FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
July 8, 2008
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
SUREFOOT LC,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 06-4294
SURE FOOT CORPORATION,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Utah
(D.C. No. 2:06-CV-554-TS)
Robert W. Adams of Nixon & Vanderhye P.C., Arlington, Virginia (Steven Call
and Carolynn Clark of Ray, Quinney & Nebeker P.C., Salt Lake City, Utah, and
Michael E. Crawford, Nixon & Vanderhye P.C., Arlington, Virginia, with him on
the briefs), for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Charles W. Jirauch of Quarles & Brady Streich Lang, LLP, Phoenix, Arizona (W.
LaNelle Owens of Quarles & Brady Streich Lang, LLP, Phoenix, Arizona; Marcy
G. Glenn of Holland & Hart LLP, Denver, Colorado; and Brett L. Foster, Cecilia
M. Romero, and Romaine C. Marshall of Holland & Hart LLP, Salt Lake City,
Utah, with him on the brief), for Defendant-Appellee.
Before MURPHY, HARTZ, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.
In this case, two companies with similar names find themselves in the midst
of a trademark dispute. Over the course of several years, Sure Foot Corp. has
repeatedly accused Surefoot LC, of infringing on its trademark, occasionally
threatened litigation if Surefoot LC failed to change its name, and filed five
administrative petitions opposing Surefoot LC’s attempts to obtain trademark
registrations. Faced with uncertainty about its right to use the “Surefoot” mark,
Surefoot LC filed a declaratory judgment suit against Sure Foot Corp., asking the
district court to determine once and for all whether it was infringing on Sure Foot
Corp.’s rights. Applying our then-governing precedent, the district court
dismissed the suit for failing to present a justiciable case or controversy under
Article III because it found Surefoot LC had no reasonable apprehension of an
imminent lawsuit from Sure Foot Corp. After the district court issued its
judgment, however, the Supreme Court, in MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.,
127 S. Ct. 764 (2007), expressly rejected the “reasonable apprehension of
imminent suit” test on the ground that it imposed an additional hurdle inconsistent
with the Court’s Article III jurisprudence. This appeal calls upon us to assess and
apply MedImmune’s teachings for the first time. In doing so, we conclude that a
triable case or controversy within the meaning of Article III exists; accordingly,
we are obliged to reverse and remand this matter to the district court for further
proceedings.
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I
The parties are in the foot business. Sure Foot Corp. (“Sure Foot ND”),
based in North Dakota, manufactures and sells shoe traction products as well as
shoe laces and insoles; it has sold products under the “Sure Foot” brand since at
least 1985, when it registered a trademark for the use of “Sure Foot” in
connection with non-skid shoe pads. Meanwhile, Surefoot LC (“Surefoot UT”),
based in Utah, began business in 1994 and manufactures and sells custom-fit ski
boots and ski boot orthotics.
By 1998, Sure Foot ND became aware of Surefoot UT’s use of the
“Surefoot” mark. Believing that this use infringed on its trademark rights, Sure
Foot ND sent to Surefoot UT a cease and desist letter asserting that Surefoot UT’s
use of the “Surefoot” mark “infringe[d] on Sure Foot’s rights in the SUREFOOT
trademark, and create[d] a likelihood of confusion” between the companies and
their products. App. at 76. It concluded by demanding that Surefoot UT cease
using the “Surefoot” mark. Id.
Over the next year, Sure Foot ND and Surefoot UT corresponded in an
attempt to settle their dispute. Surefoot UT insisted that its “Surefoot” brand of
ski boot products was sufficiently distinct from Sure Foot ND’s product line so
that there was no likelihood of consumer confusion. Accordingly, Surefoot UT
refused to change its name, though it did express some willingness to consider a
monetary settlement. For its part, Sure Foot ND continued to assert that
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confusion between the two marks was likely and was already occurring in the
market. It expressed a desire to resolve the matter outside of court, but on more
than one occasion threatened litigation if no settlement could be reached. See,
e.g., App. at 82-83 (July 20, 1999 letter) (“Sure Foot feels it has no option but to
seek legal redress. . . . Sure Foot continues to believe that litigation is in neither
party’s best interest. Nevertheless, it cannot accept your absolute refusal to
change your name. Absent your agreement to do so, Sure Foot will pursue other
more formal avenues of relief available to it.”). The parties failed to reach a
settlement, and, by the end of 1999, communications between the parties
essentially ceased.
