Monday, July 03, 2023

Inter American Convention allows claims that Lanham Act makes dubious after Abitron; but what about Article III?

Industria De Alimentos Zenu S.A.S. v. Latinfood U.S. Corp., No. 16-6576 (KM) (MAH), 2023 WL 4200169, -- F. Supp. 3d --- (D.N.J. Jun. 27, 2023)

 Industria sued Latinfood for trademark and copyright infringement; Latinfood counterclaimed for tortious interference against Industria and another counterdefendant Cordialsa. The court granted summary judgment against Latinfood on the counterclaims, and gave partial victories to both sides on the main claims. Notable for use of the Inter American Convention to protect foreign marks in the US—Christine Haight Farley has explored this once-forgotten treaty that seems to be undergoing a revival.

Industria, based on Colombia, produces and distributes food products under two relevant brand names: Zenú and Ranchera. They’re successful brands: approximately $300,000,000 annually in sales of Zenú products and $100,000,000 in sales of Ranchera products. But Industria does not advertise or sell its Zenú or Ranchera products in the United States and there are no market surveys specific to the United States for Zenú or Ranchera.

Industria has never had a registration for Ranchera; its application was opposed by an unrelated third party and has been suspended; a prior registration for Zenú was cancelled and Industria never sold any Zenú or Ranchera products in the United States when it owned that registered trademark.

Latinfood’s predecessor in interest was founded by Zuluaga, who lived in Colombia until he was approximately 17 years old. Zuluaga claimed first use of Zenú in 2011; the predecessor company applied to register the mark in 2013, with specimens using actual images of Industria’s products (though Zuluaga claimed lack of knowledge either of Industria or the specimens filed on its behalf by a filing service). The mark was registered in 2013; nearly two years later, Zuluaga told the filing service that “we need to replace / change the pic of the specimen loaded in the application.... [T]he one showed in the application is not mine.”

Zuluaga told a designer to look at Industria’s website when creating Latinfood’s packaging designs for Zenú and Ranchera and brought one of Industria’s Ranchera labels to the designer’s office. I have tried to sort plaintiff and defendant’s labels based on what the court says, but I might be wrong (which is clearly the point).

 I believe these four images are Industria's Ranchera:




I believe this is Latinfood's Ranchera:


Industria's Zenú (again, I think):


Latinfood Zenú (I think):



Latinfood did ultimately change the Zenú logo.

Also:

Some of Latinfood’s Zenú and Ranchera product labels state that the product is manufactured or distributed by “Zenú Products US, Inc.”; display the web address www.zenu.us.com; and contain the phrase “Linea de Exportacion,” which translates to “exportation line.” Latinfood does not export its Zenú or Ranchera products outside the United States. In 2016, the Latinfood website contained the phrase “We have products from” followed by marks of imported brands, among which was an image of Industria’s Zenú mark. Advertisements made for Latinfood Zenú products used the phrase “una deliciosa tradición,” which translates to “a delicious tradition.”

One supermarket sold Latinfood’s products in an aisle designated for “Hispanic and Latin imported goods,” despite having another aisle designated for similar goods made in the U.S. After a sales manager for Cordialsa visited the supermarket and told the manager that he was “surprised to find” Zenú-marked products at the store, it ceased carrying Latinfood’s products, though the reason was unclear.

The extent of Industria’s plans for US sales and the reason for Industria’s decision not to import its products was “heavily disputed” by the parties. Prior import plans in 2010-11 were paused. Industria became aware of Latinfood’s Zenú and Ranchera products sometime between October 2013 and September 2014. Its cancellation petition for Zenú has been suspended during this litigation.

Inter American Convention for Trademark and Commercial Protection: Industria sought cancellation of the registration and priority in the US under the IAC, as well as an injunction against “unfair competition.” [I’m not sure how we should think about Article III standing for purposes of injunctive relief—it seems clear there’s standing to contest the registration, but is there sufficient injury/redressability for an injunction if there’s no pending use in the US?]

Latinfood argued that the IAC claims were barred by territoriality. “Here, the U.S. has purposely breached the territoriality principle by entering into mutual treaty obligations with certain foreign nations. The IAC is a self-executing treaty, having the force of law by virtue of its enactment. The IAC has thus been recognized as an exception to the territoriality principle.” And it creates a private cause of action. Industria didn’t need to comply with §44(d) in order to claim rights under the IAC.

