How about this "Hockey Mom" shirt in Starbucks style?
Monday, June 30, 2014
Friday, June 27, 2014
Website statements aren't trade dress for insurance purposes
Test Masters Educational Services, Inc. v. State Farm Lloyds,
2014 WL 2854536, No. H–13–1706 (S.D. Tex. June 23, 2014)
Test Masters offers test prep services. It was involved in a series of lawsuits by
and against third party competitor Singh.
In the underlying case here, Singh filed counterclaims alleging that
Test Masters’ website purported to offer LSAT preparation courses across the
country under the “Test Masters” name and mark, mimicked a map on Singh’s
website, and made material misrepresentations in an effort to trick consumers
into believing that Plaintiff’s services were associated with Singh’s. State Farm agreed to defend the
counterclaims, but when Singh dropped the accusation that Test Masters mimicked
Singh’s map, it ultimately withdrew its defense because the absence of a trade
dress claim meant there was no potential coverage under the advertising injury
policy it provided Test Masters. This suit followed.
Texas uses the “eight corners” rule, under which the duty to
defend considers only the pleadings, liberally construed, and the policy
language, focusing on the factual allegations in the pleading rather than the
legal theories. Here, the only question
for the court was whether the underlying complaint alleged infringement of “trade
dress.”
Test Masters argued that Singh’s citation of §43(a) and
allegations that Test Masters used a similar name, mark, and website constituted
allegations of trade dress infringement.
But §43(a) covers more than trade dress, and statutory citation isn’t
enough to trigger coverage. The
underlying complaint alleged that Test Masters “changed its website so that it
was confusingly similar to Singh’s, purporting to offer LSAT preparation
courses in every state,” and “represents on its website that it offers live
LSAT classroom courses in 100 cities and in all 50 states,” and that its
actions “as described above (in particular, [Plaintiff’s] use of the
TESTMASTERS name and mark and testmasters.com domain name) are likely to cause
confusion, mistake, or deception ... and thus constitute trademark infringement
and false designation of origin in violation of Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act.”
This wasn’t trade dress, which is a product’s total image
and overall appearance. The complaint didn’t allege anything about any “look
and feel” of the website. (The court
mistakenly says “inherently distinctive” here but of course acquired
distinctiveness can also—indeed only, in this case since website design would be
product design—produce protectable trade dress.) “Absent some allegation of
aesthetic similarity to another’s advertisement, a claim that defendant
infringed a trademark does not itself comprise a claim for trade dress
infringement.” Allegations that the
website was “confusingly similar” to Singh’s because Test Masters copied some
of Singh’s course locations and purported to have taught “thousands of LSAT
students” said nothing about the distinctive aesthetics of Test Master’s
website as compared to Singh’s. Advertisement
of the locations in which one actually does business isn’t trade dress, so
falsely advertising locations wouldn’t be copying trade dress. And even if a
list of locations where courses are offered did constitute trade dress, the
underlying counterclaims didn’t allege that the locations were copied—rather they
alleged false advertising of Test Masters locations.
State Farm was entitled to summary judgment on Test Masters’
claim for breach of contract.
multiplicity of products and labels makes class unascertainable
Bruton v. Gerber Products Co., No. 12-CV-02412, 2014 WL
2860995 (N.D. Cal. June 23, 2014)
Bruton brought the usual California claims against Gerber
for mislabeling certain food products intended for children under 2. She
challenged Gerber’s nutrient content claims and failure to label certain
products labeled with a “No Added Sugar” or “No Added Refined Sugar” with a
disclosure statement warning of the high caloric value of the products. The court denied class certification on
ascertainability grounds.
A class is ascertainable if it is defined by “objective
criteria” and if it is “administratively feasible” to determine whether a
particular individual is a member of the class. Bruton proposed to certify a class of buyers
of foods within Gerber’s “2nd Foods” category. There were seven product sub-categories and
multiple flavors within each sub-category.
In total, of the 93 varieties of baby food available in the 2nd Foods
product category, 69 products were part of the proposed class.
The court first rejected Gerber’s argument that the class
was unascertainable because Gerber doesn’t track who buys its products. That may be the law of the Third Circuit, but
not the Ninth. See Carrera v. Bayer Corp., 727 F.3d 300 (3d Cir. 2013)
(rejecting affidavits from class members as means of identification where
defendant kept no purchase records). “In this Circuit, it is enough that the
class definition describes a set of common characteristics sufficient to allow
a prospective plaintiff to identify himself or herself as having a right to
recover based on the description.”
However, labeling variation proved a fatal flaw. Gerber sold
multiple versions of the same products during the class period. Most, if not
all, consumers likely discarded the product packaging, forcing them to rely on
memory alone, and it was too much to ask them to remember not just whether they
bought 2nd Foods products within the class period, but what the
flavors and labels were.
Of the 69 products at issue, 66 were labeled both with and
without challenged labels during the class period. Because of production and distribution
realities, “a new label produced by Gerber may appear for sale on a store shelf
anywhere between three and thirteen months after the new label is approved.”
Gerber submitted evidence that at some times during the class period, there
were two different labels simultaneously for sale in one store ,”such that on a
given day one consumer may have purchased a product with a challenged label
statement while another purchaser of the same product did not.” The court—Judge
Koh—had recently certified other consumer classes, where all products in the
class definition contained the allegedly problematic statements throughout the
class period, but this was different.
