Locus Telecommunications, Inc. v. Talk Global, LLC, No.
14–1205, 2014 WL 4271635 (D.N.J. Aug. 28, 2014)
Defendant Expansys allegedly made a false statement on a website
promoting its product, personal identification numbers (“PINs”) used to add
minutes to prepaid cell phones. Locus resells such PINS to distributors, who
sell them to retailers. Expansys
allegedly operated a website through which consumers would be able to redeem
their PINs to refill prepaid plans with various wireless carriers, marketing Expansys
PINs as “The Easiest Way To Refill a USA PrePay Plan.” Locus allegedly relied on this claim, but the
PINs didn’t work on the website, precluding Locus, its retailers, and PIN
buyers from being able to redeem them. This allegedly hurt Locus’s sales and
goodwill, and Locus sued for violation of the Lanham Act as well as state law
claims.
The court determined that “the injury of which Locus
complains does not stem from conduct by Expansys which unfairly diminished
Locus’s competitive position in the marketplace.” Instead, it stemmed from the inducement to
buy the Expansys PINs, and Lexmark
excluded injury to entities “hoodwinked into purchasing a disappointing
product” from its explanation of the Lanham Act’s scope. Even though Locus bought for resale, it was
still a purchaser. As Lexmark said, “[e]ven a business misled
by a supplier into purchasing an inferior product is, like consumers generally,
not under the [Lanham] Act’s aegis.” But
“a Lanham Act claim for false advertising requires some deception by the
defendant which causes consumers to withhold trade from the plaintiff.” (Note that Locus alleged exactly that, but
only by the mechanism of Locus believing the falsehood and acting on it, as
opposed to others believing it.)
The Lanham Act claim had to be dismissed with prejudice, and
the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law
claims. The court also declined to
impose Rule 11 sanctions on Locus and its counsel, because the circumstances
weren’t exceptional. “[T]he Court cannot
conclude that Locus filed the claim upon frivolous grounds for contending that
it fell within the Lanham Act’s zone of interest, as articulated in Lexmark. At most, Locus and its counsel
may have sought to expand the breadth of the Lexmark holding, and Rule 11 is not designed to deter good faith
efforts to extend or modify existing law.”
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