Ebay is really great for this sort of thing:
![]() |
Glade Plug-in in the shape of a pine tree |
See Car-Freshner v. S.C. Johnson & Son, 70 F.3d 267 (2d Cir. 1995).
False advertising and more
Ebay is really great for this sort of thing:
![]() |
Glade Plug-in in the shape of a pine tree |
See Car-Freshner v. S.C. Johnson & Son, 70 F.3d 267 (2d Cir. 1995).
Panel 3 - Media and Communication Systems for Attention Capture
David Simon, Associate Professor of Law, Northeastern
University (moderator)
Nick Seaver, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Tufts
University
Attention as a method of control—a name for how we can be
disciplined/enrolled into projects of bosses or other people who want to
control us. If we thought of attention that way we’d change how we regulated
and valued attention.
Mouse jiggler: one form of resistance to this type of
discipline. Bosses use bossware to surveil whether you’re “working.”
That also reveals just how lousy our techniques for
detecting attention are. Very hard to know! We use “impressions” or sales as
proxies. Self-driving cars use torque on the steering wheel to check whether
you’re prepared to take over—but that means that you can just use a weight to “pay
attention” for you. Even the most safety-focused forms of “attention” have been
turned back into discipline from above.
Bridget Todd, Fellow at Berkman Klein Center
Podcasting: what makes it different? Identity mediates our experience
of digital technologies. Podcasting is inherently a medium for people who like
to talk. Opposite of short-form content, with some exceptions. Deep dives into
complicated/nuanced issues. [Books?] Requires attention!
Asking “who benefits from this attention?”: conflict
entrepreneurs. They effectively hijacked conversations around identity. Our
current media landscape is tailor-made for conflict entrepreneurs to do this.
It makes us more divided, suspicious, lonelier, and less curious. Focuses
attention on differences among individuals, values, identities. Bite-size
journalism makes people more black-and-white in their thinking, less nuanced. What
can we do? More exposure to complicated narratives: a man who waited for 6
hours to speak in support of an anti-trans bill in Wisconsin, and listened to
the advocates speaking about their lives, and changed his mind.
Rebecca Tushnet, Professor of Law, Harvard University
Maybe by accident the flip side of Professor Seaver’s talk. My
fields are IP and advertising: and what I suggest those fields tell us is that attention
can be owned, but when attention is not an object of ownership, it is not regulated.
We value ownership of attention but not its other possible characteristics. One
thing that means is that we often are unable to measure the thing that we say
is ownable. A well-known quote, attributed to retail mogul John Wanamaker,
says: “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t
know which half.”
I also have something of a side note, or a cautionary one:
courts often believe things about human cognition that are simply wrong, and it
is hard to make them change their minds because they often consider their
beliefs about cognition to be common sense. An example from copyright:
In an important copyright case, Judge Learned Hand wrote
that “everything registers somewhere in our memories, and no one can tell what
may evoke it” – Learned Hand was a great judge but a terrible neuroscientist:
as it turns out, we do not process a lot of sensory input that we get, and it
is never encoded in memory, not long-term or short-term. But courts still rely
on this principle to hold that musicians may have engaged in subconscious
copying without knowing about it, and it is very hard to get a court to reject
a factual assertion made by Learned Hand.
Lots of similar assertions about how consumers think in TM.
More relevantly to attention in particular, copyright’s fair
use test distinguishes between unauthorized uses that are justified and
unauthorized uses that use another’s work “merely . . . to get attention or to
avoid the drudgery in working up something fresh” which are less likely to be
fair—so one of the things the copyright owner owns by default is the right to
your attention based on their expression.
Similarly, TM: TM focuses on the ability of a mark to
identify the source of a product—a mark is communicative, and a good mark
captures attention. The ability to be recognized and noticed is at the core of
what a good trademark is! That means that unauthorized attention-getting uses
might be infringing. Initial interest confusion is a concept that explicitly
relies on the idea that a trademark might get a consumer’s attention and then the
seller might sell them something else, and that’s infringing even though no
sale is ever completed as the result of confusion. At the same time, we distinguish
between initial interest confusion and mere distraction/comparison—it can be
legitimate to catch the consumer’s eye by, e.g., comparative advertising.
Likewise, trademark’s protections for truthful uses can be
limited if the user uses “too much” of the mark—relies too heavily on its
attention-getting power, as courts have ruled in cases like a former Playboy
playmate’s website that repeated that she was Playmate of the Year too many
times, or a luxury resale website emphasizing Chanel products too heavily in
its advertising.
Dilution: making it harder for a mark to stand out/capture
your attention—Delta is diluted versus Xerox which is not: no real empirical
evidence this does harm to TM owners but the sense of unfairness suffices to
get courts to condemn what they see as free riding
Outside of ownership, my fields don’t have ways to think about
attentional harms
Advertising law: getting attention is unregulable because
only falsifiable claims can be evaluated—even advertising systems that purportedly
require factuality don’t generally regulate attention-grabbing in general,
especially in the visual or oral realm.
Regulation of sponsorships and endorsements are an example:
FTC is focused on metadata disclosure—disclosure that content is sponsored—as well
as on whether endorsers make claims that need substantiation. The thought is
that audiences can calibrate their attention or the credibility they give to
the claims once there’s disclosure—but it’s important to understand the
underlying dynamic which is that sponsored content is something that audiences
have a harder time tuning out—it’s not like a banner ad that you can just have
attentional blindness towards.
Indeed, advertising is often seen as a tax on audiences or the
price they pay for other content, even though availability of information is
necessary for an efficient market. James Kellner, the chairman and CEO of
Turner Broadcasting, stated that people who skip TV commercials are violating
their contract with TV companies who provide ad-supported programming. He grudgingly
accepted that “there’s a certain amount of tolerance for going to the
bathroom.”
Attention is owed—but the givers of attention are not the
ones who are in control. That assumption or expectation that advertising is
hostile to its audiences’ interests, perhaps perversely, itself gives some
credibility to the idea that most attempts to capture audience attention are legitimate—we
expect the audiences to be running away, so we also expect the advertisers to
be lunging forward to catch the audiences in any way they can.
Emily West, Professor of Communication, UMass
Attention, inattention and convenience: from book Buy
Now: How Amazon Branded Convenience and Normalized Monopoly. Inattention
allows us to draw attention to things that we find more rewarding; can distract
us from consolidation of corporate power. Production of user inattention is
strategic and purposeful. If content was the bait for ad-supported media, convenience
is the bait in the digital economy for greater platform enclosure of time,
spending, attention. Ease at the center of any interaction/exchange;
facilitates inattention to multiple steps, research, complexity—a structure of
feeling and a logistical form. Decreases discernment and price sensitivity—decisional
muscles get flabby. Get out of the habit of going to the store, the news, etc.—these
things come to us. Google’s AI answers remove even the need to consider the
search results. Offering itself as authoritative source, but it’s a digital ad
company and not a library.
Simon: Different visions: Attention & control; attention
as an asset or point of conflict; attention as ownership/ownership of
attention; attention as convenience. TM law allocates control over
attention-getting to make it easier to find stuff. Attention can also be an
asset to employers. And to sellers who offer convenience (or maybe your desire
not to pay much attention is the asset there).
Seaver: there are boundary objects or trading zones where
disciplines meet—but people are often talking about different things (a “suitcase
term”). Are these definitions of attention all the same? Attention is a big
bag, but that can be appropriate!
West: the temptation is to go to individualized responses—“I
just need to be more careful/buy less/pay more attention”—but it’s the mental
infrastructure we live with. The firms have 150 psychologists on staff and it’s
not a fair fight.
Q: Seaver/Tushnet: Does attention exist or is it just about
metrics that we use for owning, controlling people/their behaviors? A proxy for
something deeper. Todd/West: podcasting and convenience—podcasts are regularly being
used to fill free time, raising the question whether they are really deeper
dives. Attentional experience different from that of reading books (we can do
other stuff while we listen). Current attention ecosystem: media strategy that
has to do with trying to reach the individual or the population that is the
most remote from the issue; anyone who actually knows what’s going on is alienated
by the way the news promotes the issues, but the goal is not to reach people
who understand—instead, it’s to reach the people who know the least.
West: longform content is just another method of platform
enclosure. Amazon/Tiktok equivalents of QVC where you can just watch and click
to buy.
RT: TM doctrines prioritize form over substance: TM is a
shortcut to compress information about the product/service: you see Coca-Cola
and remember the taste and the advertising and the lifestyle. But the TM owner
is allowed to change quality/characteristics without notice even though continuity
is supposedly the justification for the right. The obligation created by
reputation is not reciprocal.
Seaver: Attention is used as a proxy for productivity (the
mouse jiggler) or safety (the steering wheel)—the real value is the thing that
the attention is attached to, like truth (for media). Historically specific in
the modern era, perhaps.
Q: Do you think that attention can justly be owed?
RT: I’m attempting to describe how IP thinks about these issues; it depends on
the doctrine. Bundle of content and attention—attention might be owed if it
were really an efficient market if you were really free to choose it instead of
something else. It’s not fair if there’s monopoly control or market distortion.
Seaver: we tend to assume that neuroscience has to be
consulted, but if attention is just a word for “people should be able to do
things on their own schedules and at their own behest” you don’t need
neuroscientists for that. When Trump was elected in 2016, there was a lot of
attentional discourse: (1) how could this have happened, we (the polity) weren’t
paying attention; (2) everything he does is a distraction (to/for the polity) from
something else; (3) he has no attention span. These are three levels of
attentional discourse. The polity pays attention by writing things in the papers
even though we traditionally assume that writing things in papers leads to the
polity paying attention.
West: Advertisers like digital advertising because it can
show you the breadcrumbs of how you spent your ad dollars and whether someone
clicked—more behavioral.
RT: disagree—that’s only for some types of ads. Coca-Cola
doesn’t use behavioral advertising, and there’s lots of ad fraud. And only some
types of transparency. Amazon may tell you cost per click, but it doesn’t tell
you how you get put on the first page of search results, and it could change
how it organizes its site and destroy you at a moment’s notice.
Seaver: note that the jiggler is not super effective
resistance; interesting to see the pushback. Doesn’t find it morally
objectionable, but defeating the safety device on a car is—but they’re framed
the exact same way by their users.
Medical Depot, Inc. v. Med Way US,
Inc., --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2025 WL 948334, No. 22-CV-01272 (OEM) (SIL)
(E.D.N.Y. Mar. 28, 20
This case focuses on trademark “use.” The parties are
medical supply companies who use similar marks—“Med-Aire” and “MEDAIR®”—to
brand the medical air mattresses they sell.
