After the 7th Circuit fixed its outlier “advertising and promotion” rule, it remanded to the district court to reconsider the issues
here. Neuros sued KTurbo, its competitor
in the high-speed turbo blower market, for false advertising under the Lanham
Act and the Illinois Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act as well as for other
claims. The court found defamation per se and awarded $10,000 in compensatory
damages and $50,000 in punitive damages.
On remand, Neuros sought an entry of judgment on the Lanham
Act and DTPA claims, as well as attorneys’ fees and injunctive relief. KTurbo opposed only the fees and injunctive
relief.
Under the Lanham Act, an attorneys’ fees award is
appropriate “if the opposing party's ‘claim or defense was objectively
unreasonable—was a claim or defense that a rational litigant would pursue only
because it would impose disproportionate costs on his opponent’” or where a
party's violation of the Lanham Act is “especially egregious.” The DTPA says a court “may” award reasonable
attorneys’ fees and costs, and the court held that the standard was essentially
the same as that under the Lanham Act.
The court found KTurbo’s defense objectively
unreasonable. KTurbo told customers that
Neuro’s claims of wire power (ratio of electrical current to work, apparently
quite important) were exaggerated, and continued to make those statements well
after Neuros sued. These statements were
literally false. “KTurbo persisted in denying that the slide show and related
marketing activities were deceptive long after it was evident that the denial
was frivolous.” The evidence showed that KTurbo sought to drive Neuros out of
business, stating its intent to “break” and “terminate” Neuros and continuing
to accuse Neuros of cheating after its representatives advised it not to do so
and after the C&D and subsequent lawsuit.
“For KTurbo to maintain its defense and continue to violate the Lanham
Act in light of KTurbo knowing its claims regarding Neuros's efficiency were
false was both objectively unreasonable and egregious,” justifying a fee
award. (Will all successful defamation
claims, which have a much higher standard than the Lanham Act, justify an award
of attorneys’ fees when a Lanham Act claim is also available? I can see the argument for this.)
For the same reasons, a DTPA fee award was justified; the
standard was whether KTurbo willfully engaged in a deceptive trade practice,
which requires “voluntary and intentional, but not necessarily malicious,”
action. KTurbo argued that its conduct
wasn’t willful, but that ignored the record.
Turning to injunctive relief, it was apparent that no
adequate remedy at law existed to make Neuros whole. “The false statements made by KTurbo
regarding Neuros's wire power and efficiency will have lingering effects on its
business, because employees of potential customers could believe the false
information KTurbo has disseminated.”
(Is this really true? Surely
winning the defamation lawsuit mattered.
But the court referred to the “somewhat unique method of advertising in
the industry,” which is apparently individual presentations made by Powerpoint,
which doesn’t strike me as terrifically unique.) Anyway, there’s a well-established
presumption that Lanham Act violations cause irreparable injuries, because it’s
virtually impossible to ascertain the precise economic consequences of
intangible harms such as damage to reputation and lost goodwill. Because Neuros
couldn’t quantify its damages, no adequate legal remedy existed.
KTurbo would suffer no hardship from refraining from its
false claims, especially since it hadn’t been in the turbo blower business for more
than two years (then is injunctive relief necessary?). And the court granted a “narrowly tailored”
request for corrective advertising that didn’t place a significant burden on
KTurbo. Injunctive relief would also serve the public interest in truthful
advertising. Similar analysis applied
under the DTPA.
KTurbo was enjoined to refrain from distributing
confidential or proprietary Neuros documents (interesting remedy not discussed
in the opinion—how is it related to the violation of the law found?) and from making
false/misleading statements about Neuros. It was also required to issue
corrective advertising under its name advising every known recipient of the
false email and any other similar written or oral statements of the falsity of
those statements.
No comments:
Post a Comment