Covington Specialty Insurance Company v. Omega Restaurant & Bar, LLC, --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2023 WL 2720805, No. 2:21-cv-247 (E.D. Va. Mar. 30, 2023)
This is fallout from one of the many right of publicity etc.
lawsuits against clubs for advertising them with images of models without those
models’ consent. Omega was sued in state court by a group of such models;
Covington sought a declaration that it had no duty to defend, which it secured
on summary judgment.
The relevant policy provides coverage for bodily injury,
property injury, and advertising injury, subject to certain conditions and
exclusions. The underlying lawsuit asserted misappropriation of images and
likenesses for advertising purposes under state law; violation of the Virginia
business conspiracy statute; and violations of the Lanham Act for false
advertising and false association.
In Virginia, insurance contracts are interpreted according to
general principles of contract law; any ambiguity is construed against the
insurer. “In deciding whether coverage applies, a court may consider only the
underlying complaint and the relevant policy.” A duty to defend is triggered if
there’s any possibility that a judgment against the insured will be covered.
Additionally, “[l]anguage in a policy purporting to exclude
certain events from coverage will be construed most strongly against the
insurer.”
Covered personal/advertising injury included
d. Oral or written publication, in
any manner, of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or
disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products or services;
e. Oral or written publication, in
any manner, of material that violates a person’s right of privacy;
f. The use of another’s advertising
idea in your “advertisement”; or
g. Infringing upon another’s
copyright, trade dress or slogan in your “advertisement”.
It excluded knowing violation of the rights of another, and
injury “arising out of the infringement of copyright, patent, trademark, trade
secret or other intellectual property rights. … However, this exclusion does
not apply to infringement, in your ‘advertisement,’ of copyright, trade dress
or slogan.”
Covington argued that the ROP claim was an intellectual
property right; although Omega didn’t contest this, it’s not obviously true
(see what’s going on in courts’ characterizations of the ROP for §230 purposes)
and it’s probably past time to add ROP (or name, image and likeness if you prefer)
to that list if insurers really want it excluded. However, given how ROP claims
work, they really should be treated like copyright, trade dress, and
slogan—they’re routinely connected to advertising and the advertising can
regularly be distinguished from the underlying goods/services. Certainly
insureds have at least as much reason to want such insurance, and given the
extension of the right of publicity there is a set of claims that don’t involve
knowing violations of rights.
Anyway, Omega also didn’t contest that the conspiracy
allegation was an excluded “criminal act” and knowing violation of rights of
another, or that the Lanham Act claims aren’t one of the enumerated offenses in
the definition of personal/advertising injury. Instead, it argued that the
underlying lawsuit alleged misappropriation of advertising ideas and
slander/libel/disparagement.
The Virginia ROP “protects both a property interest and a
right to privacy.” But it is generally known as the “right of publicity” as
evolved from the right of privacy. The court concluded that the ROP is an
intellectual property right. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “intellectual
property” as “[a] category of intangible rights” including “trade-secret
rights, publicity rights, moral rights, and rights against unfair competition.”
“The distinction between the right of privacy and the right
of publicity is critical to the coverage determination here because the Policy
provides coverage for violation of one (the right of privacy) but excludes coverage
for infringement of the other (as an intellectual property right).” But the
exclusion didn’t swallow the coverage rendering the coverage meaningless,
because other personal/advertising injury offenses were covered.
There was thus no duty to defend as to the ROP, and the
court also found that the policy excluded the conspiracy claim and didn’t cover
Lanham Act claims based on confusion about underlying plaintiffs’ employment at
and/or endorsement of Omega. This was important because false endorsement/false
advertising claims could succeed without the existence of intellectual property
rights.
Omega’s arguments favoring coverage failed because the
underlying complaint didn’t even implicitly allege misappropriation of
advertising ideas, given that there’s no general common law right against
misappropriation in Virginia. Nor did the underlying complaint state a
potential claim for defamation by implication despite the fact that the
underlying plaintiffs alleged that the false suggestion of association with
Omega “would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.”
Courts have divided on whether similar allegations can
actually found a defamation claim. Here, the underlying complaint didn’t
“elaborate” on how such an association or affiliation would subject the underlying
to “scorn, ridicule, or contempt” or render them “infamous, odious, or
ridiculous.” Plus, the underlying complaint alleged that Omega used the images
to promote and draw customers to their business—not to shame or disgrace the
underlying plaintiffs.
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