While self-identification with affidavits can be enough for
ascertainability, sometimes it isn’t. In
a case seeking certification of a class of consumers who had smoked twenty
“Pack–Years,” or at least 146,000, Marlboro cigarettes over the class period,
which spanned several decades, the court reasoned that this asked too much of
class members’ prospective members’ memories. “Swearing ‘I smoked 146,000
Marlboro cigarettes’ is categorically different from swearing ‘I have been to
Paris, France,’ or ‘I am Jewish,’ or even ‘I was within ten miles of the toxic
explosion on the day it happened.’” Likewise, another food case involving multiple
products and labels was found unascertainable because the defendant “produced
and sold multiple versions of each of the contested product labels during the
class period, some bearing the allegedly misleading statements and others not.” Consumers would have difficulty remembering
whether or not they bought a product with an allegedly misleading label
statement.
So too here.
Identifying class membership required consumers to remember whether they
purchased a 2nd Foods product in a qualifying flavor; whether the product was
in the appropriate packaging; and whether the product was labeled with a
challenged label statement. But because Gerber sold more flavors of 2nd
foods than included in the class definition, and because Gerber’s flavors were
very similar in name, it was likely that consumers would have difficulty
remembering whether or not they purchased a qualifying product. (For example, Apples
and Bananas with Mixed Cereal or Apples and Cherries flavors were included, but
Apple Peach Squash, Apple Berry with Mixed Cereal, and Apples and Chicken
flavors were not.)
The multiple different labels further complicated the
issue. “Nearly all of the Gerber 2nd
Foods products included in the class definition did not contain any challenged
label statements during a portion of the class period.” Some of the labels were
changed to remove challenged statements; some statements were moved from the
front of the package to less prominent places.
The Apples and Cherries flavor, for example, had six different labels
during the class period, one with a challenged statement on the top, five with
challenged statements on the top and front, and one with no challenged
statements. That made accurate recall
even less likely.
In sum: “[t]he number of products at issue in this case, the
varieties included and not included in the class definition, the changes in
product labeling throughout the class period, the varied and uncertain length
of time it takes for products with new labels to appear on store shelves, and
the fact that the same products were sold with and without the challenged label
statements simultaneously make Plaintiff’s proposed class identification method
administratively unfeasible.” Under these circumstances, affidavits would be
unreliable, especially since Bruton sought money damages and the availability
thereof might “encourage consumers to submit affidavits even though they cannot
remember which products they purchased.”
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Class can be certified when product is allegedly worthless
Ortega v. Natural Balance, Inc., 2014 WL 2782329, No. CV
13–5942 (C.D. Cal. June 19, 2014)
The court granted class certification for a California class
of consumers of Cobra Sexual Energy, a dietary supplement containing various
herbs, extracts, and other plant-based materials, which was allegedly falsely
marketed as having beneficial health and aphrodisiac properties and being
scientifically formulated to improve virility.
Plaintiffs alleged the usual California claims.
The court found the class ascertainable by objective
criteria: whether they purchased the products during the class period in
California for personal use (and weren’t persons connected to Natural Balance).
Only those who lost money buying Cobra were included, so the class was defined
as people who’d have standing. The fact
that there were no purchase records was irrelevant; “identifying individual
class members is not germane to ascertainability.”
Typicality: Natural Balance argued that the class
representatives’ claims weren’t typical because they had unrealistic
expectations of the product and unreasonably interpreted the packaging. But the particulars of their understanding
didn’t make them atypical: “even if each Plaintiff and class member had
somewhat varying conceptions of the results he could expect from a product
marketed as virility-enhancing, each had the same marketing-induced expectation
that the product would be virility-enhancing.”
Plaintiffs alleged that it wasn’t.
That made their claims typical, except as to class members whose claims
would be barred by the statute of limitations. They couldn’t add to the period
by arguing delayed discovery that tolled the limitations period, because that
would add “a significant dimension in which the named Plaintiffs have no personal
interest.”
Common issues predominated: falsity/misleadingness of the
packaging itself, which would be determined based on a reasonable consumer
standard and not on an individual basis.
“Plaintiffs’ other evidence—consumer surveys and expert testimony
regarding the inefficacy of Cobra’s ingredients—is also applicable on a
class-wide basis.”
Classwide causation could be presumed upon a showing of
materiality. The allegedly misleading
statements were nearly all of the statements on Cobra’s packaging, and it
strained credulity to think that a manufacturer would put only immaterial
statements on its packaging. Thus, if
plaintiffs chould show misleadingness, they could likely show materiality as
well; certainly this couldn’t be ruled out as a matter of law. It could be determined classwide because the
packaging was uniform over the entire class period.
Natural Balance argues that individual questions
predominated because plaintiffs couldn’t show that everyone was misled by the
exact same statements—the named plaintiffs allegedly relied on the package’s
image of a cobra snake and not on other statements. But both plaintiffs testified to other
statements on which they relied. And the
presumption of reliance and causation could moot any issue about which
component any individual plaintiff read or remembered.
