Alsa Refinish LLC v. Walmart Inc., 2024 WL 3914512, No. 2:23-cv-08536-SVW-MAR (C.D. Cal. Jul. 31, 2024)
In 2024, people are still bringing keyword advertising
cases. Walmart wins summary judgment.
Alsa sells paint, including chrome paint, and claims
common-law rights in “Alsa,” “Alsa
Chrome Paint,” “Alsa Easy Chrome,” “Easy Chrome,” “Mirrachrome,” and “Mirra
chrome.” Walmart offers an online marketplace on which it and third parties
sell products. There are no infringing products on Walmart.com. Thus, searching
Walmart’s website with Alsa’s claimed marks results in search listings that
aren’t related to Alsa.
Still, Alsa argued that Walmart was using its marks in
advertising in confusing ways. Walmart does pay for keyword ads. It does not
pay for organic search listings.
Presumably because Walmart is a big seller, a search for the
term “easy chrome paint walmart” results in several sponsored links to products
on Walmart.com along with an organic link for a Walmart webpage named “Easy
Chrome Paint,” and a search for “walmart alsa easy chrome paint” results in a
Walmart webpage named “Alsa Easy Chrome.”
"easy chrome paint walmart" search with sponsored Walmart results and organic result |
Google result for "walmart alsa easy chrome paint" showing organic Walmart result "Alsa Easy Chrome(256)" |
But Alsa couldn’t identify any sponsored keyword ads that used Alsa’s marks. Walmart did bid $0.45 for the phrase “Alsa Chrome Paint,” but received zero impressions as a result. Alsa focused on organic search results. Those organic results were
the same webpages one would arrive
at by navigating to Walmart.com and entering the alleged Marks (e.g., “Alsa
Easy Chrome”) into Walmart’s own search bar. This happens because when a term
is entered into the search bar on Walmart’s website, the URL (i.e., the web
address) for the Walmart search results page will often include the terms that
were searched. For example, when a user searches “Alsa Chrome Paint” on
Walmart.com, the URL for the search results page is listed as follows:
https://www.walmart.com/search?q=%22ALSA+CHROME+PAINT%22. A Walmart search
results page such as this will periodically be “indexed” by Google so that the
page appears on Google’s own search results.
If a user clicks on the organic result, they will go to the
same page on Walmart.com that they would have gotten to by putting the same
phrase in the Walmart search bar.
Under 9th
Circuit precedent, a court can conclude that summary judgment in a keyword case
is appropriate “without delving into any factors other than: (1) the type of
goods and the degree of care likely to be exercised by the purchaser; and (2)
the labeling and appearance of the products for sale and the surrounding
context on the screen displaying the results page.”
First, “[b]ecause Walmart does not pay search engines to
return organic search results or index webpages, it does not ‘use’ the marks in
connection with the sale or advertisement of goods.” The fact that Google
sometimes indexed search result pages on Walmart didn’t change that. “Plaintiff
does not show that the alleged Marks appear anywhere else on Walmart.com apart
from where they are inputted as search terms. Walmart’s website does not label
any of its products under the alleged Marks or contain any infringing products.
Ultimately, Plaintiff has pointed out no evidence that Walmart did anything to
appear on these unsponsored Google search results.”
As to “Alsa Chrome Paint,” there were no clicks, meaning no
infringement was possible.
As to Walmart-sponsored results to the query “easy chrome
paint Walmart,” the court agreed with Walmart that those links were not
triggered by use of “easy chrome,” but by the separate words “easy,” “chrome,”
and “paint.” (I would think "Walmart" probably also played some role in triggering Walmart-sponsored results.) This too did not constitute a “use” of Alsa’s putative mark. Even
assuming that it did, running sponsored ads in response to a Google search for
“easy chrome paint Walmart” didn’t cause likely confusion.
There was no source confusion because Walmart didn’t sell
any infringing products. There was also no initial interest confusion.
Plaintiff’s cheapest product was $59, and “chrome paint products appear to be
specialized or even ‘sophisticated’ items rather than everyday goods.” A
reasonably prudent consumer accustomed to shopping online would exercise
greater care. Moreover, each Walmart product in Google’s “sponsored” results was
clearly labeled with the name of the product along with a photograph, and with
the word “Walmart.” None of the sponsored products made any reference to the
phrase “Easy Chrome” or the other putative marks. And finally, the sponsored
results were “clearly distinguishable from objective search results.” Thus,
confusion was unlikely.
Dilution also failed for want of “use.”
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