agreement is (absent
rescission) limited to contract remedies even for infringing uses
that are not authorized under the contract. Such a rule would
make the availability of trademark remedies dependent on whether
a certain contract is labeled a licensing agreement or a consent-
to-use agreement--an undesirable circumstance given that some
agreements might not fit squarely into either box. It would,
18
moreover, act as a trap for the unwary mark-holder, who could
find himself stripped of trademark remedies (and potentially of a
federal forum) when a consentee infringes his mark through
unauthorized uses.
A more apposite case is Sterling Drug Inc. v. Bayer AG, 792
F. Supp. 1357 (S.D.N.Y. 1992), aff’d in part and vacated in part,
14 F.3d 733 (2d Cir. 1994).4 As in today’s case, the parties in
Sterling entered into a contract according to which one party,
Sterling, promised that it would not object to the other party,
Bayer, using a certain mark so long as Bayer restricted its use
of the mark in specified ways. Id. at 1363. Sterling later sued
Bayer for breach of contract and trademark infringement. Bayer
argued that the parties’ agreement rendered trademark law
inapplicable to the case and that contract law alone governed the
parties’ conduct. Id. at 1365, 1371 n.12. The court rejected
that argument, holding that both bodies of law were applicable
and basing its injunction on both. Id. at 1371 n.12, 1375. The
Sterling court distinguished the Affiliated case on the ground
that the plaintiff in Affiliated was pursuing an infringement
action for uses that were permitted by the parties’ agreement,
which is why it was necessary for the plaintiff in Affiliated to
4
The court of appeals affirmed the district court’s
rulings on breach of contract and trademark infringement, which
are the subject of the discussion in this paragraph of the text.
The vacatur was limited to aspects of the district court’s
remedial injunction that were deemed overly broad. See 14 F.3d
at 746, 749-50.
19
eliminate the contract before suing for trademark infringement.
Id. at 1371 n.12.
Viewing these principles as useful guides to interpreting
agreements like the one at issue here, we turn to the 1998
Agreement itself. It is a contract and it must of course be
taken on its own terms, looking to the parties’ intent as
expressed in the contractual language. The contract is governed
and interpreted in accordance with state law, here the law of
Louisiana. We must decide whether the contract should be read to
bar Brennan’s from pursuing a trademark infringement action
against Dickie. Before the advent of the 1998 Agreement,
Brennan’s certainly had the right to pursue such an action (which
is not to say that any such action would succeed). The agreement
does limit that right at least to some extent, for it provides
that Brennan’s “shall not object” to Dickie’s use of the marks
DICKIE BRENNAN’S PALACE CAFÉ and DICKIE BRENNAN’S STEAKHOUSE “so
long as” Dickie arranged the words in certain ways, did not use
certain typefaces, and refrained from using words (such as
“original” or “famous”) that would suggest a connection to
Brennan’s. Thus, as long as Dickie’s use of the marks came
within the uses described in the agreement, the contract would
protect him from a charge of trademark liability. See, e.g., T&T
Mfg. Co. v. A.T. Cross Co., 587 F.2d 533 (1st Cir. 1978); Rush
Beverage Co. v. S. Beach Beverage Co., No. 01 C 5684, 2002 WL
31749188, at *9-11 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 6, 2002). The agreement
20
reduces the uncertainty and risk that inheres in certain uses
near the outer edges of the BRENNAN’S mark by creating a safe
harbor for uses that would otherwise invite colorable (though not
necessarily meritorious) trademark claims. That much is agreed.
In this case, the jury found that Dickie had used the
BRENNAN’S mark in ways that were not authorized under the
agreement. The evidence showed that the name “Dickie Brennan”
was displayed more prominently than the word “Steakhouse,” for
example. Thus, the question is whether the agreement bars
Brennan’s from pursuing a trademark case for uses outside of
those contemplated and permitted in the agreement. By its terms,
the language of the agreement does not preclude such a suit, for
it provides only that Brennan’s “shall not object . . . so long
as” Dickie follows the contract’s guidelines. The contract does
not say that Brennan’s has relinquished the right to pursue
trademark remedies for uses that are not permitted by the
agreement. Louisiana law provides that waivers of the right to
bring future claims must be clear and are narrowly construed.
See Young v. Equifax Credit Info. Servs., 294 F.3d 631, 637 (5th
Cir. 2002); Brown v. Drillers, Inc., 630 So. 2d 741, 752-54 (La.