In September 2000, Surefoot UT applied to the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office (“USPTO”) to register the “Surefoot” mark in connection with certain of
its products. The USPTO issued a Notice of Publication for this trademark
application on June 19, 2001. No opposition was ever filed by Sure Foot ND or
any other party, and the USPTO ultimately issued a trademark registration to
Surefoot UT on June 25, 2002. Shortly thereafter, on August 1, 2002, Sure Foot
ND filed a petition with the USPTO’s Trademark Trial and Appeal Board
(“TTAB”), the administrative body charged with adjudicating trademark
registration disputes, seeking to cancel Surefoot UT’s trademark. At the same
time, Sure Foot ND filed an opposition to another trademark application by
Surefoot UT that was then pending. During a one-year period from mid-2005 to
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mid-2006, Surefoot UT applied for three more trademark registrations for other
products and services using the “Surefoot” mark, and Sure Foot ND filed
oppositions with the TTAB to each of these applications. The parties eventually
agreed to consolidate their various disputes in the TTAB into one proceeding,
which appears to be pending currently.
Believing that Sure Foot ND would not only continue to oppose future
trademark applications but would also eventually sue for trademark infringement,
Surefoot UT filed a declaratory judgment action in federal district court in July
2006. In its complaint, Surefoot UT sought a declaratory judgment that (1)
Surefoot UT’s use of the “Surefoot” mark does not infringe on any of Sure Foot
ND’s trademark rights; (2) the trademark rights asserted by Sure Foot ND against
Surefoot UT are invalid or limited in scope; and (3) any possible trademark
infringement, unfair competition, or dilution claims by Sure Foot ND are barred
by equitable doctrines. Sure Foot ND moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing,
among other things, that no jurisdiction existed under the Declaratory Judgment
Act. The district court agreed and dismissed the suit. Specifically, the district
court held that, to establish jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judgment Act,
Surefoot UT had to, but could not, show that it had a reasonable apprehension of
an imminent suit by Sure Foot ND. More specifically, the district court held that,
although Sure Foot ND made claims of infringement and threats of litigation
during the 1998-99 period that may well have given rise to a reasonable
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apprehension of litigation at the time, any such apprehension dissipated by 2006.
Neither, the court held, did Sure Foot ND’s intervening administrative actions
before the TTAB give rise to any reasonable basis on Surefoot UT’s part to fear
imminent litigation. Surefoot UT now appeals the dismissal of its suit.
II
The parties’ disagreement in this case extends to the standard of review we
must apply. Surefoot UT contends that the district court’s dismissal of the case
for lack of jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judgment Act should be reviewed de
novo, while Sure Foot ND asserts our review may only be for abuse of discretion.
To be fair, neither party is exactly incorrect.
The Declaratory Judgment Act states in pertinent part that, “[i]n a case of
actual controversy within its jurisdiction . . . , any court of the United States,
upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and other legal
relations of any interested party seeking such declaration, whether or not further
relief is or could be sought.” 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a). We have previously observed
that this text presents two separate hurdles for parties seeking a declaratory
judgment to overcome. See Kunkel v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 866 F.2d 1269, 1273 (10th
Cir. 1989). First, a declaratory judgment plaintiff must present the court with a
suit based on an “actual controversy,” a requirement the Supreme Court has
repeatedly equated to the Constitution’s case-or-controversy requirement. See,
e.g., Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth, 300 U.S. 227, 239-40 (1937) (“The
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Declaratory Judgment Act of 1934, in its limitation to ‘cases of actual
controversy,’ manifestly has regard to the constitutional provision and is
operative only in respect to controversies which are such in the constitutional
sense.”); MedImmune, 127 S. Ct. at 771 (same); see also infra Part III (citing
additional authority); U.S. Const. Art. III § 2 (“The judicial Power shall extend to
all Cases . . . [and] Controversies . . . .”). Second, even where a constitutionally
cognizable controversy exists, the Act stipulates only that district courts “may” –
not “must” – make a declaration on the merits of that controversy; accordingly,
we have held that district courts are entitled to consider a number of case-specific
factors in deciding whether or not to exercise their statutory declaratory judgment
authority. See State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Mhoon, 31 F.3d 979, 982-83 (10th
Cir. 1994) (White, J.) (stating that “the district court is not obliged to entertain
every justiciable claim brought before it” and setting out the factors that a district
court should consider); Public Affairs Assoc., Inc. v. Rickover, 369 U.S. 111, 112
(1962) (“The Declaratory Judgment Act was an authorization, not a command. It
gave the federal courts competence to make a declaration of rights; it did not
impose a duty to do so.”); see also infra Part V.
To the extent that the first question implicates purely legal issues and goes
to the courts’ subject matter jurisdiction, we review any dismissal on this basis de
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novo; 1 because the second question necessarily involves a discretionary
assessment of disparate, often incommensurate, and case-specific concerns, we
have indicated that we will review a district court’s decisions on that score only
for abuse of discretion. See Kunkel, 866 F.2d at 1273; Mhoon, 31 F.3d at 983. In
the case before us, Sure Foot UT challenges the district court’s determination that
this suit, on the basis of essentially undisputed facts, presented no constitutionally
cognizable controversy as a matter of law, and the district court never had
occasion to reach the second, discretionary jurisdictional question under the Act.
