The 9th Circuit withdrew its first opinion in
this case, substituting
one that affirmed the dismissal of Fleischer’s copyright claims and trademark
claims based on the image of Betty Boop, while remanding for more clarification
of the district court’s holding on the Betty Boop word mark. Fleischer, the successor in name but not in
interest to the original Fleischer Studios, had a registered trademark in
“Betty Boop.” The court of appeals
reversed the ruling that the word mark’s fractured ownership history precluded
secondary meaning, finding a triable issue of fact. The district court has now provided that
clarification, holding that defendants’ use of “Betty Boop” was, in context,
aesthetically functional, nonconfusing, and fair use.
Defendants, like Fleischer, license Betty Boop
merchandise. Defendants’ merchandise incorporates
elements from vintage movie posters (correction: some of the copyright status is disputed, but Fleischer isn't the copyright owner and has no standing to object on copyright grounds, per previous rulings); these elements
include both images of Betty Boop and the words Betty Boop.
While the original
court of appeals ruling was withdrawn, the district court still found its reasoning
“sound and applicable.” Fleischer argued
that there’s no such thing as aesthetic functionality in the 9th
Circuit. While the court here
acknowledged “some confusion,” it found that Au-Tomotive Gold made clear that the doctrine, while limited, was
nevertheless viable, and Job’s Daughters
was still good law. That case held that
trademark law “does not prevent a person from copying so-called ‘functional’ features of a product which
constitute the actual benefit that the
consumer wishes to purchase, as distinguished from an assurance that a particular entity made, sponsored,
or endorsed a product.” To distinguish
between these two poles, the court must examine the goods themselves, the
defendant’s merchandising practices, and evidence of consumer reaction. Au-Tomotive
Gold set out a two-step test: the court must first ask whether an allegedly
significant non-trademark function is essential to the use or purpose of the
article or affects its cost or quality; if that’s not present, the court should
still determine whether trademark protection would impose a significant
non-reputation-related competitive disadvantage.
The district court examined the products, merchandising
practices, and evidence of consumer reaction in the record, and found that, as
a matter of law, defendants’ use was not a trademark use. As in Job’s
Daughters, the defendants used the words Betty Boop prominently on their
products, including t-shirts bearing movie poster images, dolls, and packaging
adapted from movie posters. “Betty Boop”
was a decorative component: “part and parcel of the aesthetic design of those goods.” Defendants never labeled their merchandise “official”
or otherwise indicated that it was sponsored by Fleischer, but rather
identified defendants as the source.
Given the combination of “Betty Boop” as artistic design element and defendants’
own source-identification, “Betty Boop” simply couldn’t be seen as
source-identifying. Unsurprisingly,
Fleischer didn’t present a single instance of consumer confusion as to origin
or sponsorship.
Apparently treating “trademark use” and “aesthetic
functionality” as separate but related inquiries, the court then held that
these same considerations rendered the use of the words Betty Boop
aesthetically functional. Though the
T-shirts would still be wearable without the words, and the dolls would still
be toys, and would function in that sense (the court didn’t address whether
this would affect the “quality” of the article, though I think it plainly
would), “protection of the feature as a trademark would impose a significant
non-reputation-related competitive disadvantage” on defendants. Defendants are entitled to market goods with
Betty Boop’s image, but those products would be less marketable than the same
product without the name, because Betty Boop names the famous character
depicted on the goods/movie posters.
(This is also understandable as a genericity ruling.) For example, one doll’s package has imagery
from a Betty Boop movie poster, and a product tag that’s a miniature
reproduction of the poster. The poster says:
“Adolph Zukor presents BETTY BOOP with HENRY the Funniest Living American.”
Removing the words BETTY BOOP from
these items would render the textual
aspect of the poster reproductions incomplete and the remaining words would be
nonsensical. It would be obvious to the
average consumer that such merchandise would be missing something. Clearly,
merchandise that is missing something is less marketable and therefore at a
competitive disadvantage.
Also, given that the use wasn’t source-identifying and didn’t
trade on any source’s reputation (as opposed to the reputation of Betty Boop,
which defendants were free to provide), barring defendants from using the words
would impose a significant non-reputation-related competitive disadvantage.
In the alternative, the use was descriptive fair use. It referred to a characteristic of defendants’
products: they featured Betty Boop. Whether a use is “otherwise than as a mark”
depends on several factors in the 9th Circuit, including whether the
term is used to attract public attention and whether the user took precautions
such as labeling to minimize the risk that the term would be used in its
trademark sense. Here, the use was in
connection with products bearing Betty Boop’s image. “It is extremely unlikely that a prospective
consumer would understand those words as identifying the source of the goods
rather than merely naming the character.” And defendants indicated themselves as the
source. As a matter of law, this was use
other than as a mark.
Likewise, there was no triable issue on whether defendants
were using the words in their descriptive sense: there were no other words
available to describe Betty Boop, and the words “self-evidently” describe the
goods. (This result could also have been
achieved with nominative fair use, though that would presuppose the validity of
plaintiff’s mark.) Given that defendants
had the right to use the character despite Fleischer’s objection, they must
necessarily therefore be able to identify the character by name. And no jury could find bad faith in the sense
of intent to capitalize on Fleischer’s goodwill, because defendants weren’t
using the mark as a source-identifier.
Finally, just in case you were worried, there was no triable
issue of fact on likely confusion. The court didn’t run through the Sleekcraft factors because of the
absence of trademark use. That test
assumes that the defendant’s use is a trademark use, referring for example to
the similarity of the “marks” and defendant’s intent in using the “mark.” Here there was no source-identifying use, and
thus no way that the use could create the impression that the goods originated
with anyone in particular. Fleischer
invoked the doctrine of legal equivalents—words and pictures that have the same
meaning can be confusingly similar.
Thus, Fleischer argued, the court should find that images of Betty Boop
infringed the Betty Boop word marks.
Yes, they were equivalents, but that didn’t help Fleischer, since there
was still a trademark use requirement, and Fleischer didn’t argue, much less
show, that defendants’ use of the Betty Boop image was a trademark use. She didn’t look the same on all of the goods,
so that was evidence against use as a mark, along with all the reasons that
defendants’ use of the name wasn’t source-identifying.
2 comments:
Interesting case. Seems like the right outcome, but I wonder if the analysis proves too much. After all, if I started selling T-Shirts with the words "Just Do It." I'm certain that the court would NOT hold that I was merely providing the aesthetic functionality people wanted and that my use did not denote sponsorship or origin.
The same seems true here. So long as there is a valid trademark (and maybe there isn't) in Betty Boop, if you put those words on a package people will think it came from that source.
I wonder whether this case is just a special one because so much of the copyrighted work is in the public domain. Seems like Dastar + nominative use gets you to the same result much more quickly and cleanly.
One correction: The movie posters had not fallen into the public domain. The earlier district court opinion specifically found at least one of the posters had not fallen into the public domain and reserved ruling on the others. So there has been no determination on pd.
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