Plaintiff, dba Drive, has sold air mattresses using the
“Med-Aire” mark since 2007. From 2007 to 2023, Drive’s “Med-Aire” mattresses
amassed gross sales of $160 million. “Med-Aire” was used on at least some of
Drive’s external packaging for its medical air mattress products intermittently
since 2007. Drive used the ™ symbol in connection with its “DRIVE” trademark for
its “Med-Aire” mattress products between 2007 and 2020. But it didn’t use the ™
symbol in connection with its “Med-Aire” mark until 2020, two years after Med
Way started using its “MEDAIR®” mark. “Med-Aire” appeared on at least certain
shipping labels for Drive’s air mattress products, alongside product
descriptions in the same font, color, size, location, typeset, and style as the
rest of the product descriptions, at least intermittently, since 2007. “Med-Aire”
appeared inside and on the cover of a user manual included with at least some
“Med-Aire” air mattress systems, and on the face plate of the air pump that
accompanied the mattress system, which is sold separately. “Med-Aire” also
appeared in at least some of Drive’s catalogs and brochures since “as early as
2007.” Drive also distributed monthly promotional “Med-Aire” product catalogs. And
“Med-Aire” was displayed in flyers at retailers of “Med-Aire” products since
2011, at trade shows since 2007, and on websites since at least as early as
2009.
Med Way, meanwhile, displayed MEDAIR on its goods in
interstate commerce since at least as early as April 1, 2019. Med Way stamps “MEDAIR®”
on its medical air mattresses and pumps. In late 2019, Med Way hired counsel to
conduct a trademark clearance search for the term “MEDAIR,” and variations
thereof, which did not reveal Drive’s “Med-Aire” mark. It filed a use-based
application for “MEDAIR” in connection with “air mattresses with pump, for
medical purposes” with a first use date of April 1, 2019; it was registered in
2020.
Drive and its affiliates have 67 federally registered
trademarks. Drive waited until July 8, 2020, to do a clearance search for the
term; having done so, it found MEDAIR and then tried to register Med-Aire for
“[m]edical products, namely, therapeutic mattresses” and the like. The PTO
ultimately suspended Drive’s application pending disposition of Med Way’s
prior-filed application; Drive’s cancellation petition is suspended pending the
outcome of this litigation.
The court found that Med-Aire was suggestive because “it
requires some imagination and some thought” to understand the kind of goods it
refers to; it was obviously medical, but it wasn’t obviously a mattress. This
is the wrong standard because it’s only half the question: the appropriate
inquiry is, knowing the goods, does it require imagination to connect
the goods with the mark? The classic Abercrombie spectrum gets its name
from a case in which the court found SAFARI distinctive for some apparel items
but not others. Noodles would be descriptive for a restaurant, but arbitrary
for a furniture store. Courts often get this wrong, but they shouldn’t. Here,
the court was apparently encouraged in its error by both sides.
The court then turned to trademark use. Citing Alexandra J.
Roberts, Trademark Failure to Function, 104 IOWA L. REV. 1977 (2019), the court
stated: “To merit protection, a trademark must be ‘used in a trademark way,’
meaning that it ‘must appear where consumers expect a trademark to appear, and
it must be sufficiently set off from the surrounding text and images to attract
notice.’” The court also looked to Jack Daniel’s and the TTAB. A mark
“must be used in such a manner that its nature and function [as a trademark]
are readily apparent and recognizable without extended analysis or research and
certainly without legal opinion.” Scholastic Inc. v. Speirs, 28 F. Supp. 2d 862
(S.D.N.Y. 1998), aff’d, 199 F.3d 1323 (2d Cir. 1999) (cleaned up).
“Common indicators suggesting that a word or phrase might be
viewed by the public as a trademark include large font relative to surrounding
text, all capital letters or initial capitals, distinctive print style, use of
color, and prominent position on a label or in an advertisement. In short, a
mark must stand out from the surrounding text.” Advertising expenditures can
also be circumstantial evidence, as can sales. (Though you still need to know
which part of the sales experience counts as a trademark!)
Conceptual strength also matters. “For example, where a mark is fanciful, ‘even
though [the mark] may be embedded in other text, there is no danger that [the
mark] will be interpreted as merely descriptive or informational matter ... As
such, its only purpose is to provide a unique identifier to a product that is
otherwise identified only by a generic name and technical explanatory,
information’” (citing In Re Eli Lilly & Co., 2015 WL 4241138 (T.T.A.B.
2015)).
Using these principles, plaintiff used “Med-Aire” as a
trademark. “Med-Aire” “consistently appears as the first word or phrase in
product descriptions, uses initial capital letters, appears at the product
point of sale listings, appears in advertising and promotional materials, is
referred to by consumers as ‘Med-Aire’ in voluminous consumer communications,
is suggestive, and products bearing the mark have amassed millions of dollars
in sales, all of which supports finding that the mark has been used as a source
identifier.”
The court distinguished Jaymo’s Sauces LLC v. Wendy’s Co.,
19-CV-01026, 2021 WL 4712685, at *4 (C.D. Ill. Oct. 8, 2021), which held that “S’Awesome”
was not an adequate source identifier for sauce in part because of the term’s
nonprivileged placement, the sauce label’s emphasis on other (descriptive)
terms, and the comparatively small, plain font of “S’Awesome,” as well as
marketing materials that featured only “occasional” use of the “S’Awesome” term.
Here, Drive used “Med-Aire” as an individual product mark and also used a house
mark on its products; that’s fine. “Drive does not emphasize other
non-trademarked phrases, images, or terms relative to ‘Med-Aire’ on labels and
in promotional materials,” and frequently used “Med-Aire” in promotional
materials.
The lack of brand awareness surveys or marketing experts was
not dispositive, nor was it dispositive that consumers often refer to “Drive”
mattresses or product numbers. Drive also submitted evidence of consumer
communications about “Med-Aire” products, demonstrating that consumers did
perceive “Med-Aire” as a source identifier.
“Size, location, and other characteristics may be
determinative for trademark use for descriptive terms that have acquired
secondary meaning,” but were less important for suggestive terms.
With nothing else in serious dispute, Drive had priority and
showed likely confusion as well as its entitlement to cancellation of Med Way’s
registration.
But its state law unfair competition claim, which required
bad faith, failed because Med Way presented evidence that it relied on a
trademark clearance search and advice from counsel. There was also no fraud on
the PTO.
Med Way’s dilution counterclaim also failed because Drive
was the senior user and because Med Way’s mark was not famous.
State law false advertising counterclaims also failed for
want of public injury. “Med Way’s evidence consists of a reference to ‘mediocre
reviews,’ but many products receive ‘mediocre reviews,’” and anyway there was
no showing of how Med Way’s mattress reviews compared.
The court declined to award disgorgement. There was no finding
of extreme difference in quality or bad faith, or even that Med Way benefited
from its infringement. Even though Med Way’s principal physically examined
Drive mattresses to see what a competitor’s mattresses looked like, “a person
could reasonably examine the physical mattress alone—without the point of sale
listing, or the user manual, or an advertising flyer—and not encounter the ‘Med-Aire’
mark” based on Drive’s own exhibits. And, though Med Way continued its use
after Drive’s objection, Med Way’s CEO and Med Way’s attorneys expressed a
genuine belief that although Drive used “Med-Aire,” it was not the senior user
of the mark.
Although Drive didn’t delay in protecting its rights or have
unclean hands, the balance of the equitable factors weighed against profit
disgorgement. Instead, it was entitled to a permanent injunction.
At a hotel recently, I was presented with this gem: "Staybill," a guide to hotel/local attractions.
Does it matter that PLAYBILL is registered for, inter alia, "making hotel reservations for others"?Memjet Technology Limited v. Vanguard Graphics International,
LLC, 2025 WL 976915, No.
3:23-cv-1810-JES-AHG (S.D. Cal. Apr. 1, 2025)
The parties sell digital inkjet products for use in
commercial industries. Plaintiffs alleged that defendants disseminated a
communication to approximately twenty businesses in the digital inkjet printing
industry stating that “Duraflex print head will no longer be produced by Memjet
effective immediately” and that they were “disappointed in Memjet’s decision
...” and will “provide even better options ...” moving forward. This allegedly
libeled Memjet by telling its customers that Memjet was discontinuing Duraflex
printheads immediately without warning to its customers and suggested that the
Duraflex printheads were “substandard, obsolete, and becoming irrelevant within
the print industry.” Plaintiffs also alleged that the communication “violated”
Memjet’s trademarks by displaying the Duraflex name and logo. Plaintiffs sued
for Lanham Act false advertising, trade libel, intentional/negligent
interference with prospective economic relations, and California UCL violations.
Defendants successfully sought dismissal of the dismiss the
trade libel claim, the UCL claim, and the Lanham Act false advertising claim.California
trade libel requires: (1) a false or misleading statement; (2) which
specifically refers to the plaintiff’s product or business; and (3) clearly
derogates that product or business. Statements about Duraflex being
discontinued weren’t clearly derogatory, despite allegations that they prompted
“countless” phone calls, emails and in-person inquiries and that one of plaintiffs’
larger OEM providers “indicated that it would significantly reduce its DuraFlex
printhead forecast as a result of the Communication.” But ‘[t]he defamatory
character of the language must be apparent from the words themselves.’ ” “[A] statement that the Duraflex printheads
are being discontinued effective immediately, even if true, would not
necessarily or clearly carry an implication that something was wrong with the
product or business. For example, unexpected discontinuation of a product could
result from a supply chain issue with a part or from a personal issue with the
business owner that has nothing to do with how the business is run or the
product’s quality.”
UCL: Only allows injunctive relief/restitution. Plaintiffs’
claim for money spent on corrective advertising wasn’t restitution but damages,
and they didn’t seek injunctive relief, so the claim had to go.
Lanham Act: This one I’m dubious about, but the court held
that a statement that a product was being discontinued didn’t relate to its
“nature, characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin.”
Sybersound Records, Inc. v. UAV Corp., 517 F.3d 1137 (9th
Cir. 2008), says that phrase relates to “characteristics of the good itself” and
not to false statements regarding their copyright license status. Characteristics
of a karaoke recording, for example, include “the original song and artist of
the karaoke recording, and the quality of its audio and visual effects.”
Whether a product was discontinued was not a characteristic of the good itself.
(What about plaintiffs’ services or “commercial activities”? The court
dismissed the complaint without leave to amend, because this was their second
try.)