Nor did individualized damages defeat predominance. Even if that could, by itself, defeat
certification—which it can’t—plaintiffs had a tenable theory of how to
ascertain classwide monetary relief. What they spent on Cobra could be readily
calculated using Defendant’s sales numbers and an average retail price. Natural Balance argued that this didn’t take
into account the actual value of the product to each individual. But plaintiffs
argued that the product was valueless because it provided none of the
advertised benefits and was illegal, entitling them to recover the full price. Natural Balance’s “theoretically available
defense” to this relief didn’t render damages an individualized issue that predominates
over the common issues.
The challenge of identifying class members was also
insufficient to make individual issues predominate. “[G]iven that one of the purposes of the
class action procedure is to facilitate small claims, that it is likely Defendant’s
aggregate liability could be reliably determined without imposing excess
liability, and that all parties would be bound by the litigation, individual
issues arising out of identifying class members do not predominate over common
issues and the class procedure does not unfairly prejudice Defendant.”
Unsurprisingly, the court also found superiority. Small individual claims would be difficult,
wasteful, and unlikely. Overall,
certification was appropriate.
However, the court did reject two unusual features of the
proposed notice—that Natural Balance be required to pay for it, and that it
also be required to include the notice within Cobra’s packaging. Nothing justified departing from the ordinary
plaintiff-pays rule, and requiring notice within Cobra’s packaging “would be
akin to issuing a mandatory injunction, a drastic step not warranted by the
record before the Court.”
UK ASA finds ad for journalistic Free Speech Network misleading
Tragedy or farce? I'll take "couldn't happen in the US" for $500, Alex.
Nonprofit's former chapter has false advertising, not TM, claims against parent
Alzheimer’s Disease Resource Center, Inc. v. Alzheimer’s Disease
and Related Disorders Association, Inc. 981 F. Supp. 2d 153 (E.D.N.Y. 2013)
Plaintiff ADRC is the former Long Island chapter of
defendant Association, dedicated to fighting Alzheimer’s. In 1998, the parties entered into a
“Statement of Relationship” (SOR) contemplating that they could part ways and
providing that the distribution of chapter assets would be subject to binding
arbitration in case of disagreement.
ADRC alleged that, over time, the Association breached the SOR by, among
other things, permitting the Association’s NYC chapter to fundraise on Long
Island. They disaffiliated in 2012, and
ADRC demanded arbitration, seeking to retain funds previously raised for the
Association.
ADRC sued the Association for unfairly competing with ADRC
by sending out 15 mass mailings under the name “Alzheimer’s Association—Long
Island Chapter” (ADRC’s former operating name) and for breaching an agreement
between the parties by using donor information it previously obtained from the
ADRC prior to the disaffiliation. ADRC
alleged that the Association lacked any presence on Long Island when the
letters were sent, and that the Association forged the signature of ADRC’s
leader in those mailings. Multiple donors allegedly mailed checks to the
Association based on the mistaken belief that the donations were going to ADRC.
Lanham Act claim: the court dismissed the §43(a)(1)(A)
aspect of the claim because ADRC conceded that it had no valid trademark in the
name “Alzheimer’s Association—Long Island Chapter” or a related expression. However, §43(a)(1)(B) was still
available. (This strikes me as an excellent use of channeling principles. It's true that the name is part of the confusion, but ADRC abandoned the name.) The court found that ADRC
plausibly alleged that the use of confusing addresses, coupled with the
inclusion of ADRC’s leader’s name on the mailings, had the capacity to deceive
a substantial portion of the intended audience about the recipient of their
donations. ADRC alleged the identity of
one such donor who was actually deceived.
The Association argued that ADRC failed to allege materiality, but the
identified donor indicated that she “felt deceived” by the mailings. Facts regarding the identity of other donors were
peculiarly within the knowledge of the Association, meriting discovery.
The NY GBL §349 claim: ADRC successfully pled a claim for
deceptive acts and practices. “Donors are the consuming public for charitable
fundraising activities and are deceived, when a check intended for one charity
is cashed by another.” There was a public interest in knowing who was receiving
charitable donations. Punitive damages
could be available on this claim, though not on the others.
There was no common law unfair competition claim, because
there was no protectable mark at issue, nor was there misuse of a trade secret
in using publicly available information like a name or ADRC’s address. “In the
Court’s view, the name of an organization’s executive and address does not
neatly fit within the categories typically associated with a common law claim
for unfair competition.” A conversion claim failed because there was no
specific identifiable fund to which ADRC was entitled. And tortious
interference with prospective economic advantage failed because there was no
sufficiently alleged “business injury,” as required. ADRC alleged injury in the form of lost
donations, but didn’t particularize the damage to its relationships with its
donors. And there was no fraud because
ADRC didn’t reasonably rely on any misrepresentations; allegations of third
party reliance were insufficient under New York law. The court also dismissed claims for breach of
contract based on the Association’s continued use of donor information after
disaffiliation. The Association’s
contractual obligations under the SOR ceased after disaffiliation, and what
counted as assets—including donor information—was expressly reserved for
arbitration. Likewise, even if the donor
lists constituted a trade secret, ADRC failed to allege that the information
was used “in breach of an agreement, confidential relationship or duty, or as a
result of discovery by improper means,” or in such a way as to constitute
common law unfair competition.
An unjust enrichment claim, however, survived (based on the
donations).
