UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
BRENCO, INCORPORATED; FULL SPEED
AHEAD REBUILDING, INCORPORATED;
QUALITY BEARING SERVICE OF
KENTUCKY, INCORPORATED; QUALITY
BEARING SERVICE OF MISSOURI,
INCORPORATED; QUALITY BEARING
SERVICE OF CALIFORNIA,
No. 95-1277
INCORPORATED,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
ROLLER BEARING INDUSTRIES,
INCORPORATED,
Defendant-Appellee.
BRENCO, INCORPORATED; FULL SPEED
AHEAD REBUILDING, INCORPORATED;
QUALITY BEARING SERVICE OF
KENTUCKY, INCORPORATED; QUALITY
BEARING SERVICE OF MISSOURI,
INCORPORATED; QUALITY BEARING
SERVICE OF CALIFORNIA,
No. 95-1792
INCORPORATED,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
ROLLER BEARING INDUSTRIES,
INCORPORATED,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond.
Richard L. Williams, Senior District Judge.
(CA-94-388)
Argued: June 3, 1996
Decided: July 23, 1996
Before RUSSELL, HALL, and LUTTIG, Circuit Judges.
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Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Craig Thomas Merritt, CHRISTIAN, BARTON, EPPS,
BRENT & CHAPPELL, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellants. Stephen
Earl Baril, WILLIAMS, MULLEN, CHRISTIAN & DOBBINS,
Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Paul W. Jacobs, II,
John W. Montgomery, Jr., CHRISTIAN, BARTON, EPPS, BRENT
& CHAPPELL, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellants. Curtis M. Hairs-
ton, Jr., WILLIAMS, MULLEN, CHRISTIAN & DOBBINS, Rich-
mond, Virginia, for Appellee.
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Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
Local Rule 36(c).
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OPINION
PER CURIAM:
Brenco, Inc., and several of its subsidiaries appeal final judgments
entered in favor of defendant Roller Bearing Industries (RBI) on
Brenco's Lanham Act, fraud, and unfair competition claims and on
RBI's counterclaim for defamation. RBI cross-appeals the denial of
its request for attorneys' fees as the prevailing party on the Lanham
Act claim. We affirm in all respects.
2
I.
Brenco is one of only two manufacturers of roller bearings for rail-
road cars in the United States. The other manufacturer, Timken, Inc.,
is not involved in this suit. Roller bearings, as the name implies, bear
the weight of railroad cars and simultaneously provide relatively
friction-free rolling motion for the axles. A typical freight car has
eight roller bearings, so there are many millions in use.
When a roller bearing wears out, it can often be salvaged through
reconditioning or, if extensive repairs are needed, remanufacturing.
The plaintiffs other than Brenco itself are its subsidiaries that engage
in reconditioning and authorized remanufacturing.
Comprehensive quality and safety standards for roller bearings are
set by an industry group, the Association of American Railroads
("AAR"), in its Roller Bearing Manual. The AAR standards govern
the reconditioning and remanufacturing of used roller bearings. Two
AAR rules are of significance here. First, only the original manufac-
turer or its authorized representative may remanufacture the "outer
ring" or roller assembly, or repair and reassemble the cone assembly
and its surrounding "cage." Second, a "shop code" and date must be
marked on each bearing every time it is reconditioned or remanufac-
tured. These markings are intended to assure accountability in the
event a reconditioned or remanufactured bearing fails in service.
In 1980, Brenco's President, Stewart Johnson, and Executive Vice
President, Jack Miller, left the company and formed RBI. RBI is a
reconditioner only. It is not authorized to remanufacture bearings.
There has been bad blood between Brenco and RBI from the very
beginning. According to Donald Lacy, then Brenco's Assistant Vice
President for Sales,1 the company's initial response to the defections
of its top executives was to buy up all the second-hand reconditioning
equipment in the market so that RBI could not have it. In 1983,
Brenco accused RBI of "dumping" new foreign-built bearings in the
U.S. market. RBI was exonerated. Lesser squabbles have continued
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1 Lacy later left Brenco for RBI, where he ultimately rose to the office
of President.
