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Osmose, Inc. v. Viance, LLC, 09-15563 (2010)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit Number: 09-15563 Visitors: 61
Filed: Jul. 30, 2010
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: [PUBLISH] IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT _ FILED U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT No. 09-15563 JULY 30, 2010 _ JOHN LEY CLERK D. C. Docket No. 09-00023-CV-JTC-3 OSMOSE, INC., Plaintiff- Counter Defendant- Appellee, TIMBER PRODUCTS INSPECTION, INC., Plaintiff, versus VIANCE, LLC, ROCKWOOD HOLDINGS, INC., STEPHEN B. AINSCOUGH, a.k.a. Steve Ainscough, SEIFOLLAH E. GHASEMI, a.k.a. Seifi Ghasemi, CHRISTOPHER R. SHADDAY, a.k.a. Chris Shadday, Defendants-Counter- C
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                                                            [PUBLISH]


            IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                  FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                   ________________________               FILED
                                                U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
                                                  ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                         No. 09-15563                 JULY 30, 2010
                   ________________________            JOHN LEY
                                                         CLERK
                D. C. Docket No. 09-00023-CV-JTC-3

OSMOSE, INC.,


                                                              Plaintiff-
                                                     Counter Defendant-
                                                              Appellee,

TIMBER PRODUCTS INSPECTION, INC.,

                                                               Plaintiff,

                             versus

VIANCE, LLC,
ROCKWOOD HOLDINGS, INC.,
STEPHEN B. AINSCOUGH,
a.k.a. Steve Ainscough,
SEIFOLLAH E. GHASEMI,
a.k.a. Seifi Ghasemi,
CHRISTOPHER R. SHADDAY,
a.k.a. Chris Shadday,

                                                  Defendants-Counter-
                                                 Claimants-Appellants,

                             versus
PAUL GOYDAN,

                                                                          Cross-Defendant-
                                                                         Counter-Defendant,

STEPHEN C. REEDER, et al.,

                                                                       Counter-Defendants.


                              ________________________

                      Appeal from the United States District Court
                         for the Northern District of Georgia
                           _________________________

                                       (July 30, 2010)

Before BLACK, HULL and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:

       This appeal concerns a preliminary injunction entered in a false advertising

case under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Viance, LLC

(“Viance”) released several advertising statements expressing serious safety

concerns regarding the use of wood treated with Osmose, Inc.’s (“Osmose”)

copper-based wood preservative called MCQ.1 In response to these



       1
                Osmose and Viance both named several officers and employees of the other as
defendants or counter-defendants in their respective claims and counterclaims. We will refer to
the parties as Osmose and Viance.

                                               2
advertisements, Osmose brought this suit against Viance, alleging that the

advertisements constituted false advertising in violation of § 43(a) of the Lanham

Act and various state laws because certain studies performed by Viance did not

support the broad safety concerns raised in the advertisements. Viance responded

in kind via counterclaims, alleging that Osmose had engaged in false advertising

of its own by releasing advertisements that inaccurately bolstered its MCQ

product. Each side moved for a preliminary injunction. After a lengthy hearing,

the district court granted Osmose’s motion for a preliminary injunction against

Viance, but denied Viance’s motion for a preliminary injunction against Osmose.

Viance appeals only the entry of injunctive relief against it. After careful review,

we affirm in part, vacate one provision of the injunction and remand the balance

with instruction that it be modified to remove any First Amendment concerns.

                                I. BACKGROUND

      Viance and Osmose are competitors in the wood preservative market. Each

develops, manufactures, and sells preservatives used to protect wood against rot,

decay, and insect attack. Both companies sell copper-based wood preservatives,

but the products differ in how the copper is introduced in the wood. Viance

manufactures and sells a preservative called ACQ, which stands for alkaline

copper quaternary. In ACQ, copper is solubilized in a solution. Throughout the

                                          3
early part of this decade, ACQ was the dominant product in the market. At that

time, Osmose used the technology in its own products under a license from

Viance.

      In the early 2000s, Osmose also began to develop a new technology that

used micronized copper suspended in solution, instead of solubilized copper as

used in ACQ. Osmose trademarked this technology and markets it as MicroPro.

Osmose used the MicroPro technology to create a wood preservative to compete

with ACQ. It called this new preservative MCQ, which stands for micronized

copper quaternary. Osmose began marketing its MCQ product in early 2006.

Osmose has obtained certification from the ICC Evaluation Service – an

association that issues evaluation reports for building products and material to

determine whether they comply with model building codes – for its MCQ product,

but MCQ has not been certified by the America Wood Protection Association

(AWPA). Viance’s ACQ is approved by both organizations. The development of

MCQ has eaten into ACQ’s share of the wood preservative market.

      After the introduction of MCQ into the market, Viance began testing the

efficacy of MCQ.

      A. Viance’s Testing

             1. SEM Testing

                                         4
      Viance’s first step was to purchase commercially available MCQ-treated

wood and send it to a lab to be analyzed using a scanning electron microscope

(SEM). Viance theorized that, unlike the soluble copper ions found in ACQ, the

suspended micronized copper particles found in MCQ might not penetrate the

wood in sufficient quantities to provide the necessary protection against

microorganisms that produce soft rot. It sought to verify this concern through

SEM testing. According to Viance, the SEM results verified its doubts because

the studies showed insufficient penetration of copper into the cell walls and a

concentration of copper in the cell walls of MCQ-treated wood that was

significantly lower than ACQ-treated wood. Dr. Kevin Archer of Viance

presented the findings at the 2007 International Research Group on Wood

Protection conference. In his presentation, Dr. Archer concluded that the copper

concentration in the cell walls of MCQ-treated wood was significantly lower than

in wood treated with ACQ but that the long term performance implications in

ground contact were unknown. Dr. Archer did not produce a paper describing the

methods and results of the SEM tests in conjunction with his presentation.

             2. Field Stake Testing

      Viance then undertook field stake tests on MCQ-treated wood. Field stake

tests are an accepted method of testing the effectiveness of a wood preservative.

                                         5
In the tests, stakes are treated with preservative and placed in the soil. The stakes

are then evaluated periodically for decay. Stakes treated with the preservative

being tested are often measured against untreated stakes and stakes treated with a

proven preservative to evaluate the tested preservative’s relative performance.

The tests performed by Viance began in April and May of 2007 in Hilo, Hawaii,

and Tanegashima, Japan. For these particular tests, Viance bought commercially

available square posts treated with either ACQ or MCQ and cut stakes from the

corners of each.2 Viance hired Dr. Darrel Nicholas, a wood scientist at Mississippi

State University, to inspect and rate the stakes. He concluded that MCQ stakes

were “performing poorly” and that “it is apparent that the MCQ formulation is not

performing in ground contact as would be expected for a commercial wood

preservative.” He qualified his findings, however, by noting that additional data

would be required to confirm his concern about the performance of MCQ-treated

products. Dr. Nicholas has not inspected the stakes since his initial inspection.

              3. In-Service Testing


       2
                 By using this technique, two sides of each stake were treated and two untreated.
The district court noted that Viance did not field coat the untreated sides of the stakes.
                 Osmose argues that Viance did not follow the AWPA’s E7 protocol for field stake
tests because Viance used pre-treated wood and cut non-standard stake sizes. Viance does not
dispute that it did not strictly follow the E7 protocol. It argues that any deviations were
immaterial because its advertisements do not state that it used the E7 protocol and because the
deviations from the protocol do not undermine the results of the test.

                                               6
       Viance then conducted an in-service survey of MCQ-treated wood. Viance

hired a private investigation firm to search central Florida for in-use MCQ-treated

posts showing signs of decay. In July 2008, that firm prepared a report noting that

it had visited eighteen sites and interviewed numerous retailers and builders and

that none had experienced or heard of any problems regarding premature decay in

MCQ-treated products.

