Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Internet surveys are admissible (but may raise IRB concerns)

Bimbo Bakeries USA, Inc. v. Sycamore, No. 13-cv-00749, 2017 WL 1377991 (D. Utah Mar. 2, 2017)

Bimbo charged that defendants misappropriated its trade secret for making Grandma Sycamore’s Home-Maid bread, and infringed on its trade dress related to the packaging of its bread. Here, the court resolved challenges to experts, as relevant here in favor of admission.

Defendant U.S. Bakery sought to exclude the expert testimony of Dr. Glenn L. Christensen; the court found him qualified to testify to quantitative surveys, of which he had prepared three. He conducted his surveys over the Internet using pre-screened panels of respondents provided by a third-party vendor, using digital images of the parties’ respective products. The court held that the internet was a proper method for conducting surveys, despite defendant’s argument that they didn’t effectively recreate the consumer experience of buying bread and screened out responses from those who buy bread, but who do not use the internet.  Defendant didn’t cite authority holding internet surveys unreliable. It was true that most consumers don’t buy bread online, so online surveys might not the best way to simulate the bread buying experience. But defendant merely speculated that the results might be different if the surveys were conducted in person or among people who buy bread but don’t use the internet.  Where the overall look of the product was at issue, online surveys could be relevant; other arguments could be addressed to the jury.  “To prove that a survey technique is unreliable the party must do more than speculate that there may have been a better way of completing the survey.”

The surveys also chose a representative enough sample for the jury to weigh them.  The survey looked for respondents in Utah and southern Idaho, the area Bimbo’s trade dress allegedly had secondary meaning, so that was okay. Using online panels was okay; defendant failed to explain how people who participate in surveys on a regular basis may skew the results. Screening out people who completed the survey on a smartphone was also okay because of the smaller screen size shrinking the visual stimuli.

Defendant also challenged the survey questions, arguing that the survey showed respondents the trade dress of Grandma Sycamore’s bread with the words “Grandma Sycamore’s removed,” but didn’t remove the unique spelling of the words “HomeMaid” from the image, thus making the package identifiable by means other than the trade dress.  But defendants didn’t explain how that made the results unreliable, though the jury could weigh it.  Defendant also challenged two surveys because only respondents who answered the questions in a particular way were asked follow-up questions, and that the surveyor also would repeat the respondents’ answer back to the respondent when asking them to substantiate their answer, which increased the likelihood of confirmation bias. Furthermore, Dr. Christensen screened out respondents who completed the surveys too quickly. None of these were fatal; defendant didn’t show how the questions rendered the underlying method unreliable, since the questions themselves were open-ended and not leading. Defendant also didn’t show that screening of results of those who answered too quickly had a disparate impact on those respondents who answered a particular way; if it did so, then exclusion of the survey might have been proper.

Finally, defendant argued that failure to ask whether the respondents would have bought the bread if it wasn’t made locally made the survey unreliable.  Defendant used the tagline “Fresh. Local. Quality.” Dr. Christensen attempted to test whether these advertisements created a false or misleading impression that these were local products and whether this impression was material to whether the respondent purchased bread. But he didn’t ask “Would you have bought the bread if it wasn’t made locally?”  That didn’t make the preceding questions unreliable.
The court also refused to exclude defendant’s survey expert Himanshu Mishra, offered in rebuttal to Dr. Christensen’s surveys.  It didn’t matter that he didn’t conduct surveys of his own.  “Rebuttal experts need not produce extrinsic evidence to be able to testify to perceived surveying flaws…. Dr. Mishra’s testimony is more speculative and theoretical than Dr. Christensen’s actual surveys because Dr. Mishra did not produce surveys of his own. But the rule does not require the exclusion of expert testimony that lacks one hundred percent certainty.”

Also, Bimbo argued that Dr. Mishra shouldn’t be allowed to testify that Dr. Christensen’s failure to secure Institutional Review Board approval prior to conducting his surveys violates the law.  The court held that neither party had adequately briefed the law on the issue.  “If lack of approval does not violate the law then Dr. Mishra cannot testify that it does.”

My final expert note: defendant offered Larry Soter as an expert in the “baking industry”to testify that Bimbo’s ingredients that are used to manufacture Grandma Sycamore’s Home Maid Bread didn’t constitute trade secrets.  Bimbo argued that it would be improper for Mr. Soter to testify that each individual element didn’t comprise a trade secret because the alleged trade secret is the combination of all the steps and ingredients. “[A] trade secret can exist in a combination of characteristics and components, each of which, by itself, is in the public domain, but the unified process, design and operation of which, in unique combination, affords a competitive advantage and is a protectable secret.” However, this rule does not mean that analyzing the individual processes is irrelevant. Finding that some of the components are secret may aid the fact finder in determining whether the combination of the individual processes is a trade secret, and it may be relevant to know how common the individual components of the claimed trade secret are.  Mr. Soter wouldn’t be allowed to claim that the combination of individually publicly known components was not protectable because such a statement would be informing the jury of the wrong legal standard, but there was no indication he would so testify.

4th Cir. affirms dismissal where P didn't allege specific lost consumers or quantify lost sales

Wall & Associates, Inc. v. Better Business Bureau of Central Virginia, Inc., --- Fed.Appx. ----, 2017 WL 1437215, No. 16-1819 (4th Cir. Apr. 24, 2017)

The court of appeals affirmed the dismissal of Wall’s complaint for false advertising based on statements by the BBB.  Lexmark requires a plaintiff to show not only false or misleading advertising but also that such statements caused it actual damages.  Wall didn’t properly allege causation.  The false advertising alleged in the complaint was that the BBB falsely advertised and promoted a system for assigning letter grade ratings to businesses as “national, uniform, unbiased, and objective” when in reality the system was implemented based on “subjective, biased, and personal criteria.” Wall alleged that it was damaged by receiving received a letter grade rating resulting from “subjective, biased, and arbitrary decisions” when consumers believed that it had been subjected to a review process that is “national, uniform, unbiased, and objective” in nature.

Wall’s complaint, however, does not identify a single consumer who withheld or cancelled business with it or pointed to a particular quantum of diverted sales or loss of goodwill and reputation resulting directly from reliance on any false or misleading representations by Defendants of the letter grade rating system as objective and unbiased. Given the absence of such fact allegations, Wall did not adequately allege the necessary proximate cause between its alleged injury and Defendants’ allegedly violative conduct.


Does that mean that every plaintiff should identify consumers or allege quantified losses, or will more general allegations suffice when the harm is more direct/the advertising claim being challenged is more central to the decision?

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Monday, April 24, 2017

Reading list: empirical evidence about FTC's substantiation standard

Sungho Cho &Yongjae Kim, Empirical Rationalization of Prior Substantiation Doctrine: Federal Trade Commission v. Reebok & Sketchers, 29 Loy. Consumer L. Rev. 55 (2016) (not apparently available online—update that website, Loyola Consumer Law Review!)

ABSTRACT

Companies frequently make efficacy claims in advertisements to introduce new products featuring innovative technology. When such claims are supported by information obtained from scientific research or expert testimonials, they are subject to the doctrine of prior substantiation. Under the doctrine, an advertisement claim based on seemingly credible authorities must be substantiated by a reasonable basis before it is released to the general public. Otherwise, the advertisement will be in violation of Section 5(a) of the Federal Trade Commission Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive acts affecting commerce.” This study investigates the rationale of the legal rule in light of consumer behavior theories. While the doctrine has been normatively rationalized, it has not been empirically examined. Given the paucity of relevant research, this study will test consumer attitudes and cognitive reactions toward different types of advertisement messages, such as, one with establishment claims and the other without such cognitive contents. The study administered real advertising video clips used by Reebok and Sketchers, disputed in two settled cases where the Federal Trade Commission alleged that the defendants failed to satisfy the legal standard of the substantiation rule. The findings of this study support the rationale of the rule on the ground that the Reebok advertisement clip delivering expressive establishment claims about its product efficacy would likely have more of an immediate impact on consumers’ purchasing intention than Sketchers’ ad without such cognitive information. Implications and future research along with limitations are also discussed.