Accordingly, our review proceeds de novo.
III
The district court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to hear Sure Foot
UT’s suit based on a determination that the company did not have a reasonable
apprehension that an imminent suit for trademark infringement was forthcoming
from Sure Foot ND. In doing so, the district court faithfully followed our
guidance in Cardtoons, L.C. v. Major League Baseball Players Ass’n, 95 F.3d 959
(10th Cir. 1996), where we held that, “[i]n an intellectual property case, an actual
controversy exists when,” among other things, “the declaratory defendant’s
conduct has created a reasonable apprehension” of imminent suit. Id. at 965. Our
holding in Cardtoons, in turn, relied on an extensive body of case law –
1
Of course, to the extent that a district court’s legal conclusion regarding
jurisdiction hinges on factual findings, we review those findings for clear error.
See Mo’s Express, LLC v. Sopkin, 441 F.3d 1229, 1233 (10th Cir. 2006).
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developed primarily by the Federal Circuit – in which courts required a
reasonable apprehension of suit, or even a reasonable apprehension of imminent
suit, before deeming Article III’s case-or-controversy test satisfied in declaratory
judgment actions involving intellectual property claims. See, e.g., Spectronics
Corp. v. H.B. Fuller Co., 940 F.2d 631, 634 (Fed. Cir. 1991); Indium Corp. v.
Semi-Alloys, Inc., 781 F.2d 879, 883 (Fed. Cir.1985); see also Teva Pharm. USA,
Inc. v. Pfizer, Inc., 395 F.3d 1324, 1333 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
Since the district court issued its decision, however, the Supreme Court
entered the field and rejected the body of Federal Circuit case law on which we
relied in Cardtoons. In MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 127 S. Ct. 764
(2007), the declaratory plaintiff, MedImmune, was a drug manufacturer that had
entered into a patent license agreement with licensor, Genentech. When
Genentech asserted that one of MedImmune’s drugs was covered by one of
Genentech’s patents (the application for which was still pending at the time the
parties entered into the licensing agreement but which was nonetheless covered
by the agreement), MedImmune agreed to pay patent royalties under protest even
though it believed that its drug did not infringe on Genentech’s patent and that the
patent was invalid. While continuing to pay royalties, MedImmune filed a
declaratory judgment action against Genentech, seeking a declaration of non-
infringement or patent invalidity. The district court and Federal Circuit, citing
the reasonable apprehension of imminent litigation test, dismissed the suit for
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lack of jurisdiction, explaining that, so long as MedImmune chose to continue
paying royalties, it had no reasonable apprehension that it would be imminently
subjected to suit by Genentech.
The Supreme Court reversed. In doing so, the Court rejected the notion
that MedImmune had to stop paying royalties – risking a breach of contract action
as well as treble damages and attorneys fees for doing so – before seeking relief
through the Declaratory Judgment Act. See id. at 775. More generally, the Court
stressed that the Act’s “case of actual controversy” language references Article
III’s case-or-controversy requirement, id. at 771; that a declaratory judgment
“controversy” therefore requires no greater showing than is required for Article
III; and that the existence of a case or controversy in the Supreme Court’s
precedents had never depended on one party taking law-breaking or contract-
breaching steps before a declaratory suit could be filed. By way of example, the
Court cited numerous cases in which declaratory plaintiffs were not required to
“expose [themselves] to liability before bringing [declaratory actions],” either to
challenge the basis of laws the government enforced against them or to challenge
the legal basis of threatened action by private parties. See id. at 772-73. 2 Most
2
Indeed, one of the cases cited by the Court in this respect came from our
court. See Keener Oil & Gas Co. v. Consolidated Gas Utilities Corp., 190 F.2d
985, 989 (10th Cir. 1951) (“[A] party to a contract is not compelled to wait until
he has committed an act which the other party asserts will constitute a breach, but
may seek relief by declaratory judgment and have the controversy adjudicated in
order that he may avoid the risk of damages or other untoward consequence.”);
(continued...)
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notably, the Court cited Altvater v. Freeman, 319 U.S. 359 (1943), in which the
Court held a live controversy existed where a patent licensee sought a declaratory
judgment of patent invalidity, even though the licensee continued to pay patent
royalties (pursuant to an injunction obtained by the patent licensor in an earlier
case). Applying the principles of those cases to the suit before it, the Supreme
Court held that the district court erred in dismissing MedImmune’s case for lack
of jurisdiction because, despite the absence of a reasonable apprehension that the
declaratory defendant would sue, the case presented a dispute sufficiently definite
and live regarding the validity of Genentech’s patent to satisfy Article III and
invoke subject matter jurisdiction. See id. at 777.