       Viance continued to search. In November 2008, it discovered posts

allegedly showing premature decay in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Viance hired

Timber Products Inspection, Inc. (“Timber Products”), an independent company

that inspects and tests wood products, to test the eleven posts removed from the

Baton Rouge site. Viance chose the posts to extract. Timber Products rated the

posts on the AWPA’s E7 scale, a 10 point scale of soundness in which 10

represents sound wood and 0 represents total failure.3 On November 14, 2008,

Timber Products issued a report (“November 2008 TP Report”) in which it rated


       3
                The score is based on a subjective determination of the degree of decay of the
wood. The rating scale is as follows: 10 - Sound, no sign or evidence of decay, wood softening
or discoloration caused by microorganism attack; 9.5 - Trace-suspect, some areas of discoloration
and/or softening associated with superficial microorganism attack; 9 - Slight attack, decay and
wood softening is present, up to 3% of the cross sectional area is affected; 8 - Moderate attack,
similar to 9 but more extensive attack with 3-10% of cross sectional area affected; 7 -
Moderate/severe attack, sample has between 10-30% of cross sectional area decayed; 6 - Severe
attack, sample has between 30-50% of cross sectional area decayed; 4 - Very severe attack,
sample has between 50-75% of cross-sectional area decayed; 0 - Failure, sample has functionally
failed.

                                               7
all eleven MCQ posts removed from the Louisiana site as a 9 or 9.5 on the scale.

Timber Products also noted that its report should not be considered as acceptance

or rejection for the grade, treatment or physical quality of the tested material.

      Sometime in late 2008 or early 2009, Viance discovered posts allegedly

showing signs of premature decay in Alpharetta, Georgia. The posts were

allegedly installed in September or October of 2007. Viance selected forty-five

posts and had Timber Products assign them a visual rating. Timber Products also

took fourteen of the forty-five posts and subjected them to a more thorough

investigation. On January 21, 2009, Timber Products released another report

summarizing its findings (“January 2009 TP Report”). Of the forty-five posts

visually inspected, twenty-six posts rated a 10, eleven rated a 9.5, five rated a 9,

two rated an 8, and one rated a 7. Of the fourteen posts subjected to further

examination, four posts rated a 10, five posts rated a 9.5, two posts rated a 9, two

posts rated an 8, and one post rated a 7. The January 2009 TP Report contained

the same disclaimer that the report should not be considered as acceptance or

rejection for the grade, treatment or physical quality of the tested material.

      Over the course of its search, Viance estimates that it inspected roughly 800

posts, two-thirds of which were treated with MCQ. Thus, they investigated

roughly 530 MCQ-treated posts.

                                           8
      B. Viance’s Advertisements

      After receiving the Timber Products Reports, Viance issued two press

releases titled: “Decaying 4x4 Posts Confirm Performance Concerns with

Micronized Copper Wood Preservatives” and “Hidden Danger in Your Backyard.”

The press releases contained various statements related to both its testing and

safety concerns regarding the use of MCQ-treated wood. For instance, one release

begins by stating: “Viance has uncovered evidence that micronized copper

quaternary (MCQ™) preservative has failed to prevent decay of 4x4 wood posts at

several subdivisions in the southeastern United States.” Another release begins:

“Findings on 4x4 posts at residential locations reveal dramatic evidence that wood

treated with micronized copper preservative (MCQ™) is decaying more rapidly

than anticipated.” The releases go on to reference Timber Products’ role in the

testing. The releases also contain statements raising concerns about the safety of

MCQ-treated posts. For instance, the first states: “The decay, verified by Timber

Products Inspection (TPI), is considered unacceptable for providing long-term

structural integrity for residential and commercial uses” and “ . . . the severity of

the decay on these micronized copper-treated posts raises alarming consumer

safety concerns about structures built using micronized copper treated wood.” The

second states: “These decay findings raise serious concerns about the structural

                                           9
integrity and safety of outdoor structures, such as decks and fencing, built with

micronized copper preservative within the last three years.” Viance also sent an

email with the subject line “Is a Treated Wood Lawsuit in Your Future?”

containing the statement: “the safety of your customers and clients is at stake if

your projects’ support structures are being built with Micronized treated wood that

cannot adequately resist decay.”

      C. Response to Viance’s Advertisements

      Viance’s advertisements prompted responses from multiple parties. Osmose

published its own press release criticizing Viance’s studies. Timber Products also

issued a press release clarifying its role in the Viance study and the limitations of

its report. Timber Products noted: (1) that it tested only the posts that Viance

directed it to test and that it did not identify a random sampling for testing, (2) that

there was a subjective element in rating the posts, (3) that no comparable study

existed for other preservatives, (4) that it was an independent agency retained by

Viance and did not advocate for any particular preservative, and (5) that it hoped

the information in its clarification would preclude interested parties from using the

Report to make generalizations that may not be supported by the Report. A group

of members of the pressure-treated lumber community also banded together and

issued a release and a letter to Viance asking it to abandon its campaign.

                                           10
      D. Lawsuit

      On March 3, 2009, Osmose filed a complaint against Viance and several of

its officers and employees alleging false advertising under § 43(a) of the Lanham

Act and various related false advertising claims under Georgia law. In addition to

monetary damages, Osmose sought preliminary and permanent injunctive relief

enjoining Viance from making false or misleading statements critical of MicroPro

technology, MCQ, or other micronized copper wood preservative systems. At that

time, Osmose also sought a temporary restraining order (“TRO”). The district

court granted the motion for the TRO on March 20, 2009.

      On April 3, 2009, Viance filed both an answer denying the allegations of the

complaint and counterclaims against Osmose and several of its officers and

employees asserting false advertising claims under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act and

various related claims under Georgia law. Viance sought money damages and

preliminary and permanent injunctive relief enjoining Osmose from making false

or misleading statements to bolster its micronized copper products. On April 14,

2009, Viance also filed a motion for a TRO. The district court denied that motion

on April 21, 2009.

      The district court held a hearing on both parties’ motions for a preliminary

injunction from June 24, 2009, to July 2, 2009. In an Order issued on September

                                        11
29, 2009, the district court granted Osmose’s motion for a preliminary injunction

and denied Viance’s motion for the same. The injunction contains the following

specific provisions:

      1. Defendants may publish the results of the in-service survey
      performed by Viance and the field stake tests conducted in Hawaii
      and Japan.

      2. Defendants are enjoined, however, from claiming or implying that
      those studies demonstrate that structures built using micronized
      copper-treated wood are unsafe, pose a threat to consumers, or are
      structurally unsound.

      3. Defendants are enjoined from claiming or implying that the studies
      demonstrate that micronized copper preservatives are defective in
      general or are less effective than solubalized copper preservatives.

      4. Defendants may not draw their own conclusions about what the
      studies indicate and then attribute those conclusions to the studies
      themselves unless the data in the studies clearly support such
      conclusions. Any conclusions attributed to the studies must be stated
      in the studies themselves or must be readily apparent from the data
      contained in the studies.

      5. Defendants may not indicate or imply that any conclusions or
      opinions stated in their advertisements concerning the effectiveness
      of micronized copper preservatives or the safety of structures built
      with micronized copper-treated wood are verified or endorsed by
      Timber Products.

      6. Defendants may not claim or imply that Osmose’s MicroPro
      process was not certified as EPP by SCS, or that SCS did not consider
      life cycle analysis including efficacy analysis in awarding EPP
      certification to Osmose’s MicroPro process.



                                        12
Viance timely appealed the preliminary injunction entered against it.4

                               II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       A district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction is reviewed for an abuse

of discretion. N. Am. Med. Corp. v. Axiom Worldwide, Inc., 
522 F.3d 1211
, 1216

(11th Cir. 2008). The district court’s findings of fact are reviewed under a clearly

erroneous standard. 
Id. A finding
of fact is clearly erroneous only when

“although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire

evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been

committed.” 
Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted). The district court’s

conclusions of law are reviewed de novo, “understanding that application of an

improper legal standard . . . is never within a district court’s discretion.” 
Id. (internal quotation
marks and brackets omitted).

