Puma v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP, No. A-1-CA-38023, 2022 WL
3221810, -- P.3d – (N.M. Ct. App. Aug. 9, 2022)
Interesting case about trademark preemption. The Pumas
alleged that defendants violated the New Mexico Unfair Practices Act based on
their purchase of a Black & Decker-branded coffeemaker.
Based on Black & Decker’s reputation, the Pumas thought
the coffeemaker would be better than the lower-priced store brand and paid more
for it as a result. However, Black & Decker did not in fact design, manufacture,
distribute, or warrant the coffeemaker. Its maker, Applica, paid royalties to
Black & Decker for the right to use the name and trademarks in selling
small kitchen appliance. “[A] consumer reading the information on the
Coffeemaker’s box would not know of any relationship between Black & Decker
and Applica.” The coffeemaker evidently proved unsatisfactory, and the Pumas
sued.
The district court certified a class of those who purchased
the coffeemaker at a New Mexico Wal-Mart store from 2009 to 2013, approximately
40,600 members. The district court, after a bench trial, found that defendants’
conduct constituted an “unfair or deceptive trade practice.” It awarded $300 in
statutory damages and attorney fees, but because the class could not establish
actual damages, it was not entitled to damages.
The court of appeals affirmed the finding of a violation of
the UPA against an argument that the Lanham Act preempted the claim. Defendants
started with 15 U.S.C. § 1055, which allows related companies to use registered
marks, including “any person whose use of a mark is controlled by the owner of
the mark with respect to the nature and quality of the goods or services on or
in connection with which the mark is used.” 15 U.S.C. § 1127. They argued that
B&D could grant a license and be protected as long as the owner exercised
quality control. And they argued that they had done so because their licensing
agremeent “mandated that Black & Decker exercise control and oversight to
ensure the Coffeemaker met Black & Decker’s quality standard.” [Side note:
that’s not enough if they didn’t actually do it!]
But anyway, the conduct could still violate the UPA, which
is “remedial legislation for consumer protection,” and which courts interpret
“liberally.” “New Mexico cases have historically interpreted the UPA to focus
exclusively on consumer protection, protecting innocent consumers.” By
contrast, the Lanham Act protects “persons engaged in commerce” and does not
allow consumers to bring claims. Interpretation of the UPA is supposed to be “guided
by the interpretations given by the federal trade commission [(FTC)] and the
federal courts.” Reading the latter phrase to include all federal court
decisions, including Lanham Act decisions, “would produce a direction so broad
as to be practically meaningless.”
Defendants’ position that, “so long as the quality
associated with the Black & Decker brand is maintained, failing to indicate
the ultimate source or manufacturer of the Coffeemaker cannot constitute an
unfair or deceptive trade practice under the UPA,” conflicted with the UPA’s
list of unfair/deceptive acts, such as “causing confusion or misunderstanding
as to the source, sponsorship, approval or certification of goods” and “representing
that goods ... are of a particular standard [or] quality ... if they are of
another.” “The language of these subsections indicates that the Legislature
intended that representations as to a product’s source could be a basis for
liability under the UPA, independent of that product’s quality.”
In a footnote, the court found that the argument that the
Lanham Act constituted a regulatory safe harbor/generally preempted the claim
insufficiently developed.
So, was there sufficient evidence of an unfair trade
practice? The district court relied on three statutory prohibited practices:
“representing goods ... as those of another when the goods ... are not the
goods ... of another,” “causing confusion or misunderstanding as to the source,
sponsorship, approval or certification of goods,” and “using exaggeration,
innuendo or ambiguity as to a material fact or failing to state a material fact
if doing so deceives or tends to deceive.”
As to the first, defendants argued that this wasn’t a case
of passing off, since B&D collaborated with and permitted its licensee to
use the mark. And they argued that “neither the Coffeemaker nor its packaging
affirmatively stated that Black & Decker designed, manufactured,
distributed, or warranted the Coffeemaker.”
The court of appeals disagreed. The trial court made factual
findings that the Pumas were actually deceived as to the source of the product.
“Even if we assume that, by virtue of the trademark licensing agreement between
Applica and Black & Decker, Defendants’ use of the Black & Decker
trademark on the Coffeemaker could not alone constitute active
misrepresentation as to the source or manufacturer of the Coffeemaker,
Defendants have not adequately addressed the district court’s reliance on [another
part of the consumer protection law], which provides that ‘using ... ambiguity
as to a material fact or failing to state a material fact if doing so deceives
or tends to deceive’” can constitute an unfair or deceptive trade practice.”
Thus, the presence of the trademark plus the absence of any disclosure on the
product or the advertising could deceive reasonable consumers about either (1)
the relationship between Black & Decker and Applica; or (2) that the product
was in fact a product of Applica, rather than of Black & Decker. The court
pointed out that the name, “Black & Decker 12 Cup Programmable Coffeemaker”
“emphasized that the ‘Black & Decker’ name was an important characteristic
of the Coffeemaker; these statements tended to deceive a reasonable consumer,
and Defendants knew or should have known that potential purchasers of the
Coffeemaker would likely regard information about the Coffeemaker being a Black
& Decker product as material.”
The court emphasized that it was not holding “that the use
of a trademark by a licensee pursuant to a trademark licensing agreement by
itself constitutes an unfair or deceptive trade practice,” or that individual
or widespread licensing was “per se irrelevant” to the inquiry. Nor was
evidence of the quality of the licensed product “per se irrelevant.” Rather,
the court of appeals was simply holding that the Lanham Act did not govern the
UPA claim, “and that, under the circumstances of this case, Defendants’ knowing
and willful use of ambiguity as to material fact, which tended to deceive a
reasonable consumer, constituted an unfair or deceptive trade practice.”
This liability victory didn’t result in big damages, though.
The court of appeals found that the district court didn’t err in denying
damages for unjust enrichment. And it reversed the district court’s decision to
award the Pumas attorney fees related to class certification.
No comments:
Post a Comment