Melwani v.
Amazon.com, Inc., 2022 WL 670919, NO. C21-1329RSM (W.D. Wash. Mar. 7, 2022)
Melwani owns the
Royal Silk trademark for “a wide variety of products.” His marks are enrolled
in Amazon Brand Registry, and Royal Silk Direct maintains an authorized Royal
Silk “storefront” on Amazon.com. Nonetheless, Melwani alleged that Royal Silk
was “plagued” by third party infringers, and his legal actions and notices allegedly
resulted in the removal of about 200 infringing listings from Amazon.com that
were attributed to about 100 different unauthorized third-party sellers over
the last 2-3 years. Melwani alleged that Amazon’s Brand Registry has not
offered proactive brand protection and that it has been “almost impossible” to
remove any listing through Amazon’s Brand Registry.
His “central allegation of wrongful conduct” was that,
“when customers use Amazon’s Search Box (the search bar at the top of its
e-commerce website) to search for ‘Royal Silk,’ results regularly include many
products not manufactured by Plaintiff. These products are sold by other
third-party sellers and Amazon itself.” For example, one search for “Royal
Silk” under all departments on Amazon.com, yielded 60 product listings.
Seventeen were for official Royal Silk products; 40 listings were “totally
unrelated” to the query Royal Silk—of which 8 were paid sponsored ads for
sellers who allegedly purchased the keywords “Royal Silk”; 32 were for third
party sellers who allegedly “likely” purchased this keyword; and the remaining
3 were third party infringers, unlawfully using or showing the words “Royal
Silk” in their product listings. But the Royal Silk Amazon storefront didn’t
show up, nor “any product listings for Royal Silk pocket squares or
handkerchiefs, of which there are allegedly over 200 product listings.” [So: is
Amazon just bad at search?] Similar searches were also “frustrating”; Melwani
alleged that the search results were “erroneous, scattershot, mingled” as well
as “consistently confusing, misleading, false, and deceptive.”
Melwani alleged
misappropriation of his trademark through use of “Royal Silk” as a keyword/metatag
in ways that confuse the customer, “rob and thwart Plaintiff’s ability to
exercise his right to quality and image control,” and ultimately allow Amazon
to “unlawfully profit[ ] from its own targeted use of Plaintiff’s marks.” He
also alleged that Amazon “avoid[s] serving up infringers when it comes to
keyword searches for its own products” by not allowing third party sellers to
bid on “Fire TV” or “Echo Show” or “Ring Doorbell.”
Infringement: Multi Time Mach., Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc.,
804 F.3d 930 (9th Cir. 2015), held as a matter of law that “[b]ecause Amazon’s
search results page clearly labels the name and manufacturer of each product
offered for sale and even includes photographs of the items, no reasonably
prudent consumer accustomed to shopping online would likely be confused as to
the source of the products.” MTM was directly on point and precluded any
liability, given the search results that were part of the complaint’s
allegations. It didn’t matter that, if a user searches “royal silk,” the phrase
will appear in the URL for the search page. “[T]he URL merely shows how the
website’s data is organized and/or the search term entered by the consumer, and
… this does not violate trademark law.”
False designation of
origin/false advertising: Lasoff v. Amazon.com, Inc., 741 F. App’x 400, 401
(9th Cir. 2018), “rejected trademark infringement claims like Mr. Melwani’s,
holding that ‘Amazon is permitted to use a trademarked search term to direct
consumers to competing products, as long as the search results are clearly
labeled.’” And it dismissed false advertising claims as “duplicative of his
infringement claim.” In providing results for trademarked search terms, “Amazon
did not make any statements about the quality of Mr. Lasoff’s products.” So too
here.
But the false
designation of origin claim wasn’t dismissed because the court didn’t think
Amazon addressed it (I don’t see why—how could it differ from trademark
infringement here?).
Trademark dilution: Not
plausibly pled to be famous, but leave to amend.
NY unfair
competition/dilution: These require bad faith, and the only supporting fact
alleged was that Amazon is “generally aware of Plaintiff’s infringement
concerns and related legal actions,” which wasn’t enough. Even “[p]rior
knowledge of a senior user’s trade mark does not necessarily give rise to an
inference of bad faith and may [actually] be consistent with good faith.” Thus,
“[m]ore than inaction is needed here.”
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