                                      III. DISCUSSION

       “[A] district court may grant a preliminary injunction only if the movant

establishes the following: (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of

the underlying case, (2) the movant will suffer irreparable harm in the absence of

an injunction, (3) the harm suffered by the movant in the absence of an injunction



       4
               Viance does not appeal the district court’s decision to deny its own motion for a
preliminary injunction.

                                                13
would exceed the harm suffered by the opposing party if the injunction issued, and

(4) an injunction would not disserve the public interest.” 
Id. at 1217
(internal

quotation marks omitted). Viance argues that the district court erred in several

respects. First, Viance argues the district court clearly erred in concluding that

Osmose had demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success because its

advertisements were not literally false. Second, Viance argues that the district

court abused its discretion by entering injunctive relief against it on a point on

which it had requested injunctive relief against Osmose. Third, Viance argues that

the district court abused its discretion in concluding that the balance of the

preliminary injunction factors weighed in favor of granting injunctive relief.

Finally, Viance argues that the terms of the preliminary injunction violate the First

Amendment because it is not restricted to commercial advertising or promotional

statements.5

       A. Likelihood of Success

       Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act provides, in relevant part, as follows:




       5
                 Of course, we address only the particular arguments raised on appeal by Viance,
and we express no opinion on other arguments which might have been asserted. For example, in
rebuttal at oral argument, Viance argued for the first time that the language of the injunction was
overbroad in that it enjoined not only false claims, but also implications (which it argued might
be ambiguous and thus not literally false but merely misleading). We decline to entertain that
belated argument.

                                                14
      (1) Any person who, on or in connection with any goods or services,
      or any container for goods, uses in commerce any word, term, name,
      symbol, or device, or any combination thereof, or any false
      designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, or false
      or misleading representation of fact, which-

      ...

      (B) in commercial advertising or promotion, misrepresents the nature,
      characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin of his or her or another
      person’s goods, services, or commercial activities,

      shall be liable in a civil action by any person who believes that he or
      she is or is likely to be damaged by such act.

15 U.S.C. § 1125(a).

      In order to establish the requisite likelihood of success on a false advertising

claim, the movant must establish that: “(1) the ads of the opposing party were false

or misleading, (2) the ads deceived, or had the capacity to deceive, consumers, (3)

the deception had a material effect on purchasing decisions, (4) the misrepresented

product or service affects interstate commerce, and (5) the movant has been–or is

likely to be–injured as a result of the false advertising.” Axiom 
Worldwide, 522 F.3d at 1224
(internal quotation marks omitted).

             1. Literal Falsity of Statements Regarding MCQ

      The first element of a false advertising claim is “satisfied if the challenged

advertisement is literally false, or if the challenged advertisement is literally true,



                                           15
but misleading.” Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc. v. 1-800 Contacts, Inc.,

299 F.3d 1242
, 1247 (11th Cir. 2002). When determining whether an

advertisement is literally false or misleading, courts “must analyze the message

conveyed in full context,” and “must view the face of the statement in its entirety .

. . .” 
Id. at 1248
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The distinction

between literally false and merely misleading statements is often a “fine line.”

Axiom 
Worldwide, 522 F.3d at 1225
. The ambiguity of the statement at issue, or

the lack thereof, is significant. Statements that have an unambiguous meaning,

either facially or considered in context, may be classified as literally false. United

Indus. Corp. v. Clorox Co., 
140 F.3d 1175
, 1180 (8th Cir. 1996). As the meaning

of a statement becomes less clear, however, and it becomes susceptible to multiple

meanings, the statement is more likely to be merely misleading. Time Warner

Cable, Inc. v. DIRECTV, Inc., 
497 F.3d 144
, 158 (2d Cir. 2007) (“[I]f the

language or graphic is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation, the

advertisement cannot be literally false.”); see also 
Clorox, 140 F.3d at 180
(stating

that as claims become more attenuated or suggestive they are less susceptible to a

literally false characterization). Literal falsity is a finding of fact reviewed for

clear error. Axiom 
Worldwide, 522 F.3d at 1225
n.12.

             a. Meaning of the Statements

                                           16
       The district court construed the various statements in the advertisements as

“tests prove” or “establishment” claims, placing the burden on Osmose to

demonstrate that Viance’s tests do not establish the proposition for which they are

cited. In 1-800 Contacts, we explained that the “plaintiff’s burden in proving an

advertisement to be literally false should depend on whether the defendant’s

advertisement cites consumer 
testing.” 299 F.3d at 1248
(citing C.B. Fleet Co. v.

SmithKline Beecham Consumer Healthcare L.P., 
131 F.3d 430
, 435 (4th Cir.

1997); Rhone-Poulenc Rorer Pharms. Inc. v. Marion Merrell Dow, Inc., 
93 F.3d 511
, 514-15 (8th Cir. 1996); Castrol, Inc. v. Quaker State Corp., 
977 F.2d 57
, 62

(2d Cir. 1992)).6 Advertising that cites such testing is classified as an

“establishment” claim. 
Id. In order
to prove the literal falsity of such a claim, the




       6
                 Although we referenced consumer testing specifically in 1-800 Contacts, the cases
we cited make clear that a statement citing a scientific or validating test constitutes a “tests
prove” or “establishment” claim. See C.B. 
Fleet, 131 F.3d at 435
(“When an advertising claim of
favorable fact either expressly or impliedly asserts that the fact is testor study-validated, the fact
of the validation becomes an integral and critical part of the claim. Such a claim may therefore be
proven literally false by showing only that the test asserted to validate it did not in fact do so.”);
Rhone-Poulenc, 93 F.3d at 514-15
(holding that “where defendant has hyped the claim of
superiority by attributing it to the results of scientific testing, plaintiff must prove only that the
tests [relied upon] were not sufficiently reliable to permit one to conclude with reasonable
certainty that they established the proposition for which they were cited” (alteration in original)
(internal quotation marks omitted)); Quaker 
State, 977 F.2d at 63
(holding that when
“defendant’s ad explicitly or implicitly represents that tests or studies prove its product superior,
plaintiff satisfies its burden by showing that the tests did not establish the proposition for which
they were cited”).

                                                 17
plaintiff must prove only that the tests did not establish the proposition for which

they were cited. 
Id. In concluding
that Viance’s advertising claims were “tests prove” or

“establishment” claims, the district court specifically cited the following

statements from the press releases:

      [T]he severity of the decay on these micronized copper-treated posts
      raises alarming consumer safety concerns about structures built using
      micronized copper treated wood. (Def. Ex. 13.)

      Viance . . . is concerned that decay occurring this early in the service
      life of wood poses a substantial safety hazard to consumers with
      structures built from micronized copper-treatedwood. (Id. at 2.)

      These findings provide evidence that micronized copper-treated wood
      is prone to premature decay, and Viance believes that its continued
      use raises serious consumer safety concerns. (Id.)

      These decay findings raise serious concerns about the structural
      integrity and safety of outdoor structures, such as decks and fencing,
      built with micronized copper preservatives within the last three years.
      (Def. Ex. 232.)

      We are very concerned about the safety of possibly millions of
      consumers whose decks and other structures were built with
      micronized copper-treated wood because the wood may be subject to
      early failure and possible collapse[.] (Id.)

and the following statements from the email:

      The safety of your customers and clients is at stake if your projects’
      support structures are being built with Micronized treated wood that
      cannot adequately resist decay. (Def. Ex. 271.)

                                         18
      Our findings show that micronized copper-treated wood will lead to
      problems with structural integrity. (Id.)

      We are concerned that micronized copper wood preservative systems
      fail to prevent decay and termite attack, thereby compromising the
      dependability of the wood used to build support structures. In the case
      of raised decks, this poses a considerable safety hazard as deck
      supports we believe will fail. (Id.)

We agree with the district court’s classification of Viance’s statements as “tests

prove” or “establishment” claims. The references to “findings” or “decay

findings” clearly refer to the results of Viance’s testing as captured in the field

stake tests and, most particularly, the Timber Products Reports. The statements

then use those findings as support for conclusions regarding the safety and

efficacy of MCQ or structures built using MCQ-treated posts. Thus, the district

court did not clearly err in classifying these statements as “establishment” claims.

