Archive for the ‘Litigation’ Category

Likeness Infringement Excluded from Coverage

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011
ISS Research Logo

www.issresearch.com

In a recent case, ISS Research, LLC v. Federal Ins. Co., Num. 3:10-cv-41 (W.D.N.C.), US District Judge Graham Mullen granted Defendant’s Summary Judgment motion against insured muscle-building company ISS Research, LLC.  The order upholds an “intellectual property” exclusion in a commercial liability insurance policy issued by Federal Insurance to ISS Research.

The underlying case for which the insured sought coverage was a Rights of Publicity case in which ISS Research’s use of a photograph of ex-football player and model, Paul Green, in a magazine advertisement for Plaintiff’s nutrition bars resulted in a lawsuit against Plaintiff and an individual photographer. Green filed suit in California after allegedly discovering that Plaintiff was using a photograph from an unrelated photo shoot in a national advertisement without his consent or authorization. The Complaint against Plaintiff contained claims for common law misappropriation of likeness, statutory misappropriation of likeness under California Civil Code §3344, and unjust enrichment. The insurance company refused to defend or indemnify the insured in the lawsuit, and ISS Research in turn sued to recover for costs related to the original lawsuit.

The dispute boiled down to the question of whether or not the concept of “likeness,” which was mis-appropriated and gave rise to the underlying case, would include a photograph. Ordinarily, the plaintiff argued, the plain and ordinary meaning of term “likeness” does not include a photograph, and California law makes a distinction between a likeness and a photograph.* The defense and the Judge disagreed with that distinction, because other courts (including North Carolina) consider a photograph to be a kind of likeness.

In the order, the Judge explains that the insurance contract at issue imposes a duty on the insurer to indemnify the insured for any judgments and to defend the insured against any claims that fall within the language of the policy and, while it is the burden of the insured to establish that a loss comes within the scope of the policy’s coverage, it is the burden of the insurer to show “that an exclusion is applicable.” Should the language indicate that the policy “creates a clear exclusion,” then that language controls.  According to the discussion of the case, the commercial liability insurance policy in this case clearly excludes infringement or violation of “any intellectual property law or rights,” so that the policies clearly exclude coverage for damages related to the misappropriation of a likeness.  Therefore, Defendant had no obligation to defend or indemnify Plaintiff in the California lawsuit brought by Mr. Green.

__________

* The statute applies to the unauthorized use of a person’s “name, voice, signature, photograph, or likeness…” Cal. Civ. Code §3344(a).

Car wash diluting UT academic excellence

Friday, February 18th, 2011

Monitoring and enforcing trademark rights is an important task for IP managers in all types of organizations.  The University of Texas is notoriously vigilant about this, and garners a lot of attention when the intellectual property at issue is the trademark tower at the Austin campus.

In the most recent filing, the facts alleged in the case are simple enough:

  • The UT has a variety of  trademark applications and registrations depicting the tower filed before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as well as and State Registrations (See graphic above).
  • In 2010, as part of its business (“Tower Express Car Wash”) the defendant erected a replica of the UT Tower (See photo below) and used a representation of it in its logo (See leading graphic).
  • Defendant continues to use the University’s marks.

The UT, like most institutions, has registered and common law rights on logos and other identifiers of the University and relies on these intellectual properties as assets, from attracting and retaining prospective and current students and faculty, to maintaining a link with the alumni network.  Consequently, the UT’s complaint argues that the continued unauthorized use of the UT Tower replica and Logo is likely to cause confusion and to portray a false affiliation, sponsorship relationship, or association of the Defendant’s business with the University.  The unauthorized use will, as it is alleged in the complaint, dilute the distinctiveness of the University’s Tower marks.

Some observers might take this infringement lightly, and see only humor in the deceptive association of the marks.  However, the UT is obligated to enforce its IP rights in their totality, not on a case-by-case exceptional basis, thus upholding the value of the licensing business for both the UT and its licensees.

This type of lawsuit seems to fall exactly within the purpose of Trademark Law, as  explained by the Supreme Court in Qualitex v. Jacobson Products:

“In principle, trademark law, by preventing others from copying a source-identifying mark, “reduce[s] the customer’s costs of shopping and making purchasing decisions,”[McCarthy on Trademarks…] for it quickly and easily assures a potential customer that this item – the item with this mark – is made by the same producer as other similarly marked items that he or she liked (or disliked) in the past. At the same time, the law helps assure a producer that it (and not an imitating competitor) will reap the financial, reputation related rewards associated with a desirable product.”

The case was filed last Wednesday, so we shall have to wait for developments.  The alleged infringement, however, seems clear from the Supreme Court’s perspective.

Case information: Board of Regents the University of Texas System v. Tower Car Wash Inc., 1:11-cv-00125-LY, U.S. District Court, Western District of Texas.