1994). The agreement accordingly cannot be taken to mean that
Brennan’s has implicitly given up its preexisting right to pursue
trademark claims as to unauthorized uses. Put differently, the
fact that Brennan’s permitted Dickie to engage in certain
specified uses without fear of liability does not mean that
21
Dickie is thereby immunized from trademark liability for all
unauthorized uses. With regard to unauthorized uses, the
contract by its terms cannot be set up as a defense, and thus a
trademark action is allowed. (Of course that does not mean, as
Brennan’s at points suggests, that a breach of a consent-to-use
agreement is per se an instance of trademark infringement. A use
might breach the contract yet not independently qualify as
trademark infringement. Cf. 2 MCCARTHY § 18:80 (“[I]n a consent
agreement, the parties can bargain for a greater separation
between their respective uses than would be required by general
trademark and unfair competition law.”).)
While the district court erred in denying Brennan’s an
opportunity to pursue its trademark-related claims, we note that
the scope of the action that Brennan’s may pursue on remand is
limited in at least the following important ways. First, since
the still-in-force 1998 Agreement permits Dickie to make certain
uses of his name in connection with his restaurants, Brennan’s
can prevail on its trademark claim only to the extent it shows
that incremental confusion would likely result from Dickie’s
unpermitted uses. It might be that some possibility of confusion
is inherent in the operation of two nearby restaurants with
similar names, but Brennan’s cannot be heard to charge Dickie
with being an infringer with regard to any confusion that results
from uses to which it acceded in the yet-extant contract, which
the district court did not terminate but instead ordered Dickie
22
to perform.5 See Sterling, 14 F.3d at 750; Sterling, 792 F.
Supp. at 1372 n.14. Second, assuming that Brennan’s can prove
infringement, the jury’s previous finding that Dickie acted in
good faith might preclude an award of any trademark remedies that
require a showing of willfulness, see 5 MCCARTHY §§ 30:62, 30:89,
30:99, a question that we leave for the district court to address
in the first instance. (Again, any damages would have to be
attributable to incremental confusion that stems from unpermitted
uses.) Third, although trademark law provides more numerous and
5
For this reason, we reject Brennan’s contention that
the proceedings on remand can assume trademark liability and move
directly to remedies. The jury’s findings that there was a
breach of contract and that there was a likelihood of confusion
“inconsistent with the intention” of the 1998 Agreement might not
be preclusive regarding the question whether the likelihood of
confusion arose only from unpermitted uses, a matter that we
leave to the district court to resolve on remand.
We note that our conclusions concerning the limitations on
Dickie’s liability for trademark infringement reflect both the
peculiar nature of the 1998 Agreement and the fact that the
agreement remains in force. In the usual case, a consent-to-use
agreement contemplates that there will be no marketplace
confusion as long as the consentee’s uses are confined in
accordance with the contract. See 2 MCCARTHY § 18:79. The 1998
Agreement, however, contemplates that some confusion (though not
necessarily actionable confusion) might result even if Dickie
kept to the permitted uses, and it directed Dickie to take action
to eliminate it. Further, in many cases the consentee’s non-
compliance with the terms of an agreement would terminate the
contract and relieve the mark-holder of his contractual
obligation to allow the specified uses. But here the jury was
instructed that they had the discretion to decide whether to
declare the contract at an end or instead to require Dickie to
specifically perform the contract. The jury was instructed that
its decision on this question could consider the severity of
Dickie’s breach, his good faith or bad faith, and the relative
fairness of the two methods of dealing with the breach.
Brennan’s has not challenged this aspect of the instructions on
appeal.
23
generous remedies than contract law typically does, in this case
Brennan’s has already recovered $250,000 in lost profits under
its contract claim. While it can pursue trademark measures of
damages on remand, in no event should it be permitted to retain
two payments for the same lost profits. See id. § 30:73.
Because of these limitations, Brennan’s might not be able to
achieve any more relief against Dickie than it has already
attained, despite the fact that the district court should have
let it pursue an infringement case.
2. Trademark claims against Dickie’s companies
The district court ruled that Dickie was permitted to use a
corporate or partnership entity to exercise his rights under the
1998 Agreement. Since the district court believed that the
agreement precluded a trademark action against Dickie, it
likewise barred Brennan’s from pursuing a trademark action
against Dickie’s companies, Cousins and Seven Sixteen. The
plaintiffs did not assert breach-of-contract claims against the
companies. As a result, the jury was not presented with any
questions regarding the liability of Cousins or Seven Sixteen.