Because the advertising statements were “tests prove” or “establishment” claims,

the burden of proof on Osmose was only to demonstrate that the field stake tests

and the in-service survey results captured in the Timber Products Reports do not

support the conclusions Viance draws with regards to the safety and efficacy of

MCQ. See, e.g., Quaker 
State, 977 F.2d at 62-63
. In other words, Osmose, as a

plaintiff challenging “tests prove” or “establishment” claims, does not have to




                                          19
affirmatively prove that Viance’s safety concerns are false; rather, Osmose has to

prove only that Viance’s tests do not support Viance’s conclusions.

      Viance contends that most of these advertising statements are a combination

of factual statements, which it contends are truthful, and non-actionable statements

of opinion. For instance, it points to the statement: “These findings provide

evidence that micronized copper-treated wood is prone to premature decay, and

Viance believes that its continued use raises serious consumer safety concerns.” It

argues that this statement is composed of two assertions. First, the assertion that

the findings show premature decay, which it argues is literally true. And second,

the assertion that Viance believes the use of micronized-copper treated wood

raises serious safety concerns, which it argues is a non-actionable opinion.7 For



      7
             Viance contends several other statements follow this pattern:

             “Viance . . . is concerned that decay occurring this early in the service life of wood
             poses a substantial safety hazard to consumers with structures built from
             micronized copper-treated wood.

             “We are very concerned about the safety of possibly millions of consumers whose
             decks and other structures were built with micronized copper-treated wood
             because the wood may be subject to early failure and possible collapse.”

             “We are concerned that micronized copper wood preservative systems fail to
             prevent decay and termite attack, thereby compromising the dependability of the
             wood used to build support structures. In the case of raised decks, this poses a
             considerable safety hazard as deck supports we believe will fail.”



                                              20
several reasons, Viance’s argument does not persuade us that the district court

clearly erred in determining these statements were literally false.

      Even taken in isolation, Viance’s purported statements of opinion might be

reasonably interpreted as being more than a simple statement of opinion.

Statements of opinion are generally not actionable. See, e.g., Pizza Hut, Inc. v.

Papa John’s Int’l, Inc., 
227 F.3d 489
, 496 (5th Cir. 2000) (“Bald assertions of

superiority or general statements of opinion cannot form the basis of Lanham Act

liability.”). But Viance’s statements regarding serious safety concerns arguably

could be construed as more than general statements of opinion. Representations

that the use of a particular product “poses a considerable safety hazard” because of

a risk of failure or that structures built with micronized copper-treated wood might

be at risk “because the wood may be subject to early failure and possible collapse”

arguably are reasonably interpreted as more than subjective statements regarding

the efficacy or superiority of a product. Instead, they can be viewed as expressing

an objective risk of serious consequences that fairly implies a basis for that

statement. See Restatement of Unfair Competition § 3 cmt. d. (1995) (“Some

representations of opinion may imply the existence of facts that justify the opinion

. . . .”). Viance cites Pizza Hut for the proposition that a statement is one of fact if

it “(1) admits of being adjudged true or false in a way that (2) admits of empirical

                                           21

verification.” 227 F.3d at 496
(internal quotation marks omitted). In this case, the

proposition of serious safety risks because of premature failure of MCQ-treated

wood arguably is one that could be judged true or false based on empirical testing

of the product. Viance, in fact, attempted to undertake that testing in its field stake

tests and in-service surveys.

      But we need not decide whether these purported statements of opinion –

viewed in isolation – are actionable because the context in which these statements

appear makes it clear that the district court reasonably interpreted these statements

as making unambiguous “establishment” or “tests prove” claims. This Court has

recognized the importance of context when analyzing false advertising claims.

See 1-800 
Contacts, 299 F.3d at 1248
(“It is true that a court must analyze the

message conveyed in full context, and that the court must view the face of the

statement in its entirety, rather than examining the eyes, nose, and mouth

separately and in isolation from each other.” (citation and internal quotation marks

omitted)); see also 
Clorox, 140 F.3d at 1180
(“In assessing whether an

advertisement is literally false, a court must analyze the message conveyed within

its full context.”); Avis Rent A Car Sys., Inc. v. Hertz Corp., 
782 F.2d 381
, 385-86

(2d Cir. 1986) (discussing the importance of context and viewing the

advertisement in its entirety when determining literal falsity). Viance’s purported

                                          22
statements of opinion regarding serious safety concerns were generally made in

the same sentence as a reference to its “findings” or “decay findings,” which

referred to the field stake tests and, most particularly, the in-service survey results

described in the Timber Products Reports. And when its statements of opinion

were not located in the same sentence as a reference to the findings, reference to

the findings can be found in the closely surrounding text. Viewing the “entire

mosaic,” 
Avis, 782 F.2d at 385
(internal quotation marks omitted), the references

to the decay findings were linked to the expressions of safety concerns in a way

that clearly indicated that the findings were the basis of and support for the

expressions of safety concerns. See Castrol Inc. v. Pennzoil Co., 
987 F.2d 939
,

946 (3d Cir. 1993) (finding claims actionable when defendant sought “to

substantiate its claims of superiority by reference to testing”).

      Beyond that, there are several statements that are not even fairly subject to

the sort of parsing that Viance proposes. For instance, one advertisement states

that: “[T]he severity of the decay on these micronized copper-treated posts raises

alarming consumer safety concerns about structures built using micronized copper

treated wood.” The other states that: “These decay findings raise serious concerns

about the structural integrity and safety of outdoor structures, such as decks and

fencing, built with micronized copper preservatives within the last three years.”

                                          23
And the email states that: “Our findings show that micronized copper-treated

wood will lead to problems with structural integrity.” None of these statements

express anything arguably in the form of an opinion. Instead, they directly link the

findings from Viance’s studies to problems with MCQ or concerns for the

structural integrity and safety of MCQ-treated wood and structures built from it.

On their face, these statements are unambiguous “establishment” claims. And

given that the statements that Viance seeks to classify as a mixture of fact and

non-actionable opinion were intimately linked with these non-parsable statements,

the district court did not clearly err in determining that the foregoing statements

made unambiguous “establishment” claims.

      In sum, we cannot conclude that the district court was clearly erroneous in

its findings as to the meaning of Viance’s statements. The district court was not

clearly erroneous in finding that the claims were “establishment” claims

unambiguously asserting that the tests supported the structural integrity and safety

concerns expressed in the advertisements.

             b. Evidence in Support of the District Court’s Factual Findings

      Having determined the meaning of the statements, we turn to the district

court’s finding that the statements were literally false because Viance’s broad

conclusions concerning the safety of structures built with MCQ-treated wood were

                                          24
not adequately supported by Viance’s field stake and in-service tests. The district

court gave three particular bases for its finding. First, Viance drew broad

conclusions about the safety of structures built with MCQ-treated wood, but it

never inspected structures built with MCQ-treated wood. Instead, it only

inspected fence posts and lot markers in its in-service survey and stakes in its field

stake test. Second, Viance had to go to considerable trouble to find any posts

showing decay in its in-service survey, and ultimately only found that thirteen of

the 530 MCQ-treated posts it inspected were rated a 9.0 or lower. The district

court concluded that such a low percentage did not support broad generalizations

about the integrity or safety of structures built with MCQ-treated wood. Third, the

reports by the inspecting parties on the in-service survey and field stake tests were

subject to qualification. Relative to the in-service survey, Timber Products

specifically qualified its reports as not providing the basis for any conclusion as to

the grade, treatment, or physical quality of MCQ-treated posts. Todd Greer, Vice-

President of Timber Products, also made several statements qualifying the findings

in the Reports. And in connection with the field stake tests, Dr. Nicholas qualified

his concerns by noting that additional data would be required to confirm concerns

about the performance of MCQ in ground-contact applications. Yet Dr. Nicholas

never inspected the stakes after his initial inspection, nor did he know if Viance

                                          25
had either. In light of those considerations, the district court concluded that the

tests did not support broad conclusions about the safety of structures built with

MCQ-treated wood. We examine in turn these three grounds for the district

court’s finding.

             i. Testing of Fence Posts and Stakes

       Viance first attacks the district court’s reliance on the fact that Viance

tested only fence posts and stakes, but not structures. Viance does not dispute that

it did not test structures built with MCQ-treated wood, but does dispute the

conclusion (which it attributes to the district court) that tests on stakes and fence

posts are not sufficient to form conclusions as to the safety of structures built with

MCQ-treated wood. In support of its argument, Viance cites to testimony

establishing that the posts tested in the in-service survey are the exact type of posts

used to build structures and that what matters is testing wood in ground contact,

not the specific use of the wood prior to the testing. Viance also points to

testimony establishing that field stake testing is a standard industry method for

testing the efficacy of wood preservatives.

