I Dig Texas, LLC v. Creager, --- F.4th ----, 2024 WL 1590590, No. 23-5046 (10th Cir. Apr. 12, 2024)
The district court
found that use of a competitor’s photos in comparative
advertising was fair use; the court of appeals affirms on the alternative
ground that no copyright damages can be traced to the use of the photos,
holding that a plaintiff seeking defendant’s profits must show a nexus between
the use of the copyrighted works and the profits. It also affirms the
conclusion that it was not literally false to claim that machinery was American-made
when it was assembled in the US from materials including foreign-sourced components.
Appellee I Dig Texas
tried to appeal to consumers’ preference for American-made products; it used
Creager’s photographs of its China-made Montana Post Drivers as part of its
advertising.
Profits can be either
direct or indirect; indirect profits would include “enhance[ing] operations by
infringing on a copyright or “add[ing] sales because [defendant’s]
advertisements included copyrighted images. Appellant Creager “bore the initial
burden to show a nexus between I Dig Texas’s infringement and making of a
profit.” Once the nexus has been established, the burden would be on defendant to
show which profits didn’t come from infringement, but that first step still
exists. Showing a nexus requires more than speculation.
Although the photos
depicted Creager’s products, “there’s no evidence that I Dig Texas sold any
more products because the advertisements had included these photographs.” [I
will note there’s a subterranean fair use rationale, still, since if the photos
hadn’t been used for critical purposes but to show the appeal of defendant’s
lookalike products no one would have failed to infer a nexus. This might be
another knock-on effect of Goldsmith: courts now afraid to say that
anything is transformative, even straight-up criticism.] There was no showing
that I Dig Texas “made any money from the advertisements bearing the
copyrighted images.” The existence of the ads wasn’t “evidence that anyone had
bought something from I Dig Texas because of these advertisements. And even if
someone had bought something from I Dig Texas based on these advertisements,
there’s no reason to believe that the two photographs would have made a difference
to any consumers.”
Nor were the ads
literally false (again, an alternative ground: the district court found that
the components were disclosed, but the court of appeals noted that at least
some of the ads didn’t contain all the relevant information). “[A]n ambiguous
statement can’t be literally false.”
Some I Dig Texas
products were assembled in the United States, others in China. “Even for the
products that I Dig Texas had assembled in the United States, some components
had come from overseas. For example, I Dig Texas had used a nitrogen power cell
made in China. And some of the nuts and bolts had come from Canada.” The court
of appeals reasoned that “make” “could refer either to the origin of the
components or to the assembly of the product itself.” Since some of the
products were assembled in the US, the ads were ambiguous and not literally
false.
What about the ones
assembled overseas? Well, the ads didn’t say “all.” I Dig Texas said on its website: “We Provide
100% American Made Skid Steer Attachments.” And a statement can be literally
false by necessary implication. But that 100% was still ambiguous: it could
mean “that only some of the products consist entirely of domestic components
assembled in the United States. Or 100% could refer only to assembly of the
final product rather than the origin of the components.” [Not discussed: were
either of these true?] Nor could the court rely on FTC standards in a
Lanham Act case, especially when the FTC noted that there was no bright line.
Likewise, patriotic
symbols like the American flag could imply US manufacture, but they couldn’t “objectively
be verified as true or false,” so they couldn’t be literally false. [Actually,
that suggests they couldn’t be misleading, either, but the court seems a bit
unclear about that.]
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