Not only did the MedImmune Court find a case or controversy in a
declaratory suit where no reasonable apprehension of litigation existed, the Court
spoke directly to the continuing viability of the reasonable apprehension of suit
doctrine developed by the Federal Circuit. In a footnote, the Court stated that the
doctrine conflicted with several of the Court’s decisions, including Maryland
Casualty Co. v. Pacific Coal & Oil Co., 312 U.S. 270, 273 (1941), where the
Court held that declaratory judgment “jurisdiction obtained even though the
collision-victim defendant could not have sued the declaratory-judgment plaintiff-
2
(...continued)
see also Delaney v. Carter Oil. Co., 174 F.2d 314, 317 (10th Cir. 1949) (“One of
the highest offices of declaratory procedure is to remove uncertainty and
insecurity from legal relations, and thus clarify, quiet and stabilize them before
irretrievable acts have been undertaken.”).
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insurer without first obtaining a judgment against the insured,” as well as Aetna,
where the Court held that “jurisdiction obtained even though the very reason the
insurer sought declaratory relief was that the insured had given no indication that
he would file suit.” MedImmune, 127 S. Ct. at 774 n.11. And to the extent that
the Declaratory Judgment Act’s “case of actual controversy” formulation was
intended to reference Article III’s case-or-controversy requirement, discarding the
reasonable apprehension of suit test makes good sense: the existence of an
Article III case or controversy has never been decided by a judicial wager on the
chances the parties will (imminently or otherwise) sue one another; rather, it has
always focused on the underlying facts, assessing whether they suggest an extant
controversy between the parties or whether instead they merely call on us to
supply an advisory opinion about a hypothetical dispute.
In light of MedImmune’s direction, it seems to us clear that the test for
declaratory judgment jurisdiction we set forth in Cardtoons is no longer good
law. 3 To be sure, Sure Foot ND tries valiantly, and in three different ways, to
3
We note that, in addition to the reasonable apprehension of suit test,
Cardtoons also required declaratory plaintiffs to show that they had “produced or
[were] prepared to produce the product in question” in order to establish the
existence of a case or controversy. See Cardtoons, 95 F.3d at 965. Because that
requirement was linked to and closely intertwined with the reasonable
apprehension of suit test, we hold that both aspects of the two-part test in
Cardtoons have now been retired from their status as the touchstones of
declaratory judgment jurisdiction in intellectual property cases, though we
acknowledge that in some cases they may still prove relevant to determining
whether an Article III case or controversy exists under the analysis set out by the
(continued...)
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convince us otherwise. First, Sure Foot ND contends that MedImmune’s
discussion of the reasonable apprehension of imminent suit test is dicta, confined
to a footnote and inessential to the Court’s disposition in the case. We cannot
agree. Although the Court held in the body of its opinion that it was bound by the
holding of its decision in Altvater, in footnote 11 the MedImmune Court explained
further that, even if Altvater could be distinguished on its facts, the point
remained that the reasonable apprehension of imminent suit test applied by the
Federal Circuit does not comport with Maryland Casualty and Aetna. Alternative
rationales such as this, providing as they do further grounds for the Court’s
disposition, ordinarily cannot be written off as dicta. See United States v. Rohde,
159 F.3d 1298, 1302 & n.5 (10th Cir. 1998) (“[The] alternate holding [was] not
dicta. . . . Were this panel inclined to engage in the business of labeling as dicta
one of the two alternative grounds . . . , it would then confront defendant’s failure
to demonstrate why that label ought not adhere to the alternative which is
innocuous to her theory, rather than to the alternative which undermines it.”).
Moreover, even if the Court’s rejection of the reasonable apprehension test could
be plausibly characterized as dicta, our job as a federal appellate court is to
follow the Supreme Court’s directions, not pick and choose among them as if
ordering from a menu. See Gaylor v. United States, 74 F.3d 214, 217 (10th Cir.
3
(...continued)
Supreme Court in MedImmune.
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1996) (we are “bound by Supreme Court dicta almost as firmly as by the Court’s
outright holdings, particularly when the dicta is recent and not enfeebled by later
statements”) .