The court did not issue any order requiring the companies to
comply with the 1998 Agreement, though it did order Dickie to do
so.
We concluded above that the 1998 Agreement does not shield
Dickie from potential trademark liability for confusion that
results from activities that fall outside of the contract’s
24
aegis. It follows that the agreement does not shield the
companies regarding such uses either, since their rights vis-à-
vis Brennan’s are surely no greater than are Dickie’s. To the
extent that the district court barred such claims, it erred.
There remains the question whether the companies could be
sued for trademark infringement even for uses that the 1998
Agreement permits Dickie to make.6 Brennan’s argues at points
that the companies cannot avail themselves of the 1998 Agreement
at all, even for uses that the agreement authorizes. In so
arguing, the plaintiffs point out that the 1998 Agreement
provides that its rights are “personal” to Dickie and “may not be
assigned, licensed or otherwise encumbered.” The district court
rejected Brennan’s position, reasoning that although the contract
forbade Dickie from assigning his rights thereunder, nothing in
the contract prevented him from exercising his own rights through
a business entity.7
6
In considering this question, we do not imply that
conduct consistent with the 1998 Agreement would in fact
constitute trademark infringement. The question here is not
whether such a suit would succeed; rather, the question is
whether a trademark suit could even be pursued in the face of the
contract.
7
On appeal, the defendants support the district court’s
decision substantially on the same grounds advanced by the
district court, namely that the 1998 Agreement contemplated that
Dickie would be able to carry on his restaurant enterprises
through business entities. We point out that the defendants do
not raise the theory, adopted by some courts but not by others,
that a stranger to a consent-to-use agreement can use the
agreement against the mark-holder as an admission that certain
uses do not create confusion, though other courts reject such a
25
We agree with the district court’s outcome on this score.
The 1998 Agreement contemplates that Dickie has been and will be
operating at least two large restaurants. While this is an
activity that could be conducted as a sole proprietorship, Dickie
was not then operating the restaurants as sole proprietorships,
and any requirement that he do so would seriously erode the
utility of the contract from his point of view. We are bound to
assume, of course, that the parties intended a reasonable,
practical arrangement. See, e.g., Texaco Inc. v. Vermilion
Parish Sch. Bd., 152 So. 2d 541, 547-48 (La. 1963); Lamson
Petrol. Co. v. Hallwood Petrol., Inc., 763 So. 2d 40, 43 (La.
App. 3d Cir. 2000). That rule argues in favor of a construction
according to which Dickie could continue to operate the
restaurants, which were major financial undertakings, through the
vehicle of his preexisting business entities. Moreover, to the
extent that extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent is
relevant, one of the Brennan brothers testified at trial that
theory. See 2 MCCARTHY § 18:81. In terms of the facts of this
case, the argument would be that the plaintiffs’ consent to let
Dickie use certain names could be turned against the plaintiffs
if they brought an infringement case against other parties for
similar conduct, on the theory that even strangers to the
consent-to-use agreement could use the plaintiffs’ contract with
Dickie as an admission that such uses do not produce confusion.
Since the defendants have not raised this particular theory in
their brief in defense of either the companies or Richard Sr., we
accordingly express no opinion on whether such a theory is a
viable defense in an infringement suit.
26
their concern was not whether the restaurants were run by a
corporation.8
In sum, we conclude that the position of Dickie’s companies
matches that of Dickie himself: Brennan’s may not pursue
trademark actions against the companies for uses permitted by the
1998 Agreement, but Brennan’s may pursue such actions for uses
that exceed the permissions of the 1998 Agreement.
3. Trademark claims against Richard Sr.
The district court ruled on summary judgment that Richard
Sr. had breached the 1979 Agreement. The 1979 Agreement
generally forbade its signatories (of whom Richard Sr. was one)
from opening or operating new restaurants in Louisiana using the
Brennan name. At the same time, however, the agreement also
expressly permitted signatories to “aid” their descendants’
efforts to own or to operate a restaurant “under any name.” The
district court held that Richard Sr.’s minority ownership
8
In further support of its position that the companies
could not claim the protections of the 1998 Agreement, Brennan’s
points to affidavits in which Richard Sr. and Dickie are said to
have made statements inconsistent with the view that the
companies could claim protection under the 1998 Agreement. The
affidavits, however, express only the view that the companies
could be considered the assigns of Richard Sr.’s interests under
the 1979 Agreement. This does not affect the interpretation of
the 1998 Agreement; the companies could have both statuses.