      The district court did not fully explain why Viance’s testing of fence posts

and stakes could not support safety concerns regarding structures built with MCQ-

treated wood. We see two possible interpretations of this first rationale of the

                                          26
district court. The district court may have meant that the particular tests

performed did not purport to indicate that the decay revealed was indicative of the

structural weakness and safety concerns expressed in Viance’s advertisements. As

the district court said in this regard: “Viance did not test the effect of the alleged

decay on the integrity of structures built with MCQ treated wood.” To the extent

this was the reasoning of the district court, it is not clearly erroneous.8 In fact,

evidence indicates that Viance’s tests did not assess the effect of the alleged decay

on the structural integrity of the wood. As thus understood, the district court

appropriately relied on the fact that Viance’s tests did not support the broad

conclusions regarding the structural integrity and safety of MCQ-treated wood

expressed in Viance’s advertisements. We adopt the foregoing construction of the

district court’s reasoning and conclude that the district court did not clearly err in




       8
                The district court’s reasoning on this point is supported by certain evidence in the
record. Chris Barber, laboratory manager at Timber Products, testified in his deposition that
there is an AWPA standard test for the structural strength of a post, that he was never asked to
perform that test on the posts in question, and that the rating of decay at a particular moment on a
post does not indicate the structural strength of a post. And Todd Greer, Vice-President of
Timber Products, stated in his declaration that “[a] claim or suggestion that properly treated
outdoor structures built with micronized copper wood may be unsafe or may prematurely fail in
service is not warranted by any of the findings contained in either of these reports.” This
testimony does support the district court’s finding that Viance’s tests did not support the broad
conclusions about structural integrity and safety asserted in Viance’s advertisements.


                                                27
finding that the tests performed did not support Viance’s conclusions regarding

the safety and efficacy of MCQ.9

               ii. District Court’s Analysis of the Results of the In-Service Survey

       The district court found thirteen of the 530 posts examined showed decay at

a rating of 9.0 or below. The district court thus found that only 2.45% of the posts

showed significant decay, a percentage the district court found was too low to

support serious concerns regarding the structural integrity and safety of MCQ-

treated wood. Viance attacks the district court’s calculations as to the percentage

of posts that showed decay and its conclusion that such a low percentage did not

support serious safety concerns. Viance contends that although it saw roughly 530

MCQ-treated posts in its in-service survey, it did not analyze all 530 of them.

Thus, Viance argues that using 530 as the baseline for the percentage that showed

decay was error. It also claims that the district court’s finding that thirteen of the

posts were rated 9.0 or less also is not supported by the record. That being the

case, Viance argues that the district court’s conclusion that 2.45% of the posts

       9
               The other possible interpretation of the district court’s language is that the district
court may have concluded that tests on fence posts and stakes could not support Viance’s
concerns about the safety of structures built with MCQ-treated wood because tests on stakes or
in-service fence posts can never contribute to a conclusion as to the safety of structures built with
MCQ-treated wood. Viance cites testimony indicating that such reasoning may well be clearly
erroneous. However, as we do not interpret the district court as having adopted that reasoning,
we need not decide that question. In any event, the other two bases cited by the district court
provide strong support for its ultimate conclusion as to literal falsity.

                                                 28
showed decay is not supported by the record. Viance suggests that an appropriate

analysis shows that of the fifty-six total posts analyzed by Timber Products,

nineteen of the Georgia posts analyzed rated 9.5 or lower and eleven of the

Louisiana posts rated 9.5 or lower; therefore, roughly 54% of the posts showed

decay, a percentage sufficient to support serious safety concerns.

      The district court’s reasoning on this point has four components: the

threshold rating at which a post should be counted as having significant decay, the

number of posts decayed under that standard, the number of posts comprising the

total sample, and whether the resulting percentage of decayed posts supports a

conclusion of serious safety concerns.

      Although Viance never clearly challenges the district court’s use of 9.0 as

the threshold rating for countable decay, Viance does suggest in its own

calculation that any post rated 9.5 or lower should count as decayed. However,

Viance cites no dispositive evidence in this record to support its apparent

conclusion that any rating below a perfect 10 denotes decay indicative of serious

safety concerns. To the extent that Viance challenges the district court’s use of 9.0

as the threshold rating, the district court was not clearly erroneous. In Timber

Products’ release clarifying its role in the Reports, it noted that the decay ratings in

the Reports were based on a subjective determination and that others might have

                                          29
assigned slightly different ratings. And Chris Barber testified that although a

rating of 10 denoted sound wood, he would not classify anything with less than a

10 as “less than sound.” The district court could have reasonably concluded there

was not a clear line of demarcation between posts rated 9.5 and posts rated 10. In

light of the evidence in this record, the district court did not clearly err in choosing

a rating of 9.0 as the threshold level of countable decay for its calculations.

        Given that threshold rating, the next component of the district court’s basis

is the number of posts inspected that had a rating of 9.0 or lower. The district

court counted thirteen posts with a 9.0 or lower, but did not explain how it arrived

at that number. Our independent review of the record suggests the district court’s

number may be incorrect. The January 2009 Report shows that eight of the forty-

five posts from the Alpharetta site that Timber Products visually inspected rated

9.0 or lower. The November 2008 Report shows that all eleven posts inspected

from the Baton Rouge site rated a 9.5 or 9.0, but does not distinguish between the

two ratings. Assuming, to the benefit of Viance, that ten of those posts rated a 9.0

and only one rated a 9.5, eighteen of the posts from both the Alpharetta and Baton

Rouge sites visually inspected by Timber Products rated a 9.0 or lower.10


        10
                In light of our generous assumption in favor of Viance that ten of the Baton Rouge
posts rated 9.0, the district court’s count of thirteen total posts rating 9.0 or lower, rather than our
assumption of eighteen, may in fact be more accurate. As our discussion below indicates,

                                                  30
       The next component is the total sample size of posts. The district court

made several factual findings in this regard. It found that Viance spent substantial

time and resources in an effort to find MCQ-treated posts showing decay, that

Viance searched numerous sites for MCQ-treated posts, and that Viance inspected

roughly 530 MCQ-treated posts. In light of those findings, the district court

concluded that 530 was the appropriate sample size. Record evidence supports

these findings. Viance’s initial efforts uncovered no signs of decayed posts.

Despite visiting eighteen sites and talking to numerous retailers and builders, the

private investigator hired by Viance could find no problems suggesting premature

decay in MCQ-treated wood. Viance nevertheless continued its search for signs of

decay. Dr. Preston, Viance’s Director of Research, testified that Viance sent

groups to numerous sites looking for MCQ-treated posts, and multiple documents

corroborate that testimony. And Dr. Archer, also of Viance, testified that Viance

inspected roughly 800 posts and estimated that two-thirds were treated with MCQ.

Viance argues that some of those 530 posts were encased in concrete or otherwise

not amenable to further testing and thus should not be counted in the total sample

size. Viance, however, produced no evidence indicating what percentage of those

posts were in concrete or otherwise inaccessible, nor did it indicate what


however, this difference is not significant in any event.