Second, Sure Foot ND argues that MedImmune at most invalidated only the
reasonable apprehension of suit test in patent cases, while Cardtoons, like this
case, involved a trademark issue. But Sure Foot ND offers no persuasive reason
why the interpretation of the Declaratory Judgment Act’s terms depends on the
nature of the intellectual property right at issue, and nothing in MedImmune’s
analysis suggests one. Indeed, two of the cases the MedImmune Court cited in the
process of rejecting the reasonable apprehension of suit test were insurance cases
– themselves well outside the intellectual property, much less patent, context. See
MedImmune, 127 S. Ct. at 774 n.11 (citing Maryland Cas., 312 U.S. at 273
(insurance case), and Aetna, 300 U.S. at 239 (same)). 4
Third, Sure Foot ND argues that MedImmune only invalidated the
reasonable apprehension of suit test for situations involving parties in a privity
4
Along similar lines, we note that the two district court cases cited by
Sure Foot ND as narrowly construing MedImmune’s holding in the way Sure Foot
ND proposes did so only because those courts were considering patent cases
presumably under the appellate jurisdiction of the Federal Circuit and that Circuit
had not yet published a decision overturning its prior decisions in light of
MedImmune. See Appellee’s Br. at 39-40 (citing Prasco, LLC v. Medicis Pharm.
Corp., 2007 WL 928669 (S.D. Ohio 2007); WS Packaging Group, Inc. v. Global
Commerce Group, LLC, 2007 WL 205559 (E.D. Wis. 2007)). The Federal
Circuit, of course, has now expressly overruled its prior decisions applying the
reasonable apprehension of suit test. See, e.g., Teva Pharm. USA, Inc. v. Novartis
Pharm. Corp., 482 F.3d 1330, 1336-39 (Fed. Cir. 2007).
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relationship, such as through a patent licensing agreement or some other contract.
See Appellee’s Br. at 45-48. But, again, we discern no such limiting principle in
the Court’s reasoning. The Court rejected the reasonable apprehension of suit test
on the basis that Article III is the touchstone of declaratory judgment
jurisdictional analysis and that, for a case or controversy to exist under Article
III, a party need not “bet the farm” by taking actions that could subject them to
substantial liability before obtaining a declaration of their rights. MedImmune,
127 S. Ct. at 775. That principle applies equally to privity and non-privity
settings. Indeed, the Court cited and relied on numerous cases in which plaintiffs
were allowed to pursue declaratory judgments against the government even
though the plaintiffs had not taken whatever steps that would have subjected them
to criminal or civil prosecution by the government, see id. at 772-73, and in none
of those cases did a privity relationship exist between the individual and the
government.
IV
Having concluded that MedImmune displaced the jurisdictional test we
announced in Cardtoons, the question remains what test replaces it, in light of
MedImmune, and whether Surefoot UT can meet that test in this case. Our
starting point naturally lies in MedImmune’s language. There, the Court reminded
us of the formulations it offered in Aetna and Maryland Casualty and suggested
they remain key to our jurisdictional inquiry in declaratory judgment actions.
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Pursuant to those decisions, a declaratory judgment suit must be “definite and
concrete, touching the legal relations of parties having adverse legal interests,”
must be “‘real and substantial’ and ‘admit of specific relief through a decree of a
conclusive character, as distinguished from an opinion advising what the law
would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.’” MedImmune, 127 S. Ct. at 771
(quoting Aetna, 300 U.S. at 240-41). Put differently, “the question in each case is
whether the facts alleged, under all the circumstances, show that there is a
substantial controversy, between parties having adverse legal interests, of
sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant the issuance of a declaratory
judgment.” Id. (quoting Maryland Cas., 312 U.S. at 273).
As the Court itself admitted, this test, stated in somewhat circular terms in
Maryland Casualty, does “not draw the brightest of lines between those
declaratory judgment actions that satisfy the case-or-controversy requirement and
those that do not.” Id. Still, we can hardly claim unfamiliarity with Article III
jurisdictional principles and their application, and reference to the facts and
circumstances of the Supreme Court’s decisions in the declaratory judgment field
suggest that the case before us is a comparatively easy one. In particular, this
case avoids the complication at the heart of MedImmune, where the existence of a
live controversy between the parties seemingly (at least in the eyes of the lower
courts) hinged on a future contingency that was entirely within the declaratory
plaintiff’s control – namely, whether to continue paying royalties. The
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MedImmune Court solved that complication by explaining that it was Genentech’s
repeated threat to enforce its claims should MedImmune stop paying royalties that
made the continuation of those payments effectively “involuntary [and]
coerc[ed],” and thus sufficed to negate the yet-unaccomplished future contingency
upon which a live controversy seemed to depend. 127 S. Ct. at 773.
By contrast, and happily, no such unfulfilled future contingency exists in
the suit before us. Surefoot UT asks the federal courts only to adjudicate the
rights of the parties based on historical facts and an already existing dispute over
a federal right. Sure Foot ND and Surefoot UT have employed the same (or at
least a very similar) mark in connection with their products. Sure Foot ND has,
through various communications with Surefoot UT, made clear its belief that
Surefoot UT’s use of the “Surefoot” mark already causes confusion in the market
and therefore currently infringes on Sure Foot ND’s trademark rights. See App.
at 76 (Sept. 2, 1998 letter) (stating that the “use of SURE-FOOT infringes on Sure
Foot’s rights . . . and creates a likelihood of confusion” and that “there were
several instances of actual confusion” at a recent trade show); App. at 78
(May 19, 1999 letter) (alleging “actual confusion in the marketplace”); App. at 83
(July 20, 1999 letter) (same). Sure Foot ND has even threatened to sue for
federal trademark infringement if Surefoot UT does not agree to change its name.
