Carson sued Prym, a manufacturer of competing optical
products, and Jo-Ann Stores, a retailer, for patent infringement, trade dress
infringement, unfair competition, and tortious interference with prospective
business relations. Carson asserted infringement of four design patents for
three different products. The designs of
Carson’s SureGrip and Clip & Flip weren’t protected by design patents, but
allegedly had a distinctive overall design that had been a commercial
success. Carson also alleged that
defendants copied its written materials, including packaging describing the
features and benefits of the Clip & Flip, to which Carson owned the
copyright.
Defendants successfully sought to dismiss the
non-design-patent related claims. Start
with the unfair competition and tortious interference claims, which were based
on defendants’ alleged copying of Carson’s products and marketing materials,
displacing Carson as a Jo-Ann supplier; Jo-Ann allegedly pretended to fairly
evaluate Carson as a supplier with no intention of continuing its business
relationship with Carson. The court
found preemption by federal patent law.
Unfair competition is a broad tort in New York, but not
all-encompassing. For claims like these,
there has to be additional tortious conduct separate from the patent law cause
of action. Claims of unfair competition
from reproducing products covered by the patents and from “systematically”
infringing Carson’s IP were preempted.
Bare allegations that Prym intended to interfere with Carson’s
relationship with Jo-Ann by dishonest, unfair, and improper means were
conclusory and insufficient. The
contention that patent infringement was a means to the end of unfair
competition necessarily required resolution of substantial questions of federal
patent law and didn’t plead conduct or bad faith independent of patent
infringement. Allegations that Jo-Ann
unfairly competed by “refusing to continue its longtime supplier relationship
with Carson” and “pretending to fairly evaluate Carson as a supplier with no
intention of continuing its business relationship,” failed because there was no
allegation that Jo-Ann had a contractual obligation to do business with Carson,
and a retailer like Jo-Ann doesn’t unfairly compete by declining to do business
with a wholesaler like Carson.
As for allegations of unfair competition by reproducing the
Clip & Flip, that also failed to state a claim, since unpatented products
are in the public domain and states are not allowed to interfere with the
patent scheme by creating a cause of action for copying unpatented products.
As for common law claims based on alleged trade dress
infringement of the Clip & Flip and SureGrip magnifiers, such claims are
identical to Lanham Act claims with an additional requirement of bad
faith. As for the Clip & Flip, the
complaint didn’t contain any allegations of trade dress infringement in the
design. To the extent that Carson
alleged that defendants copied portions of Carson’s marketing materials, they
failed to allege any harms separate from the alleged copying, and that claim
would be preempted by the Copyright Act.
That left the alleged trade dress of the SureGrip, and the
allegations there were conclusory: defendants allegedly sold “knock-offs,” but
that was insufficient to allege the necessary bad faith; the court had more to say when it got to the Lanham Act
claims.
Likewise, tortious interference requires some wrongful
means, and factual allegations of copying were insufficient to avoid
preemption. Also, plaintiffs didn’t
allege that defendants’ conduct was motivated solely by malice or to inflict
injury beyond the prospect of economic gain, as required.
The court also rejected Carson’s judicial estoppel argument
based on Prym’s attempt to allege state-law false advertising counterclaims
premised on false patent marking; judicial estoppel applies to inconsistent
factual positions, not inconsistent legal ones.
Plus Prym alleged an additional element of bad faith in false marking
(not so sure about this; bad faith is routinely found not to count as an
additional element for preemption purposes; on the other hand it’s not clear to
me that the false marking statute should be treated the same as the basic
patent/copyright infringement provisions for preemption purposes). Prym alleged that Carson was told twice by
the PTO that if it wished to claim a design involving a transparent,
translucent or highly polished or reflective surface, it had to use diagonal
lines in the patent drawings to depict such surface, but Carson ignored these
directives and marked the products with patent numbers that didn’t protect
them.
Turning to the trade dress claim, it failed on multiple
grounds. First, a plaintiff must “offer
a precise expression of the character and scope of the claimed trade dress,”
and articulate the “elements of their product design with specificity to be
afforded trade dress protection,” especially given courts’ reluctance to
protect product design or product lines.
Competition policy is strongly implicated when product design is claimed
as trade dress. This also means that
nonfunctionality must be rigorously enforced.
Here, Carson failed to plead that any of the elements for
which it claimed trade dress were nonfunctional, instead conclusorily claiming that
“[t]he ornamental design and overall appearance of Carson's SureGrip™ magnifier
are not functional.” This was
insufficient under Iqbal. Carson argued that there was no other way to
allege overall nonfunctionality than to state it, and used a photo of the
SureGrip to “illustrate[] the non-functional nature of its ornamental design
and overall appearance.” That was
insufficient—a trade dress claim can’t be rescued by photos, since courts can’t
be expected to distill nonfunctional elements from a set of images.
Separately, Carson failed to define the trade dress it
wanted to protect. It failed to articulate “the specific elements which
comprise its distinct dress”: “not just which features are distinctive, but
also how they are distinctive.” Merely
pleading inherent distinctiveness and attaching a photo of the product in its
package (which had numerous text elements making laudatory claims about the
product) was insufficient. Images alone couldn’t explain what elements were
protected.
In addition, Carson failed to plead facts supporting a
plausible inference of secondary meaning. There were no facts relating to
advertising expenditures, consumer surveys, sales success, marketing
expenditures, or unsolicited media coverage. It claimed that the overall design and
appearance was “inherently distinctive [clearly barred by Wal-Mart] and/or has acquired secondary meaning in the relevant
marketplace,” and argued that defendants’ copying, plus successful sales and
marketing since 1998, could be used to infer secondary meaning. But these “general and cursory allegations”
were insufficient.
And furthermore, Carson failed to plead facts making likely confusion
plausible, instead making naked assertions of likely confusion.
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