TM/(c) questions of the day

Which, if any, raise any TM or copyright concerns?
matchboxes with book covers

"phone app sticky notes"



Scented erasers with possibly recognizable trade dresses

Dastar bars TM claim based on unlicensed copying of footage

Fioranelli v. CBS Broadcasting Inc., No. 15-CV-952, 2017 WL 1400119, -- F. Supp. 3d – (S.D.N.Y.  Jan. 19, 2017)

Fioranelli, a photojournalist who was one of four reporters allowed to enter the World Trade Center site on September 11, 2001, sued for copyright infringement and related claims.  In 2014, he registered copyrights on both his own commercially available documentary of the events, as well as raw footage of the photographs he took that day.  In 2002, he settled a previous lawsuit with CBS and granted a limited, nonexclusive license to CBS to use his work “in all regularly-scheduled and breaking news programming and all news magazine programs … and in the advertising, publicity and promotions therefor, produced by CBS owned television stations and CBS News.”  In 2005-2006, allegedly in violation of the License Agreement, CBS allegedly sublicensed some or all of the 9/11 Material to at least fifteen companies.

The court first found that Fioranelli stated a claim for copyright infringement, not just breach of a license agreement, given that the acts alleged went outside the license. “[I]f ‘a license is limited in scope and the licensee acts outside the scope, the licensor can bring an action for copyright infringement.’ ”  The allegations here were “wholly outside the scope of the License Agreement.” Inducement claims against many of the defendants were, however, dismissed for want of specifics.

The court also got rid of Fioranelli’s Lanham Act and state-law claims on Dastar and preemption grounds.  Fioranelli argued that he was allowed to bring a Lanham Act claim “to address the activity of Defendants that directly affected his business and not just his copyright rights,” that he had a registration and the plaintiff in Dastar didn’t, and that he produced a tangible good—his footage—not just an idea.

Dastar applies to copyrighted and public domain material alike.  The allegations that “CBS has engaged in false designation of origin and false descriptions of fact regarding Plaintiff and his work” and that the other defendants “individually published [the 9/11 Material] as part of their own media products,” and thereby “have caused or are likely to cause confusion, to cause mistake, or to deceive as to the origin of Plaintiff’s Work among the public” stated “the exact type of claim that the holding in Dastar prohibits.”

Consumers who viewed the 9/11 Material as part of defendants’ programs were “not falsely informed about the origins of the [material] because [Defendants] did in fact produce” it. Just like the creator of the footage in Dastar, Fioranelli was the originator, not the “producer of tangible goods” protected by the Lanham Act.

The state-law claims fared similarly. The only extra element Fioranelli could identify was that his claims were based on “damage to his business,” but he didn’t explain how the alleged damage to his business was the result of anything other than defendants’ unauthorized copying.


Because the infringing acts alleged commenced before Fioranelli secured copyright registrations, he was not entitled to statutory damages or attorney’s fees (though the court declined to address at this time the argument that the court’s inherent supervisory power allowed it to award attorney’s fees regardless). 

"Australian for [American] beer" isn't deceptive, court rules

Nelson v. MillerCoors, LLC, 15-CV-7082, 2017 WL 1403343, -- F. Supp. 3d – (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2017)

The court dismissed Nelson’s complaint, invoking lots of different consumer protection laws, based on Miller’s allegedly misleading marketing of Foster’s Beer, “an Australian-style beer brand.”  Foster’s began exporting to the US in 1972, and its can labels sported “multiple references to Australian culture and symbols,” namely “an image of a Red Kangaroo, the national symbol of Australia, and the Southern Cross constellation,” which is “a main component on the Australian national flag.” In 2011, all Foster’s Beer sold in the United States became domestically brewed. MillerCoors allegedly tricked consumers “into believing they are purchasing the same [imported] product as they had in the past precisely because it has maintained the same packaging for Foster’s over time, despite the fact that the Foster’s sold in the United States is also brewed domestically.  Nelson also pointed to MillerCoors’s “overall marketing campaign, online and in advertisements,” including: (1) the brand slogan “Foster’s Australian for Beer”; (2) the “How to Speak Australian” television ads “depict[ing] Foster’s as being a product from Australia by using Australian accents and scenery”; and (3) the official website for Foster’s Beer, which, as of December 2015:

• Noted Foster’s Beer is made out of hops that are only grown in three locations in Australia, and that “[t]hese hops and an exclusive Foster’s yeast are what give Foster’s its bold refreshing taste. The secret yeast doesn’t produce sulfur harshness that other beers can exhibit, which means that Foster’s taste is never skunky and always Australian,”
• Advertised, ‘ “Foster’s is available in more than 150 countries, making it the largest-selling Australian beer brand in the world,” ’ and
• Displayed “an outline of the country of Australia, references to [the beer’s] roots and history in Australia, and use of Australian symbols and phrases including ‘How to Speak Australian,’ ‘Foster’s — Australian for Beer,’ and a video screen with images of rugby players.”

This allegedly exploited consumers’ willingness “to pay a premium for high quality, imported beer.”


The court found no reasonable consumer would be deceived.  The label clearly discloses the brewing location and isn’t hidden or in small text. “The idea that consumers purchase products based on certain of a label’s statements or images (e.g., pictures of a constellation and a kangaroo) but are blind to others (e.g., a statement in plain English of where Foster’s Beer is brewed) in close proximity on that label strains credibility.”  Disclaimers fail to cure allegedly misleading representations on the front of packaging “only where the alleged misrepresentation is clearly stated and the disclaimer is exceedingly vague or requires consumers to make inferences.”  The disclaimer here was explicit: “BREWED AND PACKAGED UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF FOSTER’S AUSTRALIA LTD, MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA BY OIL CAN BREWERIES, ALBANY GA AND FORT WORTH TX.” [Really? The first geographical words the consumer encounters is “Australia,” twice.] Likewise, “© Oil Can Breweries, Fort Worth, TX” is displayed on the Foster’s webpage, which was “inarguably clear as to the brewing location.” 

Ninth Circuit bars consumer claims challenging assertions of clinical proof

Kwan v. SanMedica Int’l, -- F.3d --, No. 15-15496, 2017 WL 1416483 (9th Cir. Apr. 21, 2017)

Kwan alleged that SanMedica’s product SeroVital was falsely advertised as effective, and the district court dismissed her complaint as a lack of substantiation claim not actionable under California consumer protection law. The court of appeals affirmed.

SanMedica advertised, inter alia, that its product had been clinically tested and shown to produce a 682% increase in human growth hormone (HGH), which had multiple physical and cosmetic benefits.  To proceed in a challenge to this claim, Kwan would apparently need to allege “that one or more of the authorities alluded to actually studied or tested the formula SeroVital contains and found that it does not produce a 682% mean increase in HGH levels, or that Plaintiff herself did not experience such an increase when using the product, or that a study exists somewhere demonstrating that a 682% increase is categorically impossible to achieve in an over-the-counter pill.” Instead, she only alleged that the study relied upon to make the claim was “not an example of scientific evidence recognized by experts, was never peer-reviewed, and was never published in a peer-reviewed journal.”  So even if affirmative statements about the existence of clinical tests proving effectiveness are material to consumers, California law doesn’t allow challenges to those statements merely because the consumer might be able to show that the test didn’t demonstrate the truth of the affirmative statement.

I think this is a mistake—with such evidence, the challenger has shown that the statement about clinical proof is false, even if she hasn’t falsified another part of the ad; the Lanham Act also doesn’t allow mere lack of substantiation claims, but Lanham Act jurisprudence correctly recognizes that there can be separable statements about the proof behind another statement—and advertisers make those statements in order to convince consumers that their statements are credible.


The court of appeals found that it wasn’t enough to allege that the “clinically tested” representation and the health benefit claims falsely implied that the marketing claims of SeroVital’s health benefits were clinically proven by credible scientific proof. That was just a lack of substantiation allegation, repackaged.  The court rejected Kwan’s invocation of Lanham Act establishment claim precedent because doing so “would clearly violate recognized California law on the burden of proof placed on the plaintiff.”  As readers are probably aware, the burden is also on the plaintiff to show falsity under the Lanham Act; the Lanham Act precedent, however, makes clear that statements or implications about proof can themselves be false.  Kwan wasn’t trying to shift the burden of proof, as the court accused her of doing; she was challenging the truth of some of SanMedica’s claims.