                                                 31
percentage of the accessible posts that were not tested by Timber Products showed

signs of decay based on Viance’s own inspection. Given that Viance spent

substantial time and effort to find MCQ-treated posts showing decay, that it only

called Timber Products in to inspect posts from the Baton Rouge and Alpharetta

sites, and that it failed to produce evidence quantifying decay on the other posts it

inspected, the district court could have reasonably concluded that it was

appropriate to use all 530 MCQ-treated posts that Viance inspected as the total

sample size.11 That being the case, we calculate the appropriate percentage of

decayed posts as eighteen out of 530, or 3.4%.12

       The final, and key, link in the district court’s chain of reasoning on this

point is whether the percentage of decayed posts found in the study supports the

conclusions drawn in Viance’s advertising statements regarding serious safety and



       11
                Using 530 as the total sample size basically assumes that a negligible percentage
of MCQ-treated posts outside of the Baton Rouge and Alpharetta sites would have shown a
decay rating of 9.0 or less. Given that this record indicates that Viance was searching diligently
for MCQ-treated posts showing decay and that it only called Timber Products in to inspect posts
from the Baton Rouge and Alpharetta sites, the district court did not clearly err in making that
assumption.
                Given Viance’s failure to produce evidence characterizing the bulk of those 530
posts, we fail to see what other number the district court might have used. On this record, the
district court was certainly not obligated to use the fifty-six posts that Viance specifically
identified as showing sufficient signs of decay to warrant further testing as the total sample size
for the survey.
       12
                As noted above, the district court’s finding of 2.45% may well be more accurate,
but as will be developed below, the difference is inconsequential.

                                                32
structural integrity concerns in relation to MCQ-treated posts. The district court

found the percentage of decayed posts to be 2.45%. Although this calculation may

be in error, as long as the higher percentage, 3.4%, still satisfies the conclusion

that the percentage of decayed posts does not raise serious safety concerns, then

the district court’s ultimate finding that the results of the studies do not support the

conclusions in the advertisements is not clearly erroneous. Although the district

court did not cite any testimony supporting the conclusion that 2.45% was not

sufficient to support the serious concerns raised in the advertisements, Dr.

Kamden, a professor of wood science and technology at Michigan State

University, testified that in his own survey of MCQ, 2.9% of the posts had

“issues.” Given that number, he concluded that MCQ was a “robust, very good

wood preservative.” In light of that testimony, the district court did not clearly err

in finding that the percentage of samples showing decay in Viance’s studies, be it

2.45% or up to 3.4%, was not sufficient to support the safety concerns raised in

the advertisements.

             iii. District Court’s Reliance on Qualifying Language in the Test

Reports

      Lastly, Viance attacks the district court’s reliance on qualifying language in

the Timber Products Reports and Dr. Nicholas’ report on the field stake tests. In

                                          33
its Reports, Timber Products noted that the Reports did not provide any basis for

any conclusion as to the “grade, treatment, or physical quality” of the posts tested.

Likewise, in his field stake test reports, Dr. Nicholas noted that “additional field

stake test data will be required to confirm this concern about the performance of

MCQ in ground contact applications.” The district court found that those

limitations lowered the support the reports provided for Viance’s broad claims

about safety concerns. Viance points out that Todd Greer, Vice-President of

Timber Products, testified that he had no problem with Viance drawing

conclusions regarding micronized copper based on the Timber Products Reports.

It also contends that Dr. Nicholas’ qualification did not suggest Viance’s

conclusions were wrong.

      The district court’s reliance on the limiting qualifications in the Viance tests

was not clearly erroneous. Although neither of the qualifications explicitly state

that Viance’s conclusions are wrong, they both certainly undermine the breadth of

the conclusions that Viance seeks to draw from the studies. Moreover, other

statements, such as the statement by Todd Greer in his declaration that “[a] claim

or suggestion that properly treated outdoor structures built with micronized copper

wood may be unsafe or may prematurely fail in service is not warranted by any of




                                          34
the findings contained in either of these reports,” further undermine the broad

conclusions that Viance attempts to attribute to its studies.13

       In sum, the district court did not clearly err in determining that Viance’s

statements regarding MCQ were literally false. We interpret its first basis as

focusing on whether the particular tests performed supported the broad

conclusions regarding structural integrity and safety expressed in the Viance

advertisements. Given that interpretation and the record support for the district

court’s finding in that regard, and in light of the other two strong bases relied on

by the district court – i.e., the results of the in-service survey and the limiting

qualifications in the several reports – the district court did not clearly err in finding

that the tests cited do not support the conclusions drawn in the advertisements

regarding the safety and efficacy of MCQ.

              2. Literal Falsity of Statements Regarding Timber Products

       In Point 5 of the injunction, the district court enjoined Viance as follows:

       5. Defendants may not indicate or imply that any conclusions or
       opinions stated in their advertisements concerning the effectiveness
       of micronized copper preservatives or the safety of structures built
       with micronized copper-treated wood are verified or endorsed by
       Timber Products.



       13
             In addition, Osmose adduced considerable evidence of other tests suggesting that
MCQ-treated wood performed as well as ACQ.

                                              35
The district court found that statements in the advertisements referencing Timber

Products asserted that Timber Products shared Viance’s concerns about MCQ.

The district court specifically referenced the statement: “The decay, verified by

Timber Products Inspection (TP), is considered unacceptable for providing long-

term structural integrity for residential and commercial uses.” Viance contends

that statement is literally true. Viance assigns the following meaning to that

sentence: Timber Products verified the decay found in the posts, and in Viance’s

opinion, the decay supports concerns with long-term structural integrity. It then

argues that the assertion that Timber Products verified the decay found in the posts

is literally true; thus, the statement is at most misleading. The line between

literally false and misleading is not always a clear one, “but it is a fine line, and we

will only reverse the district court if its findings are clearly erroneous.” Axiom

Worldwide, 522 F.3d at 1225
.

      We do not believe the district court clearly erred. The advertisements relied

heavily and repeatedly on Timber Products and its independence and reputation.

Significantly, several assertions in the advertisements unambiguously stated that

Timber Product’s findings raised serious concerns about structural integrity and

safety. Bearing in mind that the decay findings, Timber Products, and safety and

structural integrity concerns regarding MCQ are repeatedly linked in context, we

                                          36
cannot conclude that the district court clearly erred in determining that Viance’s

advertisements unambiguously asserted that Timber Products verified or endorsed

Viance’s conclusions regarding the safety of MCQ.

      Also the district court did not clearly err in finding that any statement that

indicated that Timber Products verified or endorsed any conclusions or opinions

regarding the efficacy of MCQ or the safety of structures built with MCQ-treated

wood is literally false. Both Timber Products Reports state that “[t]his inspection

report should not be considered as acceptance or rejection for the grade, treatment,

or physical quality of the above-referenced material.” The Reports simply catalog

Timber Products’ visual inspection rating of the posts tested. The Reports do not

draw any conclusion as to what those ratings indicate about the performance or

safety of MCQ. Moreover, Todd Greer stated in his declaration that the “reports

do not provide the basis for a conclusion that wood treated with a micronized

copper preservative or using a micronized copper wood treating system is unsafe

or will fail prematurely in service.” He also stated that “[b]ased on the scientific

data to which Timber Products Inspection, Inc. has access, including its own

inspections, [it] cannot conclude and has not concluded that micronized copper

treated wood treating systems, including MCQ, are not as effective and reliable as

any other major wood preservative treating system.” Finally, he noted that had

                                          37
Timber Products been aware of Viance’s intended use of reports in Viance’s press

releases, Timber Products would not have performed the services referenced

therein. In light of the evidence, we are not left with the definite and firm

conviction that the district court clearly erred in concluding that Viance’s

statements asserting that Timber Products endorsed or verified its safety concerns

were literally false.

