Axon Enterprise, Inc. v. Luxury Home Buyers, LLC, No. 2:20-cv-01344-JAD-VCF, |2023 WL 4636917 (D. Nev. Jul. 19, 2023)
In what seems likely a missed
opportunity due to insufficient investment in the defense, the court grants
summary judgment against an argument that “Taser” is generic (quick quiz before
reading further: what is the generic name for a Taser device?) but also narrows
the issues somewhat; the larger infringement, cybersquatting, and false advertising
claims can’t be resolved on summary judgment. [Edit: Please note that the court later granted reconsideration on the infringement claims.]
Axon makes Taser “non-lethal
weapons” (but that can’t be the generic name—anything that encompasses a Taser
and a beanbag gun is clearly too broad). Defendant LHB is a former distributor
now selling used Tasers that its owner
refurbishes in his home workshop. Axon sued for infringement of the
Taser word and design marks and for holding Taser-related
domain names for ransom. Axon apparently characterizes its non-lethal
electric weapons as “conducted energy weapons.”
When it was an authorized Axon
distributor, LHB’s owner registered various
domain names including taser.org and tasers.org to help it market Tasers
online. LHB currently owns 64 domain names containing references to Taser or
Axon Taser models. “And while
neither party knows exactly when their distributor relationship ended, they
agree that it ceased sometime around 2000.” Does that sound like the
claims against the domain names might be lached?
On websites, emails, and mailers,
LHB uses Axon’s Taser character, stylized
word, and design marks, often in proximity to its own marks. On several of its
websites, LHB also makes representations that it is an “Authorized TASER®
Distributor” and that “TASER® is a Trademark of the Mister Stungun.”
Its marketing also focuses on the
superiority of the Taser X26E CEW over other models—that is of course
the refurbished model it sells, while Axon has moved on—stating that the X26E “wield[s] the highest degree of
takedown power of total and absolutely unsurpassed effectiveness[;]” “offers
the highest degree of takedown power ever available with the same level of
safety[;]” “has the most powerful technology and stopping force[;] “lasts for
over 20 years—and works every time[;]” and has “twice the power” of the X26P
CEW. LHB also advertises that its products
are “factory refurbished,” “professionally refurbished,” “thoroughly tested,”
“refurbished to the highest standard,” “completely refurbished” to “work like
new,” “even better than new,” and reprogrammed “with the latest software.”
Axon was entitled to summary
judgment on genericity. LHB offered only two news
articles and a Ninth Circuit opinion that use the word “Taser” without the
trademark symbol:
The mere fact
that two article authors and a Ninth Circuit panel utilized the mark without a
corresponding trademark symbol does not show as a matter of law that the
primary significance of “Taser” to consumers is as a type of good rather than a
source identifier. And the context of each reference was to refer to an Axon
product or to distinguish other products as alternatives to Axon’s weapons.
Even if they were generic uses, two
articles and one opinion weren’t sufficient to overcome the “strong presumption”
of validity of a registered mark.
Likely confusion: Obviously, this
is a nominative use. But is it a nominative fair use? Toyota Motor Sales v. Tabari asks whether “(1) the product was ‘readily identifiable’
without use of the mark; (2) defendant used more of the mark than necessary; or
(3) defendant falsely suggested [it] was sponsored or endorsed by the trademark
holder.”
The court rejected Axon’s argument
that LHB could have identified its products by calling them CEWs; they were
Taser brand products. However, it used more of the marks than reasonably
necessary, favoring Axon (the court seems to be treating this as a balancing
test, to be finalized in the third factor). The court applies the non-empirical
but fairness-based line of 9th Circuit cases stating that using logos and not
just names risks confusion. (When I see these claims I think about all the
businesses using Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn etc. logos on their materials to
identify their social media accounts. Does anyone think that increases the
likelihood of confusion over affiliation? Just as with first sale, there is an
unambiguous truth—I have a legit product to sell, I have an account on this
site—coupled with a less-significant possibility of confusion about whether
there’s a greater relationship than that. I don’t think using the logo
guarantees confusion, but the context of social media may be much more
clarifying than the context of resales.)