Sixth Circuit has nominative fair use sans la lettre

Oaklawn Jockey Club, Inc. v. Kentucky Downs, LLC, No. 16-5582 (6th Cir. Apr. 19, 2017)

Query: Does the Sixth Circuit’s refusal to adopt nominative fair use, and its insistence on a separate doctrine of “use as a trademark,” make a difference?  After all, many courts applying “nominative fair use” conduct the same back-of-the-envelope mini-confusion inquiry in determining whether there can be any liability as we see from the court here.

“In 2010, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission amended its regulations to permit gambling on historical horse races.”  This is a way of letting people gamble without live races.  “Customers receive anonymized information about the historical horses, handicap the race, and place their bets,” or there’s also apparently an “automatic” feature that skips the handicapping, so it’s basically a slot machine.  After bets are placed, the regulations require, “the terminal shall display a video replay of the race, or a portion thereof, and the official results of the race. The identity of the race shall be revealed to the patron after the patron has placed his or her wager.” In defendants’ product, the replay isn’t an actual replay, but “computer-generated, generic, and lasts for only a few seconds; it shows only the order of finish and does not attempt to visually recreate the racetrack that originally hosted the race.”  It does display the track name as part of substantiating the results.
 
from the brochure
The track owner-plaintiffs have registered marks for their racing tracks.  They alleged that the use of their marks was likely to confuse consumers into believing that they are the source of the video recreation and endorse its accuracy.  Also, the game-maker’s ad brochure includes a screenshot of a video replay that uses the track names of Mountaineer Casino Racetrack & Resort, Rockingham Park, and Turf Paradise, though the owners of these tracks weren’t parties to this suit. The brochure states that “[t]he Encore RBG System and its individual games have successfully undergone the rigorous testing of Gaming Laboratories International (GLI), the gold standard in technical review and authorization of wagering software and hardware.”


“Trademark use” is required before the multifactor confusion test is applied.  “When the mark is used in a way that does not deceive the public we see no such sanctity in the word as to prevent its being used to tell the truth.” Prestonettes, Inc. v. Coty, 264 U.S. 359, 368 (1924). “If defendants are only using [the] trademark in a ‘non-trademark’ way—that is, in a way that does not identify the source of a product—then trademark infringement and false designation of origin laws do not apply.” Interactive Prods. Corp. v. a2z Mobile Office Sols., Inc., 326 F.3d 687, 695 (6th Cir. 2003).

Well, how do you know?  The inquiry focuses on “whether a consumer is likely to notice [the plaintiff’s trademark] . . . and then think that the [defendant’s product] may be produced by the same company[.]”  Why is this not a poor woman’s confusion test?  This is left as an exercise for the reader. In fact, the court described its earlier Hensley case in these terms: “Because there was no likelihood of consumer confusion regarding whether the plaintiff trademark owner was the source of the defendant’s products, we held that the defendant’s use of the trademark was a permissible non-trademark use.”

The track owners argued that the display of their marks was a trademark use because it confuses consumers into believing that the track owners provided or verified the video replays.  The court of appeals disagreed, pointing out that there were no live feeds of races or actual video replays.  (If there had been, would that have been likely to confuse?)  “These depictions are sufficiently different from the Track Owners’ product—live horse racing at their venues—that the minimal use of the trademarks, preceded by the word ‘Location,’ would not confuse consumers into believing the videos were provided by Plaintiffs.”  It could be true that there is such a thing as “an Oaklawn® horse race,” and thus “deciding where to watch a live horse race or which live-broadcast race to watch [note: not which source to watch it via] may be similar to deciding which brand of computer to purchase.”  But here, “the fact that a race occurred at Oaklawn or Churchill Downs is relevant only as a factual matter—it is used so consumers can substantiate the race’s result, not to promote the quality of Exacta’s product.”

It was fair to say that the marks were used “to substantiate or legitimize the video,” but “only in the sense that they provide consumers with the requisite details to verify the video game’s accuracy.”  If the game displayed inaccurate results, it was unlikely that a consumer would blame or complain to the tracks; the target of complaint would be defendants, the parties actively representing the accuracy of the results.  “The term ‘Location’ preceding the trademarks sufficiently explains to consumers that the trademarks are being used in a wholly descriptive manner and does not cause a likelihood of confusion as to the source of the video,” especially since the replay didn’t depict the facilities.

As for Exacta’s advertising materials, the only display of specific track names appeared in a screenshot of a video replay, and the brochure touts defendants’ own expertise and goodwill.  “Because this was a non-trademark use of Plaintiffs’ trademarks, we need not reach the question whether the fair-use defense applies.”  Sure, fine, whatever.


The same analysis applied to Kentucky common law trademark infringement and unfair competition claims.

Thursday, April 20, 2017

9th Circuit revives class action against allegedly mislabeled baby food

Bruton v. Gerber Prods. Co., 2017 WL 1396221, --- Fed.Appx. ----, No. 15-15174 (9th Cir. Apr. 19, 2017)

Bruton sued Gerber, alleging that labels on certain Gerber baby food products included claims about nutrient and sugar content that were impermissible under FDA regulations incorporated into California law. The district court ruled against her.  The court of appeals, over a partial dissent, reversed and remanded.

First, the district court erred in dismissing Bruton’s claim for unjust enrichment/quasi-contract, because it was unclear at the time whether California allowed a separate unjust enrichment claim, but the California Supreme Court has subsequently clarified California law, allowing an independent claim for unjust enrichment to proceed.

Second, the district court erred in finding that a class would not be “ascertainable.” Briseno v. ConAgra Foods, Inc., 844 F.3d 1121 (9th Cir. 2017), held that there was no separate “administrative feasibility” requirement for class certification.

Third, there was a genuine dispute of material fact on Bruton’s claims that the labels were deceptive in violation of the UCL, FAL, and CLRA.  The theory of deception doesn’t require literal falsity, but rather that “(a) the presence of the claims on Gerber’s products (in violation of FDA regulations), and (b) the lack of claims on competitors’ products (in compliance with FDA regulations), made Gerber’s labeling likely to mislead the public into believing that Gerber’s products were of a higher quality than its competitors’ products…. [I]t may be literally true that Gerber’s products are ‘As Healthy As Fresh,” but due to external facts—that Gerber does not comply with the FDA regulations that otherwise prevent its competitors from making the same claim—Gerber’s labels mislead in their implications.”

This theory of deception made sense:

Shoppers in a supermarket aisle look for cues about quality in the products they buy. If a shopper sees two products on a shelf and one says “Supports Healthy Growth & Development,” while the other makes no similar claim and is cheaper, a likely inference is that the first product will be viewed as healthier, explaining why it costs more. If the products had been of the same quality, then competitive pressures would have driven the maker of the second product to use the same attractive label. In the baby food market in particular—where measuring the effect of a particular food on one’s own baby’s growth and development is not practical—consumers have to make quality judgments before the baby is fed, based on what they see in front of them at the store. When everyone plays by the rules, this process works reasonably well. But when the maker of one product complies with a ban on attractive label claims, and its competitor does not do so, the normal assumptions no longer hold, and consumers will possibly be left deceived.

Even reviewing the nutritional information of the competing products wouldn’t help. “Consumers cannot easily check claims like ‘Supports Healthy Growth & Development,’ or ‘As Healthy As Fresh,’  against nutritional charts to determine their veracity. Consumers might believe, for instance, that the claims refer to the quality of the produce used or the particular canning process.”  Likewise, they can’t easily figure out the import of the absence of such claims.  Even for seemingly black and white claims like “No Added Sugar,” if Gerber’s product says “No Added Sugar,” and a competitor’s product doesn’t, the nutritional chart won’t the consumer whether any of the sugar in its product was added—it will simply list the amount of “Sugars.” “Nevertheless, the reasonable assumption would be that some of the sugar in that competitor’s product must have been added, or else the competitor would have used the attractive label ‘No Added Sugar.’”

Bruton also submitted enough evidence of likely consumer deception to create a genuine dispute of material fact. The key evidence was the labels.  “A reasonable jury observing Gerber’s labels and comparing them to those of its competitors could rationally conclude that Gerber’s labels were likely to deceive members of the public.”

