Belmora
LLC v. Bayer Consumer Care AG, No.
1:14-cv-00847 (E.D. Va. Feb. 6, 2015)
Territoriality
lives! Belmora sells an OTC pain relief
product, Flanax, in the US with a similar trade dress to, and capitalizing on
the good will of, Bayer’s Flanax, sold in Mexico. The Lanham Act does not provide Bayer with a
remedy in this situation. (Perhaps Bayer
should’ve sued in NY, where state law might do so.) [NB:
Marty Schwimmer & John Welch represent Belmora.]
Belmora
registered FLANAX for analgesic tablets in 2005, with use in commerce since
March 1, 2004. Bayer has used FLANAX in
Mexico since the 1970s, with sales of hundreds of millions of dollars and
promotion in Mexico, including major cities near the Mexico-US border. Bayer
attempted registration for Flanax in 2004, but failed due to Belmora’s
preexisting application. Bayer has never had FDA approval to market or sell
Flanax in the US.
Belmora’s
early packaging was virtually identical to Bayer’s, and the court found that
Belmora copied Bayer’s logo and trade dress.
The packaging has changed but is still similar to Bayer’s, and Belmora’s
marketing “often suggested a historical connection between its FLANAX and
Latino customers.”
Bayer
petitioned for cancellation in 2007. In
2014, the TTAB cancelled Belmora’s registration under §14(3) of the Lanham
Act. Belmora appealed to the Federal
Circuit, but Bayer sued Belmora; though Bayer wanted the case heard in
California for obvious reasons, it was transferred to Virginia.
The court
found that Bayer lacked standing under §43(a)(1)(A) and (B) under Lexmark.
Starting with false designation of origin: Lexmark established that the plaintiff needed to be within the
Lanham Act’s zone of interests and plead proximate cause of its injuries to
have standing. The zone of interests
test isn’t very demanding, and the plaintiff receives the benefit of the doubt.
It “forecloses suit only when a plaintiff s interests are so marginally related
to or inconsistent with the purposes implicit in the statute that it cannot
reasonably be assumed that Congress authorized that plaintiff to sue.” Lexmark.
Nonetheless,
Bayer’s interests didn’t fall within the zone of interests Congress intended to
protect, because Bayer didn’t have a protectable interest in Flanax in the
US. Congress intended “to regulate
commerce within the control of Congress.”
For trademarks, the purpose was to provide national protections to marks
to secure to owners the benefits of their goodwill and to protect consumers. Park ‘N Fly. “[A] key purpose of the Lanham Act is to
protect the interests of those with a protectable interest in a mark,” and
ownership of a mark is an element of a §43(a)(1)(A) cause of action. Unregistered marks must be used in commerce in
the US. Bayer failed to plead facts showing that it used Flanax in US
commerce. Bayer was therefore not within
the class of plaintiffs Congress authorized to sue under §43(a)(1)(A).
Also, even
if Bayer satisfied the zone of interests test, it failed to plead facts showing
that Belmora’s false designation of origin proximately caused Bayer economic or
reputational injury. Bayer suggested that it lost sales in the US by not being
able to convert immigrating Flanax consumers to Aleve, its American counterpart
to Flanax. But a core purpose of the Lanham Act is to "help assure a
trademark's owner that it will reap the financial and reputational rewards
associated with having a desirable name or product." To let Bayer make
this argument “would require the Court to extend Lanham Act protections to an
international mark that was not used in United States commerce.” The economic
consequences targeted by the Lanham Act are those caused by infringement in the
US.
The Fourth
Circuit hadn’t adopted any exceptions to this rule. It hadn’t recognized the
famous marks doctrine had suggested it was disinclined to do so. In addition,
some courts allow extraterritorial conduct to be actionable if it has a
significant effect on US commerce, since sales to foreign consumers may harm
the income of an American company. The
Fourth Circuit hasn’t recognized this theory, and, even if it did, Belmora is
selling to US consumers, not to foreign consumers. “[T]he Court expressly declines to find that
the loss of potential sales to immigrating consumers is the type of economic
loss recognized by the Lanham Act as they are speculative.” [Compare doctrines surrounding the likelihood
of irreparable harm.] Speculative allegations
of harm are insufficient for Lanham Act standing.
Not only
did Bayer fail to plead that Belmora proximately caused cognizable economic
injury, it also failed to plead proximately caused damage to its reputation.