Unveiling the Bond Between Artists and Their Work: A Vignette Study
38 Pages Posted: 12 Feb 2025 Last revised: 19 Feb 2025
Date Written: January 31, 2025
This paper empirically measures the bond between artists and their work. In a pre-registered vignette study, the impact of generative AI (Artificial Intelligence) in the creation process on the relationship between artists and their creations is investigated. The study provides evidence for the personality-rights theory of copyright law, predominant in continental Europe, which emphasizes a close personal bond between creators and their creations. While other theories of copyright law, such as the incentive and the labor theory, have already received much attention from the empirical research community, the personality-based approach to copyright law has been primarily discussed as a mere theoretical concept. To address this knowledge gap, over 200 art students from the five top art schools in Switzerland participated in an online vignette study where they were randomly assigned to go through the creation process of visual artwork using either (i) traditional drawing tools on a canvas, (ii) digital drawing software on a tablet, or (iii) an AI image generator. The results record the degree of the participants' emotional attachment to their artwork and indicate a nuanced relationship between technological tools and the artist's bond to their work. While there is no significant di!erence in emotional attachment between traditional and digital drawing tools, using an AI image generator leads to a statistically significant decrease in the artist's bond to their work and their perception of the work as their own intellectual creation. These findings suggest that the use of generative AI tools to create artwork impacts the extent to which artists can personally express themselves in their artistic endeavors, which has significant implications for policymakers in the fields of copyright law and technology as they navigate the landscape of copyright protection and authorship of AI-generated works.
James v. Chocmod USA Inc., 2025 WL 950509, No. 1:22-cv-01435 JLT SKO (E.D. Cal. Mar. 28, 2025)
Plaintiffs sued over defendant’s “Truffettes de France”
(trans. “Truffles from France”), which are, despite the name, made in Canada. They
brought the usual
California claims.
Even if the truffles were not physically different, and if—as
defendant argued—it uses the same recipe in France as it does in Canada and
doesn’t charge more based on place of manufacture, California law holds that
there is a cognizable injury. As the California Supreme Court held in Kwikset:
To some consumers, processes and
places of origin matter. … Whether a wine is from a particular locale may
matter to the oenophile who values subtle regional differences.
...
For each consumer who relies on the
truth and accuracy of a label and is deceived by misrepresentations into making
a purchase, the economic harm is the same: the consumer has purchased a product
that he or she paid more for than he or she otherwise might have been willing
to pay if the product had been labeled accurately. This economic harm—the loss
of real dollars from a consumer’s pocket—is the same whether or not a court
might objectively view the products as functionally equivalent. … Two wines
might to almost any palate taste indistinguishable—but to serious oenophiles,
the difference between one year and the next, between grapes from one valley
and another nearby, might be sufficient to carry with it real economic
differences in how much they would pay.
Chocmod tried to defend by arguing that it had trademark
rights in its brand name and thus no reasonable consumer would be deceived, particularly
because the back label “explicitly states” that they were made in Canada. Initially,
Moore v. Mars Petcare US, Inc., 966 F.3d 1007 (9th Cir. 2020), held:
[B]rand names by themselves can be
misleading in the context of the product being marketed. Descriptive brand
names require of the consumer “little thought,” which can make consumers
susceptible to purchasing because “they won’t have the time or interest to read
about [the product] on [the] website or the back of the box.” Thus, a product
called “One a Day” gummy vitamins, which required two gummies a day for a full
dosage, is explicitly misleading.
The court rejected Chocmod’s argument that “any reasonable
consumer should ... be expected to review the packaging to determine the
country of origin, if that is something the consumer feels is important.” The front-label
representations were plausibly misleading to reasonable consumers, who aren’t
required to look beyond the front of the box. Only if reasonable consumers
couldn’t think they’d answered their questions with the front of the package—only
if they’d “necessarily require more information before reasonably
concluding that the label is making a particular representation”—do courts
consider the back as potentially resolving an inherent ambiguity. (Emphasis mine.)
The brand name “Truffettes de France,” or “Truffles from
France,” was not ambiguous and would plausibly mislead a reasonable consumer.
This was much clearer than ambiguous images or phrases addressed in other
cases. Cf. Culver v. Unilever United States, Inc., 2021 WL 2943937 (C.D.
Cal. June 14, 2021) (front labels “Paris,” Depuis 1747,” and “Que Maille”;
court explicitly distinguished “de Paris”); Eshelby v. L’Oreal USA, Inc., 664
F. Supp. 3d 417 (S.D.N.Y. 2023) (“L’Oreal Paris” on front label could lead
reasonable consumers to think that the company originated in Paris, but not that
any particular product was); La Barbera v. Ole Mexican Foods Inc., 2023 WL
4162348 (C.D. Cal. May 18, 2023) (“Phrases like ‘The Taste of Mexico!’ are at
once true in every meaningful sense and meaningless; the point is that they are
different in kind from stating the Products are from Mexico.”).
Here, there was an actual representation about the truffles’
county of origin, which was “so misleading” that a reasonable consumer “need
not search elsewhere for the truth.” Chocmod argued that the product name was
no different from French onion soup, French fries, Belgian chocolates, Mexican
burritos, or Chinese chicken salad. The court was open to the idea that “French
truffles” would be insufficient to satisfy the reasonable consumer test. But “from
France” was different. The label didn’t make representations about style or
recipe, which would be different. Moreover, “the reasonableness of a consumer’s
belief that a salad or other perishable item was shipped from another country
is incomparable to his relative belief as to a shelf-stable product like
chocolate, which was, in fact, shipped from another country—Canada.”
Tentantable.com, LLC v. Aljibouri, 2025 WL 959656, No. 22-CV-78-LJV
(W.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2025)
Not sure I’ve seen this before! Is selling stolen goods
trademark infringement? No, this court says, and that has to be right.
Plaintiffs sell “various inflatable products such as bounce
houses[,] water slides, and...air blowers used to inflate such products,” as
well as “party tents, pole tents, [and] banquet tents with associated tables
and chairs.” They claim trademark rights in “Zoom Blowers,” “ ‘Pogo’
inflatables,” and “PartyTentsDirect.com.” They also alleged rights in “a black
and yellow housing for an air blower.” Their application “for the yellow and
black color scheme” is pending at the PTO.
Defendant Mohammed Aljibouri began working at Tentandtable
as a “warehouse supervisor” in October 2019. After he quit, they allegedly discovered
that had been “entering orders” and “making deliveries” of the plaintiffs’
goods for which they had no record and had not been paid. He also had
“stole[n]...property” from the plaintiffs’ warehouse. And even after he left,
he made unauthorized orders by signing in as a Tentandtable user.
Defendants sold the plaintiffs’ products, which “bear[ ] the
[p]laintiffs’ names and trademarks[,] including Tentandtable.com, Zoom Blowers,
Pogo Bounce House[,] and Partytentsdirect.com.” They also allegedly sold yellow
and black air blowers that look “similar[ ]” to the plaintiffs’ air blowers.
The RICO claims failed because they were RICO claims.
Trademark infringement as to the allegedly stolen goods: Selling
goods that have been altered so that they “do not meet the trademark owner’s
quality control standards”—or failing “to observe a restrictive condition on
the sale of a product”—and thereby causing “consumer confusion” may be
infringing. But “repackaging of goods is not trademark infringement if it does
not deceive the public or damage the mark owner’s goodwill.” But the complaint
didn’t allege these things. “[T]he mere fact that the defendants sold the
plaintiffs’ goods with the plaintiffs’ trademarks without their permission is
not enough to state a Lanham Act claim.”
Burton v. Label, LLC, 344 F. Supp. 3d 680 (S.D.N.Y. 2018), rejected
similar claims against a former employee, where the allegations were that the
former employee had “use[d] his position as a Label salesman to sell items
represented to be Label goods by placing orders with Label suppliers” and then
keeping the profits for himself. Unlawfully pocketing proceeds that belonged to
an employer does not constitute false designation of origin. ML Fashion, LLC v.
Nobelle GW, LLC, 2022 WL 313965 (D. Conn. Feb. 2, 2022), likewise rejected
Lanham Act claims based on sales of unaltered but allegedly stolen goods. There
was no actionable misrepresentation-by-omission that they had the right to sell
the goods.
As for the more conventional trade dress claims, they failed
too. First, a trade dress plaintiff must “offer ‘a precise expression of the
character and scope of the claimed trade dress.’ ” This is vital to assessing
protectability, infringement, and the scope of any relief. The court was
unconvinced that plaintiffs had provided the requisite articulation here. The
complaint focused on the air blowers’ yellow and black “design[ ],”
“configuration,” “scheme,” and “appearance.” But they said little more than
“yellow and black.” And a “focus on the overall look of a product does not
permit a plaintiff to dispense with an articulation of the specific elements
which comprise its [trade] dress.” Images attached to the complaint couldn’t
relieve plaintiffs of this burden. Still, the Second Circuit has cautioned that
“a plaintiff that articulates the components of its trade dress with the
requisite precision should not have its claims prematurely dismissed”
regardless of whether the trade dress claimed is sufficiently distinctive.
So the court turned to distinctiveness and found it insufficiently
pled. (It was also skeptical about conclusory allegations of nonfunctionality.)
Product design trade dress always requires secondary meaning,
including the primarily color-based claim here. Plaintiffs did not succeed in
the “formidable task” of pleading secondary meaning for product design. The
complaint was silent on the first four factors courts consider: (1) advertising
expenditures, (2) consumer studies linking the mark to a source, (3)
unsolicited media coverage of the product, and (4) sales success. As to (5),
attempts to “plagiarize” the mark, plaintiffs alleged copying by defendants,
but not by anyone else. “[C]urts have found that when a complaint alleges that
only the defendants have violated the plaintiff’s trade dress, this factor
weighs against an inference of secondary meaning.” As the court noted, “if
allegations of the defendant’s plagiarism were itself enough, this factor
always would weigh in favor of finding acquired secondary meaning.” Finally, the
length of the mark’s use was pled as being since January 2015, and the complaint
didn’t specify that they have used this design “exclusively,” although plaintiffs
referred to the design as “unique.” “But even assuming the plaintiffs have
sufficiently alleged more than seven years of exclusive use, that would not be
enough to state a plausible claim in the absence of any facts relevant to the
other factors.”
The court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction
over remaining claims.
Nguyen v. Lovesac Co., 2025 WL 950511, No.
