Axon Enterprise, Inc. v. Luxury Home Buyers, LLC, --- F.Supp.3d ----, No.: 2:20-cv-01344-JAD-MDC (D. Nev. Jan. 16, 2024)
The court grants plaintiff's motion for
reconsideration of parts of this case, discussed
previously. Axon alleged that LHB infringed Axon’s “Taser” mark. The court
previously denied summary judgment on nominative fair use, treating it as a
balancing test: LHB needed to use “Taser” to refer to Axon’s product, but used
too much (it was a former distributor), and there were genuine disputes of fact
on whether it did anything else to suggest endorsement. The court granted
reconsideration, now holding that all three prongs weren’t satisfied. Although
what constitutes “too much” varies based on circumstance—an artist may need to
use Barbie’s name and trade dress to make Barbie-themed art—the “no more than
necessary” element needs to be satisfied to allow the defense to foreclose
further consideration of confusion.
Thus, here, LHB used
more of the Taser mark than necessary when it used its distinctive lettering
and logo, and Axon was entitled to summary judgment in its favor on
infringement. However, whether the permanent injunction already entered to “bar
LHB’s use of Axon’s Stylized Taser Mark and Logos on all its websites and
advertising” should be modified raised First Amendment considerations that required
further briefing. (I take it this means that the logic of NFU means that remedies should allow proper NFU rather than flat bans.)
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