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
You have to laugh or you'll cry: supplement regulation
John Oliver has yet another fantastic, and accurate,
advertising law-related story, this time focusing
on the deliberate unregulation of dietary supplements.
More pondering on the relationship between sec. 2 and sec. 43
One question from last week’s TTAB REDSKINS decision
concerns the effect on §43 if the §2 cancellation is upheld. Mark
McKenna has argued that, if we took history seriously, there should be no
effect, because unfair competition historically covered lots of things that
weren’t registrable. I’m not so sure
that ought to make a difference today, because now that we register trade
dress, surnames with secondary meaning, etc., I don’t think there is currently a coherent
account of unregistrable matter that is
nonetheless protectable. I don’t think it’s wrong to say that there ought to be such a set, but I don’t think
there must be.
For a student research paper concluding that unregistrable ought to mean
unprotectable, see James C. Bartholomew, The
Scope of Protection Under §§ 2 & 43 of the Lanham Act, though the paper
acknowledges that nobody has much to go on here. (Professor McKenna notes that
one reason to apply §43 is that if §2 and §43 go together, then the case that
§2 violates the First Amendment gets a lot stronger. I’m also okay with that—I think the right
result might be for parts of §2 to go, if we can figure out what the government
interest in registration really is. Right now, we don’t have a good account of
that.)
The exclusions in §2 that arguably don’t
go to core trademark policy (though this too is debatable) are those for immoral,
scandalous, or disparaging marks; flags/coats of arms; names/signatures/portraits
of living persons/deceased presidents with living spouses without written
consent; geographic indications (GIs) on wine or spirits identifying someplace
other than their origin; and primarily geographically deceptively
misdescriptive terms. Some of these exclusions
are closer to source significance than others, and it might be worth noting
that the “core” exclusions are pretty well mixed in with the non-core ones, so
that “deceptive” is listed right in between “immoral” and “scandalous.” Arguably it’s all congressional policy about
what ought to serve as a mark. (See the
policy reasoning in Renna
v. County of Union, arguing that governments ought not to have access
to ordinary trademark remedies, given their First Amendment implications.)
But anyway, the NAFTA amendments might seem to be a really
obvious place to look for congressional policy about the relationship between
registration and protectability.
Congress intended—before California
Innovations gutted the change—to switch geographically deceptively
misdescriptive marks from registrable to unregistrable. Did it also intend to make them unprotectable
under §43? As my research assistant
pointed out, in retrospect this seems like a really obvious question. And yet, as I confirmed with Professor
McCarthy, there seems to have been no consideration of that question. Perhaps this is related to the fact that most
of our treaty partners operate more registration-based systems, and weren’t
attuned to the fact that the US now offers essentially the same protection to
registered and unregistered marks.
Relatedly, our NAFTA commitment required us to provide a
remedy to persons harmed by the use of primarily geographically deceptively
misdescriptive terms: “Each party [United States, Mexico, Canada] shall
provide, in respect of geographical indications, the legal means for interested
persons to prevent: (a) the use of any means in the designation or
presentation of a good that indicates or suggests that the good in question
originates in a territory, region or locality other than the true place of
origin, in a manner that misleads the public as to the geographical origin of
the good....”
Congress did not amend the Lanham Act to implement this
provision, while it amended §2 to deal with registration. Presumably, the assumption was that false
advertising law covered the situation already.
Did Congress just not notice that materiality is a requirement under
§43(a)(1)(B) (as it should be under §43(a)(1)(A))? The use of geographically misleading terms is
therefore not unlawful unless the misleadingness is material. That’s probably not what our trading partners
wanted, but it’s what they got—both for §43(a)(1)(B) and for §2, after California Innovations. (I say that materiality was not supposed to
be required because part of the theory behind protecting all GIs is that
different places should be encouraged to develop reputations for specific
qualities. Protection should enable such
reputations to develop even if they don’t exist now and therefore aren’t
material now. There’s other language
that can be used to specify GIs with an existing reputation.)
The best that can be said, I think, is that Congress wasn’t
really thinking that much about the details, and so the NAFTA amendments don’t
help us much in figuring out how we should think about the modern relationship
between §2 and §43.
Friday, June 20, 2014
Is DRM the source of Hachette's troubles?
So argues Cory Doctorow. He makes a point that also came up at the 1201 exemption hearings: the copyright owner does not clearly have the right to authorize a user to strip DRM from a work, where the copyright owner isn't the source of the DRM (and the major forms of DRM aren't operated by individual copyright owners). So Hachette can't, without some serious work, release a "read your Kindle books on a Hachette app" app. Obviously there are other issues, especially with the physical books, but it's a point worth considering.
Also the note that removing DRM from Kindle books is "literally a three-word search," despite over 15 years of the DMCA. As I've said before, the DMCA harms people trying to do the right thing and is irrelevant to people trying to do the wrong thing.
Also the note that removing DRM from Kindle books is "literally a three-word search," despite over 15 years of the DMCA. As I've said before, the DMCA harms people trying to do the right thing and is irrelevant to people trying to do the wrong thing.
Something fishy about this trademark claim?