See supra Part I (citing letter dated July 20, 1999). And Sure Foot ND has sought
to impede Surefoot UT in its use of the “Surefoot” mark by commencing
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trademark cancellation and opposition proceedings in the TTAB. On the other
side of the suit, Surefoot UT denies that it is infringing on Sure Foot ND’s
trademark rights and alternatively alleges that Sure Foot ND’s trademarks are
invalid. Taking “all the circumstances” into account, as we must, see Maryland
Cas., 312 U.S. at 273, we cannot help but conclude that the parties before us have
a dispute that is definite and concrete that would “‘admit of specific relief
through a decree of a conclusive character, as distinguished from an opinion
advising what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.’” MedImmune,
127 S. Ct. at 771 (quoting Aetna, 300 U.S. at 240-41). Because “[i]t is the nature
of the controversy, not the method of its presentation or the particular party who
presents it, that is determinative,” Aetna, 300 U.S. at 244, we can confirm the
point by asking, counterfactually, whether we would have Article III jurisdiction
if faced with a straightforward infringement suit by Sure Foot ND against
Surefoot UT, rather than a declaratory judgment action in which the parties are
reversed. Given the evidence before us about the nature of the controversy
between the parties in this dispute, we have no doubt the answer would be yes.
In this respect, our case finds a home in the heartland of declaratory
judgment cases, closely resembling Aetna. In that case, an insured repeatedly
claimed coverage under certain insurance policies for a present disability, but
never brought suit against the insurer; meanwhile, the insurer, though believing
the insured was not entitled to any payment under the policies, felt compelled to
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maintain a sum of money in reserve to guard against the contingent liability posed
by the insured’s claims. See id. at 237-39. Seeking to dispel the cloud that the
insured’s claims placed over the insurer’s business affairs, and unwilling to wait
until the insured finally (if ever) filed suit, the insurer sought a declaration of the
insured’s rights in federal court. See id. The case presented no complicating
issues of future contingencies and the Supreme Court readily held that jurisdiction
existed, stressing that the “parties had taken adverse positions with respect to
their existing obligations,” and the dispute concerned “a present right” based
upon historical or “established facts.” See id. at 242. The very same may be said
of the case before us. Indeed, the only perceivable difference between Aetna and
our case, on the one hand, and conventional litigation, on the other, is the bare
formality that the parties are transposed. See id. at 244; Maryland Cas., 312 U.S.
at 273 (“It is immaterial that . . . , in the declaratory judgment suit, the positions
of the parties in the conventional suit are reversed; the inquiry is the same in
either case”). 5
5
The case before us also parallels a hypothetical offered by Wright and
Miller as a paradigmatic instance where declaratory judgment jurisdiction should
be held to exist:
If Jones Company does not sue [over its claim to a patent], but merely
threatens Smith, Smith will have a lively interest in determining whether
the patent is valid and whether his device is infringing. Prior to the
Declaratory Judgment Act, Smith’s action to resolve this question would
not, absent diversity, have been within federal jurisdiction.
Nevertheless, it now seems settled that Smith can sue for a declaratory
(continued...)
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Sure Foot ND objects to the conclusion we reach about the nature of the
parties’ controversy, arguing that it has not made any claims of infringement or
threats of suit since the 1998-99 period, and that the six years separating that
period from the filing of this suit dissipated whatever controversy may have
existed in the earlier period. But, despite the passage of time, Sure Foot ND has
never withdrawn its allegations of ongoing infringement (or its threats to sue).
And whether or not the passage of time could effectively eviscerate declaratory
judgment jurisdiction where it once existed or how much time is necessary to do
so, we need not decide. 6 Even if the parties’ controversy dissipated for a period,
it was surely rekindled when Sure Foot ND engaged in a new burst of activity
beginning in 2002, when it initiated what ultimately became five separate
5
(...continued)
judgment of invalidity or noninfringement. Again, the federal nature of
the claim appears on the complaint for a declaratory judgment and the
precise issue could have been litigated in federal court in a coercive
action brought by Jones Company, although in the suit actually brought
by Smith the parties are transposed and the matter may be determined at
an earlier stage than if Smith had been required to await a coercive
action by Jones Company.
10B Fed. Prac. & Proc. § 2767, at 650-51 (footnotes omitted).