2:24-cv-01293-TLN-JDP (E.D. Cal. Mar. 28, 2025)
Weird decision finding that a price isn’t an actionable
representation, which—even if true—ignores the difference between a
price and a putative former price represented by a strikethrough, which
implicates specific provisions of consumer protection law enacted precisely to
protect consumers from false and misleading price comparisons. Nguyen alleged
that Lovesac inflates its product prices for the sole purpose of marking them
at a discounted “sale” price. Price
quotes allegedly include a purported “discount” the customer is receiving on
their purchase, which correlates with a “limited time sale” and a fictitious
strikethrough reference price accompanied by a purported percentage off. Lovesac
allegedly warrants to consumers that their purchase received a certain “% off”
of their purchase, resulting in “-$XX” to the initial subtotal.
The court initially found that Nguyen didn’t sufficiently
allege which sofa he purchased, though he did allege the price. He didn’t allege
any “particular size, fill, material, or any of the other customizable features
he purchased.” The complaint also failed to allege, about the investigation
purporting to show that the “sales” were not really sales, “what products were
tracked, what the prices were on specific dates, whether any individual item
prices were identified or tracked, whether the investigation included the
specific ‘Sactional’ items Plaintiff purchased, or any other meaningful details
about the investigation.”
More concerningly, the court rejected Nguyen’s allegations of misleadingness where the product he bought “displayed an original, strike-through price of $7,175.00, representing [a] purported $1,793.75 ‘discount.’ ” The court instead relied on cases holding that “the price of a product can[not] constitute a representation or statement about the product.” Parent v. Millercoors LLC, No. 3:15-cv-1204-GPC-WVG, 2016 WL 3348818 (S.D. Cal. June 16, 2016); Boris v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 35 F. Supp. 3d 1163 (C.D. Cal. 2014). But a “price” is not a juxtaposition with a putative former/regular price—as evidenced by the fact that legislatures around the country bar specifically false advertising relating to “sales.” It’s not the actual selling price that makes the misrepresentation—it’s the struck-through price presented as some sort of ordinary price. But the court missed that distinction: “pricing about the product alone cannot constitute a representation or statement about the product.”
The California Supreme Court, however, has specifically held that a consumer who buys a product in reliance on a false/misleading reference price has suffered an injury. Hinojos v. Kohl’s Corp., 718 F.3d 1098 (9th Cir. 2013) (citing Dhruv Grewal & Larry D. Compeau, Comparative Price Advertising: Informative or Deceptive?, 11 J. PUB. POL’Y & MKTG. 52 (1992) (“By creating an impression of savings, the presence of a higher reference price enhances subjects’ perceived value and willingness to buy the product. . . . [E]mpirical studies indicate that as discount size increases, consumers’ perceptions of value and their willingness to buy the product increase, while their intention to search for a lower price decreases.”)). As the Hinojos court pointed out, the “what a great bargain!” effect is exactly why the California legislature barred the practice.
TNT Amusements, Inc. v. Torch Electronics, LLC, 2025 WL 947506, No. 4:23-CV-330-JAR (E.D. Mo. Mar. 28, 2025)
The parties compete in the market for “retail amusement devices.” TNT owns and leases out traditional arcade games and similar amusement equipment (e.g., foosball and pool tables, dart boards, pinball machines, juke boxes) to various retailers. Torch leases putatively “no-chance” gaming machines. TNT alleged that Torch operates illegal slot machines and touts them as legal. Here, the Lanham Act false advertising claim survives for a jury, but the RICO claims are tossed out on summary judgment because they’re RICO claims.
I’m going to try to strip down the extensive regulatory background, but
gambling is heavily regulated in Missouri. Relevant definitions include:
(4) “Gambling”, a person engages in gambling when he or she stakes or risks something of value upon the outcome of a contest of chance or a future contingent event not under his or her control or influence, upon an agreement or understanding that he or she will receive something of value in the event of a certain outcome. …
(11) “Slot machine”, a gambling
device that as a result of the insertion of a coin or other object operates,
either completely automatically or with the aid of some physical act by the
player, in such a manner that, depending upon elements of chance, it may eject
something of value. A device so constructed or readily adaptable or convertible
to such use is no less a slot machine because it is not in working order or
because some mechanical act of manipulation or repair is required to accomplish
its adaptation, conversion or workability. Nor is it any less a slot machine
because apart from its use or adaptability as such it may also sell or deliver
something of value on a basis other than chance.
Possession of a gambling device is a Class A misdemeanor.
Any building used for unlawful gambling is considered a public nuisance.
Torch’s game machines feature at least five game themes, and
each theme offers several play levels. “A game theme is a series of visual
images displayed to entertain the player, revealing a combination of winning or
losing symbols on each turn. A play level dictates the payment required to play
the next turn.”
![]() |
picture of a "no chance" device |
The record showed that the software for a Torch device has a randomly selected starting point for each theme/play level combo. “From any given starting point, for each turn of play, the software cycles through pre-determined and finite sequential pools of 60,000 to 100,000 outcomes, depending on the game theme,” like a counter (but not in numerical order) ticking forward one at a time until it cycles back to the beginning. “There is nothing a player can do to alter the payout amount of a turn before or after the player inserts money.”
Torch devices only take bills, “so, if there is a balance of
$0.25 when a player decides to stop playing, there is no way to recover that
amount.” Each device has an optional “prize viewer” that allows the player to
preview the next payout amount, but only the next payout amount. “So, for
example, if a player selects the prize viewer and sees that the next payout
amount is $0 and she wants to obtain a better result, she must play through
that $0 turn and continue playing. She cannot skip ahead. If she wants to know
the payout of the second, third, or any future turn, she must pay for and play
through those additional turns.” Using the prize viewer doesn’t change the
odds, though “Torch devices are configured to enable the commercial operator to
adjust the settings to require a player to pay extra to use the prize viewer.” According
to a specialist with the Missouri Gaming Commission, absent the preview
feature, Torch machines “essentially play just like a slot machine.”
Torch advertises that the devices are not gambling machines.
Until September 2022, its website said:
Torch’s No Chance Game Machines are
legal. Torch’s No Chance Game Machines are an innovative non-gambling game
machine.
Why are No Chance Game Machines
different?
Under Missouri law, a “gambling
device” is defined as having three elements: consideration (money in), prize
(money out), and chance (unknown outcome).
Torch’s No Chance Games obviously
have the elements of “consideration” and “prize”, but have been carefully
designed to eliminate the element of “chance” (which Missouri law defines as
the material component of a gambling device). If the player does not like the
predetermined outcome, they can choose not to play. If they have a balance on
the machine, they can redeem their balance at any time.
The “Prize Viewer” option on NCGs
eliminates chance.
In mid-September 2022, Torch revised its website to state
only this:
Torch’s No Chance Games are the
first of an entirely new entertainment concept; a game in which there is no
element of chance.
Importantly, the player may view
each and every outcome which may entitle them a prize before playing the game.
They may simply touch the “Prize Viewer” button on the game console and view
the result of the game before playing. As such, the player can decide if they
want to play the game or not based on the pre-determined outcome.
Each Torch device bears a disclaimer:
The Amusement Device to which this
disclaimer is attached provides each player of the device with information on
the specific outcome of each electronic amusement game offered thereon. The
information with respect to each such outcome is provided prior to such
player’s participation in any such game. Consequently, this amusement device is
designed to provide no contest and no chance in the games offered to its
players.
… In Missouri (as in most states),
in order to be considered “gambling,” an element of chance or a contest must be
present in the activity … As noted above, this amusement device is designed to
offer no contest of chance as the outcome is known by players before any
amusement game is initiated. Therefore, the activity offered by this device
clearly does not meet the definition of “gambling.” As a result, this amusement
device does not fit any definition of “gambling device” in the state of
Missouri and is not prohibited for use by you. …
![]() |
Torch "no chance" ad |
Its ad flyers make similar claims, as do its oral representations. “As such, Defendants have not taken measures to prevent problem gamblers or gambling addicts from playing Torch devices, nor have they taken measures to prevent children from playing other than instructing customers not to allow it.” Torch doesn’t have a gaming license.
At least 20 locations where defendants operate Torch devices
are current or previous customers of TNT. There have been as many as 15,000
Torch devices in Missouri. TNT’s customers have directed TNT to remove at least
19 machines from overlapping locations in order to make room for Torch devices.
The Torch games displaced TNT games because they made more money (and revenue
is split with retailers).
You will not be surprised to learn that the history of evading
gambling regulations is long:
Over 100 years ago, in City of
Moberly v. Deskin, 155 S.W. 842 (Mo. App. 1913), a Missouri appellate court was
asked to determine whether a slot-machine-like gum dispenser was a gambling
device. The machine had a prize preview feature showing in advance what the
player would receive on the next play. The defendant argued that each turn was
a separate and independent business transaction and there was no chance
involved as the player knew in advance what he would receive for his nickel. The
court rejected this theory, finding the defendant’s position “unsound” because
the “contrivance” was clearly intended to “allure” the player into continuing
in the hope of a better outcome.
Deskin is still good law; Missouri legalized some gambling
in 1994 but made no change in its definitions that would abrogate its rule. The
parties, other operators, and officials have nonetheless debated the legality
of “no-chance” prize viewer games and proposed various legislative changes specifically
drafted to encompass machines with a preview feature, but nothing has happened
yet. In January 2017, Torch obtained a legal opinion from a Chicago law firm
concluding that “no chance” gaming devices were legal under Missouri law, and Torch
maintained this position in contacts with prosecutors. After Torch’s owner met
with the Phelps County prosecuting attorney, the latter informed local law
enforcement that he would not pursue prosecution involving Torch devices. But,
around the same time, local officials in Franklin County warned Torch that the
Missouri Gaming Commission deemed the devices illegal and the prosecutor would
“absolutely consider prosecution regardless of Phelps County opinion.” TNT also
secured an advisory opinion from the Missouri Gaming Commission in 2019 that the
devices were indeed gambling devices and slot machines notwithstanding the
prize viewer feature. Torch’s lawyer acknowledged the Commission’s position but
recommended that Torch maintain its public stance that that “MGC has nothing to
say about Torch’s games.” In 2023, defendants were denied a business license in
Branson based on the Gaming Commission’s position that Torch devices are
illegal, and a Platte County prosecutor successfully charged a business with a
class E felony for operating “no chance” prize viewer devices in local
convenience stores in 2019. Other attempted prosecutions were dismissed or are
ongoing, as are fights over seizures of Torch machines as illegal gambling
devices. “In their field investigations, Commission representatives observed
consumers playing Torch devices like slot machines without using the prize
viewers.”
