Klauber claimed that Russell-Newman (apparently now defunct)
and Bon-Ton Stores infringed its copyrights in certain lace patterns by selling
women’s underwear incorporating substantially similar patterns. Klauber co-authored lace designs numbered
7087, 7088, and 7089; the last two are registered, and 7087, which was allegedly
infringed, is allegedly a derivative work of them. A related case was filed in 2009, which was
dismissed by stipulation based on a settlement agreement. Klauber filed a new
complaint alleging breach of the settlement agreement, new acts of copyright infringement,
and false advertising under the Lanham Act.
Bon-Ton successfully moved to dismiss.
The court first rejected Klauber’s argument that Bon-Ton was
jointly and severally liable for payments Russell-Newman agreed to make in the
settlement agreement; the obligation was only on Russell-Newman.
Bon-Ton lost its general legal arguments on the copyright
claims, but still won. First, it argued
that the copyright infringement claim based on the 7087 pattern should be
dismissed because 7087 wasn’t registered.
However, the owner of a derivative work can bring a copyright claim
against an alleged infringer based on any infringement of the preexisting,
registered work from which the derivative work is derived. The infringement claim must be based on a
comparison of the accused work with the registered work. Here, the 7087 pattern was a derivative work
of 7088—actually, just a section of the larger 7088 design. (Is that even a derivative work? How does blowing up part of a design evince
copyrightable additional creativity?)
“[A]ll of the elements of the unregistered 7087 design are contained in
the registered 7088 design,” allowing an infringement claim to be maintained
based on infringement of the underlying registered work through copying of the
derivative work. Plaintiff and defendant's patterns:
Further, Klauber adequately pled that Bon-Ton had access
because it became aware of Klauber’s copyrights at least as early as the time
the first, settled action was filed. The complaint adequately pled substantial
similarity by pleading that Bon-Ton made “a copy” of Klauber’s designs. However, as a matter of law, the allegedly
infringing garments were not substantially similar. This determination is usually reserved for
the trier of fact, but can be resolved as a matter of law when no properly instructed
jury could reasonably find substantial similarity. The court refused to apply a “more
discerning” observer standard because that only applies when the copyrighted
work incorporates elements from the public domain (as they all do). Bon-Ton argued that both patterns contained
the unprotected idea of roses and leaves arranged in a curved or lace
pattern. But dissection is ordinarily
not required; the “more discerning” test is limited to cases in which some elements
of the work have been copied from the public domain (which is apparently
different from being ideas). The use of
flowers here wasn’t simply an unprotectable depiction of a flower as it would
appear in nature, but rather an artistic rendering with its own unique
qualities.
Still, an ordinary observer couldn’t find substantial
similarity here. Quoting the Second
Circuit, the court noted that only a visual comparison was required, and that “[g]ood
eyes and common sense may be as useful as deep study of reported and unreported
cases, which themselves are tied to highly particularized facts.” The plant sprigs in Klauber’s designs were
much longer, featured many more leaves, and were more stylized than those in
the allegedly infringing design, curling into semi-circles. The flowers in Klauber’s
designs were buds, while Bon-Ton’s were blossoms. 7088 had a border of small, interconnected
dots of fabric, while Bon-Ton’s design didn’t. The leaves in Klauber’s designs
were solid, while Bon-Ton’s had a small center gap, presumably showing the leaf
spine. There were enough differences in
individual elements that the total concept and feel and aesthetic appeal of the
works differed. No reasonable jury could
find that an average lay observer would recognize Bon-Ton’s design as having
been appropriated from Klauber’s designs.
Other fabric cases finding infringement had relied in part on the
presence of a similar or identical color scheme, not an issue here.
The court refused to apply Dastar to bar Klauber’s Lanham Act claim, but still rejected it. Klauber pressed only a §43(a)(1)(B) claim,
premised on the idea that Bon-Ton offered for sale underwear “prominently
showing, as the waistband, a copy of Klauber's 7087 lace,” but consumers who
ordered the underwear would receive underwear with a different lace in the
waistband.
Advertised & close-up:
Allegedly delivered:
Section 43(a)(1)(B) provides a cause of action for such
“bait and switch.” And this claim wasn’t
based on false representations or attributions of authorship of ideas or
expressions, so it wasn’t Dastar-barred.
The reason given is weird, though, and doesn’t actually distinguish authorship
from non-authorship claims: Klauber alleged that Bon-Ton’s false advertising
caused “confusion, mistake and deception in the minds of the purchasing public
as to the identity and source of the lace in Bon-Ton's product,” which has
caused Plaintiff damage. But put that
way, it’s saying that Bon-Ton falsely advertised that it was the source of the
lace in its products, which seems … not unlike the precise claim rejected by Dastar, which held that as long as
Dastar was the physical origin of the
product then there wasn’t any misrepresentation of origin. It’s hard to see how “identity” or “source”
could mean something different here. See
also Specialized
Seating v. Greenwich Indus. (7th Cir. 2010) (holding that the
key, for Dastar purposes, is whether
the defendant is the source of the overall product and not the components).
Bon-Ton then argued that Klauber lacked standing, in that it
failed to allege a reasonable interest to be protected against the alleged
false advertising and a reasonable basis for believing that the interest is
likely to be damaged by the alleged false advertising. A more substantial
showing is required when the parties’ products aren’t obviously in competition
and there’s no comparative advertising.
The court agreed that the complaint lacked sufficient allegations of
injury to Klauber. The complaint alleged that the consuming public would be
deceived into buying Bon-Ton’s product.
(Materiality?) But that wasn’t
enough to make out a plausible claim for injury, given that Klauber makes lace
and doesn’t compete directly with Bon-Ton.
In its briefing, Klauber argued that it sells the lace
pattern at issue exclusively to the well-known brand Hanky Panky “for use in
its famous and iconic lace panty.” (So, not a false advertising claim but a
trade dress claim?) Hanky Panky, which
does directly compete with Bon-Ton, would supposedly be damaged by Bon-Ton’s
ads, which would in turn damage Klauber because Hanky Panky wouldn’t want to
pay for exclusive rights to Klauber’s design if competitors are selling the
same designs. Also, consumers might
mistakenly attribute Bon-Ton’s bait and switch ads to Hanky Panky, since the
design at issue was well known, and consumers would get angry when they didn’t
receive the advertised product and would blame Hanky Panky. (Hunh?)
“Whatever the merits of this theory of injury, it is not pleaded … and may
not be relied on now to defeat Bon-Ton's motion to dismiss.”
Hmm, I guess "confusion, mistake and deception in the minds of the purchasing public as to the identity and source of the lace in Bon-Ton's product” could refer to the source of the physical lace. But then I agree it's a Bretford issue about whether confusion about the source of a part of the product matters.
ReplyDeleteBut the fundamental question remains - why bother? I may like a lace band, but is anyone really that particular about the design of the lace itself? Surely there are no actual damages.
ReplyDelete