GurglePot, Inc. v. New Shreve, Crump & Low LLC, 2014
WL 2744283, No. C13–6029 (W.D. Wash. June 17, 2014)
I’m not really interested in the law in this personal jurisdiction case, finding that there’s no personal jurisdiction in plaintiff’s home state over Massachusetts-based New SCL for this the declaratory judgment of non-infringement. I just really liked the accused trade dress (I think it’s nicer than New SCL’s), and also it reminds me of Justice Scalia’s “cocktail shaker shaped like a penguin.” Even if there is secondary meaning in the New SCL design, it seems to me that New SCL is asserting rights at the level of idea.
I’m not really interested in the law in this personal jurisdiction case, finding that there’s no personal jurisdiction in plaintiff’s home state over Massachusetts-based New SCL for this the declaratory judgment of non-infringement. I just really liked the accused trade dress (I think it’s nicer than New SCL’s), and also it reminds me of Justice Scalia’s “cocktail shaker shaped like a penguin.” Even if there is secondary meaning in the New SCL design, it seems to me that New SCL is asserting rights at the level of idea.
GurglePot |
New SCL Gurgling Cod |
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Apply fair use to burned area
Via Five Useful Articles, this deposition excerpt from HathiTrust is nearly priceless--what takes it beyond the usual snark is the very last dig the HT lawyer gets in at the Authors Guild's theory of the case.
So, HT's lawyer snarks about multiple litigation copies of HT witness's book the AG's lawyer has made in preparation for the deposition; AG lawyer rises to the bait (even though the book is, according to another AG lawyer, CC/noncommercial licensed) and suggests he'll destroy the extra copies before reading. HT's lawyer: "I guess if no one else looks at something, it's not infringement? That's an interesting theory."
So, HT's lawyer snarks about multiple litigation copies of HT witness's book the AG's lawyer has made in preparation for the deposition; AG lawyer rises to the bait (even though the book is, according to another AG lawyer, CC/noncommercial licensed) and suggests he'll destroy the extra copies before reading. HT's lawyer: "I guess if no one else looks at something, it's not infringement? That's an interesting theory."
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
"original" and "first" are mere puffery
Bern Unlimited, Inc. v. Burton Corp., No. 11-12278, 2014 WL
2649006 (D. Mass. June 12, 2014)
Bern sued six of its competitors in the market for sports
helmets, alleging trade dress infringement.
Answering Bern’s third amended complaint, defendants asserted false
advertising counterclaims, which the court struck in part.
First, defendants alleged that Bern falsely advertised that its
helmets were the “first visor helmet offering a protective visor cover in the
front.” The court found this, and claims that the helmets were the “original”
and the “first functional visor lid” to be puffery. They were not specific and
measurable, and thus not actionable. (No
Dastar analysis required, then.)
Second, defendants alleged that Bern falsely advertised that
its helmets were covered by a patent, implying that its competitors’ helmets
were imitations. Bern argued that there
could be no falsity because the patent in fact issued and was presumed valid. But the presumption can be overcome by
showing objective and subjective bad faith.
What counts as bad faith is determined on a case by case basis; if the
patentee knows of invalidity but represents that a competitor is infringing,
that’s clearly bad faith.
The counterclaims alleged that Bern advertised and sold the
helmet more than a year before the applicant applied for the patent, triggering
the old on sale bar. If the
counterclaims were true, Bern’s statements that the patent covered the helmet
were made in bad faith because it couldn’t reasonably have believed that the
patent was valid.
Bern argued that statements could only be actionable if they
directly referred to a competitor or its products, and that it didn’t
explicitly claim that the defendants were infringing its patent. But the counterclaims alleged that Bern
characterized competing helmets as imitations, and did so in the same marketing
materials that included references to the patent. One ad included, on the same page, both a
reproduction of the first page of the patent and the statement, “Every single
brand in the market now has a brim, but your customer wants the original!” While the argument that these statements in
combination would reasonably cause consumers to believe that competing helmets
were infringing was “thin, at best,” the allegations were sufficient to state a
claim.
Bern also argued that defendants didn’t allege proximate
cause, as required by Lexmark. But Lexmark’s
requirement of injury flowing directly from advertising is satisfied when “deception
of consumers causes them to withhold trade from the [claimant].” The
counterclaims properly alleged that scenario.
The court also rejected Bern’s argument that the
counterclaims were added too late. Defendants
argued that they didn’t know until they received Bern’s document disclosure
that Bern knew the patent was invalid from its inception, thus completing their
counterclaim with the requisite bad faith.
The court had “doubts” about the timing and purpose of the
counterclaims, but still declined to strike them on grounds of undue
delay. There would be some prejudice to
Bern, because Bern would be entitled to discovery on deception and materiality
(even though literal falsity creates a presumption of deception, that can be
rebutted, and materiality has to be shown independently; thus discovery would
be appropriate). But that prejudice was not
enough to overcome the interest in adjudicating related claims together; much
relevant discovery was already completed, and it would be a waste to separate
the claims.
Washington's football team registrations cancelled
If you didn't get the link from five other places, here it is. (It turns out that today was a bad day to wear shorts to the office; it's not the best outfit for being interviewed by a suited TV reporter.)
My contributions: a reminder that Renna v. County of Union has some very important things to say about the lack of protection for marks under sec. 43(a) when those marks are not registrable under sec. 2.
Also, a picture from my collection: I got this from a yard sale; the guy who made them was forced to discontinue them due to threats from the team. (Object in center of card is an Indian-head nickel.) You can see Bad Frog Beer hanging out behind the card.
