Troubleshooter Network, Inc. v. HomeAdvisor, Inc., 2021 WL 6881640, No. 18-cv-2362-WJM-STV (D. Colo. Nov. 24, 2021)
A rare case finding no violation of the right of publicity
or trademark law from an allegedly false endorsement based on lack of harm.
Benefit to the defendant, the court says, is not itself harm to the plaintiff—see
also this
recent Note on trademark standing by my former student Lauren Bilow.
Thomas Martino “is a Colorado talk radio host and online
consumer advocate who is known as ‘The Troubleshooter.’” Troubleshooter Network
runs a referral list website, www.referrallist.com, which offers referral
services for various business and also promotes Martino. “Businesses pay
membership fees to be reviewed or endorsed by Martino and to be placed on Tom
Martino’s Referral List…. Businesses who wish to use the Tom Martino name or
the Tom Martino’s Referral List mark in their advertising must pay a fee and be
vetted and authorized by Plaintiffs.”
HomeAdvisor “matches consumers’ home improvement service
requests to service professionals who are members of HomeAdvisor’s national
network.” HomeAdvisor’s services are free to consumers, but service providers
must pay for a membership subscription and pay “lead fees” when they receive
customer contact information relating to a service request.
HomeAdvisor bid on “tom martino referral list” as a keyword
(note: fine!). It also ran “some” search engine advertising which displayed
“tom martino referral list.” (Note: not recommended!) “As a result, on at least 1,524 occasions,
individuals searching for Tom Martino or his Referral List were presented with
ads that linked to HomeAdvisor’s website. Individuals clicked on the ads and
were routed to HomeAdvisor’s website at least 663 times.” [Quite a clickthrough
rate if those numbers are roughly accurate in the same magnitude!] “Over 60
individuals who clicked on HomeAdvisor’s ad containing Martino’s name completed
service requests with HomeAdvisor and HomeAdvisor generated a ‘net result’ (after
refunds) of $2,946.52 from selling other service requests as leads to service
providers.” [As Eric Goldman notes, this may be a value-negative lawsuit
regardless of recovery.]
Evidence of confusion: An executive producer declared that
she received “numerous calls inquiring about certain about certain members of
ReferralList.com that they heard advertising during the radio show”; however,
“when they searched for the Referral List and Tom Martino, they were directed
to a website with a search box on the front page,” and they could not find the
business they had just heard advertised. Also, she received a call from an
elderly gentleman who believed he had received a roofer referral from
ReferralList.com, but had actually received a referral from HomeAdvisor.com. A
VP also declared that he received more than a dozen calls complaining that
merchants, contractors, or service professionals were not listed on
ReferralList.com, as advertised.
Right of publicity: Under Colorado law, the elements are:
(1) the defendant used the plaintiff’s name or likeness without consent; (2)
the use of the plaintiff’s name or likeness was for the defendant’s own
purposes or benefit, commercially or otherwise; (3) the plaintiff suffered
damages; and (4) the defendant caused the damages incurred.
Plaintiffs alleged three types of injury (1) sales
diversion, (2) negative publicity from false association with HomeAdvisor, and
(3) failure to pay for the value of the endorsement.
Consumer/revenue diversion: Plaintiffs couldn’t identify
specific lost business. The court agreed that, because the parties’ services
were both free to consumers, the fact that some searchers clicked on
HomeAdvisor’s ad and then used its website didn’t show that revenue was diverted
from plaintiffs. Plaintiffs earn revenue through monthly membership fees paid
by businesses who want to be vetted and/or endorsed by Martino, not through
lead fees. Because plaintiffs don’t earn revenue from consumers who use
services from a Martino-endorsed company, the fact that HomeAdvisor made over $2900
from selling leads didn’t show that any revenue was diverted from plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs didn’t show, for example, that any members ended their agreements
with plaintiffs as a result, or any service providers declined to sign on with
Referral List because of HomeAdvisor’s ads. (Plaintiffs did provide testimony
about one professional who threatened to end his relationship if they didn’t “do
something” about the deceptive advertising; their witness indicated that the
professional did continue the relationship, though.)
Why isn’t customer diversion itself harm? Because of the
free-to-consumers nature of both parties’ services: consumers could easily have
clicked on both parties’ ads. There was no evidence that plaintiffs actually
lost any opportunities to reach consumers.
(2) Negative publicity from false association: The affidavits
from plaintiffs’ employees about complaints from confused consumers were
hearsay. The court didn’t address the more common reason for admitting such
testimony—that it reflects consumers’ present state of mind and thus is not
offered for the truth of the reported statements—but rejected plaintiffs’ argument
that the affidavits were admissible “lay opinion testimony that is rationally
based on the [affiants’] experience and perceptions and are not based on
scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge.” “Because Plaintiffs
seek to use the statements as evidence that consumers were confused by
HomeAdvisor’s advertisements or had a negative experience with HomeAdvisor,”
the reports of customer calls were hearsay, and because plaintiffs had no
records identifying the confused customers, there was no prospect that their statements
could be presented in admissible form at trial. Thus, there was no evidence of
damages from negative publicity generated by HomeAdvisor’s ads.
(3) Use of Martino’s name without paying for its endorsement
value. The court excluded plaintiffs’ expert testimony about the value of Martino’s
endorsement, and so there was no evidence of the value of Martino’s name in the
context of search engine advertising. [Wow—even without evidence of magnitude,
I would have thought that the fact that he charges for endorsements would be
evidence that there was some amount he would have charged, though—as the
exclusion of the expert’s opinion points out—the fact that HomeAdvisor was a
kind of competitor makes that harder to figure out; his endorsements were of
very different entities. Anyway, not getting money is not itself a loss,
but many ROP cases treat it like a loss.]
No damage, no requisite element; summary judgment for HomeAdvisor.
The same flaws doomed the Lanham Act false
endorsement/common law TM infringement and unfair competition claims, even
though most TM cases don’t impose a separate injury requirement, and the Colorado
Consumer Protection Act, negligence, and unjust enrichment claims.
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