The district court also erred in granting summary judgment to Gerber on Bruton’s claims that the labels were unlawful under the UCL, which “borrows” predicate legal violations and treats them as independently actionable. The reasonable consumer test is only a requirement under the UCL’s unlawful prong only when it is an element of the predicate violation. The predicate violation here was of California’s Sherman Law, which incorporates standards set by FDA regulations, which include no requirement that reasonable consumers be likely to be deceived.

Judge O’Scannlain dissented from the majority’s conclusion that there was a genuine issue of material fact about consumer deception.  Bruton’s testimony about her own confusion couldn’t satisfy the reasonable consumer standard, because “a few isolated examples of actual deception are insufficient” to create a material dispute over the likelihood of general consumer deception.  The majority’s reliance on the labels was insufficient because the labels weren’t clearly false, as compared to a label “Made in U.S.A.,” when significant parts of the labeled product weren’t made in the US.  “[T]he challenged statements themselves say nothing at all about the quality of Gerber’s products; they simply report—accurately—certain nutritional features of the products.”  Nothing “inherent” in the labels would support a leap from these correct statements to deceptive quality claims, especially because Gerber’s and competitors’ labels include detailed information about their ingredients. Judge O’Scannlain didn’t see any evidence that the challenged statements made Gerber’s labels objectively more “attractive” to a “a significant portion of the general consuming public,” or that consumers consumers would conclude that any price or quality difference between Gerber and its competitors was due “specifically to the challenged label statements (as opposed to any number of other reasons that may have led Gerber’s nationally recognized brand to carry more market power).”

Georgetown Tech Law Review seeks submissions

From the editors:

The Georgetown Law Technology Review is soliciting content for fall 2017 publication. Founded in 2015, the Review seeks to build a common forum for technologists, lawyers, and policymakers to discuss the increasingly complex intersections between law and technology. It leverages its presence in Washington, D.C. to focus on legal and policy issues driven by cutting-edge technological developments. The Review also collaborates with the Georgetown Law Center on Privacy & Technology, the Georgetown Law Institute for Technology Law & Policy, and the Georgetown-MIT Privacy Legislation Practicum to promote and showcase innovative scholarship.

We welcome submissions on a wide variety of topics, including but not limited to: intellectual property, privacy, cybersecurity, fintech, and telecommunications. While the Review accepts traditional scholarly articles, we are especially interested in shorter (5,000-15,000 word) pieces focused on narrow and timely issues in law and technology. The submission deadline to ensure fullest consideration for the fall issue is June 30, 2017, though we are happy to accept submissions on a rolling basis.


If we can provide further information, or if you would like to discuss a potential submission, please email us at GLTR.Submissions@gmail.com or visit our website at https://www.georgetownlawtechreview.org/.

Presumptions and evidence of causation both work in false advertising cases

Robroy Indus.–Texas, LLC v. Thomas & Betts Corp., No. 15-CV-512, No. 2:16-CV-198, 2017 WL 1370545 (E.D. Tex. Apr. 10, 2017)

T&B and Robroy compete in the market for PVC-coated electrical conduit, which is used to carry electrical wiring in buildings or other structures. The parties are the major suppliers of PVC-coated electrical conduit in the United States; T&B’s conduit is known as “Ocal.”  Robroy alleged that T&B made a number of false claims that only its Ocal products had certain features, such as meeting the UL 6 standard, the ANSI C80.1 standard, and the NEMA RN-1 standard, all significant industry standards.
 T&B also claimed that “only Ocal” offers local installation training and certification. And its promotional materials claimed that Robroy “abrade[s] the surface of the conduit prior to the application of the PVC,” thereby “remov[ing] the protective coatings that the customer is paying for.” T&B further claimed that “UL standards are not being followed by the abrading of the conduits [sic] exterior zinc finish.”

T&B argued that there was insufficient evidence of harm causation to survive summary judgment. The court disagreed.  T&B had three key arguments (1) that Robroy has never been “kicked off” a specification for PVC-coated conduit for any reason related to the T&B statements at issue; (2) the evidence shows that customers made purchasing decisions based on price, quality, availability, and other factors having nothing to do with the alleged false statements; and (3) the evidence shows that customers made decisions to add T&B’s Ocal product to the specifications for particular projects and to purchase Ocal based on price and other factors, not because of the allegedly false statements.

The court agreed with Robroy that, because this was a case of allegedly deliberately false comparative advertising in a functionally two-party market, causation could be presumed.  [Why “deliberately”?  The two-party market situation appears independently significant, assuming the claim is material; the deliberateness might justify a presumption of effectiveness as well. But that’s what the cases say.] A number of circuits and district courts have adopted this rule; no case appears to have rejected it; and the Fifth Circuit hasn’t said anything to cast it into doubt.  Causation is required by the Lanham Act, but “that does not speak to whether and under what circumstances that element can be satisfied by a presumption.”  Also, “[g]iven that courts have uniformly recognized the presumption for the past 30 years, Congress’s silence in the face of that now well-established line of authority suggests, if anything, that Congress is satisfied with the status quo.”

T&B argued that this wasn’t really a two-party market, but Robroy provided evidence that “during the period at issue in this case, the PVC-coated electrical conduct market has been effectively a two-competitor market.” Also, some of the allegedly false statements were directed at Robroy by name, and many of the challenged statements were comparative, which would be understood as referring to Robroy by clear implication.  Summary judgment on causation denied.

Separately, there was evidence about actual causation. Robroy’s theory of the case was:

(1) in order to bid on a project, a manufacturer was required to be included on the specification for the project; (2) there were numerous projects on which T&B was not initially on the specification; (3) those contracts would have gone to Robroy but for T&B’s actions that resulted in T&B being added to the project specifications; (4) it was T&B’s false statements that caused project managers and engineers to alter the specifications to include T&B as a qualified bidder on those projects; and (5) on those projects on which T&B won the contract, Robroy suffered injury from the loss of a contract it would have won but for T&B’s false advertising.

While it might be true that in particular instances customers chose T&B’s products over Robroy’s products for reasons other than T&B’s false statements, Robroy argued, that occurred after the stage of the process in which the project engineers were persuaded to alter the specifications for their projects to allow T&B to bid, which was the critical point at which the false advertising was allegedly effective.  If T&B hadn’t been allowed to bid, according to Robroy’s evidence, “on many of the projects the specifications initially called for Robroy products or required quality assurances that only Robroy could meet.” The critical step was project engineers’ decisions to “open” the specifications to allow T&B to bid on the projects.  And there was evidence in the record that this “opening” at least sometimes came as a result of the challenged statements.  [Is there an analogy here to bait-and-switch initial interest confusion?  Initial qualification deception?]  The allegedly false statements were clearly designed toward getting engineers to open the specs.  E.g., “a form letter including several of these false statements was posted on an internal bulletin board that was available to the project specification specialists at T&B who were responsible for attempting to ‘break’ specifications that specified only Robroy products or ETL-listed conduit.”  And T&B reps claimed success in their endeavors. One internal comment: “That job was specified [Robroy] but with the help of you and T[o]m Russ [a senior T&B sales representative who promoted the use of the “only Ocal” material during efforts to “break” specifications] we were able to open it up to Ocal.”

Pizza Hut, Inc. v. Papa John’s Int’l, Inc., 227 F.3d 489 (5th Cir. 2000), found that evidence of subjective intent to deceive on the part of the defendants’ executives was insufficient to show that the false advertising in question actually succeeded in persuading customers to buy the defendant’s products instead of the plaintiff’s.  However, here there was “evidence—including statements by T&B representatives—that the effort succeeded.”

The evidence was mostly circumstantial, and circumstantial evidence isn’t always enough, but here it was.  “This is not a case in which the proof is limited to showing no more than that the defendant’s representatives intended to mislead potential customers or that false statements were made in the course of competitive bidding, after which one party lost the project.” On Robroy’s evidence, Robroy was “essentially guaranteed to be awarded a contract on those projects, until T&B ‘broke’ the specifications, obtained the right to bid, and ultimately was awarded the contract.” It was reasonable to infer that the challenged statements played a pivotal role in the customers’ decisions to allow T&B to bid on the projects, even if there might also be other reasons that engineers might have opened the specs. The inference of causation was “strengthened by the evidence that T&B’s own representatives expressed their view that the characterizations of Robroy were responsible for the engineers’ decisions to open the specifications to bidding by T&B, and that one of the project engineers repeated one such alleged falsehood when changing the specification to allow T&B to bid.”