Torch’s challenge to TNT’s standing went nowhere; the
parties were direct competitors and there was enough evidence for a jury to
conclude that there was a causal connection between Torch’s sales and TNT’s
claimed losses. TNT provided evidence of TNT machines that were replaced with
Torch devices and its witness also testified that many customers have asked her
if TNT offers products similar to Torch games. There were other possible
explanations why customers removed TNT devices, such as wanting newer equipment
or more profitable devices, but that was a fact question for the jury.
What about falsity? Torch made extensive claims that the
devices didn’t involve chance and weren’t gambling devices. Were these non-actionable
statements of opinion, or potentially falsifiable? Courts sometimes refuse to
consider statements about legality to be falsifiable in the absence of a “clear
and unambiguous statement” from the regulator. For example, Coastal Abstract
Service, Inc. v. First American Title Insurance. Co., 173 F.3d 725 (9th Cir.
1999), held that, “[a]bsent a clear and unambiguous ruling from a court or
agency of competent jurisdiction, statements by laypersons that purport to
interpret the meaning of a statute or regulation are opinion statements, and
not statements of fact.” The court thought the Eighth Circuit would agree, and
cited Dental Recycling N. Am., Inc. v. Stoma Ventures, LLC, No. 4:23 CV 670
CDP, 2023 WL 6389071 (E.D. Mo. Oct. 2, 2023) (allowing Lanham Act claim where a
defendant represented that its product was compliant with EPA regulations when
technically it was not; reasoning that “an opinion by a speaker who lacks a
good faith belief in the truth of the statement is actionable”).
Under these circumstances, the evidence was sufficient to go
to a jury. The representations on Torch’s website and devices were clearly
intended to be “reasonably interpreted as a statement of objective fact” and
not merely opinion. And the anti-gambling law requires only “an element of
chance.” “[I]t is now undisputed that Torch devices contain random entry points
at each play level in each game theme.” There could be as many as three million
potential outcomes, reflecting “a material degree of chance such that a jury
could find literally false Defendants’ unambiguous representation that ‘chance
has absolutely no role.’” The law even says “a slot machine is no less a slot
machine when it delivers something of value on a basis other than chance –
e.g., large sequential pools.” The court didn’t see a meaningful difference
between randomly reshuffling each time and “random-entry-point 100,000-outcome
pools yielding three million possibilities.” There was absolutely no reason for
the state to intend to regulate one technology and not the other. See Thole v.
Westfall, 682 S.W.2d 33, 37 (Mo. App. E.D. 1984) (“In the slot machine games,
the objects that appear on the screen are determined by the devices’ electronic
circuitry and the player has no control over which combination of objects will
appear. Thus, from the player’s point of view, winning is purely a matter of
luck, a matter of chance.”). [Exactly!]
In addition, the decidedly mixed and often unfavorable results
of Torch devices’ encounters with the law provided context to show “Torch’s
actual knowledge that its legal assurances were false, or at least patently
misleading.” Unlike cases where no clear guidance existed at the time of the
statements, “Defendants have been well aware since 2018 that the Missouri
Gaming Commission, state and local law enforcement, numerous county
prosecutors, and at least one state circuit court have deemed Torch devices
illegal under Missouri law.” The Platte County conviction, for example, was a
“clear and unambiguous ruling from a court … of competent jurisdiction” even
without appellate review, and the Gaming Commission’s 2019 opinion was “an
equally clear declaration by the competent agency. On this record, Defendants
cannot credibly claim that their unambiguous representations of legality –
asserted as unequivocal fact on the website and on each device – were mere lay
opinions lacking the benefit of clarity from a court or agency.”
Even without literal falsity, a jury could readily find
misleadingness/deceptiveness, “especially given that law enforcement officials
explicitly warned Defendants that their customers would be prosecuted for
operating the devices. Torch was so acutely aware of this real risk that it
offered to fund customers’ legal defense. This belies good faith and at least
creates a triable issue as to Defendants’ knowledge.”
Skillz Platform Inc. v. Papaya Gaming, Ltd., 2025 WL 918411,
24cv1646(DLC) (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 26, 2025)
Previously,
the court partially granted Skillz’s motion to dismiss Papaya’s amended counterclaims;
Papaya sought leave to file further amended counterclaims, which the court denied.
The parties compete in the market
for mobile games that allow users to spend and win money (and in-game prizes). “Users
of Papaya’s games typically compete with between five and twenty opponents. …
The Skillz platform hosts games, each of which allows gameplay between only two
players, created by third-party developers.” Skillz allegedly “engaged in a
multipronged campaign to discredit Papaya in the eyes of the public and law
enforcement officials regarding Papaya’s use of robots or ‘bots.’”
The challenged conduct included an
alleged “false-front organization called 4 Fair Play” that “solicited
complaints from consumers about Papaya and other competitors of Skillz.” As
alleged:
Skillz forwarded
these complaints to state attorneys general. But before doing so, it added
stock language to the complaint, which said “I’m a resident of your state and I
would like to make you aware of a mobile game that is defrauding consumers like
me out of their hard-earned money. I strongly believe the following games use
AI or ‘bots’ to scam players by pretending that those are real players.” It
then listed the games selected on the complaint form. Skillz did not tell
complainants it was adding this language. Most complaints that 4 Fair Play
received did not mention bot use, but the stock language, which misleadingly
appeared to have been written by the complainant, was added to them anyway.
Skillz “spot checked” the complaints that it forwarded to law enforcement, but
it otherwise did not vet them to make sure they came from real people.
This Skillz-added material in the forwarded consumer complaints
was not alleged in the previous counterclaims.
The 4 Fair Play website also included short quotations purportedly
from consumers complaining about Papaya’s games. “These testimonials, each one
or two sentences long, were attributed to consumers identified only by initials
and state of origin … or by the game they had played.” Skillz itself allegedly
drafted some of those testimonials, and they had not come from real consumers. “Other
testimonials did come from real consumers but had been edited by Skillz.” The
fact that these weren’t real consumers or real quotes was added to the proposed
counterclaims.
[Gotta say, if we had a working FTC, this would be the kind
of thing that the FTC considers deceptive, though it might well leave the
parties to private remedies given their incentives to litigate and the lack of
direct sales from the website.]
Finally,
[p]ortraying itself as a “public
policy group conducting research,” 4 Fair Play contacted Skillz employees … and
offered recipients $300 for participating in interviews meant to “better
understand the mobile gaming industry.” An internal guide, which was edited by
Skillz executives, encouraged interviewers to ask questions about Papaya’s use
of bots. The involvement of Skillz and 4 Fair Play in this scheme was hidden.
Despite NDAs, two former Papaya employees participated in
interviews and “disclosed information about when and why bots are used and the
coding behind the bots, among other things.” Using this information, Skillz
publicly accused Papaya of using bots. It also sued Papaya for false
advertising about lack of bots. The proposed counterclaims added an unfair
competition claim based on these facts.
The existing surviving counterclaims relate to Papaya’s challenges
to Skillz’ advertising that its own platform did not use bots, matched players
evenly, and allowed customers to withdraw cash at any time.
The new allegations didn’t change the outcome for Papaya.
Misleadingly adding to consumer complaints before sending them to state law
enforcement doesn’t violate the Lanham Act because it’s not “commercial
advertising or promotion.” It also doesn’t violate NY GBL § 349 because it
doesn’t involve consumer-facing representations/consumer-oriented conduct.
That leaves defamation, but falsity requires pleading that
the alleged statement is not “substantially true,” meaning that it “could have
produced no worse an effect on the mind of a reader than the truth pertinent to
the allegation.” But Papaya didn’t allege that “the substantive content of this
stock language was false—just that it was misattributed.” Nor did it allege
that state authorities ever did anything with these communications or that they
became public. There was thus no allegation of harm, “reputational or
otherwise.” The statements couldn’t be per se actionable, which requires proof
that the statement “impugns the basic integrity or creditworthiness of a
business.” But, while “the integrity of Papaya’s business practices and its
deception of the public about its historic use of bots to compete with
customers in its games of ‘skill’ are at the heart of this case,” Papaya didn’t
deny such undisclosed historic use in the proposed amended complaint, and thus
wouldn’t be able to prove the falsity of the supposedly defamatory statement at
trial. Footnote: “In recent depositions, none of Papaya’s individual deposition
witnesses denied the historic use of bots, as they all asserted their Fifth
Amendment rights against self-incrimination rather than testifying to any
potentially disputed facts.” [Yikes!]
Misattribution of testimonials: Both Lanham Act and GBL
claims require materiality, and Papaya didn’t allege that the content of
the testimonials (accusing Papaya of using bots or being unfair generally) were
false, nor that numerous real consumers were not submitting complaints along
these lines. Even if the consumers “(barely) identified by the website –‘J.P.
from Florida,’ ‘Bingo Cash Player,’ and the like” didn’t write “the specific
words included in the displayed testimonials,” it was not plausible that the misattribution
was material and caused injury.
[N]o reasonable jury could find
that anyone’s purchasing decisions would have been affected (or that consumers
would be affected in any other meaningful sense) by the fact that a real “J.P.
from Florida” did not say the words, “I have genuinely never played a game that
is so rigged in my life.” While parties generally “should be given the
opportunity to develop their evidence to demonstrate materiality,” the
pleadings must set forth some plausible basis for the defendant to ultimately
be held liable.
Finally, the interview scheme wasn’t actionable. “The
essence of an unfair competition claim under New York law is that the defendant
misappropriated the fruit of plaintiff’s labors and expenditures by obtaining
access to plaintiff’s business idea either through fraud or deception, or an
abuse of a fiduciary or confidential relationship.” Although Skillz allegedly used
deceptive means to obtain information about Papaya’s business, there were no
allegations that Skillz actually did anything with that information. Yes,
Skillz told reporters that Papaya was using bots in its games. But according to
the complaint itself, “Skillz was publicly accusing Papaya of using bots well
before the interviews took place anyway.” Given that context, “characterizing
the accusation that Papaya used bots as a trade secret is a stretch at best.” And
even if it was, this conduct wasn’t unfair competition.