Since our conclusion rests on the parties’ intent as
expressed in the 1998 Agreement itself, we need not consider
whether, absent such an intent, Dickie’s rights could otherwise
be imputed to his companies as a matter of corporations law or
agency law. Cf. Casson v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 548 So. 2d 66
(La. App. 3d Cir. 1989). Nor do we consider what would happen
were the relationship between Dickie and the companies to change.
27
interest in Cousins and Seven Sixteen went beyond the permitted
“aid” to descendants and instead violated the 1979 Agreement.
Richard Sr. has not appealed that ruling.
The district court also ruled that the 1979 Agreement barred
Brennan’s from suing Richard Sr. for trademark infringement,
leaving Brennan’s to pursue contract remedies only, which it
declined to do. Brennan’s appeals the district court’s ruling,
asking not only that we let it pursue trademark-related claims
against Richard Sr. but, indeed, that we render judgment in its
favor and remand for determination of an appropriate remedy.
The key section of the 1979 Agreement provides as follows:
Each of the parties agrees that it will not assert any of
its “marks” . . . against the other party with respect to
said other party’s use of the surname Brennan or
Brennan’s or the “marks,” if such use is permitted by and
is in accordance with this Agreement. This Agreement
shall not affect the right of either party to assert at
a future date, a claim, demand or cause of action, either
directly or by way of counter-claim, against the other
party, or its successors and assigns, that may arise
. . . out of a breach of this Settlement Agreement
. . . .
Under the first sentence quoted above, the plaintiffs cannot
bring a trademark suit for uses that are permitted under the
contract. By its terms, that sentence does not shield Richard
Sr., since the district court found that he violated the
contract’s restrictions. In the second quoted sentence, each
party expressly reserves the right to assert a claim that
“arise[s] . . . out of a breach of” the agreement. It could be
argued that a trademark suit predicated on acts that violate the
28
contract “arise[s] . . . out of” a breach of the agreement, even
though such a suit sounds in tort.9 If so, then the second
sentence of the 1979 Agreement expressly authorizes a trademark
suit in a situation like the one we confront today. But if such
a trademark suit is not held to “arise . . . out of” a breach of
the 1979 Agreement, then the 1979 Agreement is silent on the
question of whether it bars trademark suits for future conduct
that is not permitted under the agreement: The first sentence
does not expressly bar such a suit, and the second sentence does
not expressly reserve the right to pursue it. As explained
previously, Louisiana law requires that waivers of the right to
bring future claims be clear, and such waivers are narrowly
construed. See, e.g., Young, 294 F.3d at 637; Brown, 630 So. 2d
at 752-54. Therefore, we conclude that the district court erred
in ruling that the 1979 Agreement barred the plaintiffs from
bringing trademark-related claims against Richard Sr.
While we agree with the plaintiffs that the 1979 Agreement
does not bar their trademark-related claims against Richard Sr.,
we cannot accede to their request that we simply render judgment
against Richard Sr. on trademark infringement. That he breached
9
In a recent decision involving an insurance policy that
excluded coverage for injuries “arising out of . . . [b]reach of
contract,” this court held under Texas law that a trademark
infringement action related to a violation of a licensing
arrangement “aris[es] out of” a breach of contract. See Sport
Supply Group, Inc. v. Columbia Cas. Co., 335 F.3d 453, 458-59
(5th Cir. 2003).
29
the 1979 Agreement--a ruling he did not appeal--does not by
itself mean that he infringed the plaintiffs’ trademarks through
his conduct with regard to Dickie’s restaurants. Among other
things, it is unclear whether Richard Sr.’s level of
participation in the restaurants is sufficient to expose him to
personal liability. See generally Chanel, Inc. v. Italian
Activewear of Fla., Inc., 931 F.2d 1472, 1477-78 (11th Cir.
1991); 4 MCCARTHY § 25:24. The district court must consider any
such defenses on remand.
D. Reasonable royalty as a measure of damages
The district court barred the plaintiffs from presenting
evidence of a reasonable royalty in the damages phase of the
case. The amount that a party hypothetically would have agreed
to pay as a reasonable royalty for use of the mark is sometimes
used as a measure of damages in trademark actions, especially
those involving licensing relationships. See 5 MCCARTHY § 30:85.
