Trademark Priority Intro to IP Prof Merges 3
- Slides: 32
Trademark Priority Intro to IP – Prof Merges 3. 16. 09
Agenda • Quick update: Color Marks • Priority – Federally Registered Marks – Common Law trademarks
Color • College and University trademarks • Big business! $100 million in 2008 … • Bd. Of Supervisors of LSU v. Smack Apparell, 89 USPQ 2 d 1338 (5 th Cir. 1988)
LSU v. Smack • T-shirts using school colors (bit not logos), together with (unregistered) slogans • “Beat Oklahoma” (front), “And Bring it Back to the Bayou!” and “ 2003 College Football National Championship”(back)
LSU • Held: Color protectable • Not functional • Colors had secondary meaning
Clam Corp. v. Innovative Outdoor Solutions, Inc. , 89 PQ 2 d 1314 (D. Minn. Dec. 2008) • Registered trademark for ice fishing huts made in particular shade of blue • Held: No infringement; defendant’s huts were different shade of blue, had black roofs, and had defendant’s logo prominently displayed
Hinsdale 630 -325 -8126 Naperville 630 -355 -2230 Wheaton 630 -221 -8300 Oak Brook 630 -928 -1510
Zazu Designs, Inc. v. L’Oreal ZHD Meets with Chemists; sales in salon 11/85; 2/86: Shipments to Texas & Florida ZHD Files Suit 1985 2/86 4/86 6/12/86 1987 L’Oreal 4/86 Covenant with Riviera; 1 st Interstate shipment Federal Registration
How do you establish priority? • Must “win the race to the marketplace” – p. 679 • BUT: There are some detailed rules to this race. . .
Lanham Act sec. 1, 15 USC 1051 “(a)(1) The owner of a trademark used in commerce may request registration of its trademark on the principal register hereby established. . ”
Caselaw: Balancing two factors • “Prevent[] entrepreneurs from reserving brand names in order to [raise rivals’ costs]” – prevent “Rent Seeking” – p. 678 • “Allow[] firms to seek protection for a mark before investing substantial sums in promotion” – “Claim-staking” – p. 679
Sound familiar? • Utility in patent law: prevent “wrong kind” of racing, but permit reasonable claiming • Derivative works in copyright: allow owner to develop ancillary markets without fear of competition
Use requirement • Policy justifications – Furthers purpose of trademark (I. D. source) – Prevents warehousing of trademarks – Provides notice to others • Possible drawbacks – May cause uncertainty re: when rights attach – May result in loss of preparatory expenses
A twist: “Intent to use” • Allows “reservation” of right to a trademark • But ONLY if reserved mark is actually used within 6 months (extendable to 1 yr. and then three years for good cause)
Intent to use statute: Sec. 1(b), 15 USC 1051(b) (b)(1) A person who has a bona fide intention, under circumstances showing the good faith of such person, to use a trademark in commerce may request registration of its trademark on the principal register hereby established by paying the prescribed fee and filing in the Patent and Trademark Office an application and a verified statement, in such form as may be prescribed by the Director.
Sec 13, 15 USC 1063 (b)(2) a notice of allowance shall be issued to the applicant if the applicant applied for registration under section 1051(b) of this title. .
“Use in Commerce” • Lanham Act § 1 (15 U. S. C. § 1051) – (a)(1) The owner of a trademark used in commerce may request registration … • Lanham Act § 45 (15 U. S. C. § 1125) – Commerce: All commerce which may lawfully be regulated by Congress – Bona fide use of a mark in the ordinary course of trade, and not merely made to reserve a right in a mark.
Maryland Stadium v. Becker MSA New ballpark approved Extensive advertising, promotion, and use Becker 1987 1988 1989 Old buildings demolished 1990 New stadium begins to rise 1991 Named Camden Yards First game played 1992 Starts selling T-Shirts
What constitutes “use”? • Use in a bona fide way, targeted at customers • Key is “use” not “sale” – Sales probative of use, esp. if followed by more – But neither necessary nor sufficient • Single sale may not be sufficient (Blue Bell, Lucent) • Token sales not sufficient (Blue Bell, P&G) • Preparatory activity may be sufficient (Shalom, Becker) – Look to totality of circumstances
Registration - Priority • Lanham Act § 7(c) (15 U. S. C. 1057(c)): – Contingent on the registration of a mark …, the filing of the application … shall constitute constructive use of the mark, conferring a right of priority, nationwide in effect, in connection with the goods … specified … against any other person except for a person whose mark has not been abandoned and who, prior to such filing - (1) has used the mark …
State registration; common law use • Zazu’s state registration here: for services, not goods – “Trade name” vs. state TM register • What if Zazu had a state registration for goods?
Concurrent Use • Two types of concurrent use – Different Products • E. g. Apple Records and Apple Computers • E. g. Acme Cleaners, Acme Mufflers, Acme. . . – Different Geographic Markets • E. g. Broadway Pizza (Boston) and Broadway Pizza (S. F. )
Common law rights • Geographic priority determined by (1) 1 st use, (2) customer associations
Dawn Donut v. Hart’s
- Burman's priority list gives priority to
- Priority mail vs priority mail express
- Rspo trademark license
- Intel inside logos
- Trademark
- The levi strauss trademark shows two horses
- Fsc trademark
- Boeing company profile
- On which playing card is the cardmaker's trademark
- Features of trademark
- Difference between copyright and patent
- Cipc patent journal
- Use case ranking and priority matrix images
- Windows 10 priority
- Priorityprospect
- Logical operators priority in c
- Priority queuing
- Priority queuing
- Mars pathfinder priority inversion
- Priority scheduling
- The dma request input pin that has the priority is dreqo
- Java priority queue example
- Six key priorities in health department
- Deque and priority queue
- Transform and conquer
- Priority queue using heap
- Portexpress
- Vectored and non vectored interrupts in 8085
- Priority scheduling
- Verilog ^ operator
- Priority housing development areas
- Priority queue doubly linked list
- Apache kafka message queue