My contributions: a reminder that Renna v. County of Union has some very important things to say about the lack of protection for marks under sec. 43(a) when those marks are not registrable under sec. 2.
Also, a picture from my collection: I got this from a yard sale; the guy who made them was forced to discontinue them due to threats from the team. (Object in center of card is an Indian-head nickel.) You can see Bad Frog Beer hanging out behind the card.
Grande deception?
Starbucks and the “free”
college education for its workers: The reporting on Starbucks’ offer has
gone beyond the headline—and if treated like ordinary advertising, that
headline is misleading. As it turns out,
Starbucks
will only pay in full for two years, not four; it’s negotiated a discount
with ASU online for everyone. And
Starbucks does not pay up front.
Instead, the employee must go out of pocket, and get reimbursed only
after sufficient credits have been completed.
I don’t think this meets the standard for “free” offers set forth by the FTC. Although most of the Guide is directed at
other situations, it’s pretty clear that material constraints on the “free”
offer have to be disclosed, and the requirement that the employee pay up front
is quite significant, financially. This
seems to me similar to the cases
involving purported early tax refunds, which were instead tax refund
anticipation loans, with very different potential economic consequences. Calling them “rapid refunds” was false and
misleading.
Consider also that Starbucks is using this announcement to
tout its own specialness and corporate social responsibility, as on The Daily Show. So it’s commercial speech, certainly under Nike v. Kasky. Just as dolphin-safe tuna is an intangible
product attribute that convinces consumers to buy even though saving dolphins
does nothing for them directly, so is “free” college tuition for
employees, something Jon Stewart highlighted when he stated that because of Starbucks' announcement he'd be buying from one of their stores. Given all this, should Starbucks be worried about its PR
moment turning into a moment in court?
Fair use decisionmaking
Deconstructing arguments that treat fair use as a mysterious
and dangerous concept: This
detailed analysis of a flowchart is quite useful. And it cites the OTW’s Fair Use Test Suite!
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
reading list: marijuana advertising and lessons from tobacco
Kimber P. Richter, Ph.D., M.P.H. & Sharon Levy, M.D., M.P.H., Big Marijuana — Lessons from Big Tobacco, New England Journal of Medicine:
[T]obacco was not always as lethal or addictive as it is today. In the 1880s, few people used tobacco products, only 1% of tobacco was consumed in the form of manufactured cigarettes, and few deaths were attributed to tobacco use. By the 1950s, nearly half the population used tobacco, and 80% of tobacco use entailed cigarette smoking; several decades later, lung cancer became the top cause of cancer-related deaths. This transformation was achieved through tobacco-industry innovations in product development, marketing, and lobbying….
Marketing strategies go hand in hand with product innovation. The market for marijuana is currently small, amounting to 7% of Americans 12 years of age or older, just as the tobacco market was small in the early 20th century. Once machines began mass-producing cigarettes, marketing campaigns targeted women, children, and vulnerable groups by associating smoking with images of freedom, sex appeal, cartoon characters, and — in the early days — health benefits. There is reasonable evidence that marijuana reduces nausea and vomiting during cancer treatment, reverses AIDS-related wasting, and holds promise as an antispasmodic and analgesic agent. However, marijuana manufacturers and advocates are attributing numerous other health benefits to marijuana use — for example, effectiveness against anxiety — with no supporting evidence. Furthermore, the marijuana industry will have unprecedented opportunities for marketing on the Internet, where regulation is minimal and third-party tracking and direct-to-consumer marketing have become extremely lucrative. When applied to a harmful, addictive commodity, these marketing innovations could be disastrous. This strategy poses a particular threat to young people. Adolescents are more likely than adults to seek novelty and try new products.
ALI CLE event on Lexmark, Pom, etc.
First, I apologize for the slew of RSS feed
updates you may recently have received if you subscribe via an RSS reader like
Feedly—the feed has apparently been broken since early May. I was still here
though! If you’re interested, you can
browse the archives at tushnet.blogspot.com, or use any tags of interest to see
what you missed. I have taken measures so I'll notice earlier next time.
Thursday July 10, 2014 1:00 - 2:00 pm
Eastern
The law of false advertising has attracted
national attention. Two recent Supreme Court decisions interpreting the Lanham
Act will provide companies with more flexibility in policing their competitor’s
product claims.
The Supreme Court recently issued Lanham
Act opinions in Lexmark International v. Static Control Components and POM
Wonderful v. Coca Cola, involving standing and preclusion, respectively. The
Third Circuit will soon address whether a Lanham Act plaintiff who shows a
likelihood of succeeding on its false advertising claim is entitled to a
presumption that the defendant’s conduct causes irreparable harm.
What impact will these decisions have on
future actions under the Lanham Act? Learn more at this CLE on the latest
rulings on the Lanham Act.
What You Will Learn
Discussion will include:
analysis of Court’s decisions in Lexmark
and POM Wonderful
standing to bring suit under Lanham Act
FDA preclusion and preemption
remedies: injunctive relief vs. damages
Who Should Attend
This continuing legal education program
from American Law Institute CLE will benefit in-house counsel, IP and business
attorneys, and other professionals involved in business marketing.