But it is much less familiar as a measure of contract damages,
which is the type of claim that went to the jury. During the
charge conference for the damages phase of the trial, Brennan’s
took the position that lost profits and a reasonable royalty were
alternative methods of quantifying the loss attributable to
Dickie’s breach of the 1998 Agreement. On appeal, it takes the
position that, in order to receive a full recovery for the
defendants’ breach of contract, it is entitled to both types of
damages. In support, it relies principally on the codal
30
provision stating that “[d]amages are measured by the loss
sustained by the obligee and the profit of which he has been
deprived.” LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 1995 (West 1987) (emphasis
added).
The basic rule of contract remedies is that the plaintiff is
to be put in the same position he would have occupied had the
defendant performed his obligation. Morris v. Homco Int’l, Inc.,
853 F.2d 337, 346 (5th Cir. 1988) (applying Louisiana law); Amoco
Prod. Co. v. Texaco, Inc., 838 So. 2d 821, 837 (La. App. 3d Cir.
2003). A plaintiff is not entitled to be put in a better
position by recovering twice for the same harm. Morris, 853 F.2d
at 346; Town of Winnsboro v. Barnard & Burk, Inc., 294 So. 2d
867, 882 (La. App. 2d Cir. 1974).
Even if a reasonable royalty could be a proper measure of
contract damages under Louisiana law--a proposition on which we
express no opinion--we must reject the plaintiffs’ argument. In
the circumstances of this case, it is evident that the two
proposed measures of damages do not aim to compensate Brennan’s
for discrete, independent harms. The plaintiffs’ expert’s report
calculated several different measures of damages, and it is
important to understand the relationships between them. The
expert calculated the plaintiffs’ lost profits by estimating the
number of customers that Brennan’s lost during the period of
time, which stretched back several years before trial, in which
31
Dickie’s restaurants were allegedly causing confusion.10 The
hypothetical royalty set forth in another part of the report was
simply calculated as a percentage of the defendants’ sales during
that same time period. Thus, the lost-profits calculation aims
to put Brennan’s in the position it would have occupied but for
the breach by estimating what Brennan’s would have earned had
Dickie’s restaurants not caused confusion in the marketplace.
The royalty calculation, in contrast, aims to make Brennan’s
whole through the more indirect method of capturing what
Brennan’s hypothetically would have received from Dickie in
exchange for licensing Dickie to use the BRENNAN’S mark in an
otherwise infringing (i.e. confusing) manner. But Brennan’s
would be made doubly whole were it to receive the profits it
would have made in the absence of confusion plus the royalties it
would have demanded to permit that same confusion. That
Brennan’s may not do.
Taking a different tack, Brennan’s has also argued that a
reasonable royalty is a permissible proxy for lost goodwill and
that it is entitled to recover lost goodwill as an element of
contract damages under Louisiana law. But the reasonable royalty
calculated by its expert does not capture a loss of goodwill in
the sense of damage to a business’s reputation going forward, nor
in the accounting sense of the value of a business apart from its
10
The plaintiffs’ expert’s methodology is described in
more detail in Part III.A infra.
32
value as a mere collection of assets. See Simpson v. Restructure
Petrol. Mktg. Servs., 830 So. 2d 480, 486 (La. App. 2d Cir.
2002); Kenneth M. Kolaski & Mark Kuga, Measuring Commercial
Damages via Lost Profits or Loss of Business Value: Are These
Measures Redundant or Distinguishable?, 18 J.L. & COM. 1, 15-16
(1998) (both explaining the concept of goodwill). In fact, the
expert’s royalty calculation--which was computed as a percentage
of Dickie’s restaurants’ sales during the period of confusion--
simply provided another metric for recompensing the damage that
the plaintiffs suffered during the same time period used in the
expert’s lost-profits calculation. But cf. Simpson, 830 So. 2d
at 486 (explaining that a breach of contract could be remedied by
an award of past lost profits plus an award for a loss of
business reputation, which would address future sales). We
therefore reject Brennan’s request to supplement its lost-profits
recovery on its breach-of-contract claim with a royalty award.
III. CROSS-APPEAL ISSUE
On cross-appeal, Dickie and Dickie Brennan & Co. challenge
the testimony of the plaintiffs’ damages expert. They argue that
the testimony should have been excluded for several reasons and
that, without it, the jury’s $250,000 verdict cannot stand.