               3. The Remaining Elements Regarding a Substantial Likelihood of

Success

       As noted above, a movant must establish the following elements in order to

establish the requisite likelihood of success on a false advertising claim: “(1) the

ads of the opposing party were false or misleading, (2) the ads deceived, or had the

capacity to deceive, consumers, (3) the deception had a material effect on

purchasing decisions, (4) the misrepresented product or service affects interstate

commerce, and (5) the movant has been-or is likely to be-injured as a result of the

false advertising.” Axiom 
Worldwide, 522 F.3d at 1224
(internal quotation marks

omitted). Having dealt with literal falsity, we turn to Viance’s challenges to the

second, third and fifth elements.14



       14
              Viance does not challenge the fourth element – that the product or service affects
interstate commerce.

                                               38
             a. Consumer Deception

      The classification of an advertisement as literally false or true but

misleading affects the movant’s burden with respect to the element of consumer

deception. If the court deems an advertisement to be literally false, then the

movant is not required to present evidence of consumer deception. 1-800

Contacts, 299 F.3d at 1247
. If, on the other hand, the court deems the

advertisement to be true but misleading, then the movant is required to present

evidence of deception. 
Id. Because the
district court did not clearly err in

determining the statements at issue were literally false, it correctly found that

evidence of consumer deception was not required.

             b. Materiality of the Deception

      Even if an advertisement is literally false, the plaintiff must still establish

materiality. 
Id. at 1250.
In order to establish materiality, the plaintiff must

demonstrate that “the defendant’s deception is likely to influence the purchasing

decision.” 
Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted). A plaintiff may demonstrate

this by showing that “the defendants misrepresented an inherent quality or

characteristic of the product.” 
Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted).

      The district court found that the materiality of Viance’s false statements was

“self-evident” because the advertisements attacked an inherent quality of MCQ,

                                          39
namely its ability to prevent decay and preserve the structural integrity of wood.

Viance challenges the element of materiality only in relation to the statements

concerning Timber Products. It claims first that the district court made no finding

in this regard and second that the statements concerning Timber Products were not

material.

      The district court’s general finding of materiality appears to focus on

whether statements expressing serious concerns regarding the safety and efficacy

of MCQ were material. Viance has not challenged that finding insofar as it

focuses on the statements regarding the safety and efficacy of MCQ. The

materiality of statements regarding Timber Products is equally self-evident,

however, in that the statements regarding Timber Products are actionable because

those statements indicate that Timber Products verified and endorsed Viance’s

concerns regarding the safety and efficacy of MCQ. Because the actionable

statements regarding Timber Products are intimately tied with Viance’s concerns

regarding the safety and efficacy of MCQ, those statements are material in that

they misrepresent the same inherent quality or characteristic of MCQ, namely its

ability to prevent decay and preserve structural integrity. Moreover, the heavy

reliance on Timber Products’ independence and reputation enhances the likelihood

that misrepresentation would influence purchasing decisions. Thus, the district

                                         40
court did not clearly err in determining that the statements regarding MCQ were

material.

             c. Injury

      Viance also contends that the district court failed to make the required

finding of an injury or likelihood of injury with regards to the Timber Products

statements and that such a finding is not supported by the record. The district

court discussed the likelihood of injury from the statements in its analysis of

irreparable injury as a factor in favor of a preliminary injunction. For the reasons

stated below in section III.B.1, the district court did not clearly err in finding a

likelihood of injury from the statements. And for the reasons stated above in

section III.A.3.b., the injury flowing from statements regarding Timber Products is

inherent in the injury resulting from statements regarding the safety and efficacy

of MCQ because the statement that Timber Products verified and endorsed those

concerns is intimately tied to those safety concerns. Thus, the district court did

not clearly err in finding the statements regarding Timber Products injurious.

      In light of the foregoing, we conclude that the district court did not clearly

err in finding that Osmose demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits in its

Lanham Act claim.




                                           41
      B. The Remaining Preliminary Injunction Requirements

      The district court found that the remaining preliminary injunction factors all

weighed in favor of issuing injunctive relief. Viance argues that the district court

abused its discretion in finding that there was a substantial threat of irreparable

injury to Osmose, that the balance of harms favored enjoining Viance, and that

granting the injunction would not disserve the public interest. Specifically,

Viance argues that the district court abused its discretion by essentially presuming

irreparable harm and that its statements were not likely to cause irreparable harm

to Osmose. It next argues that its advertisements caused no harm to Osmose,

while the injunction seriously hampers its own ability to debate the subject,

shifting market perception. Finally, it argues that the injunction harms the public’s

interest in the free flow of scientific and commercial information.

             1. Irreparable Harm

      We note at the outset that the district court found there was a likelihood of

irreparable harm to Osmose without applying any presumption on the issue. The

district court discussed the presumption of irreparable harm that had been

accorded in false advertising cases where the defendant’s advertisements were (1)

literally false and (2) comparative, but expressed some doubt as to whether such a

presumption was still appropriate in light of eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, LLC,

                                          42

547 U.S. 388
, 
126 S. Ct. 1837
, 
164 L. Ed. 2d 641
(2006), and Axiom 
Worldwide, 522 F.3d at 1226-28
. The district court concluded that no presumption was

necessary because the advertisements, on their face, would likely cause irreparable

harm. It reasoned that the advertisements contained serious indictments of the

safety of MCQ-treated products that would likely be remembered by consumers.

It also noted that the stated goal of Viance’s campaign was to put Osmose out of

business, which would obviously harm Osmose. Because the district court did not

rely on a presumption of irreparable injury, we need not decide whether such a

presumption still applies in the wake of eBay. Even in the absence of a

presumption, the district court’s conclusion as to the likelihood of irreparable

harm was not an abuse of discretion. The inference that the serious nature of the

claims in the advertisements would irreparably harm Osmose’s goodwill and

market position is certainly reasonable. Viance argues that such harm was

unlikely because the intended audience of the advertisements were industry

professionals. First, given that one release was titled “Hidden Danger in Your

Backyard,” it appears that the target audience for the advertisements was not

solely industry professionals. Second, to the extent that the advertisements were




                                         43
directed at companies that supply lumber to consumers, the concerns voiced in the

advertisements could reasonably affect their purchasing decisions as well.15

              2. Balance of Harms

       The district court found that the balance of harms weighed in favor of

granting the injunction because the ads could seriously damage Osmose’s

goodwill among consumers and the treated wood industry while Viance would not

be seriously harmed because it could still publish its test results. The district

court’s finding in this regard was not an abuse of discretion. The harm on

Osmose’s side flows naturally from the likelihood of irreparable injury. And

given the scope of the injunction, any arguable harm to Viance is limited. Point 1

of the injunction specifically allows Viance to publish the results of its testing.

Viance is also permitted to publish conclusions that are stated in the studies or

readily apparent from the data contained in the studies. Thus, Viance’s concern

that it is hindered in engaging in the scientific debate regarding the efficacy of

MCQ is overstated. Although Viance argues that the effect of the injunction will

be to shift market perception against Viance, that hardly seems likely. Stopping

       15
               We also disagree with Viance’s argument that the letter and press release from
pressure treated wood producers calling for Viance to drop its campaign demonstrates that the
target audience was not confused or influenced by these ads. The fact that certain industry
members saw through these ads does not indicate that the purchasing decisions of sellers of
pressure treated lumber or ultimate purchasers of pressure treated lumber would not be
negatively influenced by these ads.

                                               44
these advertisements does not disparage Viance’s product or inappropriately

bolster Osmose’s product. The effect of the injunction is only to prohibit Viance

from advertising generalizations regarding Osmose’s product that the district court

has determined are unsupported by Viance’s current studies.

             3. Public Interest

      The district court found that the public was served by preventing Viance

from disseminating broad conclusions regarding the safety of MCQ-treated wood

that exceeded the findings of its studies because the public interest is served by

preventing customer confusion or deception. Again, the district court did not

abuse its discretion in drawing that conclusion. Viance argues that the public is

served by the free flow of commercial and non-commercial speech on topics of

consumer safety. But the free flow of scientific information regarding any concern

of consumer safety is not hindered here because Viance may still publish tests

results and conclusions that are readily apparent from those results. Thus, the

injunction, as crafted, only prevents unsupported statements. Such an injunction

does not disserve the public interest.