Latinfood won summary judgment on the claim under Article 7, whose sole remedy is to grant priority. Industria clearly conceded that its IAC claims weren’t based on a claim of priority rights in the US.  Also, because Latinfood registered the Zenú mark in the U.S., Industria was barred from using Article 7 to gain priority over the Zenú mark for itself.

Article 8 grants the owner of a mark the “right to apply for and obtain the cancellation or annulment of the interfering mark.” This relevantly requires that the owner had legal protection for its mark in another state and the other party knew of the owner’s use for the specific goods to which it applied the mark before it adopted the mark. (There’s another route, not available here, when the mark owner was already trading in marked goods in the country in which cancellation was sought.)

Summary judgment for Industria was appropriate: It showed legal protection in Colombia prior to Latinfood’s application, and the evidence of knowledge of use on the same goods was “overwhelming and one-sided.” “Latinfood cannot shirk responsibility by simply stating that Mr. Zuluaga was unaware of the contents of the application he signed.” (There was other evidence of knowledge too.) The same goods requirement was satisfied even though the parties’ lists of food items didn’t correspond “precisely” or “item-for-item.” “Latinfood’s registration covers various meat and fish products, which would fall within the plain meaning of ‘meat, fish, poultry and game’ covered by Industria’s registration.”

The order was temporarily stayed pending full authentication of the Colombian registrations.

Under Article 17 of the IAC, Industria needed to show, relevantly, that Latinfood’s interfering mark “may lead to error or confusion in the mind of the consumer” with respect to Industria’s commercial name. The court found an issue of fact and denied summary judgment on likely confusion (see below).

Article 18 grants the right to “apply for and obtain an injunction against the use of any commercial name or the cancellation of the registration or deposit of any trade mark.” (The injunction-against-use provision is where there may be an Article III problem, it seems to me.)   This relevantly requires a showing that Latinfood’s interfering name or trademark is “identical with or deceptively similar to” Industria’s commercial name “already legally adopted and previously used in [Colombia] in the manufacture, sale or production of articles of the same class”; and prior to Latinfood’s use or adoption of the name or mark, Industria used and continues to use the “commercial name adopted and previously used” for the “same products” in Colombia. But it does not seem to require harm. Still, the court granted summary judgment for Industria (conditional on authenticating the registration).

Lanham Act (and parallel NJ Fair Trade Act): Here too there may be standing problems. The TM part of this might need revisiting in light of Abitron; the court earlier held that use of a mark in the US wasn’t required to bring Lanham Act claims, but subsequently Meenaxi Enterprise, Inc. v. Coca-Cola Company, 38 F.4th 1067 (Fed. Cir. 2022), demanded injury to sales or reputation in the US and held that “nebulous future plans for U.S. sales cannot be the basis for a Lanham Act claim.” [Dawn Donut, but for extraterritorial use.]

So, did Industria satisfy Lexmark? There were genuine issues of fact on (1) whether Industria had concrete plans to enter the United States market; and (2) whether Industria’s commercial injury was proximately caused by Latinfood’s actions. There was insufficient evidence of reputational injury as an alternative theory; Industria didn’t provide any evidence even showing that it had any particular US reputation to be harmed.

Industria argued that Latinfood blocked its entry into the US market, and a jury could credit its evidence, but there was also evidence that it couldn’t enter the US market because of various regulations.

False advertising: Industria argued that deception could be presumed from literally false statements that Zuluaga “convinced a major product manufacturer in Colombia to sign an exclusive distribution and importing rights agreement for the tri-state area”;  his statement to a supermarket sales associate that he had Colombian products; and Latinfood’s website stating in substance that it offered Industria’s Zenú products. For the first two, Industria failed to show literal falsity. Among other things, the sales associate testified that Zuluaga did not mention the names of the Colombian products (is that even commercial advertising or promotion?). But the third statement was literally false.

As evidence of deception, Industria submitted evidence that one of Latinfood’s distributors believed that Latinfood’s products were associated with Industria’s products. Also, a Twitter user sent a message to Industria’s Twitter account with a picture of Latinfood’s Zenú and Ranchera products and asked whether Industria had “a sales franchise for beer sausage and ranchera sausage that they are selling in New York and New Jersey and Florida, as so-called Colombian sausages.” Industria’s advertising agency manager, responded that the products are not Industria’s, to which the alleged customer replied “So why are they using your brand? This makes Colombians abroad get tricked.” A supermarket sales associate testified at deposition that Latinfood’s products were sold in a store aisle with other Hispanic or Latin-sourced products, rather than in an aisle with products made in the U.S. A supermarket store manager testified that Zuluaga had a reputation for selling Colombian products and that Zuluaga told him that Zenú was a brand known in Colombia. And of course, Latinfood’s packaging resembles and implies an affiliation with Industria. The packaging also includes the line “Linea De Exportacion,” which translates to “exportation line.”