Coy’s Honey Farm, Inc. v. Bayer Corp., MDL No.:1:18-md-02820-SNLJ, No. 1:21-CV-089-SNLJ, 2025 WL 901264 (E.D. Mo. Mar. 25, 2025)
Coy’s s a beekeeping and honey-producing operation. It
alleged that dicamba-based herbicide products, including those produced by
defendants, moved away from the targeted dicamba-tolerant plants and damaged
non-tolerant vegetation surrounding plaintiff’s beekeeping operation. This
allegedly resulted in reduced honey production and loss of bees. The court
allows Lanham Act false advertising claims (and others) to proceed. I think the
proximate cause question is interesting, but the other claims may have obscured
the specific proximate cause question with respect to false advertising, since
there was a material issue of fact on proximate causation of damage to the bees/honey.
The Lanham Act claim is based on defendants’ alleged false
representations that their dicamba products were safe for the type of use that
allegedly let them to volatize and spread to surrounding areas after being
applied to the intended target of soybean and cotton fields. Misled purchasers
then used the dicamba as directed, which “allegedly resulted in the destruction
of a great deal of plant habitat for the honeybees, and, in turn, caused the
bees to produce less honey. Thence, plaintiff profited less.” There was a fact
issue on whether that had happened.
But was there Lanham Act standing? Lexmark held that
a plaintiff must “allege an injury to a commercial interest in reputation or
sales proximately caused by the defendant’s misrepresentations.” That is, a
Lanham Act plaintiff must be a commercial actor suffering commercial injuries
instead of being a “consumer who is hoodwinked into purchasing a disappointing
product.” “Here, there is no question that plaintiff is a commercial actor, and
plaintiff has alleged a loss in sales due to defendants’ misrepresentations.”
The “due to” is doing a lot of work there—I’m open to the argument that the
honey producers are at least as distant from the false advertising as the
landlord of a business that suffers damage from false advertising. But
proximate cause is, of course, a legal rather than factual conclusion.
National Republican Senatorial Committee v. Red Senate, 2025 WL 819711, No. 8:24-cv-02301-JVS-KES (C.D. Cal. Jan. 14, 2025)
NRSC sued Red State, alleging that it was exploiting Senator
Rick Scott’s “name, image, and likeness without his consent to deceive and scam
potential donors...” Red State is a Super PAC, which may accept “unlimited
contributions” from nearly any domestic source “so long as it does not
coordinate its public communications with any federal candidate.” But NRSC
alleged that it was a scam, misleading donors “into believing that their
contributions will support a particular candidate or cause, when in reality the
Scam PAC plows that cash into endless fundraising that ultimately funds little
more than the salaries of its officers and its preferred vendors, who profit
handsomely.”
NRSC alleged that, according to FEC disclosures, Red Senate
raised over $2.6 million in the 2019-2020 election cycle and spent over $1.1
million in total disbursements during the cycle, including over $1 million in
operating expenses. The 2021-2022 election cycle had similar numbers, and, at
the time the complaint was filed, Red Senate had raised over $300,000 in the
current election cycle, and spent over $500,000, with approximately $450,000
going towards operating expenses. Thus, NRSC alleged, Red Senate merely
compensates vendors and keeps any leftover cash, harming the candidates “they
purport to be supporting” in the process.
Red Senate allegedly allocates the bulk of its spending to
Wavecrest or Google Ads. According to the Google Ads Transparency Center, Red
Senate has paid between $35,000 to $40,000 for Google ads mentioning Senator
Scott, which were shown between 70,000 to 80,000 times throughout the United
States. The advertisements specifically state: “Red Senate for Rick Scott -
Keep Florida Red in 2024,” and “Red Senate for Rick Scott - Take Back Our
Senate in 2024.” Red Senate also reported making independent expenditures in
the 2024 Florida Senate race; however, as of October 2, 2024, none of the
reported expenditures expressly advocated for Senator Scott or his opponent. Rather,
“the reported expenditures served to raise funds for Red Senate while using
Rick Scott’s name and likeness.”
Senator Scott allegedly assigned his rights to NRSC, and,
“as the only national party committee solely purposed to supporting Republican
senate candidates,” NRSC claims to have an independent interest in stopping
false advertising and false personification of Republican candidates. NRSC sued
for California statutory and common law right of publicity violations, Lanham
Act false advertising, and unfair competition under California’s UCL.
The court took judicial notice of the existence of
disclaimers on Red Senate’s website, though not their accuracy, and did the
same for the content of FEC reports filed by Red Senate. And it took judicial
notice of the “fact that there has been significant news media coverage of
Senator Rick Scott, his 2025 campaign for re-election to the United States
Senate, and his opponent Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.”
Initially, NRSC’s statement that Senator Scott’s assignment was
exclusive was sufficient to establish standing to assert his claims as an
initial matter. But did Scott have statutory Lanham Act standing? He needed to
allege an “injury to a commercial interest in reputation or sales.” NRSC argued
that the parties competed in “the political-fundraising marketplace,” meaning that
“potentially millions of dollars were diverted from his campaign.” But the
complaint didn’t so allege; its only allegations focused on the deception of
donors. But the court granted leave to amend. (Seems like “commercial
advertising or promotion” is going to be an insuperable barrier here.)
California’s UCL requires “the plaintiff to be the one ‘who
has suffered injury in fact and has lost money or property as a result of the
unfair competition.’ ” Consequently, “an injured [party’s] assignment of rights
cannot confer standing on an uninjured assignee.” NRSC’s allegation of its own
interest in stopping false advertising and false personification of Republican
candidates was not enough to satisfy this burden; again, there was leave to
amend.
As for the California claims, they were subject to
anti-SLAPP analysis. NRSC argued that its complaint “challenges Red Senate’s
deceptive conduct in fundraising—not the message it conveys in its ads,” so
that the lawsuit did not “arise from” any statements that Red Senate made “in
relation to political campaigns.” Instead, it arose from its post-speech
conduct—its spending allocation. (I thought political spending was speech.) The
court was unpersuaded by these arguments. “First, it is well settled that the
anti-SLAPP statute applies to conduct in furtherance of the right to free
speech, in addition to the protected speech itself. Second, even if the lawsuit
as a whole challenges Red Senate’s disbursement of funds, the right of
publicity claims specifically target Red Senate’s use of Senator Scott’s name
in Google ads.” The speech was itself allegedly wrongful, not merely evidence
of a wrongful act (fundraising misconduct). “[H]ad Red Senate never used
Senator Scott’s name in its Google advertisements, NRSC would have no right to
publicity claims.”
Thus, the burden shifted to NRSC to demonstrate a
probability of prevailing on the merits of its claims. For a common law cause
of action for commercial misappropriation, a plaintiff must prove: “(1) the
defendant’s use of the plaintiff’s identity; (2) the appropriation of
plaintiff’s name or likeness to defendant’s advantage, commercially or
otherwise; (3) lack of consent; and (4) resulting injury.” The statutory cause
of action requires commercial misappropriation.
Red Senate argued that its speech was related to a political
campaign, a matter of public interest, and that NRSC couldn’t prove that Scott’s
image was used “exclusively” for commercial gain. NRSC’s argument that Red
Senate’s speech was unprotected because it was fraudulent lacked sufficient
evidence. The exception for political speech isn’t limited to specific types of
political campaigns; nor does the “underlying purpose of one’s dissemination of
a political message” determine whether an exception applies. Motion to strike
granted, with leave to amend. (How could there be a successful amendment,
especially for the statutory cause of action?)
Zehra Jafri, One Sari, Three Different Ways to Drape It: Trademarks, Religion, Language, and Morality in Post-Colonial India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, 40 UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal 127 (2023)
Abstract:
Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh were all established on a sense of wanting to be a majority in a nation where they were once “othered,” be it by the British, Hindu majority, or Urdu-speaking majority. As a result, religious independence and mother-tongue/linguistic independence are highly valued in these countries, and are the context by which the morality of trademarks within the borders of these countries are assessed. Notions of free speech traditions and political ideologies that also color traditions are discussed, as they also run abreast trademark law. Although these three countries once emerged from one land, they carry differences as distinct and rich as the cultural and religious historical tensions that define them. Each sought to create a space where their cultural and religious identities were represented fairly. As thus, it is no surprise that religion is such an important consideration that it was codified into each country’s trademark law.
This paper aims to illustrate what each country deems as running afoul to notions of morality and religious susceptibilities, and how that may have changed over time with politics and other social factors. The factors that may have influenced these definitions is assessed in depth by country, with homage to the political structures and free speech traditions within which they are nested. A framework of what would and what wouldn’t qualify as a registrable trademark under the morality bar is posited through an analysis of government guidelines on registering trademarks, case law, and a comparative analysis of certain marks that were treated one way under one country’s standard but could be treated differently under different standards from other countries.
Some interesting passages (footnotes omitted):
[U]nder Section 9(2)(c) [of Indian
trademark law], a mark is prohibited for registration as a trademark if it
contains or comprises of any matter likely to hurt the religious
susceptibilities of any class or section of the citizens of India. The Draft
Manual further explicitly acknowledges that it is a common trade practice in
India to use names and pictures of religious deities or symbols as trademarks. Accordingly
such use is not regarded per se as offending religious sentiments of any class
or section of public. However, such use in relation to certain goods may offend
the religious sentiments of the people. For example, the use of the names or
device of deities or religious heads on footwear will be considered distasteful
and will be open to objection. Similarly, use of Hindu Gods on beef or meat
products or use of names of Muslim saints on pork products would offend the
religious feeling of respective sections of the public and may attract
objection under this section. … The Draft Manual goes on to list illustrative
examples. The use of religious symbols (like OM) or names (e.g., Jesus) as
trademarks is likely to undermine/offend religious value and sentiments. Names
of gods or goddesses which are also used as personal names may be considered as
personal names for registration purpose, unless accompanied by the device of
such god or goddess.
… Not included in the explicit list
of unauthorized religious names in the trademark guidance are Islamic marks.
All of the explicitly prohibited religious deities and figures are Hindu, Jain,
and Sikh. By including only Hindu, Sikh, and Jain names in the official
guidance of prohibited marks, India may also project a certain vision of Indian
identity in line with the “pseudo-secularism” and Hindutva ideology espoused by
Modi and the BJP, which has its roots from the religious tension harbored from
the partition between India and Pakistan.
The author notes that marks containing “Allah” are, however,
apparently routinely refused.
Wong v. Iovate Health Sciences U.S.A. Inc., 2025 WL 821451, No. 2:24-cv-00901-DAD-CKD
(E.D. Cal. Mar. 14, 2025)
Is an asterisk on the front of a package a
get-out-of-jail-free card for false advertising? If the disclosure doesn’t
flatly contradict the claim, at least, maybe it is. (I would think that
evidence of what reasonable consumers thought they might learn from the
asterisk is quite relevant for that—if they didn’t realize they needed to
consult the qualification, then they could still be deceived—but that’s not
what this court holds, even though there are allegations that other marketplace
participants advertise differently and less deceptively.)