3
over the years, as was testified to by Miller and by a mutual customer,
Thad Schipereitt of CSX Transportation.
In 1992, RBI complained that it had received a defective batch of
bearings from Brenco. It inspected the product by opening three of the
caged cone assemblies, and, when it returned the defective product to
Brenco, it placed wire fasteners on the opened cages to hold them
together.
Brenco then accused RBI of opening and closing the caged cone
assemblies, which the AAR rules reserved to the manufacturer alone.
The AAR thoroughly investigated Brenco's complaint and found
nothing amiss. By letter dated May 26, 1993, it informed Brenco of
this conclusion.
Brenco did not drop the matter, though. It hired a private investiga-
tor, who began contacting ex-RBI employees. Sure enough, the inves-
tigator found a few former employees who accused RBI of
performing AAR-prohibited remanufacturing of bearings and forging
Brenco marks on the work. Brenco also obtained expert opinion that
certain Brenco-marked remanufacturing had been done on RBI equip-
ment.
Armed with this evidence, Brenco went back to the AAR in May
1994. After further engineering and data review, the AAR was still
unable to conclude that RBI had broken its rules.
On June 16, 1994, Brenco filed this suit charging RBI with viola-
tions of the Lanham Act2 and adding common-law claims of fraud
and unfair competition. It then mailed a copy of the complaint, along
with a cover letter entitled "Notice to Users," to the chief mechanical
or purchasing officers of all major domestic railroads. This "Notice"
asserted, among other things, that "for at least ten years, [RBI] rou-
tinely remanufactured bearing components in violation of [AAR]
rules." These violations were allegedly "carried out in secret, with a
deliberate intent to deceive the original bearing manufacturers, rail-
road industry customers, and the AAR's Mechanical Inspection Divi-
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2 15 U.S.C. §§ 1051-1128.
4
sion," and they could "seriously impair the reliability of the bearings."
According to the "Notice," RBI's piracy also extended to "other origi-
nal bearing manufacturers."
RBI, which had not yet been served and had no idea the lawsuit
had been filed, was soon deluged with irate phone calls. According
to trial testimony, it literally had to beg to keep some of its customers.
RBI filed a host of counterclaims, most alleging antitrust theories.
It also pled a common-law defamation claim based upon the allega-
tions in the "Notice to Users."
After a trial, the jury found for RBI on all of Brenco's claims and
for Brenco on all of RBI's claims save one: it held for RBI on its def-
amation claim and awarded $374,150 plus interest. Judgment was
entered on the jury's verdict.
As the prevailing defendant in the Lanham Act case, RBI moved
for an award of attorneys' fees and costs. The district court, applying
this court's Scotch Whisky standard, denied the motion.
Brenco appeals, and RBI cross-appeals the denial of fees.
II.
After several hours of deliberations, the jury sent a question to the
court:
Does Stipulation Number 35 release Brenco from legal
liability in the event that RBI reconditioned the bearing last
in the event of a malfunction?
Stipulation 35 reads:
The purpose of the rules in the Roller Bearing Manual
with respect to marking is to assure accountability for the
work that has been performed in that particular operation,
and to place responsibility for failure with those who per-
formed the work.
5
The district court answered the question as follows:
Now, the Roller Bearing Manual in effect says whoever
reconditions the bearing has to put a mark on the bearing so
that you can identify who did the reconditioning. Now, the
purpose of that is so that the entity that bought that bearing
that has been reconditioned can look, if there was a mal-
function at that point in time, they would look to the
reconditioner for damages or a replacement. But if RBI had
done the reconditioning, and when they inspected the bear-
ing and saw that whatever malfunction came about was due
to a manufacturing defect in the bearing itself, then RBI
could implead Brenco and say, look, while we reconditioned
this thing the actual culprit was your manufacturing of it so,
therefore, you owe us money on it.
Now, if the malfunction was due to something that RBI
did wrong, then that would end the matter and Brenco
wouldn't have any liability for that. Does that clear it up?