Robroy’s state-law unfair competition claim under the common law also proceeded.

Having a product in development isn't enough for Lanham Act standing

Pulse Health LLC v. Akers Biosciences, Inc., 2017 WL 1371272, No. 16-cv-01919 (D. Or. Apr. 14, 2017)

Pulse was formed to develop a product that can measure aldehyde molecules in human breath via a non-invasive hand-held device. Its device was called FRED or Revelar. Akers develops and sells diagnostic products and devices designed to deliver various health information test results. The parties entered into contracts for Akers to make a breath tube containing a chemical reagent that could accurately measure aldehyde molecules in human breath, to be used with the FRED/Revelar device. Akers’ development failed, according to Pulse, and Pulse requested to part ways. The final agreement provided that Pulse transferred the relevant tech back to Akers, and Akers waived the remainder of what Pulse was supposed to pay.  Akers granted Pulse an exclusive and perpetual license to use the relevant tech in the field of aldehyde tests, which included any testing for oxidative stress, but excluded tests relating to diabetes, cancer, and alcohol. The agreement further provided that Akers had no rights with respect to Pulse’s technology for its hand-held FRED/Revelar device.

Akers started to sell hand-held products that Pulse claimed measured oxidative stress and free radical damage through disposable tubes, which Pulse determined was a copy of its FRED/Revelar product. “The chemistry for the OxiChek and the Assigned Technology reagents are the same, and the circuit boards for the OxiChek product have a similar layout and the same optical chamber, LED, diodes, switches and gates as the original FRED/Revelar device developed by Plaintiff.”

The court rejected Lanham Act and state-law consumer protection claims.  Pulse wasn’t within the zone of interests protected by the statute and there could be no proximate causation of injury, even if, as alleged, Akers “knowingly made false statements in advertising the technology’s ability to detect levels of oxidative stress or free radicals” using Pulse’s technology.  Because Pulse didn’t have a competing product on the market, it failed to allege any injury to a commercial interest in reputation or sales. Possible future sales of a product under development weren’t enough, despite the alleged “spoiling” of the market based on Akers’ false advertising.  Any such injury was purely speculative.

The Oregon Unlawful Trade Practices Act only protects consumers, not competitors. Because leave to amend would not allow Pulse to fix either of these problems, it was denied.


Lesson: write your noncompete more clearly so that suing for breach will give you all the relief you seek, I guess?

My colleague Laura K. Donohue, now on Twitter

Where she will be tweeting about the national security state, privacy, et cetera.  She's got comprehensive knowledge and a prime location, so take a look!

Monday, April 17, 2017

Grange grudge: court orders disclaimer to resolve confusing corporate status

National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry v. California State Grange, 2016 WL 8730678,  No. 16-201 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 23, 2016)

As relevant here, plaintiffs sued the California Guild and Robert McFarland for false advertisement and unfair competition under the Lanham Act, and moved for a preliminary injunction.  “The National Grange is a nonprofit fraternal organization founded in 1867 to promote the interests of rural America and agriculture.”  The California State Grange was created as its California affiliate in 1873 and elected McFarland as its leader in 2009.  After disputes arose, the National Grange revoked the California State Grange’s membership and the two sides disaffiliated in 2013.The disaffiliated chapter, led by McFarland, continued as a separate entity under the California corporate charter filed in 1946, while the National Grange chartered a new California State Grange in 2014.

Defendants continued to represent themselves publically as the California State Grange, but in 2015 the court granted the National Grange summary judgment on its trademark infringement and false advertisement and unfair competition claims. The court permanently enjoined the disaffiliated entity from using the word “Grange,” but declined to extend that prohibition to include similar words because the National Grange did not expressly seek such relief in its initial complaint. Those rulings are pending on appeal in the Ninth Circuit [ed.: where they may languish for a long time].

In April 2016, the court granted the National Grange’s motion for post-judgment injunctive relief, ordering that the disaffiliated entity

[R]emove the word “Grange” from all corporate registrations and other documents filed with any federal, state, or local government ... [R]emove the word “Grange” from all public telephone and business directory listings, on the internet or otherwise, ... [Refrain] from: (a) conducting business using the name “Grange,” …; (b) using “Grange” in any domain name or email address …; and (c) referencing their past affiliation with plaintiff or any other entity whose name contains the word “Grange,” including representing themselves to be the former California State Grange; successor to the California State Grange; or formerly known as, trading as, or doing business as the California State Grange....

The disaffiliated entity changed its corporate name to the “California Guild,” but continued to refer to itself as “CSG” and “[f]ormerly the California State Grange.”

In this proceeding, the National Grange sought a lot more relief, including a prohibition on “referencing the history and goodwill of the California State Grange” and surrender of all physical and intellectual property of the California State Grange (the physical property also being subject to a California state proceeding).

Defendants “continued to advertise that ‘cities and townships have grown up around our rural halls’; that the the [sic] Defendant’s organization has ‘lobbyists in Sacramento and boasts a long history of successful legislative advocacy’; that the Defendants’ organization was the first organization to support and promote women as equal voting members’ [sic]; and that ‘[i]n these uncertain times our members find comfort and security by returning to our roots and reaffirming principles and goals set by the founders 140 years ago.’ ” The National Grange argued that “only the California State Grange can claim the 140 years’ [sic] of history and goodwill associated with the organization.” The court noted that defendants apparently found a way around the injunction “by taking credit for the California State Grange’s history and achievements without referencing it by name.”

Without discussing Dastar, the court stated that “[t]he Lanham Act prohibits uncredited references to another entity’s history and achievements.”  However, the court noted another loophole: the California Guild remains incorporated under the same corporate papers that the California State Grange formerly existed under.  Thus, defendants were “technically correct when they refer to the California Guild as an organization that has existed for ‘decades’ and around which ‘cities and townships have grown up.’” Though the National Grange maintained that this was nonetheless deceptive, the court found that its “hands were tied with respect to claims to history and achievements accrued post-incorporation”  because such claims weren’t false or misleading but true, although “claims to history and achievements accrued prior to 1946 are undeniably false.”  The court wasn’t ignoring reality or gamesmanship; it was recognizing that, “for some reason, plaintiffs have not taken effective action in the three years after the parties disaffiliated to prevent defendants from occupying the California State Grange’s corporate charter. The court cannot step in to save plaintiffs here.” Thus, the court would only enjoin defendants from referencing history and achievements accrued by the California State Grange prior to its incorporation.  Irreparable injury existed because “further uncredited references to their history may permanently dilute their brand in California.”

The National Grange also challenged defendants’ allegedly false claims that local chapters must ‘disaffiliate’ with the California Guild in order to join [the California State Grange]” and that the local chapters “are ‘no longer nonprofit, must pay taxes, cannot accept tax deductible donations, or receive various grants.’ ” But the National Grange didn’t show falsity for those statements.  Any acts defendants engaged in while purporting to act in the official capacity would violate the existing order; they were allowed to solicit new guild members and officers in their own capacity.  The court denied the National Grange’s request to enjoin “performance of Grange rituals” as vague and overly broad.  “While performance of similar functions can contribute to a violation of the Lanham Act, plaintiffs’ request encompasses legitimate commercial activities such as soliciting new members and providing services to farm communities.”

The National Grange’s request for delivery of all business records, physical property, and intellectual property also went beyond the false advertising claims at issue here.  There was no evidence that defendants’ alleged use of business records and mailing lists constituted false advertising. Using the “proprietary mailing lists of the California State Grange ... albeit under different names” to contact Grange members with proper identification was “not, in itself, false advertisement.” Use of website logos, images, and backgrounds that are nearly identical to the National Grance could cause actionable confusion, but the National Grange’s request for relief was too broad. 

The court declined to evict defendants from the buildings alleged to belong to the California State Grange, but it did agree that, given defendants’ other deceptive tactics (referring to themselves as an organization “created in 1873,” “provid[ing] 160 years of service,” and “oldest agricultural organization in California”), their use of the National Grange’s buildings and former telephone numbers “would serve to further create a false impression among the public that they are affiliated with or successors to the California State Grange.” Eviction was a drastic measure for a preliminary injunction;  at this stage, a further disclaimer would suffice. However, it was reasonable to require defendants to cease using the old phone numbers.