Most importantly, there were
genuine issues of fact about whether LHB suggested Axon’s sponsorship or endorsement. LHB argued that
it avoided consumer confusion by fully disclosing that
its products are refurbished and by maintaining the basic nature of the Taser
through the refurbishment process. “Axon responds
that the first-sale doctrine isn’t dispositive of this prong because
affiliation confusion can still exist for disclosed refurbished products.”
As the Ninth Circuit held in Sebastian International v. Longs Drug Stores,
first sale doctrine “is not rendered
inapplicable merely because consumers erroneously believe the reseller is affiliated
with or authorized by the producer.” The Sebastian court thus held that,
“[w]hen a purchaser resells a trademarked article under the producer’s
trademark, and nothing more, there is no actionable misrepresentation.”
Still, that’s limited to using the
trademark on a resold article and its immediate packaging, but not using stylized
marks and logos on advertising materials. Axon didn’t seek to
enjoin the sales of refurbished Tasers.
Axon’s evidence of actual confusion was three emails from various police officers and personnel
inquiring about any affiliation between Axon and LHB, as well as declarations
from two officers that they
were confused about an affiliation between the parties. LHB pointed out
that it markets to thousands of police
departments, and one declaration
only states that he was under the belief that LHB “could be affiliated with
Axon.” Still, that was enough to create a genuine issue of fact. [Note
that the cases are just divided on this—inquiries and uncertainty often indicate
that the inquirers correctly understood that they needed to know more before
concluding that there was an affiliation. Compare this to the treatment of ambiguity
in advertising law—outside of trademark, courts make consumers work much
harder.]
The context of the use also
mattered. Axon pointed to LHB’s
phrases such as “100% certified to work like new,” false description of itself
as “an [a]uthorized TASER® distributor” (this was, LHB argued, an
oversight on some of its websites left over from when that was true), use of Axon’s
stylized mark in the top left corner of every single page on
accreditedsecurity.com, and incorporation of Axon’s globe/bolt logo into that
same page. It argued that LHB’s
disclaimers were ineffective at curing confusion
because of their placement alone—they appear in small font at the bottom of
LHB’s website and are thus “buried and easy to miss.” However, the
disclaimers were not ineffective as a matter of law. Whether LHB suggested
affiliation was an issue of fact.
False advertising: As noted above,
LHB made superiority claims for the model it sold; claims that its products
were “factory refurbished,” “professionally refurbished,”
“thoroughly tested,” “refurbished to the highest standard,” “completely
refurbished,” “work like new,” and reprogrammed “with the latest software”;
and affiliation statements that it is an “[a]uthorized
TASER® [d]istributor” and “TASER® is a [t]rademark of the Mister Stungun.”
The product superiority claims
failed. Although these statements weren’t puffery, but specific and measurable,
they weren’t shown to be false either. Although LHB admitted it never tested
that model against others, it relied on “two media
articles, his personal opinions, stories from his customers, and unspecified
google searches.”
But this wasn’t a “tests prove”
case. [Did the statements inherently suggest the existence of scientific
research backing them up? I might’ve gone the other way on this.] Thus, showing
that reliable studies didn’t support the claims didn’t suffice to falsify them.
Axon didn’t submit any evidence of falsity. The closest it got was an expert
report stating that “Axon has established a
5-year useful life for its CEW products and strongly discourages ... use of
CEWs beyond their 5-year useful life.” “But a
manufacturer’s strong recommendation of a product’s useful lifespan does not
show that the device cannot last for more than 20 years.”