6
We do note, however, that the Federal Circuit, which appears to have
addressed this issue more than any other court, has concluded that the mere
passage of time does not eviscerate the existence of an actual controversy unless a
declaratory defendant has, for example, made a covenant not to sue the
declaratory plaintiff, or where the circumstances of the parties have significantly
changed, perhaps such as by the withdrawal of one side’s product from the
marketplace – neither of which have occurred in this case. See, e.g., Fina
Research, S.A. v. Baroid Ltd., 141 F.3d 1479, 1484 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
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cancellation and opposition proceedings in the TTAB against Surefoot UT’s
trademark applications, signaling its belief that Surefoot UT continues to infringe
its trademark.
To this, Sure Foot ND replies that TTAB opposition proceedings should be
entirely irrelevant when assessing whether an actual controversy exists, and cites
to us cases that purportedly support such a conclusion. As it happens, however,
most of the cases Sure Foot ND cites stand only for the very modest proposition
that, because a party may oppose a trademark registration for reasons having
nothing to do with any infringement dispute between the trademark applicant and
opponent, courts should not take a TTAB opposition filing, automatically and by
itself, to be conclusive evidence of the existence of a live infringement dispute.
See, e.g., Merrick v. Sharp & Dohme, 185 F.2d 713, 716-17 (7th Cir. 1950). 7
Neither can Sure Foot ND reasonably dispute the fact that TTAB proceedings
sometimes do involve express assertions of infringement, and other times are at
least a symptom indicative of, or even a proxy fight for, an underlying
infringement dispute. Most importantly of all, were we to hold TTAB opposition
filings as a class irrelevant to Article III analysis, we would disregard the
7
Certain other cases on which Sure Foot ND relies hold that a TTAB
opposition does not give rise to jurisdiction because it fails to create a reasonable
apprehension of suit. See, e.g., Kosmeo Cosmetics Inc. v. Lancome Parfums et
Beaute & Cie., 44 U.S.P.Q.2d 1472, 1474 (E.D. Tex. 1996) (“An opposition
proceeding cannot serve as the basis for reasonable apprehension of suit.”). After
MedImmune, however, we now know that this asks the wrong question.
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Supreme Court’s direction that, in assessing whether a live controversy exists
between the parties, we must both take into account “all the circumstances”
before us, MedImmune, 127 S. Ct. at 771 (quoting Maryland Cas., 312 U.S. at
273), and be sensitive to the fact that whether jurisdiction exists is often a
question of “degree,” Maryland Cas. 312 U.S. at 273; see also 10B Fed. Prac. &
Proc. § 2757, at 469 (“Although the massive generalities” of earlier cases are
often quoted, “[l]ater cases have recognized, as Justice Murphy did [in Maryland
Casualty], that whether the controversy is of sufficient immediacy and reality to
permit a declaratory judgment is a question of degree.”).
Of course, to say TTAB proceedings are not categorically irrelevant does
not answer the question what weight they deserve. One might worry, for
example, whether the filing of a single TTAB opposition without a hint of an
infringement claim should hold much sway in a jurisdictional analysis. One
might also be concerned about what assuming jurisdiction in cases where ongoing
TTAB proceedings exist might mean as a practical matter; at least one
commentator has suggested that the “real policy” undergirding the case law cited
by Sure Foot ND for disregarding the existence of TTAB proceedings has nothing
to do with Article III but with a more practical concern “not to short-circuit the
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administrative tribunal that has already achieved jurisdiction over the issues”
separating the parties. 6 McCarthy on Trademarks 32:52. 8
In response to these concerns, we underscore that we have no need today to
pass on what MedImmune means to a case where the only indicia of a live
infringement controversy is the existence of a single TTAB opposition
proceeding, or perhaps a single cease-and-desist letter, see supra note 8. In this
case, we have five separate TTAB oppositions combined with an extensive history
of interactions between the parties in which the declaratory defendant expressly
and repeatedly suggested historical and existing infringing activity by the
declaratory plaintiff. It is only this combination that we pass upon today and
which we hold suffices to demonstrate the existence of Article III jurisdiction.
Neither are we alone in reaching such a conclusion; many other courts before us
have considered TTAB oppositions in combination with threats of litigation
sufficient under certain circumstances to suggest a live infringement controversy
8
Along related lines, other commentators have expressed the concern that
one of MedImmune’s effects might be that a single cease-and-desist letter, if not
carefully drafted to avoid making threats of litigation, may more frequently give
rise to declaratory judgment jurisdiction. See, e.g., Michael Weinstein, The Fate
of the Federal Circuit’s “Reasonable Apprehension” Standard in Patent Suits for
Declaratory Judgment Following MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 76 U. Cin.
L. Rev. 681, 704-06 (2008); cf. D. Peter Harvey & Seth I. Appel, The Declaratory
Judgment Response to a Cease and Desist Letter: “First-to-File” or “Procedural
Fencing”, 96 Trademark Rep. 639 (2006).