As for that disclaimer: though the court would allow defendants from to claim credit for the history and achievements of the corporate entity formerly named the California State Grange from 1946 to 2013, “unless the public is notified that defendants are not in fact the California State Grange there would be a strong probability of confusion.”  Thus, all communications discussing the history or achievements of the corporate entity formerly named the California State Grange required a prominent disclaimer: “NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE CALIFORNIA STATE GRANGE.” Defendants were already using a mealy-mouthed disclaimer, “not affiliated with ... the Grange of the State of California’s Patrons of Husbandry Chartered.” The National Grange argued that this name was “unknown to the California Granges.” Without specifically ruling on that argument, the court saw no harm in making the disclaimer clearer.



Uber can't get taxi false advertising case dismissed on 12(b)(6)

Delux Cab v. Uber Technologies, Inc., 2017 WL 1354791, No. 16cv3057 (S.D. Cal. Apr. 13, 2017)

Delux, a cab company in San Diego, sued Uber for false advertising about “the purported exceptional safety of Uber” and the relative unsafety of taxicab rides. Challenged claims included:  “SAFEST RIDES ON THE ROAD—Going the Distance to Put People First,” and that Uber sets “the strictest safety standards possible …. The specifics vary depending on what local governments allow, but within each city we operate, we aim to go above and beyond local requirements to ensure your comfort and security—what we’re doing in the US is an example of our standards around the world.” Uber also touted rigorous background checks that it said compared favorably to those in the taxi industry.  Uber added a separately itemized $1 “Safe Rides Fee” shown on receipts, touting the fee as supporting an “industry-leading background check process, regular motor vehicle checks, driver safety education, development of safety features in the app, and insurance.”

Uber argued that the statements were all puffery, but many of them were specific and testable: Uber claims that it is “setting the strictest safety standards possible,” that its safety is “already best in class,” and that its “three-step screening” background check procedure, which includes “county, federal and multi-state checks,” and adheres to a “comprehensive and new industry standard.” A reasonable consumer “could conclude that an Uber ride is objectively and measurably safer than a ride provided by a taxi or other competitor service, i.e., it is statistically most likely to keep riders from harm.”  Nor were the statements merely aspirational and subjective.  Thhe simple addition of phrases such as “Uber is committed to ...,” “Uber works hard to ...,” or “We’re doing everything we can to ...” to an advertising statement isn’t an automatic shield from liability.  Nor did the context preclude a finding of misleadingness. Though Delux didn’t dispute that Uber screens criminal records going back seven years and conducts county, federal, and multi-state checks, the additional statements it made were also falsifiable, and the seven-year multi-jurisdictional background check was allegedly not “industry-leading.”

Uber also argued that several of its statements weren’t made in commercial advertising or promotion because they were made to journalists independent of Uber. Those challenged statements were “inextricably intertwined” with the reporters’ coverage of a matter of public concern, whether Uber is safe for riders.  Claims based on those statements weren’t actionable under the Lanham Act.

The “Safe Rides Fee,” however, was actionable even though Uber argued that it related to a transaction that had already occurred; it was aimed at getting future rides.


Uber agued that Delux didn’t adequately allege proximate cause.  Injury can be presumed in false comparative advertising cases.  The parties here were direct competitors, and it made sense that Uber’s alleged misrepresentations would decrease taxi rides.

Who registers the watchmen? court needs more info in (c) case

Sara Designs, Inc. v. A Classic Time Watch Co., --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2017 WL 627461, No. 16CV03638 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 15, 2017)

Sara sued for copyright infringement, trade dress infringement, state trademark infringement and dilution, unfair trade practices, and deceptive practices and false advertising under New York General Business Law §§ 349 and 350. The court granted a motion to dismiss and denied a motion for a preliminary injunction.

Sara sells a highly successful series of wrap watches, including several styles of wrap watches using gradient chains, leather strands, adjustable links that include a lobster claw closure connected to the gradient chains with a ring, and an extension chain with a Sara Designs leaf-shaped logo connected to the watch. A representative from NY & Co. allegedly visited Sara’s booth at a trade show to ask whether it would lower prices or produce their product with lower-end materials under the NY & Co. brand. Sara declined, and NY & Co. allegedly had A Classic Time copy several of Sara’s watches. 

Bonus question: after Varsity Brands, are these watches protectable?

The copyright aspects had a problem: the complaint included certificates of copyright registration for several watches, “and numerous images of what appear to be internet screenshots of various iterations of Plaintiff’s watches and Defendants’ allegedly infringing watches.” But each of the submitted certificates of registration were text-only, and none were accompanied by any corresponding images of the work it purported to cover nor any specific descriptions of the work, other than the title of the work. The internet images of the allegedly infringed watches weren’t alleged to correspond to any particular registration number.

[Scroll down for more]
 
from complaint

More allegedly infringing watches





The court ordered Sara to file a supplemental submission “clarifying the scope of the copyright application and grant covering the allegedly infringed watches.” The resulting declaration didn’t provide further evidence to show that the certificates of registration corresponded to the images of the various watches submitted with the complaint. For example, although Sara alleged that “the W03 All Chain Wrap Watch” was infringed, it didn’t submit a certificate of registration referencing any “W03” watch, nor did it allege a plausible basis for a determination that any of the certificates covered that watch. “The declaration proffers, without explanation, multiple and seemingly different watches as being covered by single certificates of registration, and refers to watch titles that differ from the titles in the certificates and the Complaint.” There was no plausible factual basis from which to infer that a valid copyright registration covered any of the specific watches shown in the screenshots.  The complaint was dismissed with leave to amend.

The trade dress claims were conclusory and insufficient.  The complaint failed to identify the “precise nature of the trade dress” allegedly at issuse, “and merely contains a high level description of features of several watches, such as ‘gradient chain,’ ‘lobster claw closure,’ and ‘leaf-shaped logo,’ without allegations as to whether and how those features are distinctive.” Sara also didn’t properly allege secondary meaning, merely “asserting in a conclusory manner” that Sara was “known primarily for its unique and famous Wrap Style Watches,” and that its trade dress was “widely recognized by consumers as being associated with Plaintiff and has developed secondary meaning in the marketplace.” The complaint didn’t plead facts about advertising expenditures, consumer surveys, marketing coverage or prior attempts to plagiarize Sara’s trade dress that would support a proper inference of secondary meaning.

State dilution claims require a plaintiff to show “(1) that it possesses a strong mark, one which has a distinctive quality or has acquired a secondary meaning such that the trade name has become so associated in the public’s mind with the plaintiff that it identifies goods sold by that entity as distinguished from goods sold by others, and (2) a likelihood of dilution by either blurring or tarnishment.” The allegedly infringing watches were marked with “NY & Co.” or “New York & Company” logos. If Sara ought to claim that the term “wrap style watch” or the appearance of its watches constituted protectable marks, it didn’t allege sufficient facts or legal theories to make infringement or dilution claims plausible.

Sara’s unjust enrichment claim was preempted by the Copyright Act, like the unfair competition claim to the extent that it was also based on misappropriation of copyright. The claims similar to the Lanham Act claim were dismissed for the reasons above, and for the additional reason that the complaint didn’t adequately allege bad faith. The deceptive practices/false advertising claims under GBL §§ 349-350 were dismissed for want of alleged facts supporting an inference of harm to the public interest or consumers outside of harm to Sara’s own products and its related property rights.


Friday, April 14, 2017

Lack of damages dooms false marking, advertising claims

Gravelle v. Kaba Ilco Corp., 2017 WL 1349278, No. 2016-2318 (Fed. Cir. Apr. 12, 2017)

Gravelle sued his competitor Kaba for falsely marking its key-cutting machines as “patent pending” for a time, as Kaba eventually admitted, and sought monetary relief under the Patent Act, the Lanham Act, and North Carolina’s Unfair and Deceptive Practices Act.