![]() |
front and back panels from complaint |
Wong bought “100% Mass Gainer,” a dietary supplement in the
form of a protein powder, which stated that the supplement provided 60 grams of
protein per serving. But, without adding milk, the supplement contained only 44
grams of protein per serving rather than 60 grams. The rest of the product line
also has fewer grams of protein in a serving than what is stated on the front
label of the packaging because they all require the consumer to add some
quantity of milk. “Other protein powders not produced by defendant have
packaging that prominently advertises the amount of protein contained within a
serving of the powder, but only include the protein content from the powder
itself.”
There’s a disclaimer that the protein content assumes the
addition of milk, “though those disclaimers and the associated asterisk symbols
appear in small font on the front of the packaging.” [NB: I think only the
asterisks appear on the front, according to the rest of the opinion and to the
images.] On the back, “the protein content is reduced below the advertised
amount appearing on the front of the packaging when the powders are mixed with
water instead.” Wong brought the usual
California statutory claims.
The court dismissed claims for injunctive relief, but not
equitable relief under the FAL and UCL. The court accepted the idea that the
pleading standard for seeking equitable relief is “minimal.” “[I]f a plaintiff
pleads that she lacks an adequate legal remedy, Sonner will rarely (if
ever) require more this early in the case.” Wong alleged that equitable relief
is more “prompt and certain and in other ways efficient” than an award of
damages, given that “equitable restitution can justify an award of greater
relief than damages and is governed by a different standard of proof that
allows the award of restitution even if a plaintiff cannot adduce evidence to
support an award of damages.” That was enough.
Still, a reasonable consumer would not have been deceived,
despite the large font size representation of the products’ protein content.
The asterisk itself made the protein claim “ambiguous” to a reasonable
consumer, which ambiguity could then be cleared up by reading the back label. “Even
before reading the back label, the presence of an asterisk alone puts a
consumer on notice that there are qualifications or caveats ….” This strikes me
as a license to cheat.
Clark v. Eddie Bauer LLC, --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2025 WL 814924, No. 2:20-cv-01106-RAJ (W.D. Wash. Mar. 12, 2025)
A good choice for publication given that the opinion
addresses (and rejects) some arguments I haven't seen before. Clark sued Eddie Bauer under
Oregon’s Unlawful Trade Practices Act for using purportedly false and
misleading tagged list prices, aka reference prices, on the garments sold at
Eddie Bauer’s outlet stores. A previous district court decision found the claim
time-barred, even though Eddie Bauer’s policy change of using the phrase
“comparable value” on its sales tags for garments as opposed to a reference
price based on the garment’s claimed fictitious full retail price violated the
UTPA, “as Eddie Bauer must provide the origin of any such reference price.” On
appeal, the Ninth Circuit certified a question to the Oregon Supreme Court:
whether a consumer suffers an ascertainable loss under the UTPA when the
consumer purchased a product that she would not have purchased at that price
but for a violation of the UTPA if the violation arises “from a representation
about the product’s price, comparative price, or price history, but not about
the character or quality of the product itself.” That court said yes, recognizing
Clark’s “purchase price theory,” holding that “when a person acts in response
to the deception by spending money that the person would not otherwise have
spent, the person has been injured to the extent of the purchase price as a
result of that deception.” Clark v. Eddie Bauer, LLC, 532 P.3d 880 (2023).
The Ninth Circuit subsequently accepted Clark’s standing and
ruled that she could seek injunctive relief against Eddie Bauer’s ongoing
falsely discounted prices, despite the new use of the term “comparable value.”
It also held that monetary damages for past harms was not an adequate legal
remedy for Clark’s future harm and granted Clark leave to amend her complaint
is appropriate so she can explain the circumstances associated with her
discovery of Eddie Bauer’s advertising scheme. The amended complaint described
Clark’s “unearthing of the advertising scheme in 2020 after finding the law
firm’s website describing Eddie Bauer’s unlawful practices.” (In a footnote,
the court declined Eddie Bauer’s invitation to impute counsel’s knowledge of
the scheme to Clark herself.)
The court agreed that, for purposes of a motion to dismiss,
Clark had pled that the discovery rule applied to toll her claim. Oregon’s UTPA
provides that a party must commence a lawsuit “within one year after the
discovery of the unlawful method, act, or practice.” The statute of limitations
begins to run when the plaintiff “knows or should have known of the allegedly
unlawful conduct.” And it is an objective standard: “how a reasonable person of
ordinary prudence would have acted in the same or a similar situation.”
In Oregon, a plaintiff must have had sufficient knowledge to
“excite attention and put a party upon his guard or call for an inquiry
notice.” In addition, “it must also appear that a reasonably diligent inquiry
would disclose the fraud.” “Application of the discovery rule presents a
factual question for determination by a jury unless the only conclusion that a
jury could reach is that the plaintiff knew or should have known the critical
facts at a specified time and did not file suit within the requisite time
thereafter.”
Eddie Bauer argued that Clark knew or should have known of
her case well over one year before she sued in July 2020 because “her
experience using the products that she bought ... provided enough information
for her to conclude before July 2019 that she had been misled as to the value
of the items she purchased.” They also posit that when she bought the items,
she knew the reference prices, and she “apparently used the products
sufficiently to gauge their quality and value.”
The court found this to be nonsense: As Clark argued, “[t]he
only way for a person to know that Eddie Bauer’s advertised discounts were
false is for the person to know Eddie Bauer’s true historical selling prices
for the products he or she purchased.” “The Court struggles to find a
correlation between a consumer wearing an item of clothing and the same
consumer somehow knowing the item’s regular selling price or worth merely
because she wears it.” It is not the case that, “when a reasonable consumer
wears an item, she learns facts that trigger suspicion of a discrepancy between
a garment’s ticketed price and its regular selling price.”
Nor did it appear from the face of the complaint that Clark
had a duty to conduct an investigation. She had no obligation to uncover a
pricing scheme “by talking to her fellow consumers, to whom she has no
relation.” Nor did the court accept that she could simply have asked Eddie
Bauer for price information:
First, Plaintiff had no idea Eddie
Bauer was engaging in an unfair trade practice at the time. Second, there is no
evidence to show that its employees would know or have access to this
information. These two considerations also do not factor in the employee’s
state of mind, as an employee might be suspicious of such questions and feel
obligated to protect her employer.
A person sometimes cannot discover a false advertising
scheme “because, by design, its very nature is hidden and impossible for an
ordinary consumer to discover.”
What about the argument that “Comparable Value” in an outlet
context isn’t deceptive? It was plausibly reasonable for consumers to interpret
that to mean “Eddie Bauer’s price for the identical item.” “Under Oregon’s
UTPA, Eddie Bauer has an obligation to provide the origin of a reference price.
It has not done so.”
As for standing to seek injunctive relief, the Ninth Circuit
explained that Clark “will be harmed if, in the future, she is left to guess as
to whether Eddie Bauer is providing a legitimate sale or not, and whether
products are actually worth the amount that Eddie Bauer is representing.”
Nantucket Wine & Food Festival, LLC v. Gordon Companies, Inc., --- F.Supp.3d ----, No. 24-11640-LTS, 2024 WL 5442374 (D. Mass. Dec. 12, 2024)
Wild facts here.
Plaintiff NWF runs an annual, multi-day event on Nantucket
called the Nantucket Wine & Food Festival “The Festival has been held
annually—with the exception of a hiatus during the COVID-19 pandemic—since its
founding as the Nantucket Wine Festival in 1997.” Recently, it’s been held over
the course of five days encompassing the weekend in May between Mother’s Day
and Memorial Day. NWF solicits “Luminaries”—experts and high-level presenters—and
“Invitees”—other exhibitors, wineries, distributors, importers, and sponsors.
The remaining attendees are “Guests,” who either purchase tickets to the
various events or are invited by, for example, a sponsor. NWF works on the
Festival year-round, with ticket sales typically commencing in November. Nancy
Bean, with a partner, owns the rights to the Festival and is one of two
permanent staffers; she’s the majority owner.
David Gordon is the president and chief executive officer of
the Gordon Companies, a regional liquor-and-wine retail-and-distribution
business based in Waltham, Massachusetts. He approached Bean about potentially
investing in NWF in 2021. Discussions continued over two years, and Gordon
provided logistical, financial, and other assistance to Bean. “Principally,
Gordon furnished Bean with an attorney, defendant Todd Goldberg, who had
previously done work for the Gordon Companies, to help Bean buy out her
original partner,” a transaction completed in 2022, though a small percentage is
still owned by a third party. The Gordon Companies also extended to NWF a loan
of approximately $55,000, and Gordon gained access to financial and other
sensitive information relating to NWF.
NWF and the White Elephant resort agreed that White Elephant
would be the exclusive “Host Hotel” of the 2024 Festival, reserving to NWF the
exclusive rights to its name and logo. But, as the 2024 Festival approached,
Bean broke off negotiations for a Gordon Companies investment in NWF. Gordon
and Bean executed a release agreeing that NWF’s $55,000 debt to the Gordon
Companies would be paid off via sponsorship rights at the 2024 Festival. The Festival
occurred as planned, and Bean posted on NWF’s website a save-the-date for the
2025 Festival, marking the same weekend, May 14 to May 18, 2025, as well as a
similar Instagram post.
Then, mid-June, 2024, the Gordon Companies issued statements
announcing the Gordon Companies’ plans for the 2025 Nantucket Food and Wine
Experience. An email announcement sent to “a cultivated list of industry
professionals, including wine vendors, chefs and restaurant owners” stated, in
relevant part: “The Gordon Companies is thrilled to announce that we have
partnered with White Elephant Resorts to present the newly branded Nantucket
Food And Wine Experience. Under new guidance, this rebranded event will take
place on Nantucket from Wednesday, May 14th through Sunday, May 18, 2025. This
extraordinary celebration will offer a revitalized experience featuring the
world’s top vineyards, distilleries, and culinary minds.”
Another email went to the Gordon Companies’ customer list:
“The Gordon Companies Purchases Nantucket Food and Wine Experience.” It read in
relevant part: “The Gordon Companies have partnered with the iconic White
Elephant Resorts to present the newly branded Nantucket Food And Wine
Experience. Under this new partnership, one of the nation’s longest-running
food and wine events will take place on Nantucket from Wednesday, May 14th
through Sunday, May 18, 2025.”
