Honeywell International Inc. v. ICM Controls Corp., 2014 WL
5438395, No. 11–569 (D. Minn. Oct. 24, 2014)
This litigation involves claims for patent infringement,
copyright infringement, violations of the Lanham Act, and violations of the
Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act based on ICM’s alleged copying of combustion
control devices. A
few months ago, the court kicked out Honeywell’s trade dress claim on
functionality grounds and its false advertising claim based on ICM’s “Made in
the USA” representations. While at
the time it questioned the validity of false advertising claims based on trade
dress similarity, it now administered the coup de grace.
Honeywell maintained that it wasn’t just challenging ICM’s
copying of trade dress, but also ICM’s promotion of its products as “the same
as” Honeywell products. ICM allegedly
copied the appearance of Honeywell’s products “because that appearance gives
contractors the impression that ICM’s products are ‘highly interchangeable’
with the range of Honeywell products they are intended to replace.” However, ICM’s products were allegedly not the
same and not always highly interchangeable with Honeywell products, making ICM’s
marketing false or misleading. Honeywell
also argued that its history of making these products as “private label”
products for third-party competitors contributed to the confusion.
The court was unconvinced.
Functionality protects competition and consumers. The allegations didn’t show any false
statement. Instead, ICM allegedly marketed products similar to Honeywell’s,
which created a false impression of affiliation/sponsorship. “But Honeywell International has no
protectable interest in its claimed trade dress. Trade dress infringement does
not arise out of ICM Controls’ products; the marketing of those same products
does not constitute false advertising.”
Comment: I would state the doctrinal result as one that an implicit
performance message, if any, conveyed by copying functional features must be
allowed, even if that causes some confusion, to police the boundaries of
trademark and patent law. This is an unusual example of channeling from
false advertising to trademark; more common is the other way around, where we
usually require complaints about comparative advertising to be made under the
head of false advertising with its stricter falsity, materiality, standing, and
“advertising or promotion” requirements.
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