In another ruling in this case
about electronic check scanning, the magistrate judge recommended granting
Mitek’s partial motion to dismiss without leave to amend. USAA alleged that it invented a method for
consumers to remotely deposit financial documents, e.g., checks, using a
digital camera or similar device. USAA
alleged that its software provider, Mitek, filed for a patent on elements of remote
scanning technology and started claiming that USAA was infringing; USAA sued
for a declaratory judgment etc. USAA
alleged a claim for false advertising, false designation of origin, and reverse
palming off based on Mitek’s statements that Mitek “played a key role in the
development of remote deposit capture”; that “USAA's RDC technology is ‘powered
by Mitek Systems' “; that “mobile RDC software is proprietary to Mitek”; and
that “USAA's mobile RDC service incorporates Mitek proprietary
technology.” While USAA apparently
acknowledged that Dastar barred a
§43(a)(1)(A) claim, it contended that §43(a)(1)(B) was still available to it,
insofar as the Supreme Court said so. The question was whether allegations that
Mitek passed off USAA’s trade secrets as its own product could be viable under
§43(a)(1)(B).
Patent law is supposed to reward manufacturers for
innovation, not trademark law. Dastar
said that an ad that gave consumers the false impression that a product was “quite
different” from the plaintiff’s product could create a valid cause of action
for Lanham Act false advertising, but didn’t sanction a false advertising claim
“premised entirely on false designation of authorship.” USAA didn’t allege facts similar to those
posited by the court in Dastar, but
just restated its false designation of origin claim. Baden Sports, Inc. v.
Molten USA, Inc., 556 F.3d 1300 (Fed. Cir. 2009), involved a similar situation,
and held that “authorship, like licensing status, is not a nature,
characteristic, or quality, as those terms are used in Section 43(a)(1)(B) of
the Lanham Act.” Similarly, allegations that “Mitek engaged in classic false
advertising by misrepresenting its role in the development of RDC technology
and [in] misrepresenting the nature, characteristics, and qualities of USAA's
services and products” failed to state a claim.
So too with the “proprietary,” “key role,” etc. allegations.
Moreover, USAA failed to plausibly plead materiality: “As
the Supreme Court noted in Dastar,
whether Mitek or USAA owned the product in question would be immaterial to a
consumer purchasing this product.”
(Unless the consumer feared getting sued for patent infringement ….)
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