The Gordon Companies also sent a press release to at least
fifteen media outlets, including the Boston Globe, Boston Common Magazine, Wine
Spectator, and Forbes: “The Gordon Companies Partner with The White Elephant to
Present a Newly Branded Nantucket Food & Wine Experience.” A subhead read:
“One of the nation’s longest running food and wine events returns to Nantucket
on May 14–18, 2025.” Relevant bits included:
The Gordon Companies ... and White
Elephant Resorts are thrilled to announce their partnership for a newly branded
Nantucket Food & Wine Experience in 2025.... David Gordon, CEO of The
Gordon Companies, notes, “We are excited to introduce the newly rebranded
Nantucket Food & Wine Experience to the loyal guests who have enjoyed this
celebratory time on the island for many years.” … Khaled Hashem, President of
White Elephant Resorts, adds, “We are honored that our harborside hotel will
continue to serve as the official host for this dynamic partnership with The
Gordon Companies. We look forward to carrying on the tradition of providing
food and wine excellence for locals and visitors alike on beautiful Nantucket.”
A similar press release went to industry media outlets such
as BevNet/Nosh, Wine Industry Advisor, Kane’s Beverage News Daily, Beverage
Dynamics, and Wine Business: “Prominent New England Wine and Spirits Retailer
Purchases Nantucket Food & Wine Experience.” Its subhead was: “Gordon’s
Fine Wine Acquires Ownership Stake in One of the Nation’s Longest-Running Food
and Wine Events.” In relevant part, it said:
The Gordon Companies … have
acquired the ownership rights to the Nantucket Food & Wine Experience
(previously known as the Nantucket Wine & Food Festival), one of the
longest running food and wine events in the U.S. The rebranded event … will
take place on the island from Wednesday, May 14 through Sunday, May 18, 2025 ….
“This longstanding event is an important part of Nantucket’s rich history, not
to mention a significant annual driver of tourism and local pride,” says David
Gordon, CEO of The Gordon Companies. “We’re excited to introduce the newly
rebranded Nantucket Food & Wine Experience, and we’re especially honored to
be one of the only fine wine and spirits retailers in the country to own and
present a festival of this size and prominence.”
Both Gordon and White Elephant had issues with Bean—the former
believing that Bean would never bring him on as a co-owner as he’d hoped, the
latter because of Bean’s “organization and planning and time management.” Thus,
they’d planned a new event for a couple of months, including
nantucketfoodandwine.com. The person who sold them that domain name offered
Gordon a list of domains including the word “festival” or “fest,” but Gordon
replied, “[w]e need to use experience not festival (for now).”
After the four statements went out, Gordon quickly realized
that there was a bit of a problem, and emailed “[t]he subject of our email that
went out said Purchases Nantucket Food and Wine, if we can I’d like to stick
with ‘The Gordon Companies Partner with The White Elephant to Present a Newly
Branded Nantucket Food & Wine Experience.” Meanwhile, Bean’s contemporaneous
reaction was: “I am inundated with texts and calls—everyone thinks I sold NWF
to him for $$$$$$$.” NWF also received “frantic inquiries from Boston Common
Magazine regarding the sale and their astonishment of it given they had just
been with us on-site and were in the midst of writing all of our post-festival
acclaims and reviews and pieces.”
The next day, the Gordon Companies sent out a clarification
to its industry email (“Gordons has not purchased any festival. We have
partnered with the White Elephant in a multiyear deal to produce a new event.
In no way are we affiliated with any other event or festival on Nantucket.
Sorry for any confusion this may have caused.”) and contacted industry
publications to remove from the Industry Release the statement that the
Experience had been “previously known as the Nantucket Wine & Food
Festival.” But they didn’t send out corrective emails to the other recipients
of the statements. Even after Gordon’s instruction not to use the word “purchase,”
he responded to “[c]ongratulations to your purchase of the Nantucket Food and
Wine Festival” without a correction.
Amy Baxter, Licensing Administrator at the Nantucket Police
Department, met with Gordon and subsequently emailed a third party about “a
change in ownership and management of the Wine Fest.” She then emailed Gordon:
“[j]ust to confirm I should not be expecting Nancy to come at us to try and
secure that weekend since you have a contract with White Elephant correct? I
know that to be the case and I will be general in my answer but just
reconfirming.” She then told a reporter from a local newspaper, “I do not
anticipate competing festivals.”
Three days after the initial announcement, and two days
after first contact from NWF’s lawyer, the Gordon Companies sent a correction
to its customer list: “Gordon’s has not purchased, acquired, or rebranded the
previously existing Nantucket Food & Wine Festival which has been operated
by a still operating entity which is not affiliated with The Gordon Companies
in any way. The Nantucket Food and Wine Experience is also not affiliated with
the Nantucket Food & Wine Festival.” The Gordon parties succeeded in
getting several industry publications to remove the parenthetical stating that
the Experience was “previously known as the Nantucket Wine & Food Festival,”
but didn’t send corrections to the general media release.
“In response to questions from several chefs regarding
whether a sale had happened, Bean emailed all chefs who had participated in the
2024 Festival clarifying the situation and asking for their support.” She also
contacted sommeliers, wine importers, and other constituents. The Boston Globe,
the Newport Buzz, and the Nantucket Current all ran articles about the Festival
and the Experience with quotes by Bean. Nonetheless, Bean testified, “many
people remain under the impression that I either tried to sell the genuine
festival or will sell the genuine festival” because they “find it hard to
believe someone would lie so blatantly about purchasing a company unless there
had been some agreement that I reneged or that belatedly fell apart.”
The Nantucket Select Board received applications from both
sides for events during the same time and announced that tickets for these
events should not be sold until the applications had been evaluated; the
applications were pending as of the court’s decision.
Right before the PI hearing, plaintiffs dismissed White
Elephant from the case, and White Elephant agreed that it wouldn’t host an
event with the Gordon parties on the relevant weekend for the next two years. The
Gordon Parties represented that they were in the process of withdrawing the
permit applications they had filed to the Nantucket Select Board. So the Experience
wasn’t going to happen in 2025, at least not on Nantucket. Thus, plaintiffs
narrowed their request for preliminary relief, but still wanted defendants to be
enjoined from disparagement and to be required to make corrective disclosures
including a statement that their earlier statements were “false.” They also
wanted prominent links on defendants’ websites to NWF’s own site. The court
granted the corrective disclosure and website remedies, but not a general
prohibition against disparagement.
The court relied on Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 93A and
did not analyze the claims as Lanham Act false advertising. Chapter 93A grants
a private right of action to any business harmed by another business’s “unfair
methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct
of any trade or commerce.”
The court found that defendants’ statements constituted
commercial disparagement, which requires proof that a defendant: (1) published
a false statement to a person other than the plaintiff; (2) “of and concerning”
the plaintiff’s products or services; (3) with knowledge of the statement’s
falsity or with reckless disregard of its truth or falsity; (4) where pecuniary
harm to the plaintiff’s interests was intended or foreseeable; and (5) such
publication resulted in special damages in the form of pecuniary loss.
The court found that at least three of the widely
disseminated messages were false, implying that that the Gordon Companies had
purchased and the long-running Festival and was “rebranding” it as the
Experience. (Although this probably counts as falsity by necessary implication,
relying on 93A avoids any need to nitpick about explicitly false v. implicitly
false claims under the Lanham Act, since state laws generally don’t have the
same doctrinal distinctions.) The statements were plainly of and concerning
plaintiffs, and they were made with knowledge/recklessness as to their falsity.
Harm intended or foreseeable: “Stating that a competitor no
longer operates independently could foreseeably cause that competitor to lose
business.” “[W]here a false statement has been ‘widely disseminated,’ and it
would be impossible to identify particular customers who chose not to purchase
a plaintiff’s goods or services,” a plaintiff can show special damages “by
circumstantial evidence showing that the loss [of the market] has in fact
occurred, and eliminating other causes.” That was also sufficiently shown with
evidence of confusion, including among the Nantucket town government, preventing
plaintiffs from selling tickets to the 2025 Festival starting in November, as
they normally would.
Plaintiffs also showed irreparable harm to their goodwill
and reputation. “By its very nature injury to goodwill and reputation is not
easily measured or fully compensable in damages. Accordingly, this kind of harm
is often held to be irreparable.”
The existing corrective efforts were inadequate: they “did
not admit or explain the falsity of the original statement.” Indeed, the court
found their language obfuscatory, with the potential to leave readers believing
that the NWF no longer existed: “Gordon’s has not purchased, acquired, or
rebranded the previously existing Nantucket Food & Wine Festival which has
been operated by a still operating entity which is not affiliated with The
Gordon Companies in any way.” Plus, “while the original Customer Email went out
as its own message, the corrections went out in small print above ads for the
Gordon Companies.”
Defendants argued that confusion had already dissipated due
to plaintiffs’ efforts. “However, just
because some locals and insiders now know that the Gordon Parties did not
purchase the Festival, that does not mean that all confusion has dissipated.
Many Festival devotees may still find it difficult to trust Bean, as she has
avowed. Other, more casual participants may not be so plugged in and so may,
having seen one of the Gordon Parties’ statements, still believe the Festival
is no more.”
Still, plaintiffs couldn’t identify any actionable, false
statements made by the Gordon Parties after July 1. Thus, the court denied
their requires for an injunction against “false disparaging statements about
either of the Plaintiffs, the ownership of the Nantucket Wine & Food
Festival, or its operations.”
However, additional corrective disclosures, including prominent
placement on defendant’s nantucketfoodandwine.com website with links to
plaintiffs’ site, were justified. The disclosure is not the kind of thing you
want to have to send out:
Pursuant to an Order of the U.S.
District Court …, the Gordon Companies hereby discloses that, in June of this
year, the Gordon Companies sent out false press releases and emails stating
that Gordon Companies had acquired and rebranded the Nantucket Wine & Food
Festival under new management. There was never any acquisition, rebranding, or
new management of the Nantucket Wine & Food Festival. The Gordon Companies
is not planning any festival for May 2025. The long-running Nantucket Wine
& Food Festival continues to operate. As previously announced by the Nantucket
Wine & Food Festival, the annual tradition will continue May 14 – 18, 2025,
under the leadership of its longtime Executive Director Nancy Bean. For more
information, please visit www.nantucketwinefestival.com.
Defendants had to post the disclosure in large bold font on
the home page of the website at nantucketfoodandwine.com and
foodandwinenantucket.com, with no other text or links on the page, but with the
reference to www.nantucketwinefestival.com at the end of the disclosure
hyperlinked.