Planning Chair
Christopher M. Kindel, Member, Pirkey
Barber PLLC, Austin, Texas
Mr. Kindel focuses his practice on
intellectual property trademark and copyright. His experience crosses a wide
range of industries including consumer and luxury goods, retail sales, hotel
services, music and entertainment, pharmaceuticals, software, financial and
consulting services and information technologies industries.
Saul H. Perloff, Member, Norton Rose
Fulbright LLP, San Antonio, Texas
Mr. Perloff is a partner in the firm’s
Intellectual Property Group and the head of the false advertising group where
he represents domestic and international clients in a wide range of complex
advertising and unfair competition disputes under the Lanham Act and state law.
He also counsels and advises pharmaceutical, consumer product, biotechnology and
other clients on advertising and brand protection strategies.
Adam L. Scoville, Vice President &
Assistant General Counsel, RE/MAX, LLC, Denver, Colorado
Mr. Scoville leads a team of over a half
dozen professionals charged with advertising substantiation, trademarks and
brand protection, and other intellectual property issues at RE/MAX, LLC, which
franchises real estate brokerage operations with over 90,000 sales associates,
in over 6,000 franchised offices, in over 95 countries.
Rebecca L. Tushnet, Professor of Law ,
Georgetown Law, Washington, D.C.
Professor Tushnet is a professor of law at
Georgetown specializing in intellectual property and is a frequent author and
speaker on the topic. She also writes the widely-followed 43(B)log False
Advertising and More which reports on current IP cases, issues, conferences,
and debates.
Monday, June 16, 2014
Such a lonely word: "honest" isn't puffery
Salazar v. Honest Tea, Inc., 2014 WL 2593601, No. 2:13-cv-02318
(E.D. Cal. June 10, 2014)
Salazar alleged that HT’s Honey Green Tea bottles didn’t
contain the amount of antioxidants represented on their labels, where
independent lab testing determined that the bottles contained an average of
186.7 mg of flavonoids per bottle, or 24 percent below the “247 mg Antioxidants
Green Tea Flavonoids Per Bottle” highlighted on the labels. (Previous versions claimed “250mg EGCG2 Super
Antioxidant,” though independent testing showed only 70 mg, and then “Antioxidants
190mg Tea Catechins/Bottle,” though independent testing showed only 119
mg. Salazar alleged that HT changed its
labels but not the formulation.) Salazar
alleged that HT’s “Refreshingly Honest” and “Brutally Honest,” and interactive
campaigns centered on the word “honesty,” made this more deceptive.
Salazar brought the usual California claims. HT argued express preemption, because her
tests didn’t employ the FDA-mandated test protocol for nutrient content
claims. Salazar argued that the FDA
requirements only apply to disclosures in the “Nutrition Facts,” and that HT’s
alleged misrepresentations weren’t “nutrient content claims” subject to the FDA
regulations. The court disagreed.
Under FDA regulations, “compliance with requirements for
nutrient content claims” must be determined by analyzing a sample consisting
“of a composite of 12 subsamples (consumer units), taken 1 from each of 12
different randomly chosen shipping cases, to be representative of a lot.” However, Salazar’s claims were based on (1)
her own independent testing (finding, for example, an average of 70 mg of EGCG,
less than a third of the claimed 250 mg amount, with similar lower-than-claimed
results for catechins and bioflavonoids), (2) a report from ConsumerLab.com
(finding 57.5 mg of EGCG, with similar lower-than-claimed results for
catechins), (3) HT’s own marketing materials referring to supposed independent
tests by Men’s Health Magazine
(finding 71 mg).
The court found that the label statements were nutrient
content claims even if not required to be in Nutrition Facts. Therefore, their
accuracy had to be challenged under the 12-sample test method, which allowed
for some variation in nutrient content of each individual product. The complaint didn’t allege such testing. It
was therefore dismissed with leave to amend.
However, the court did find that Salazar had standing, making
the usual allegations of reliance. But
could she sue for the earlier labels, given that she began buying only in
2012? At this stage, she’d alleged
sufficient similarity between the Honey Green Tea products she bought and those
she didn’t. The formulation was identical from 2008-2013, and all the variants
related to the advertised antioxidant content.
Material differences, if any, were better addressed at the class
certification stage.
HT argued that claims based on the “Honest Tea” name; its “Refreshingly
Honest” and “Brutally Honest” taglines; or its “just a tad sweet” and “a kiss
of honey, but not enough to gross you out” statements should be dismissed
because they are non-actionable puffery. Salazar argued that she believed them,
as a reasonable consumer would. While
nonspecific, nonmeasurable assertions are puffery, some courts have found
“honesty” to be actionable. See, e.g.,
Richman v. Goldman Sachs Grp., Inc., 868 F.Supp.2d 261, 277 n. 8 (S.D.N.Y.2012)
(“If Goldman’s claims of ‘honesty’ and ‘integrity’ are simply puffery, the
world of finance may be in more trouble than we recognize.”). The honey-related statements were more
blatant puffery:
It is unclear how one could verify
whether the level of honey in defendant’s product qualifies as a “kiss” and is
“not enough to gross you out.” A “tad” and a “kiss” are vague and non-specific
terms that lack any clear, objective indication of their levels. “Not enough to
gross you out” is inherently subjective; two different consumers may have different
tolerance levels to the honey.
