Vericool World LLC v. Igloo Prods. Corp., 2023 WL 8634803, No. 22-cv-02440-HSG (N.D. Cal. Dec. 13, 2023)
Vericool alleged that Igloo falsely claimed that its
“Recool” biodegradable cooler was the first of its kind. The court found this Dastar-barred,
since the alleged misstatements do not go to the “nature, characteristics, or
qualities” of the cooler as required under the Lanham Act. The court rejected
arguments that the materiality of the claim distinguished it from Dastar-barred
claims, and that “first of its kind” doesn’t necessarily imply anything about
patent/IP status.
Dastar explicitly stated that the Lanham Act “does
not exist to reward manufacturers for their innovation in creating a particular
device” and that the Act’s “common law foundations ... were not designed to
protect originality or creativity.” “Yet that is precisely what Plaintiff seeks
to protect in this case: the originality and novelty of its own cooler design.”
There was no meaningful distinction between claims of being the “first” and
claims of inventorship. “Plaintiff may not directly challenge the Recool as
infringing its patents, but just as in Dastar and Sybersound, it
is trying to protect its intellectual property rights through the Lanham Act.”
Vericool didn’t help its claim by stating in its papers that
“[t]o vigorously defend its patent, Vericool World had to bring this claim.” But
“[t]he rights of a patentee or copyright holder are part of a ‘carefully
crafted bargain,’ ” and for whatever reason, it didn’t bring a patent
infringement claim.
Zobmondo Ent. LLC v. Imagination Int’l Corp., No. CV
09-02235 ABC PLAX, 2009 WL 8714439, at *1 (C.D. Cal. June 23, 2009), found that
the use of “original” to describe a board game was actionable because it was
about first physical manufacture, not creation of the idea. The court here
disagreed. The ad at issue wasn’t about physical manufacture, just used the
word “original.” “Yet the Supreme Court has stated that patent law, and not the
Lanham Act, offers protections for a manufacturer’s ‘originality’ and ‘creativity.’”
Plus, Zobmondo didn’t explain why date of manufacture was a quality or
characteristic of the game itself. “Although when a product was manufactured
may have implications for patentability, such as whether it is considered novel
or non-obvious, in the Court’s view it does not alter the nature of the product
or a user’s experience with it.” In Sybersound, the Ninth Circuit
explained that the “nature, characteristics, and qualities” of the karaoke
recording referred to things like the “quality of its audio and visual
effects.” “Such attributes would affect the consumer’s experience rather than
the rights of third parties.” (Comment: “First printing” might therefore be
different.)
Blue Spike, LLC v. Texas Instruments, Inc., No. 6:12-CV-499,
2014 WL 11848751, (E.D. Tex. July 25, 2014), report and recommendation adopted,
No. 6:12-CV-499, 2014 WL 11829325 (E.D. Tex. Aug. 15, 2014), involved
allegations that the defendants falsely claimed on their websites that they
were the “first to create content fingerprinting technology,” and that
competitors are using “borrowed” technology. Here too, the decision didn’t
explain how being the first to use a specific kind of technology goes to the
“nature, characteristics, and qualities” of the good itself as opposed to the
innovation of the technology at issue.
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