A. Relevant facts
In the damages phase of the trial, Brennan’s relied on
expert testimony from William Legier. Legier attempted to
33
quantify the plaintiffs’ lost profits through a “but for” method;
that is, he attempted to determine how many customers Brennan’s
would have served (and how much profit would have been generated
thereby) but for the confusion caused by Dickie’s restaurants.
To determine how many customers Brennan’s lost, Legier calculated
Brennan’s customer counts as a percentage of the attendance at
the New Orleans convention center. (Brennan’s relies heavily on
out-of-town visitors.) The method yielded three different lost-
profits figures--a low figure, a high figure, and a weighted
average figure--each representing a different set of assumptions
regarding Brennan’s historical market share. If Brennan’s
Restaurant’s business decreased in relation to convention traffic
in the years following the opening of Dickie’s restaurants, the
decline could be attributed to consumer confusion.
In his initial report, provided to the defense on July 8,
2002, Legier relied on convention attendance raw data provided by
the convention center’s marketing department. The defendants’
expert, Douglas Tymkiw, issued his report on August 5. At that
time, Tymkiw did not have access to the work papers and
calculations that supported Legier’s estimates, but Tymkiw did
note that Legier’s conclusions appeared inconsistent with the
convention attendance data that Tymkiw had obtained. On
September 12, after reviewing Legier’s work papers and
deposition, Tymkiw issued a supplemental report in which he
concluded that Legier had used faulty convention attendance data.
34
Brennan’s filed a motion to exclude Tymkiw’s supplemental report
and related testimony, but the district court decided on October
21 that the report was for the most part admissible. On October
23, a bit less than a week before trial, Legier then provided his
own supplemental report in which he used the adjusted attendance
data that Tymkiw said were correct.11
The defendants quickly filed a motion in limine seeking to
exclude Legier’s supplemental report. They charged, among other
things, that the supplemental report was simply an over-late
effort to correct Legier’s initial errors and that the defendants
would be prejudiced in their trial preparation, particularly
since they had not yet been provided with the work papers that
supported the supplemental report. The district court denied the
11
The defendants’ brief contends that Legier contradicted
himself regarding when he came into possession of the adjusted
data. Like the district court, we have examined Legier’s
testimony, his reports, and a post-trial affidavit submitted in
response to the defendants’ Rule 59(e) motion. The district
court reasonably concluded that there did not appear to have been
any duplicity. Legier had in his possession at the time of his
initial report a faxed one-page summary of adjusted attendance
totals, but he instead used the marketing department’s detailed
raw data, which could be analyzed and checked for accuracy more
readily than the end totals on the summary. After filing his
initial report, he learned that the convention center’s chief
financial officer maintained an adjusted set of the detailed raw
attendance figures that Legier had used in his initial report.
This adjusted set of detailed data is not the same thing as the
one-page summary that Legier had in his possession all along,
though the former was apparently the source for the latter.
Legier’s statements that he did not have the adjusted data at the
time of his initial report is, therefore, not inconsistent with
the fact that he was in possession of the summary at the time of
the initial report.
35
motion, based in part on its belief that the defense had in fact
been given the supplemental work papers.
Legier testified on November 7. His testimony referred to a
lost-profits figure that differed somewhat from the one set forth
in his supplemental report; the difference was attributable to an
adjustment to account for the fact that the jury’s verdict,
rendered earlier that day, had found Dickie in breach only with
regard to his Steakhouse restaurant, not the Palace Café.12
Tymkiw took the stand the next day and, during cross-examination,
mentioned that he had not received the work papers supporting
Legier’s supplemental report. The judge, quite taken aback by
this revelation, then excused the jury and conferred with the
attorneys. The judge said that she thought that the plaintiffs
had represented that the papers had been turned over and that she
would have granted the defendants’ motion in limine had she known
otherwise. Counsel for Brennan’s stated that he thought that the
supplemental work papers had been provided, but opposing counsel
told the judge he had never received them. The defendants
reurged their motion in limine. The district court, recognizing
that they were now in “a heck of a mess,” gave Tymkiw a chance to
review the papers briefly to see if there was anything that he
12
Dickie Brennan’s Palace Café predated Dickie Brennan’s
Steakhouse. With the Palace Café out of the case, the period of
consumer confusion stretched back only to the opening of the
Steakhouse at the end of 1998. Legier therefore eliminated the
lost profits that occurred before the Steakhouse opened.