Thus, the claims were dismissed with prejudice insofar as
they relied on honey-related statements.
But “honesty” required more analysis. The term’s frequent use in trademarks was “suggestive
of its hyperbolic, generalized nature.”
HT’s use of “honest” was similar to non-actionable claims for “reliability”
and “authentic[ity]” in other commercial product cases. “Adding the terms
‘refreshingly’ and ‘brutally’ to ‘honest’ in the tagline may appeal to
consumers but may not substantively contribute to notions of honesty.” On the other hand, “honest” might imply
claims to provide only truthful information, and truthfulness can be
measured.
“Honest Tea” by itself also had a “concrete message.” HT’s ad campaigns included a website posting,
“Honest Tea: If it’s not real, it’s not Honest”; re-styling of the label to
accentuate the word “Honest”; a billboard campaign of truths such as “YES, THAT
DRESS DOES MAKE YOU LOOK FAT, BE REAL. GET HONEST” and “IT’S NOT ME IT’S YOU,
BE REAL. GET HONEST”; and a National
Honesty Index social experiment measuring compliance with an honor system
across cities. As alleged, “defendant sets out to paint itself as honest and
bases virtually its entire product image on that characteristic. These claims
are not mere puffery.”
infringement isn't disparagement for advertising injury purposes
Hartford Casualty Ins. Co. v. Swift Distribution, Inc., No.
S207172, 2014 WL 2609753 (Cal. June 12, 2014)
The California Supreme Court here provides a relatively rare
state court interpretation of the scope of an advertising-related insurance
policy. Hartford insured Swift (here,
Ultimate) for claims arising from “[o]ral, written, or electronic publication
of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a
person’s or organization’s goods, products or services.” A third party, Dahl, sued Ultimate, alleging
patent and trademark infringement, false designation of origin, and damage to business,
reputation, and goodwill based on Ultimate’s sale of a media cart. Hartford denied coverage on the ground that
the underlying suit didn’t allege disparagement.
The duty to defend is broad.
It can be triggered by the allegations of the complaint, or where
extrinsic facts known to the insurer (whether disputed or undisputed) suggest
that the claim may be covered.
The court nonetheless held that a claim of disparagement “requires
a plaintiff to show a false or misleading statement that (1) specifically
refers to the plaintiff’s product or business and (2) clearly derogates that
product or business. Each requirement must be satisfied by express mention or
by clear implication.” These limits
derive from the common law tort of disparagement, which has been shaped by
First Amendment considerations even as applied to nonmedia defendants.
These specificity requirements “significantly limit the type
of statements that may constitute disparagement, especially since
advertisements and promotional materials often avoid express mention of
competitors,” though the court noted that other courts “have found certain
kinds of statements to specifically refer to and derogate a competitor’s
product or business by clear implication.” This can occur when a false or
misleading statement necessarily
refers to and denigrates a competitor’s product. A total superiority or uniqueness claim may
clearly or necessarily disparage another party without expressly mentioning
them.
The underlying complaint here alleged infringement and
dilution, and attached Ultimate’s ads, which didn’t name the Multi-Cart or any
other competing product. Ultimate
offered two theories of disparagement: the first focused on Dahl’s claim that
the products’ similarity in design and product name led to confusion, while the
second involved false statements of superiority that allegedly implied the
inferiority of Dahl’s product.
Even if the use of Ultimate’s “Ulti-Cart” could reasonably
imply reference to Dahl’s “Multi-Cart,” there was no disparagement. Consumer confusion does not by itself mean
disparagement. Intentional mimicry,
without more, doesn’t derogate or malign the subject of copying. Even assuming it’s true that confusing
consumers into thinking that you offer a high-quality product and then offering
them a cheap knock-off is derogatory to the trademark owner, because confused
consumers will believe that the cheap knock-off represents the legitimate
product’s actual quality, no such conduct was alleged here. Instead, Dahl repeatedly asserted that the
two products were “nearly identical, folding transport carts.” “A false or
misleading statement that causes consumer confusion, but does not expressly
assert or clearly imply the inferiority of the underlying plaintiff’s product,
does not constitute disparagement.”
Ultimate argued that its 2010 product catalog disparaged the
Multi-Cart by asserting the superiority of the Ulti-Cart: “Ultimate Support
designs and builds innovative, superior products,” provides “unique support
solutions that are crafted with unparalleled innovation and quality and
accompanied by superior customer service,” and the Ulti-Cart has “patent-pending
folding handles and levers.” The catalog was referenced in the complaint and
should be considered, but were insufficient. Except for the patent-pending
statement, the statements were general descriptions of the company. And “superior” doesn’t necessarily imply a
derogatory comparison; according to the dictionary, it may be used to describe
something “[o]f great value or excellence; extraordinary” or “notably excellent
of its kind: surpassingly good.” Nor
does “patent-pending” guarantee that a patent will be granted or that the
product is of higher quality. These statements weren’t specific enough to call
into question Dahl’s proprietary rights in his product or to suggest that the
Ulti-Cart had any important, unique feature.
Instead, they were mere puffing.
“Were we to adopt Ultimate’s theory of disparagement, almost any
advertisement extolling the superior quality of a company or its products would
be fodder for litigation.” That would be
a free speech problem.
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