      C. Injunction Against Commenting on Osmose’s EPP Certification




                                         45
       Viance argues that the district court abused its discretion by enjoining it

regarding Osmose’s environmental advertisements because it neither identified nor

analyzed any statements by Viance to that effect. We agree.

       In pertinent part, the district court enjoined Viance as follows:

       6. Defendants may not claim or imply that Osmose’s MicroPro
       process was not certified as EPP by SCS, or that SCS did not consider
       life cycle analysis including efficacy analysis in awarding EPP
       certification to Osmose’s MicroPro process.

       The district court did not identify any advertising statement in which Viance

claimed that MicroPro was not certified as an Environmentally Preferable Product

(“EPP”) by Scientific Certification Systems (“SCS”) or that SCS did not consider

life cycle analysis in awarding EPP certification to the MicroPro process.16

Liability follows under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act when a party uses a “false or

misleading representation of fact.” 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Without such a

misrepresentation, there is no basis for liability. Because the district court has not

identified any statement in which Viance made such claims, it has not identified a

proper basis for Point 6 of the injunction.




       16
               EPP stands for Environmentally Preferable Product. EPP Guidelines are
established by the EPA. Record evidence indicates that MicroPro technology has been certified
EPP by SCS. In its Order, the district court noted that Viance did not contend that the statement
that MicroPro technology was certified EPP by SCS was literally false.

                                               46
       The district court did discuss EPP certification in the portion of its Order

dealing with Viance’s motion for a preliminary injunction against Osmose.

Viance requested a preliminary injunction against certain advertising statements

by Osmose regarding MicroPro’s EPP certification, claiming that the statements

falsely implied that MicroPro technology was certified by the EPA. The district

court denied Viance’s request, finding that it had failed to demonstrate that the

statements were literally false or misleading or that the statements “had the

capacity to deceive consumers into believing MCQ was EPA certified.”17 The

district court never linked this finding of fact to its decision to enjoin Viance from

claiming MicroPro was not certified as EPP by SCS or that SCS did not consider

life cycle analysis, including efficacy analysis, in awarding EPP certification to the

MicroPro process. Even if the district court had linked that finding of fact to Point

6 of the injunction, Viance’s failure to establish that Osmose’s advertising

statements falsely implied that MicroPro technology was certified by the EPA is

not a proper basis for Point 6 of the injunction because, as we noted above, the

district court did not find any statement in which Viance claimed that MicroPro

technology was not certified EPP by SCS or that SCS did not consider life cycle


       17
                Because Viance has not appealed the denial of its request for a preliminary
injunction, the correctness of this conclusion is not before us. We express no opinion on the
matter.

                                               47
analysis, including efficacy analysis, in awarding EPP certification to MicroPro

technology.

       Because the district court did not identify any statement in Viance’s

advertisements that supports Point 6 of the injunction, the district court abused its

discretion in entering that provision.18 Accordingly, we vacate Point 6 of the

injunction.

       D. First Amendment Concerns

       Viance argues that the injunction operates as an unconstitutional prior

restraint because by its terms it could apply to protected non-commercial speech.

Specifically, it argues that the literal terms of the injunction would prohibit it from

engaging in many actions beyond commercial speech, such as petitioning the

government, publishing scientific papers, arguing before certification

organizations, or even giving testimony in this litigation. We agree and remand

with instructions that the scope of the injunction be limited to statements made in

commercial advertising and promotion.




       18
                 We express no opinion on whether a statement claiming or implying that
MicroPro was not certified as EPP by SCS or that SCS did not consider life cycle analysis,
including efficacy analysis, in awarding EPP certification to MicroPro technology would be
literally false or misleading, deceptive, material, and injurious. Assuming such a statement is
identified, that question would be for the district court in the first instance.

                                                48
      “[I]t is well settled that false commercial speech is not protected by the First

Amendment and may be banned entirely.” 
Pennzoil, 987 F.2d at 949
. Under the

Lanham Act, a court may issue an injunction to prevent the use of a “false or

misleading representation of fact” in “commercial advertising or promotion.” 15

U.S.C. §§ 1116, 1125(a)(1)(B). In this case, Points 2 through 5 of the injunction

prohibit Viance from claiming or implying that its studies support concerns

regarding the safety and efficacy of MCQ or that Timber Products verified or

endorsed those concerns. Nothing in the language of the injunction explicitly

limits its scope to advertising or promotional statements. Osmose argues that

given the context of the litigation, the injunction was clearly not targeted toward

non-commercial speech protected by the First Amendment. In other words,

Osmose disavows any intent to apply the injunction to protected non-commercial

speech. Certainly the injunction has not currently been enforced in a way

indicating that the district court intended to prohibit Viance from making such

claims outside of advertising or promotional statements. Nevertheless, the literal

terms of the injunction prohibit Viance from making such claims in any setting.

Under these circumstances, such a broad prohibition is not warranted in this case.

Injunctive relief should be narrowly tailored. ALPO Petfoods, Inc. v. Ralston

Purina Co., 
913 F.2d 958
, 972 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (“The law requires that courts

                                         49
closely tailor injunctions to the harm that they address.”). The harm in this case is

damage to the goodwill or market position of Osmose’s MCQ product based on

advertising statements containing broad claims about the safety and efficacy of

MCQ that the district court has determined are not supported by Viance’s studies.

A narrower injunction will address that concern and avoid any possible First

Amendment concerns. Accordingly, we remand Points 2 through 5 of the

injunction with instructions that those prohibitions be limited to statements made

in commercial advertising or promotion.19 See 
id. at 972-73
(remanding for

removal of phrase “or other related” from injunction so as to limit it to advertising

statements).

                                      IV. CONCLUSION

       The district court did not clearly err in determining that Osmose

demonstrated a likelihood of success on its Lanham Act claims against Viance’s

       19
                Viance also argues that the injunction is overbroad because it is not limited to
false or misleading advertisements. We disagree. The district court issued the injunction in this
case because it found the claims covered by Points 2 through 5 to be literally false. Thus, the
injunction is effectively limited to false statements. See 
Pennzoil, 987 F.2d at 949
(“The
injunction is also not overbroad because it only reaches the specific claims that the district court
found to be literally false.”).
                Our conclusion in this regard is bolstered by the fact that the current injunction
against Viance is preliminary and thus temporary. Should the district court deem it proper to
enter permanent injunctive relief later in the proceedings, it might well consider whether
explicitly limiting the terms of the injunction to false or misleading speech is appropriate.
Compare 
id. (finding such
limitation unnecessary in context of permanent injunction), with U-
Haul Int’l, Inc. v. Jartran, Inc., 
793 F.2d 1034
, 1042-43 (9th Cir. 1986) (imposing such a
limitation in context of permanent injunction).

                                                 50
statements regarding the safety and efficacy of MCQ and Timber Products’

endorsement of those views. The district court also did not clearly err in

determining that the remaining preliminary injunction factors weighed in favor of

enjoining Viance from making such claims. Thus, the district court did not abuse

its discretion by enjoining Viance from making such claims. But First

Amendment concerns dictate that the provisions of the injunction dealing with

such statements be limited to commercial advertising or promotional statements.

The district court, however, abused its discretion by enjoining Viance from

making claims regarding whether MicroPro was certified EPP by SCS because it

failed to identify a basis for that provision of the injunction. Accordingly, we

vacate Point 6 of the injunction and remand Points 2 through 5 with instructions

that they be limited to commercial advertising or promotional statements.20

AFFIRMED in part; VACATED in part; REMANDED in part with instructions.21




      20
             Viance has not challenged Point 1 of the injunction; it need not be disturbed.
      21
             Osmose’s May 25, 2010 supplemental letter is stricken.

                                              51

Source:  CourtListener

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