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Interesting Delay: Prejudgment Interest Accrues Despite Unreasonable Delay

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upheld a decision on enhanced damages and prejudgment interest, concluding that the district court correctly applied the appropriate standard for enhanced damages in accordance with established precedent. Halo Electronics, Inc. v. Pulse Electronics, Inc., Case Nos. 23-1772; -1966 (Fed. Cir. Feb. 28, 2025) (Prost, Bryson, Reyna, JJ.) (nonprecedential).

In 2013, following a jury verdict in favor of Halo, the district court entered a $1.5 million verdict against Pulse for willful infringement but denied Halo enhanced damages. Halo appealed and, in 2016, engendered a new enhanced damages standard from the Supreme Court. In 2015, while the case was pending before the Supreme Court, Halo filed for an award of supplemental damages for direct infringement between 2012 and 2013, and prejudgment and post-judgment interest on the initial $1.5 million judgment and on the supplemental damages. The district court awarded supplemental damages and prejudgment and post-judgment interest.

In 2017, the district court determined that Halo was not entitled to enhanced damages or attorneys’ fees under the Supreme Court’s new standard. Although the parties still disagreed on which method to use for prejudgment interest calculation – and briefed their positions accordingly – the district court mistakenly ordered the clerk to enter a final judgment and close the case. After the Supreme Court decided WesternGeco v. ION Geophysical in 2018, Halo (in 2020) filed a motion seeking prejudgment interest and a new damages trial, arguing that the district court had not made a final ruling on the issue of prejudgment interest and that WesternGeco was intervening case law that permitted it to seek additional damages for Pulse’s activities outside the United States.

Halo argued that because the final order closing the case ignored an outstanding issue (prejudgment interest), the case was merely administratively closed. Although Pulse argued that the resurrected case should remain closed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b), the district court awarded limited prejudgment interest in March 2023. The district court rejected Halo’s request for a new trial regarding additional foreign damages under WesternGeco.

Halo appealed, and Pulse counter appealed. Halo raised two main arguments:

  • Enhanced damages were appropriate because of the jury’s finding of willfulness.
  • The district court should have allowed a limited trial on the issue of foreign infringement.

Pulse argued that FRCP 41(b) should have barred any prejudgment interest because Halo did not address the court’s oversight until 2020.

The Federal Circuit rejected both of Halo’s arguments. It explained that a jury’s finding of willfulness is “but one factor” in an enhanced damages determination under the Supreme Court’s highly discretionary Halo test. Willful infringement does not require the more egregious intent that gives rise to enhanced damages, nor does it merge with enhanced damages analyses procedurally – willfulness is a jury issue, while enhanced damages is an issue for the court.

Addressing Pulse’s argument, the Federal Circuit found no abuse of discretion in either the district court’s refusal of a new trial [...]

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A Lesson in Laches: You Waited Too Long to Start Your Kar

After the district court, on remand, held that laches did not bar relief, the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit again determined that the district court abused its discretion by not properly applying the presumption in favor of laches and issued an order to vacate and remand with instructions to dismiss a charity’s trademark infringement claims with prejudice. Kars 4 Kids Inc. v. America Can!, Case Nos. 23-1273; -1281 (3rd Cir. Apr. 17, 2024) (Bibas, Porter, Fisher, JJ.)

Kars 4 Kids and America Can! Cars for Kids are charities that sell donated vehicles to fund children’s education programs and have been engaged in a trademark dispute since 2003. Both parties have alleged federal and state trademark infringement, unfair competition and trademark dilution over their respective KARS 4 KIDS and CARS FOR KIDS trademarks. The parties were last before the Third Circuit in 2021, when the Court held that America Can was first to use its CARS FOR KIDS trademark in Texas, and Kars 4 Kids waived any challenge to the validity of America Can’s marks. In that 2021 decision, the Third Circuit also vacated the district court judgment in part and remanded the case for the district court to reexamine its laches and disgorgement conclusions, which had been decided in favor of America Can.

The Lanham Act does not contain a statute of limitations. Instead, it subjects all claims to the principles of equity. To determine whether laches bars a claim, a court considers two elements: whether the plaintiff inexcusably delayed in bringing suit, and whether the defendant was prejudiced as a result of the delay. With respect to the burden of proof for the laches claim at issue, America Can and Kars 4 Kids agreed that their Lanham Act claims were properly analogous to New Jersey’s six-year fraud statute. Therefore, because America Can first discovered the Kars 4 Kids trademark in Texas in 2003 and did not bring counterclaims until 2015, America Can was subject to a presumption that its claims were barred by laches unless it was able to prove both that its delay in filing suit was excusable and that it did not prejudice Kars 4 Kids.

On the issue of delay, the Third Circuit found that the district court erred because it did not find that America Can met its burden of establishing that its delay in bringing suit was excusable and that a reasonable person in its shoes would have waited to file suit. Instead, the district court improperly placed the burden on Kars 4 Kids to establish whether its advertisements in Texas were viewed by a sufficient number of Texans so as to put America Can on notice. As the Third Circuit explained, this was error. The district court should have held America Can to the burden of persuasion to show that it was not sufficiently aware of Kars 4 Kids’s use of its mark in Texas and to show what it did to identify and stop any potentially [...]

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