Monday, April 02, 2018

Can the argument that third party users of a term are engaged in nominative fair use defeat a genericism claim?


Illinois Tamale Co. v. El-Greg, Inc., 2018 WL 1534971, No. 16 C 5387 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 29, 2018)

This case raises the interesting question of whether it’s possible to distinguish nominative fair uses from generic uses when looking at online comments/reporting; the jury may not get much guidance on how to do that!

Illinois Tamale owns a registered trademark for PIZZA PUFFS for “a frozen, hand-held stuffed sandwich or dough pocket filled with meat, cheese, and sauce,” among other PUFFS trademarks. El-Greg used theproduct names “Pizza Pies (Puffs),” “Chili Cheese Puff,” and “Veggie Pizza Puff,” and allegedly similar slogans and packaging. The court denied El-Greg’s motion for summary judgment on genericism and Illinois Tamale’s motion for summary judgment on fair use.

Illinois Tamale’s slogan is “MAKERS OF THE ‘ORIGINAL’ PIZZA PUFFS.” Although the word “pizza” is disclaimed, Illinois Tamale owns an incontestable registration for PIZZA PUFFS. On its website, Illinois Tamale describes its Pizza Puff as “Pork Sausage and Mozzarella Cheese with our Home-Style Pizza Sauce Wrapped [in] a Soft Flour Tortilla.”

El-Greg sells the “Pizza Pie,” a copy of Illinois Tamale’s Pizza Puffs product, described in El-Greg’s advertising as “Cooked Pork, Real Mozzarella Cheese, Homemade Pizza Sauce with our blend of fresh spices wrapped in a flaky tortilla pocket.” The parties have sold their products to Restaurant Depot, a restaurant supply firm, for many years; the products are sold side-by-side. In 2010, El-Greg changed its Pizza Pie label, but only for products sold at Restaurant Depot, now referring to the product as “PIZZA PIES (PUFFS).” El-Greg’s modified label has a layout similar to Illinois Tamale’s Pizza Puffs label, and it includes the slogan “MAKERS OF THE ‘ORIGINAL PUFFS.’”

The parties’ Restaurant Depot labels:
 
Defendant's Pizza Pies (Puffs)

Plaintiff's Pizza Puffs


The parties sell other products, including variations on the same stuffed sandwich / dough pocket theme. Additional stuffed sandwich items from Illinois Tamale include Sloppy Joe Puffs; Taco Puffs; Gyro Puff; Ham & Cheese Puff; Pepperoni Pizza Puff; Beef Pizza Puff; 4-Cheese Pizza Puff; Ham, Cheese & Jalapeno Puff; BBQ Pulled Pork Puff; Reuben Puff; and Breakfast Puff, with registrations for a number of these products, including Taco Puffs and the Gyro Puff. El-Greg sells a similar “Chili Cheese Puff” item and phyllo dough “Spinach Puff” hors d’oeuvres.

Whether or not a term is generic is a question of fact, but it may be resolved on summary judgment “if the evidence is so one-sided that there can be no doubt about how the question should be answered.” Though the Seventh Circuit hasn’t decided who has the burden of persuasion for a registered mark, it has noted that “an incontestable registration is more like a bursting-bubble presumption of non-generic-ness” than an “indomitable presumption” overcome only by strong evidence of actual generic usage of the term. The court put the burden of persuasion on genericness on the defendant for incontestable trademarks.

El-Greg’s evidence of genericness was (1) the PTO’s apparent approval of use of the term to denote a type of good (in six registrations not currently in force); (2) manufacturers’ and restaurants’ use of the term to denote a type of good (two other manufacturers and nearly 400 restaurants); (3) use of the term to denote a type of good in about 100 recipes published online; (4) dictionary definitions (Urban Dictionary and Wiktionary); (5) use of the term to denote a type of good in newspapers and other publications (over 200 times); and (6) use of the term to denote a type of good in connection with other products and services (just under 90 examples in TV shows/ads for other goods or services).