The court found that Industria’s argument for false advertising “falls on the wrong side of the line between a false association claim and a false advertising claim. On these facts, any mistaken belief that Latinfood’s products were Industria’s products depends on evidence of a false association between the brands, which is distinct from a false advertising claim.”

The use of “exportation line” was arguably the exception, but “[o]ne country’s exportation … is another’s importation, and the meaning is unclear.” There was no evidence of a tendency to deceive.

What about injury? To get injunctive relief, a plaintiff has to prove likely injury. But there was no evidence that the only actionable statement—Latinfood’s use of Imdustria’s logo on its website in 2016—was likely to cause injury. “[N]o reasonable jury in 2023 could conclude that Latinfood’s use of Industria’s logo in 2016 is likely to cause damage to Industria in the future.” Summary judgment for Latinfood.

Trade dress infringement: Summary judgment denied; I’m going to skip most of the discussion because, sadly for the hardworking district court, I think Abitron does require revisiting it, even if the trade dress is inherently distinctive and was copied. Without a reputation in the US, I don’t see how there can be confusion in the US.

On strength, Industria conceded that it didn’t actively advertise in the US, but submitted evidence that its trade dress had been “seen” by US residents and that its websites have been visited by US users “thousands” of times 2012-2017, which “may indicate at least some commercial strength of its trade dress.” (Later, the court noted, “there are no products for sale on those websites and there is no indication that Industria sells products to United States consumers either through its websites or in stores.”) In light of the size of the food market, that’s a bit hard to credit. Citing domestic precedent, however, the court reasoned that “the mark’s strength in other markets is relevant.”

Other evidence of actual confusion, besides that noted above, was that, sometime in or after 2014, a Facebook user posted in a group titled “WikiWomen in Medellin” that she purchased “ranchera sausages” at an unidentified location in the United States and that “they say” that “Zenú set up a plant in New York for the Colombia market in the U.S.A.” And the copying here could also lead to an inference of deception.  “The fact finder might also find it significant, however, that for a relevant period of eight years, Industria was able to provide only three somewhat equivocal instances of customer confusion.”

Did intentional copying show intent to confuse? A jury could go either way.

Trademark infringement/false association: There wasn’t sufficient evidence that Industria owned the Zenú or Ranchera marks for purposes of the trademark infringement claim. (I don’t quite get how it could show ownership of the trade dress in the US but not ownership of the word marks.) Summary judgment for Latinfood.

Cancellation for fraud: Industria wasn’t required to establish United States trademark rights to petition for cancellation of Latinfood’s Zenú mark. A trademark application is a “legitimate commercial interest,” which satisfies the “real interest” requirement, and “blocking” an application can satisfy the belief of damage requirement. It was entitled to summary judgment because Zuluaga knew that Industria had a prior right. (This is inconsistent with the holding above that Industria didn’t have US rights: Zuluaga signed a declaration stating “to the best of his/her knowledge and belief, no other person, firm, corporation, or association has the right to use the mark in commerce, either in the identical form thereof or in such near resemblance thereto as to be likely when used on or in connection with the goods/services of such other person, to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive.” We know this means US commerce, so his knowledge of the Colombian rights wouldn’t matter.)

But there was also fraud in using Industria’s products in photos purporting to show Latinfood’s use. Industria showed that Latinfood never used the Zenú mark in commerce prior to filing its application.

Copyright: The Third Circuit applies the discovery rule to the limitations period of three years. Industria filed its copyright infringement claims on April 21, 2017. Its witness testified that Industria found out about Latinfood’s use of the Zenú mark in or around October of 2013. It was put on notice of the need to investigate and the limitations period began to run then for those claims, but copyright infringement is a continuing violation so it could reach back three years prior to filing, and also Latinfood didn’t show it was entitled to summary judgment on the limitations period as to the Ranchera mark. (Not clear from this discussion if the copyright claims are really for copyright in the logos or cover the labels.)

The tortious interference counterclaim failed; it related to one supermarket that removed Latinfood’s Zenú products. Assuming that Industria’s assertion of its trademark rights led to this removal, Industria had a substantial basis for its claims, such that “even if its position is not ultimately borne out, it does not meet the high bar of malice.”



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