In April 2015, Gravelle sold the rights to his key-cutting machine to Hudson Lock LLC which sold “between 50 and 85” RapidKey 7000 machines over a year and spent “probably ... $30,000 in advertising.” Kaba’s competing machine had two features, “automatic blade detection” and “automatic calibration,” marked as “patent pending,” although no patent application for those features was ever filed. Kaba sold 687 EZ Code machines between 2008 and 2015, continuing to use the false marking through at least September 10, 2013.

In order to sue under the false marking statute, a plaintiff must have “suffered a competitive injury as a result of a violation” of the marking statute. The court of appeals found that the district court correctly concluded that Gravelle did not put forth sufficient evidence to connect the decline in his sales to Kaba’s false marking of its machine as “patent pending.”  Gravelle claimed that he was “forced” to sell his rights to Hudson for $20,000, representing a loss of the value in the absence of Kaba’s false marking. Again, his evidence—his own estimate—was too speculative.  “Gravelle has advanced no evidence that he was deterred from introducing or continuing to market a product similar to Kaba’s falsely marked one or from engaging in innovation in the field of Kaba’s product, or that he incurred costs in designing around the features Kaba marked as subject to a pending patent.”  Gravelle claimed that the features “automatic blade detection” and “automatic calibration” were “highly desirable within the small locksmith community, at large, to the extent that same could readily influence a buyer[’]s purchasing decision.” But that was “too speculative and unexplained an assertion to support the causal proposition, which is anything but obvious, that buyers actually purchased the ‘patent pending’ machines over Gravelle’s machines.”  Further, no reasonable juror could find that Gravelle’s testimony was sufficient to show that the reason Hudson spent $30,000 advertising for a product it believed would generate $2 million in annual profits was that the expenditure was necessary to overcome Kaba’s false marking.

This same problem prevented success on Lanham Act false advertising claims.  Gravelle didn’t argue for a presumption of injury due to direct competition in the district court, and anyway this case didn’t involve a two-player market.  Though disgorgement is an available remedy under the Lanham Act, liability still depends on showing proximately caused harm.  So too with the state-law claim.


The court of appeals remanded for further fact-finding on the award of fees to Kaba.  The district court found that Gravelle’s case for injury causation was frivolous. Though no reasonable jury could find sufficient evidence of injury, “the question of whether the evidence crossed the triable-issue threshold was a closer one than the district court concluded. It is not implausible that in some markets a number of potential customers, choosing between two similar machines, one marked ‘patent pending’ and the other not, will buy the marked one because they think that buying the unmarked one exposes them to the risk of later infringing a patent of the seller of the marked one.”  Gravelle didn’t point to enough evidence that this would actually occur for this particular market.  But frivolousness focuses on “what a litigant could reasonably believe would constitute sufficient evidence to allow a reasonable inference of harm caused by the false marking.”  On this question, more findings were required than the district court provided.  Gravelle, a pro se plaintiff, was deeply involved in the relevant market, and he offered his own opinion that customers “could” be influenced by a “patent pending” marking. “[I]t is not clear that a person in Gravelle’s position should be charged with understanding that merely possible influence (‘could’) is inadequate and that ‘influence’ cannot be asserted in a wholly general manner, but must be supported by evidence, whether from customers or others, concretely showing how customers would have been influenced by a marking in the specific market.” The district court was thus ordered to reconsider the fee award.

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Ordinary false advertising isn't disparagement for insurance purposes

Vitamin Health, Inc. v. Hartford Casualty Ins. Co., --- Fed.Appx. ----, 2017 WL 1325263, No. 16-1724
 (6th Cir. Apr. 11, 2017)

Vitamin Health makes products intended to reduce the risk of developing age-related macular degeneration, advertising that its products contain the combination of vitamins recommended by the second Age-Related Eye Disease Study, a 2013 study conducted by the National Eye Institute for the National Institutes of Health.  Bausch & Lomb, a competitor, sued Vitamin Health for patent infringement and false advertising, alleging that that Vitamin Health’s product contained less zinc than what the AREDS 2 study recommended.  Because of the false advertising claim, Vitamin Health asked its insurer Hartford to defend it, and Hartford declined.  Here, the court upholds the district court’s finding that Hartford had no duty to defend.

Vitamin Health argued that the false advertising claim fell within the policy’s definition of “personal and advertising injury,” which covers, among other things, “Oral, 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.”  Vitamin Health argues that allegedly disparaged Bausch & Lomb by implication. But there can be no disparagement when the alleged misrepresentation was of the policy holder’s own product. Under Michigan law, “a disparagement claim requires a company to make false, derogatory, or disparaging communications about a competitor’s product.”  


Vitamin Health argued a theory of “implied disparagement,” which allegedly existed whenever one company claims its products are superior to all other products. But it wasn’t clear that Michigan law recognizes claims of disparagement by implication, and even if it did, Vitamin Health didn’t make claims about its own superiority; Bausch & Lomb was the one that claimed that its product was the only one that complied with the AREDS 2 formula.

Don't try to make a Lanham Act case out of a copyright case

Lieb v. Korangy Pub’g, Inc., 2016 WL 8711195, No. 15-CV-40 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 30, 2016)

The Second Circuit isn’t a good place to try to plead around Dastar.  Lieb sued Korangy for copyright infringement and deceptive business practices based on alleged infringement of the article “10 Surprises When Inheriting Real Estate.” Lieb, a HuffPo blogger, alleged that Korangy infringed by copying and promoting its contents in a separate article, “Watch for These 10 Surprises When Inheriting Real Estate,” published on therealdeal.com, and engaged in unlawful business practices by advertising the infringing work on the Real Deal, social media websites, and other outlets.  Korangy allegedly harmed consumers by linking to the infringing work “which, in turn, distorts information contained in the Copyrighted Work and thereby misleads and consequently harms consumers.” The fact that the infringing work linked to the original work allegedly “wrongfully suggests … that the Infringing Work was published with the apparent authority to hold itself out as of equal value to the Copyrighted Work” and that “the Infringing Work was published with the authorization of Plaintiff.”  Korangy’s ads for the article were allegedly deceptive because the infringing work “was falsely advertised as a wholly original work and it was falsely advertised to have been authored by a non-party.” Korangy allegedly did this with lots of different articles online.

Lieb sought to amend his complaint to add Lanham Act claims, alleging that “Defendant engaged in the systematic practice of misappropriating others’ articles and altering them so that they are no longer representative of the authors’ works, while simultaneously attributing them to the original authors[.]”  The proposed complaint also alleged false advertising “by copying and/or summarizing and/or removing information from the Copyrighted Work, thereby distorting the intended meaning of the Copyrighted Work.”

At this point in the case, an amended complaint required a showing of good cause under Rule 16(b), which requires that a movant have exercised diligence but still failed to meet the Court’s deadline despite such efforts.  The court found that Lieb had not done so; allegedly newly discovered evidence of Korangy’s “systematic practice” of summarizing articles as Lieb’s had been summarized could and should have been known before; indeed, the opearative complaint alleged “numerous” examples of such articles.  Anyway, nothing about Lieb’s own Lanham Act claim required evidence of intent to deceive, which was what Lieb contended he’d newly unearthed in the deposition testimony of Korangy employees.


Also, even with good cause, amendment would be futile because of Dastar.  Allegedly falsely designating the infringing work as having been authored by someone else is not actionable, nor was allegedly passing off the infringing work as having been authored by Lieb.  As for the false advertising claim, Dastar’s interpretation of “origin” “necessarily implies that the words ‘nature, characteristics, and qualities’ in 43(a)(1)(B) cannot be read to refer to authorship.” Thus, “a failure to attribute authorship to Plaintiff does not amount to misrepresentation of ‘the nature, characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin of ... Defendant’s goods.’ ” 

Flea market case on secondary (and tertiary) liability for counterfeiting

Luxottica Gp., S.P.A. v. Greenbriar Marketplace II, LLC, --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2016 WL 5859023, No. 15-cv-01382 (N.D. Ga. Sept. 30, 2016)

Luxottica sought to hold Greenbriar and Albert Ashkouti liable for contributory trademark infringement based on sales of counterfeit goods by some vendors at the Greenbriar Discount Mall, including “knock-off” Ray-Ban and Oakley sunglasses (Luxottica brands).  In December 2013, DHS and the Atlanta PD raided the mall and adjacent Greenbriar Strip Plaza and seized thousands of counterfeit products, including counterfeit Ray-Ban and Oakley merchandise. Luxottica’s investigators observed sales of fake Ray-Bans and Oakleys and were able to purchase several pairs of counterfeit sunglasses on multiple undercover trips to the flea market from October, 2014 to April, 2015. Luxottica sent a C&D letter about this addressed to the “Owner/Manager” of the “Greenbrier Strip Plaza Warehouse” in January 2015.

