East West, which sells food products including Jamaican and
south Asian spices and halal meat and fish in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan
area and surrounding communities, contracted to buy the common-law CARIBBEAN
CRESCENT mark and trade name. Defendants
agreed not to compete with the business they were selling for 5 years within a
5-mile radius of the area, but could use the Carribean Crescent (spelling differences
apparently intentional) name outside that area.
They also agreed that East West would sell defendants’ Jamaican patties
in the area for a commission, and Rahman would sell East West products for a
commission. Defendants allegedly
violated the non-compete agreement and infringed East West’s rights by
competing and using the Caribbean Crescent name in the area. Defendants also registered the mark with the
PTO, despite allegedly having sold it, and hired away an East West employee
with confidential information.
Many of these events occurred several years back, and
defendants argued that many of the claims were barred by the statute of
limitations. Unlike the Lanham Act, which has no explicit limitations period so generally borrows coordinate state laws' limitations periods for purposes of determining whether a presumption of laches applies, there were actual limitations periods at issue here. The court held that it
wasn’t clear when East West’s breach of contract claim accrued, so that wasn’t
dismissed.
However, the unjust enrichment claim was based on the 2008
registration of the CARIBBEAN CRESCENT Mark after having sold all rights to
East West. Since East West didn’t sue
until more than 3 years later, past the limitations period, that claim was
dismissed with prejudice. I’m not really
sure why this was an unjust enrichment claim in the first place, or whether
registration confers the kind of benefit that can unjustly enrich someone.
The court addressed the ontological status of TM more
directly in rejecting East West’s conversion claim, based on the same facts:
there is no claim for conversion of a trademark. A court in E.D. Va. had accepted a conversion
claim related to paper and electronic copies of documents containing
confidential business information, reasoning that:
In this technology-driven world,
the value of intangible property cannot be disputed, and a decision to limit
conversion to tangible property or intangible property merged into a document
would leave domain name users, satellite programmers, owners of telephone
networks, and internet servers, and others similarly situated unable to use an
action for conversion for substantial interference with their rights.
But the court here refused to accept that logic for
trademark. “In contrast to the domain
name users, satellite programmers, and owners of telephone networks and
internet servers, whose intangible property has arisen in an environment of
technologic [sic] advancements and who may well depend on conversion actions to
protect their rights, a specialized field of law has existed to protect
trademark owners for over 100 years.” As
McCarthy says, “[O]ne cannot dispense with the carefully constructed
requirements for trademark protection by blithely claiming that defendant ‘converted’
some symbol of plaintiff which may or may not be capable of trademark
protection. Trademark law was specifically constructed to balance the private
and public interests inherent in commercial symbols: the tort of conversion was
not. It is the wrong tool for the job.”
The court then turned to the state-law consumer protection
claims, which were based on the allegedly false use of the mark on defendants’
products: basically a trademark claim by another name. Defendants argued that the claims were
time-barred (the limitations period was 2 years), because they allegedly
started selling products bearing the mark in 2004. East West argued that the introduction of new
products bearing the mark in summer 2011 re-triggered the statute of
limitations. (I am not quite sure what’s
going on here. Assuming that the mark
still has secondary meaning—which might not be true if there were two competing
providers in the area during this whole period—even under a general consumer protection law, wouldn’t there still be a
non-time-barred claim not for past damages but to prevent future infringement,
unless laches was shown?)
The court first said that it wasn’t sure laches was even at
issue, since laches is a defense to trademark infringement and this was instead
a consumer protection claim. Laches
won’t apply in cases of progressive encroachment, but East West didn’t identify
any case in which progressive encroachment pushed back a limitations period on
consumer protection claims instead of a laches period. Anyway, consumer protection claims in
Virginia accrued when defendants allegedly used the mark without authorization,
not when East West discovered the resulting damage, and progressive
encroachment is grounded in the notion that delay should be measured from when
the plaintiff knows or should know of its viable claim. But in any event East West failed to plead
facts warranting the application of the progressive encroachment doctrine. New products weren’t key; the issue was
whether defendants alleged closer to East West in product similarity, and East
West didn’t allege that, so its claims were dismissed with prejudice. (Also not
sure why the court was confident this couldn’t be repled properly, but perhaps
other facts alleged in the complaint make this clear.)
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