Then, your next question was, does accountability in this
stipulation mean liability? And they are sort of interchange-
able, but accountability is so that the customer who bought
the reconditioned bearing knows who [sic] to go to get a
new bearing or money back in his pocket.
One juror then asked if the situation would be different if a mal-
function caused death or injury. The court replied:
Well, then, a third party or the victim could sue RBI and
collect damages, or they would sue the railroad first and
then the railroad that had bought the bearing would bring
RBI in and probably Brenco, and if they determined that the
failure was due to bad reconditioning, probably the railroad
would be able to stick it to RBI. If they found that it was a
manufacturing defect then the railroad would be able to pass
the liability on to Brenco. But the victim would get paid,
certainly, so it would work both ways.
6
Subsequently, out of the hearing of the jury, the court asked
whether either side had any problem with these instructions. Counsel
for Brenco complained that the jury might misunderstand the court's
comments as meaning that RBI would somehow be responsible for its
reconditioning errors even if it had managed to forge a Brenco mark
on the bearing and the forgery were not detected. The district court
replied that the jury's question rested on the assumption that the
proper marks were there; the court therefore declined to further sup-
plement the instructions.
The form and content of supplemental instructions are within the
district court's discretion, and are reviewed for abuse of that discre-
tion. Price v. Glosson Motor Lines, Inc., 509 F.2d 1033, 1036 (4th
Cir. 1975).3
We see no abuse. If the challenged instructions were wholly
divorced from context, there might be some palpable risk that the jury
misunderstood them in the manner Brenco suggests. With context
restored, there is no such risk. The jury was asking about the meaning
of stipulation 35, which explained the purpose of the marks. The dis-
trict court prefaced its explanation with the observation that a railroad
could look to the marks to see whom it should hold responsible for
bearing failure. We will not lightly presume that the jurors were so
dull-witted as to fail to perceive that forging the marks would cause
the railroad to look to the wrong entity.
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3 Perhaps in hopes of receiving the benefit of a more exacting appellate
inquiry, Brenco characterizes the court's answers to the jury's inquiry as
"comments on the evidence." Though the court used the parties' names
in its answer, it did so in a purely hypothetical and illustrative sense, and
we are satisfied that the court did not stray from an exegesis on the law
into a commentary on the facts. We treat the court's responses, therefore,
as supplemental instructions.
In any event, even if we viewed the court's answers as comments on
the evidence, we would hold, for the reasons stated in the main text, that
they neither mischaracterized the evidence nor misled the jury in a man-
ner prejudicial to Brenco.
7
III.
Brenco also asserts that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of
law on RBI's defamation counterclaim. We disagree.
To prevail on its counterclaim, RBI had to prove by clear and con-
vincing evidence that the Brenco "Notice to Users" was false and
defamatory. Brenco concedes that the notice was defamatory, i.e. it
tended to harm RBI's business reputation. Falsity was at issue, and
the jury obviously found that RBI had not engaged in the conduct
alleged.
Nevertheless, even where his statement is false and defamatory, a
speaker in Virginia has a qualified privilege to comment in good faith
on matters in which he and his listener have a mutual interest or duty.
Smalls v. Wright, 241 Va. 52, 399 S.E.2d 805, 807 (1991). The dis-
trict court properly instructed the jury that Brenco was entitled to
assert the qualified privilege. It went on to instruct the jury, however,
that Brenco could lose the protection of the qualified privilege if --
(1) Brenco made the statement knowing it was false or
with reckless disregard to its truth or falsity (identical to the
federal "malice" standard);4
(2) the statement was deliberately made in a manner in
which it would be published to persons with no interest in
the subject;
(3) the statement was unnecessarily insulting;
(4) the language used was stronger or more violent than
was necessary; or
(5) the motive for the statement was hatred, ill will, or a
desire to harm RBI, rather than as a fair comment on the
subject.
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4 See Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton, 491 U.S.
657, 667 (1989).