Liability for contributory infringement depends upon whether the alleged contributing defendant “intended to participate” in the infringement or “actually knew about” the infringement. “The extent and nature of the violations being committed may be relevant in making this determination.”  The defendant also needs to have “actively and materially furthered the unlawful conduct,” which can include “bad faith refusal to exercise a clear contractual power to halt the infringing activities.”  Corporate officers can be held personally liable for contributory trademark infringement if they “actively participated as a moving force in the decision to engage in the infringing acts, or otherwise caused the infringement as a whole to occur.”

For purposes of this motion, defendants didn’t dispute knowledge of the alleged widespread sale of counterfeit merchandise at the discount mall/flea market and focused on their control over operations.

Greenbriar Marketplace is the owner of the real property on which the Discount Mall is located. Greenbriar Marketplace leases the anchor store space and the adjoining parking lot areas to defendant 2925 Properties, LLC, for the operation of the Greenbriar Discount Mall (flea market). Greenbriar Marketplace’s only income is rent from tenants of the shopping center, including 2925 Properties. 
Greenbriar Marketplace has two owners: Tabas Two, LLLP and Kimberly Swindall. 2925 Properties sublets spaces to vendor/tenants in the flea market. Kimberly Swindall is also the sole member/owner of 2925 Properties:


organization chart

2925 Properties also owns and operates an adjacent property and shopping center, as outlined on the map:

The utility of photos in opinions

Defendant Albert Ashkouti owns 67% of Tabas Holdings, which in turn owns 1% (and is the general partner) of Tabas Two. Ashkouti is also a limited partner of Tabas Two, and “a member of the general partner of Greenbriar Marketplace’s majority member.” He’s listed with the Georgia Secretary of State’s office as the “registered agent” and identified himself as a “member/manager” for Greenbriar Marketplace, although he in fact is not personally a “member” of the LLC:

Ashkouti chart

Kimberly Swindall was aware of the December 2013, law enforcement raid on the Greenbriar Discount Mall and adjacent Greenbriar Strip Plaza and acknowledged the seizure of counterfeit merchandise at both shopping centers. That raid “was not the first run-in with counterfeiting by Greenbriar and 2925 Properties, nor was it their last.” Swindall’s efforts to combat the prevalent sale of counterfeit merchandise at the flea market were “unsuccessful in ridding the flea market of all counterfeit sales.”  Greenbriar Marketplace, as landlord, has certain rights if its tenant 2925 Properties doesn’t comply with the lease terms, including the right to terminate the lease; the lease requires 2925 Properties to obey the law.  The lease also barred the sale of alcohol, obscene, erotic or pornographic materials.

Greenbriar Marketplace argued that its tenant was solely responsible for the use of the property and that it had no right of control over tenants under the lease.  But liability for contributory trademark infringement can attach to a landlord who continues to lease space to a tenant whom it knows or has reason to know is engaging in trademark infringement even without direct control over the infringing conduct. Swindall’s dual status as half-owner of Greenbriar Marketplace—the property owner and landlord—and as sole owner of 2925 Properties which operates the flea market was also highly relevant, as was her general awareness of the widespread counterfeiting problem at the flea market.  A reasonable jury could find that Swindall could have acted on behalf of Greenbriar Marketplace but refused to do so, or it could conclude that she took reasonable efforts to flush out infringing sales of counterfeit merchandise at the flea market.

Ashkouti was not individually liable for contributory infringement. “Mr. Ashkouti’s savvy business structuring of his family’s investment companies was clearly done to avoid opening him up to personal liability for his financial real estate dealings.”  The record showed that he maintained an active management role in Greenbriar Marketplace, and was its agent.  He dealt with the money and never went inside the shopping center, instead employing his own property management company to manage it. “For all practical purposes, Mr. Ashkouti delegated all issues involving the flea market and complaints regarding counterfeiting to Patrick and Kimberly Swindall.” Whenever he received complaints, “he wrote a responsive letter to the complainant, referred the matter to the Swindalls, and relied on them to deal with it.” He met with representatives of Homeland Security once and “complained that the department was harassing him, trying to put him out of business, and that he didn’t have any rights over the flea market vendors that the department had failed to arrest or take any other action against.”


The lease agreement didn’t give Ashkouti the personal right to take action against 2925 Properties. Although he gave “evasive and conflicting deposition testimony,” that wasn’t enough to show sufficent involvement.  He could potentially have exercised control over 2925 Properties, which might be a contributory infringer.  “But control over a contributory infringer in this way (not the actual infringer)—without evidence of more extensive intermingling of Ashkouti and Greenbriar with 2925 Properties’ management/direction of the flea market …—does not provide an adequate basis for Ashkouti’s individual liability.” A reasonable jury couldn’t find that he oversaw, facilitated, or “actively participated as a moving force in contributing to the flea market’s operation.”

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

No evidence of harm means no disgorgement in false advertising case

MB Imports, Inc. v. T&M Imports, LLC, No. 10-3445, 2016 WL 8674609 (D.N.J. Dec. 23, 2016)

MB Imports imported and sold Sicilia brand lemon and lime juice products, and sold them to Safeway from 2001-2003; for many years, they were the only squeezable lemon and lime juices sold in Safeway’s produce department. Safeway discontinued Sicilia in favor of Tantillo juices offered by T&M after a 2009 meeting in which Safeway’s representatives didn’t recall receiving a proposed label for the juices. “Safeway representatives stated that Safeway was interested in selling the Tantillo juices because of the name-brand recognition, price, and Defendants’ willingness to engage in product promotions (and not due to any representations about the product’s quality, country of origin, or anything relating to their labels).”

The front label of Tantillo’s lemon juice stated “Product of Italy,” “Sicilian Lemon Juice,” “Not from Concentrate,” and “All Natural.” The back label listed ingredients, including “Lemon Juice (99.97%)” and “Potassium Metabisulfites (Antioxidant E224).” The lime juice was similar. Laboratory tests commissioned by MB indicated that Tantillo lemon juice contained added water, added non-fruit citric acid, and were not dervived from lemons of Italian or Sicilian descent, and MB concluded that the lime juice could not be “Sicilian” because there was no commercial lime juice exportation from Italy.  Despite getting this report, Safeway continued to sell the juices.

After a bit of litigation, MB was left with Lanham Act and coordinate New Jersey Unfair Competition Statute claims, with “disputed issues of fact regarding whether a consumer would consider the alleged misrepresentations material to his or her purchase; whether the current lemon juice label and previous lime juice labels still being used in advertising are false or misleading;” and “whether, if false and misleading, the representations at issue are material to consumers.”

Here, the court found that defendants were entitled to summary judgment on MB’s request for disgorgement. The Third Circuit has provided six non-exhaustive factors to evaluate whether disgorgement is appropriate: “(1) whether the defendant had the intent to confuse or deceive, (2) whether sales have been diverted, (3) the adequacy of other remedies, (4) any unreasonable delay by the plaintiff in asserting his rights, (5) the public interest in making the misconduct unprofitable, and (6) whether it is a case of palming off.”

Previously, the court found that “no reasonable factfinder could find that Safeway relied on Defendants’ alleged misrepresentations in deciding to sell Tantillo lemon and lime juice products.”  Moreover, MB failed to show that the false advertising caused MB any harm.  Without “at least some evidence of harm,” no award of profits or damages was appropriate.  For damages purposes, the court wouldn’t presume that any of defendants’ sales would have gone to MB but-for the false advertisement.


The court declined to address the appropriateness of attorneys’ fees at this stage. An award of attorney’s fees doesn’t require intentionally false advertising, or the existence of damages.  The court could potentially find culpable conduct if defendants were still using their original ad on the internet, and other claims related to be litigated. It was too early to decide that this wasn’t an exceptional case.