Speaking of irreparable harm, here’s a
line we might see quoted again: “Mere confusion by itself does not amount to
reputational injury—there must also be evidence of harm resulting from the use
of the allegedly infringing product” (citing Haute Diggity Dog).
Bayer
argued that its reputation was harmed because Belmora’s deceptive marketing
caused actual confusion. Telemarketers
hired by Belmora allegedly called potential distributors and suggested to them
that Belmora's Flanax products were the same as those offered by Bayer in Mexico.
Belmora also allegedly advertised that its Flanax was a brand that Latinos had
turned to "for generations," and that "FLANAX acts as a powerful
attraction for Latinos by providing them with products they know, trust, and
prefer." However, that didn’t show
injury to Bayer’s reputation. There was
no evidence showing that Belmora’s products had harmed anyone, or that people
had made misdirected payments. “Without
more, mere confusion by itself does not constitute reputational injury.”
Bayer
argued that its inability to control the quality of goods sold under the Flanax
brand harmed its reputation. This “demonstrates
a fundamental misapprehension of the protections of the Lanham Act.” But quality control injury depends on ownership, and Bayer can’t bring a
trademark infringement claim because it’s not an owner. Bayer pled neither
actual reputational injury nor a protectable interest in a mark.
The court
also dismissed the §43(a)(1)(B) claim on standing grounds, for the same
reasons: Bayer didn’t sufficiently plead an injury to commercial interest in
sales or business reputation proximately caused by Belmora’s alleged
misrepresentations.
The court
dismissed Bayer’s California state law claims for unfair competition and false
advertising, declining to exercise its supplemental discretion.
Further,
the court affirmed the TTAB’s dismissal of Bayer’s Article 6bis claim. “[T]he Paris Convention is not self-executing
and Sections 44(b) and (h) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C.
§ 1126(b)
and (h), do not render Article 6bis of the Paris Convention a ground for
contesting trademark registration.”
Section 44 incorporates the Paris Convention only to provide foreign
nationals with the necessary substantive rights. The court would not infer, “from
uncertain terms in the Lanham Act, a declaration from Congress adopting the
famous marks exception captured in Article 6bis, thus creating a cause of
action therein.” Such a new rule would
“eviscerate” territoriality, “a principle that has been accepted by
the Supreme Court
for nearly one
hundred years and
remains essentially unassailable
in each circuit court except for the Ninth Circuit.” More definite instruction from Congress would
be required to do so.
Then the
court reversed the TTAB’s holding that Bayer had standing to seek cancellation,
because Bayer lacked standing to sue under Lexmark.
The TTAB had found standing based on injury allegedly caused by strikingly
similar packaging and copying that was done to misrepresent a connection with
Mexican Flanax. Cancellation can be sought by any person who believes they are
or will be damaged by the registration, including “if the registered mark is
being used by, or with the permission of, the registrant so as to misrepresent
the source of the goods or services on or in connection with which the mark is
used . . . .” Lexmark guided the
standing inquiry here too, though the TTAB didn’t apply it. Again, Bayer failed
the zone of interests test as well as the proximate cause test. [Interesting
collapse of protection & registration, something I’m thinking a lot
about.]
Section
14(3), the court held, requires use of the mark in US commerce to find a
misrepresentation of source. Bayer argued that the plain language of the
statute didn’t require that, and that such an interpretation was inconsistent
with other provisions of the Lanham Act barring registration of deceptive
marks. The TTAB found standing. But the court was persuaded otherwise by case
law and comparison to other provisions of the Lanham Act.
Previous
misrepresentation of source cases either involved petitioners who owned a mark
or were silent on the question. Nor
could Bayer rely on cases applying special standing rules to Cuban entities,
because there’s a special law providing for that treatment.
What about
the argument that some provisions, like §2(d), mention owning a mark and
others, like §§43 and 14(3), do not, implying a difference between them? “[A]lthough Section 43(a)(l)(A), by its
terms, does not require use of the mark, courts have consistently required a
plaintiff to use the mark in United States commerce in order to state a claim
under that statute.” Congress’s intent
“to regulate commerce within the control of Congress by making actionable the
deceptive and misleading use of marks in such commerce” was also relevant,
making it appropriate to read a use requirement into §14(3) as well. Thus, the TTAB ruling was reversed.
3 comments:
Rebecca,
What were you referencing in indicating that NY state law might provide a remedy in this situation? Any citations would be helpful! Thank you.
Punchgini: http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2007/12/if-you-can-make-it-anywhere-you-can.html
Thanks for your response!
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