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and thus establish Article III jurisdiction. 9 To the extent one might worry that
allowing declaratory litigation might supersede or even supplant already-ongoing
administrative TTAB proceedings, or that it might impede efforts by parties to
secure an informal resolution through correspondence and personal negotiation,
we note that there exists a more appropriate venue for addressing such concerns:
Before assuming declaratory judgment jurisdiction, a district court must not only
consider its Article III authority to hear the case, it is also free to consider a range
of other discretionary factors in assessing whether or not to exercise jurisdiction
under the Act. See supra Part II; infra Part V. At the end of the day, however,
such discretionary considerations should not be confused with, or included in, the
very different and non-discretionary assessment whether the Article III case-or-
controversy requirement has been satisfied.
9
See, e.g., Chesebrough-Pond’s, Inc. v. Faberge, Inc., 666 F.2d 393, 396-
97 (9th Cir. 1982) (finding an actual controversy where notice of opposition was
filed in conjunction with a letter threatening an opposition filing and claiming a
“likelihood of confusion”); HSI IP v. Champion Window Mfg. & Supply Co., 510
F. Supp. 2d 948, 956 (M.D. Fla. 2007) (“While [Defendant] is correct that the
filing of a TTAB action is not, on its own, sufficient to create an actual
controversy, such is not the issue in this case where it is undisputed that in
addition to filing an opposition in the TTAB proceedings, [Defendant] sent
correspondence to [Plaintiff] suggesting it would sue if its [infringement]
concerns ‘could not be settled on an amicable basis.’”); Jeffrey Banks, LTD v. Jos.
A Bank Clothiers, Inc., 619 F. Supp. 998, 1002 (D. Md. 1985) (finding an actual
controversy where prior claims of infringement and threats of litigation had cast a
“threatening shadow” that was “made more ominous by the notice of
opposition.”).
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V
Though we hold that the district court has jurisdiction to entertain this case,
the question remains whether, as a discretionary matter, it should do so. As we
noted above, see supra Part II, the Declaratory Judgment Act does not demand
that a district court decide every declaratory suit brought to it even where the
court has the power to do so. Instead, once the court is satisfied that Article III’s
jurisdictional requirements are met, it must then consider a number of factors,
including those previously set out by this court in Mhoon, to determine whether
the suit warrants the district court’s attention. These factors include:
[1] whether a declaratory action would settle the controversy; [2]
whether it would serve a useful purpose in clarifying the legal relations
at issue; [3] whether the declaratory remedy is being used merely for
the purpose of “procedural fencing” or “to provide an arena for a race
to res judicata ”; [4] whether use of a declaratory action would increase
friction between our federal and state courts and improperly encroach
upon state jurisdiction; and [5] whether there is an alternative remedy
which is better or more effective.
Mhoon, 31 F.3d at 983.
In this case, the district court never reached the issue whether it should, as
a matter of statutory discretion, consider Surefoot UT’s request for declaratory
relief because it held that, by failing to present a case or controversy, the suit
could not be entertained at all. Now, of course, the discretionary question must
be faced and answered. Rather than tackling it ourselves, we believe the
appropriate course is to afford the district court the opportunity to evaluate it in
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the first instance. In this vein, we are guided again by MedImmune where, after
holding that Article III jurisdiction existed, the Court explained that “it would be
imprudent for us to decide whether the District Court should, or must, decline to
issue the requested declaratory relief,” and so held that “[w]e leave the equitable,
prudential, and policy arguments in favor of such a discretionary dismissal for the
lower courts’ consideration on remand.” 127 S. Ct. at 776-77. In doing so, the
Court echoed its own previous direction in Wilton v. Seven Falls Co., 515 U.S.
277, 289 (1995), where it said that “[w]e believe it more consistent with the
statute to vest district courts with discretion in the first instance.” So we say
here, and further stress that we express no views on what the proper outcome of
the district court’s analysis should be.
* * *
While the district court faithfully applied our precedent, since the time it
issued its decision the Supreme Court has undone that precedent. Applying the
Court’s new direction in MedImmune, we conclude that Article III jurisdiction
exists over this controversy and so must reverse the district court’s contrary
judgment. At the same time, acknowledging that discretionary considerations
associated with Surefoot UT’s invocation of the Declaratory Judgment Act remain
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to be addressed, we remand this matter for further proceedings not inconsistent
with this opinion. 10
Reversed and remanded.
10
We deem moot Sure Foot ND’s motion to strike certain portions of
Surefoot UT’s Reply Brief that cited post-appeal communications between the
parties as evidence of the likelihood of suit. The contested portion of Surefoot
UT’s filings played no role in our disposition of this matter.
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