36
needed to examine further. There were several pages of
calculations, but the bulk of the 77-page packet consisted of the
adjusted convention attendance data. The judge then gave Tymkiw
an hour in which to look at the papers and discuss them with the
defendants’ attorneys. At the conclusion of the recess, the
parties’ argued the motion in limine again. The judge stated
that she was going to “stick [her] neck way out” and not exclude
Legier’s testimony, directing the parties to take up the matter
in post-trial motions.
After the verdict, the defendants pressed the issue of
Legier’s testimony once more in a written motion to alter or to
amend the judgment under Rule 59(e). The district court denied
the motion, concluding that the defendants had not been
prejudiced by the late disclosures. On appeal, the defendants
continue to contend that the district court erred in admitting
the testimony. They further argue that without Legier’s
testimony, there is insufficient evidence on which the jury could
have rendered its $250,000 verdict.
B. Analysis
The defendants raise three related objections to Legier’s
testimony: (1) that it was unreliable and should have been
excluded under Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and Daubert, (2) that
Legier’s supplemental report was not actually “supplemental”
within the meaning of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(e), and
(3) that the testimony should have been excluded under Federal
37
Rule of Civil Procedure 37(c)(1) because the plaintiffs failed to
disclose the work papers that supported the supplemental report.
Turning first to the Rule 702/Daubert issue, the defendants
contend that Legier’s testimony was unacceptably unreliable
because the ultimate conclusions in his supplemental report
showed a lost profit of approximately half the size set forth in
the initial report. This type of variance is indeed a cause for
pause, but the reason for the difference was that Legier’s
supplemental report applied the same methodology used in the
initial report to a different, more accurate set of data (i.e.,
the CFO figures) that the defendants’ own expert said should be
used. The defendants’ brief does not offer argument on whether
Legier’s methodology was improper. It is true, of course, that
the methodology must also be applied reliably to reliable data,
see FED. R. EVID. 702, but the important point on that score is
that the adjusted figures that formed the basis for Legier’s
actual testimony were the same data that formed the basis for
Tymkiw’s report. We therefore conclude that the district court
did not abuse its discretion in deeming Legier’s expert testimony
sufficiently reliable. To the extent that there was a problem
with what happened during the damages phase of the trial, we must
look elsewhere.
The defendants’ other arguments concerning Legier’s
testimony focus not on the reliability of the testimony itself
but on the unusual course of events that led up to the testimony.
38
First, with regard to Rule 26(e), the defendants’ argument is
that Legier’s second report was not truly a “supplemental”
disclosure because the CFO’s adjusted attendance figures were in
Legier’s possession even before he filed his initial report.13
As the defendants present it, their argument subtly misconstrues
the office of Rule 26(e). Rule 26(e) imposes “a duty to
supplement or correct [a] disclosure or response to include
information thereafter acquired” (emphasis added). The rule is
properly invoked to bar evidence when a party fails to make a
required supplemental disclosure. E.g., Alldread v. City of
Grenada, 988 F.2d 1425, 1435-36 (5th Cir. 1993). If, as the
defendants say, the subsequent report was not really
“supplemental” but instead effectively replaced the earlier
report, the duty to supplement would not by itself provide a
reason to exclude Legier’s testimony--though there might well be
other grounds to exclude it, such as that the plaintiffs’
disclosures were untimely or otherwise violated Rule 26(a) or the
court’s scheduling order. Cf. Sierra Club, Lone Star Chapter v.
Cedar Point Oil Co., 73 F.3d 546, 571 (5th Cir. 1996) (upholding
district court’s exclusion of expert testimony where initial
13
As pointed out earlier, Legier had the summary of
adjusted attendance totals but does not appear to have had the
adjusted raw data at the time of the initial report. The
adjusted data set certainly existed at the time of the initial
report, and indeed Tymkiw obtained it. But it is uncontradicted
that Legier thought at the time of his initial report that the
raw data from the marketing department represented a complete and
best-available source of information.
39
expert reports were mere outlines, though the reports were
“supplemented” after the disclosure deadline).
The defendants frame their grievance against Legier’s
testimony most persuasively when they contend that Legier’s
supplemental report and testimony relating thereto should have
been excluded because Brennan’s did not timely turn over the
supporting work papers and calculations. Under Rule 37(c)(1),
“[a] party that without substantial justification fails to
disclose information required by Rule 26(a) or 26(e)(1) . . . is
not, unless such failure is harmless, permitted to use as
evidence at a trial . . . any witness or information not so
disclosed.” We can assume that Brennan’s failed in its
disclosure obligations regarding the supplemental work papers.