8
In Virginia, whether a speaker with a qualified privilege has abused
and thereby lost it is a question for the jury. Smalls, 399 S.E.2d at
808. Viewing de novo the evidence in the light most favorable to RBI,
as we must,5 we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to submit
this issue to the jury and to support its verdict.
IV.
The district court instructed the jury that Brenco had to prove its
common-law unfair competition claim by clear and convincing evi-
dence. Brenco asserts that this heightened standard is erroneous, cit-
ing a Virginia case closely on point -- involving, as here, alleged
unauthorized use of a trade name -- that required proof by "a fair pre-
ponderance of the evidence." Rosso & Mastracco, Inc. v. Giant Food
Shopping Center of Virginia, Inc., 200 Va. 159, 104 S.E.2d 776, 780
(1958). RBI counters that because Brenco's theory here is more akin
to fraud than to simple trademark infringement, 6 the "clear, cogent,
and convincing evidence" standard applicable to common-law fraud
claims7 should apply.
We need not decide whether a Virginia court would apply Rosso
& Mastracco here or adopt RBI's analogy, because any error is
clearly harmless. The Lanham Act claim is similar yet narrower than
the state unfair competition claim,8 and the burden of proof there is
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5 Smith v. Barry, 985 F.2d 180, 184 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S.Ct.
207 (1993).
6 For example, the dispute in Rosso & Mastracco was whether the
plaintiffs had established that their use of the word "Giant" had acquired
a secondary meaning that could engender consumer confusion.
7 See Patrick v. Summers, 235 Va. 452, 369 S.E.2d 162, 164 (1988).
8 The district court instructed the jury that the Lanham Act claim had
three elements: (i) that RBI sold bearings containing components that
purchasers would believe had not been remanufactured except by
Brenco; (ii) that RBI had remanufactured those components; and (iii) that
RBI failed to inform the buyers that it had engaged in such remanufactur-
ing. The unfair competition claim required proof that (i) RBI sold bear-
ings in a manner likely to confuse purchasers of the source of any
remanufacturing work that had been performed; (ii) the buyers were
deceived by RBI; (iii) RBI profited from the sale; and (iv) Brenco was
9
a mere preponderance. The jury found for RBI. Moreover, the defa-
mation verdict establishes that the "Notice to Users" was false. In
light of these verdicts, the jury would not possibly have held for
Brenco on the unfair competition claim, even under a lesser burden
of proof.
V.
In Lanham Act cases, attorneys' fees are available in "exceptional"
cases. 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). This court, in reliance on legislative his-
tory, has given "exceptional" a different meaning depending on
whether the plaintiff or defendant prevails. A prevailing plaintiff must
prove bad faith on the defendant's part, but a prevailing defendant
may receive an award on a showing of "something less." Scotch
Whisky Ass'n v. Majestic Distilling Co., Inc., 958 F.2d 594, 599-600
(4th Cir.), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 862 (1992). The district court's deci-
sion on a Lanham Act fee application is reviewed for abuse of discre-
tion. Shell Oil Co. v. Commercial Petroleum, Inc., 928 F.2d 104, 108
n.6 (4th Cir. 1991).
The court reasoned that Brenco's Lanham Act claim, though it
failed, was not "unfounded," and awarding fees here would be tanta-
mount to automatic fee-shifting, which it deemed incompatible with
the statute's limitation of fees to "exceptional" cases. This reasoning
falls well within the broad discretion entrusted to the district courts
in Scotch Whisky.9
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damaged. Thus, at least under Brenco's theory of the case here, a Lan-
ham Act violation would not necessarily constitute unfair competition,
but no instance of unfair competition could occur without a subsumed
violation of the Lanham Act.
9 We recognize that Scotch Whisky's dual standard was called into con-
siderable doubt by disapproving dicta in Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc., 114
S.Ct. 1023, 1028-1029 n.12 (1994). The same test-- be it bad faith or
"something less" -- may well apply to applications for fees from both
plaintiff and defendant. In any event, because RBI has not made even the
"something less" showing here, the continuing vitality of the Scotch
Whisky standard need not be decided.
10
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
11