Illinois Tamale disputed the relevance of much of this evidence, arguing that it does not compete with restaurants because it sells Pizza Puffs only to wholesalers and retailers. The court disagreed—noncompetitors’ uses can be considered “where that use contributes to consumers’ common understanding of the meaning of the term.”  However, Illinois Tamale’s argument that the “pizza puff” item on menus and in news articles could be designating Illinois Tamale’s product, rather than a category of food, was better aimed.  Where the menus didn’t designate the source of the “pizza puff” product or indicate that it is homemade, they could be referring specifically to Illinois Tamale’s Pizza Puffs brand, as could many of the articles that reference pizza puffs. [Capitalization appears not to matter to the court here.]  “That said, the vast majority of the articles and menus cited make no reference to Illinois Tamale, nor do they otherwise suggest that they are referring to ‘pizza puffs’ as a brand rather than a type of food product.”

Here’s what caught my eye: in responsing to the “pizza puffs” recipes, Illinois Tamale argued that there are also thousands of recipes for a homemade version of Hot Pockets; this might just show that Hot Pockets are a “well-known brand[ ] [that] home cooks want to replicate.” There was also variation in the recipes—some produced pizza-themed foods that bore little resemblance to the Pizza Puffs product at issue, allegedly indicating that consumers don’t use the term “pizza puff” to denote any particular type of food product. Such use didn’t preclude genericness, but it wasn’t helpful to El-Greg either.

Illinois Tamale also showed that a number of similar stuffed sandwich / filled dough pocket products on the market are not named or described as “pizza puffs,” and El-Greg sold its competing product as “Pizza Pies” for over 20 years before changing its Restaurant Depot label. The term “pizza puff” does appear in any dictionaries other than the crowd-sourced ones above, and definitions of the word “puff” don’t encompass Illinois Tamale’s product. Several recent news articles expressly identify Illinois Tamale as the source of the Pizza Puff brand.

Ultimately, the court denied summary judgment to both sides; there was “significant evidence” of generic use, but no showing that there was no other name for the product. Thus, a reasonable juror could find either way.  Similarly, the court denied summary judgment on the issue of whether Illinois Tamale owned a “Puffs” family of marks.

So too with descriptive fair use. On factor 1 of the statutory test, Illinois Tamale argued that El-Greg couldn’t prove it uses “Pizza Pies (Puffs)” in a non-trademark way because it was featured prominently on the product label, but that wasn’t dispositive. But a jury could accept El-Greg’s argument that putting “(Puffs)” after Pizza Pies on the label was not trademark use, because of its placement and the parentheses, and that El-Greg’s logo on the box served as the trademark.  On factor 2, Illinois Tamale argued that “puffs” wasn’t merely descriptive of its product, because it wasn’t a light, fluffy pastry, and El-Greg only used the word “puffs” on its label for Restaurant Depot, where the parties compete side by side. But a jury could agree with El-Greg, and examining attorneys at the PTO, that “puffs” is descriptive for the product. 

On factor 3, Illinois Tamale argued that El-Greg lacked good faith because El-Greg had been involved in other disputes with Illinois Tamale relating to its use of the word “puffs,” and also because the rest of El-Greg’s product label clearly demonstrated an intent to copy Illinois Tamale’s label, which El-Greg admits to having seen prior to creating its own label. [They both look to me exactly like the generic informative labels you’d expect to find in a food warehouse that isn’t consumer-facing.] El-Greg argued that it added the “puffs” descriptor because Restaurant Depot complained that people were opening the boxes to identify the contents, and that it designed its label in accordance with Restaurant Depot’s requirements. Though Restaurant Depot didn’t require adding the word “puffs” to the label, that didn’t mean that El-Greg didn’t make the change to address the problem of customers opening boxes to identify the product.  A defendant’s good faith can be judged “only by inquiry into its subjective purpose.” El-Greg’s awareness of Illinois Tamale’s “Pizza Puffs” trademark and label was insufficient to prove bad faith, even though “the similarities between the parties’ labels and slogans is striking and could quite possibly be interpreted as evidence of bad faith.” 

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