The decision whether the failure was justified and/or harmless is
committed to the district court’s sound discretion, which we
review for abuse. Texas A&M Research Found. v. Magna Transp.,
Inc., 338 F.3d 394, 402 (5th Cir. 2003); United States v.
$9,041,598.68, 163 F.3d 238, 251-53 (5th Cir. 1998).
The district judge found herself in an extremely difficult
position after the revelation that Tymkiw had not seen the
supplemental work papers. She could have properly exercised her
discretion by excluding Legier’s testimony. She was
understandably reluctant to do that, given that the case had
already gone on for over a week, the jury had rendered a verdict
on liability, and Legier was the only witness in the damages
40
phase. To all appearances, counsel for Brennan’s honestly
thought that the papers had been turned over, although they could
not present any evidence of delivery. In the circumstances of
this case, we cannot conclude that the district judge abused her
discretion in her response to this predicament. Our decision is
driven largely by the reasonableness of the district court’s
assessment that the defendants were not prejudiced by the tardy
receipt of the documents.
As noted above, the supplemental work papers consisted
largely of attendance data from the convention center--data with
which Tymkiw was already familiar since he had used it in his own
report. The district court could well decide that the late
delivery of this information was quite harmless. Cf.
Woodworker’s Supply, Inc. v. Principal Mut. Life Ins. Co., 170
F.3d 985, 993 (10th Cir. 1999) (upholding the district court’s
decision not to prevent the plaintiff from presenting evidence on
a previously undisclosed theory of damages where, inter alia, the
defendant knew the numbers on which the calculations were based).
Potentially of greater consequence were the relatively few pages
showing Legier’s calculations, but here too the record bears out
the district court’s assessment that the defendants were not
prejudiced. Legier’s methodology had not changed, doubtless
easing any difficulty in understanding the calculations. After
reviewing the work papers during the recess, Tymkiw testified on
redirect examination that the calculations showed that in certain
41
years, using the lowest of Legier’s three figures, Brennan’s
Restaurant suffered no lost profits. Tymkiw also used the work
papers to explain to the jury an aberration in Legier’s 1999
results that Tymkiw had remarked upon in earlier testimony but
had been unable to explain, repairing any deficiency in his
earlier ability to scrutinize that aspect of Legier’s report.
The defendants were given latitude to inform the jury of the
unusual circumstances surrounding Legier’s report. Tymkiw’s
testimony, both before and after the recess, appears from the
transcript to have been extremely powerful. In its closing
arguments, Brennan’s cited $2.2 million as the lost-profits
figure supported by Legier’s work. The jury, which had also
heard testimony during the liability phase of the trial that some
customers actually did mistake Dickie’s restaurants for Brennan’s
Restaurant,14 awarded $250,000 in compensation for breach of the
1998 Agreement. Significantly, neither in its post-trial motion
to amend the judgment nor in its brief here have the defendants
set forth any additional revelations from the work papers that
they would have, if given more time, unearthed and presented to
14
The plaintiffs’ closing argument gave roughly equal
emphasis to Legier’s expert testimony and to the testimony of
actual confusion related during the liability phase. Counsel
reminded the jury of anecdotal evidence from restaurant employees
and customers, a survey performed by the defendants that showed
that a small percentage of customers confused the restaurants,
and expert testimony that customers who actually realize that
they have confused the restaurants represent only “the tip of the
iceberg.”
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the jury. The district judge was forced to deal with a very
difficult situation that arose on the last day of trial, and we
find no abuse of discretion in her response to it. Therefore,
while we recognize that what happened during the damages phase of
this case was irregular, we do not believe reversal is required.
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s judgment insofar as it
awarded $250,000 in damages, plus interests and costs, to
Brennan’s on its breach-of-contract claim, and we AFFIRM the
district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motions for judgment
as a matter of law or for a new trial on their fraudulent
inducement claim. We REVERSE the district court’s rulings that
the 1998 Agreement bars the plaintiffs from pursuing trademark-
related causes of action against Dickie, Cousins, and Seven
Sixteen. We REVERSE the district court’s ruling that the 1979
Agreement bars the plaintiffs from pursuing trademark-related
causes of action against Richard Sr. The case is REMANDED for
further proceedings consistent herewith. Each party shall bear
its own costs.
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