Refurbishment quality: Axon argued that LHB’s
Tasers cannot be “factory refurbished” because the process takes place only in its
principal’s home or in the homes of his
independent contractors; nor “professionally refurbished” because he has no degree or expertise in mechanical engineering; nor
“thoroughly tested” because LHB does not run independent testing other than
superficial inspection; nor “refurbished to the highest standard” because LHB
identified no standards it was using; nor “completely refurbished” to “work
like new” because Tasers are sonically welded together such that their internal
components cannot be examined or replaced. And finally, while Axon agrees that
LHB’s Tasers might be reprogrammed “with the latest software,” it argues that
such a claim is misleading because the last X26E firmware update was in 2014
and LHB does not have access to the most
recent updates for two of the other Taser models he sells.
LHB responded that each Taser “undergoes several aesthetic and functionality
inspections” in which he “installs new batteries, new firmware, cleans any
internal carbon build-up in the front cartridge, clears any error codes, and
ensures each element of the [display] functions properly.” Its principal
maintains a “designated space [that] LHB references
as a ‘factory’ area to perform the refurbishment process.”
The court found that reasonable jurors
could disagree about the “subjective” meanings of the claim. [Doesn’t that mean
that evidence of consumer deception is required, in the absence of literal
falsity?]
Affiliation statements: Everybody
agrees that neither “[a]uthorized TASER® [d]istributor”
nor “TASER® is a [t]rademark of the Mister Stungun”
is true. But Axon still needs to show deception and materiality. Literal
falsity leads to a presumption of materiality and deception, and “[n]othing in the record suggests that those presumptions
should not apply here.” [This might be a good case for why there shouldn’t
always be such a presumption, although I think it should still exist in many
cases; neither “always” nor “never,” the more recent judicial trend, is ideal.]
But Axon wasn’t just seeking a
permanent injunction; it sought compensatory damages, but pointed to no evidence
of actual injury or damages from the false affiliation statements. It lost
summary judgment on damages but won summary judgment as to injunctive relief.
Trial only on
LHB’s refurbishing-quality statements.
Nevada deceptive trade practices:
Similar results, but somewhat different remedies for the affiliation statements.
LHB knew it was aware the distributor relationship was over well before Axon
filed suit. Nevada’s law allows a court to require a liable party “to pay to the aggrieved party
damages on all profits derived from the knowing and willful engagement in a
deceptive trade practice and treble damages on all damages suffered by reason
of” that practice. And its
consumer-fraud statute requires a court to award a deceptive-trade-practices
claimant “any damages that the claimant has sustained; any equitable relief
that the court deems appropriate; and the claimant’s costs in the action and
reasonable attorney’s fees.” Thus, Axon could recover damages and
attorney’s fees but would have to prove the amount.
Then, surprisingly reversing the result
on the product superiority statements in the Lanham Act context, the court says
that although there’s no evidence of falsity, “Nevada law
imposes liability for disparaging claims based on true-but-misleading
statements,” so that would have to go to trial. But the Lanham Act also
imposes liability for true-but-misleading statements; it just requires evidence
that consumers were misled to do so—here, about the nature and quality of LHB’s
supporting evidence. Having a different result on the state law claim is
conceptually weird but does highlight that traditional common-law claims are
more likely to be decided on vibes, whereas Lanham Act false advertising has adopted
a technocratic, probabilistic structure that often demands survey or other
empirical evidence.
The court also denied summary
judgment on the ACPA claim, even though one of LHB’s
websites listed its various Taser-related domains
with a headline banner labeled “Domain Names for Sale.” The court agreed
that bad faith could arise after registration of a domain name. Still, there
were genuine disputes over bad faith because the prior distributorship, and
current sales of refurbished Tasers, weighed against things like LHB’s offer to
sell the domain names to Axon. Even redirecting four of the contested domains
to porn sites didn’t sufficiently show intent to tarnish the Taser mark for
summary judgment purposes.
Laches (I wondered!): Although Axon had knowledge of some of the contested domains since
at least 1999, LHB didn’t fully analyze the laches standard or offer evidence that it suffered prejudice from delay. Summary
judgment for LHB on laches denied.
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