JUUL Labs, Inc. v. Chou, — F.Supp.3d —-, No. CV 21-3056
DSF (PDx), 2023 WL 3886046 (C.D. Cal. Jun. 8, 2023)
Juul, which makes vaping products including charging
docks/cases and cables for the main devices, sued defendants for trademark
infringement and counterfeiting. After a bench trial, the court found
defendants liable for some counterfeiting/infringement, but also rejected claims to the
extent that they were based on product listings that merely suggested compatibility
with Juul products—a careful result. I’ll skip most of this to focus on the
interesting bit.
At one point, the relevant website listed a “JUUL Portable
Charger,” showing a picture of an OVNS-branded charger.
![]() |
| OVNS branded charger |
It also listed a “Universal Magnetic JUUL Charging Cable” with
no trademark visible on the product in the available picture.
![]() |
| charging cable |
The court found likely confusion with regard to a “JUUL
Mobile Phone Case,” but not as to the magnetic charging cables or portable
chargers. As to the charging cables, “[t]he use of the word universal implies
compatibility with JUUL and not that it is a JUUL product. There is nothing
else in the product description or on the picture of it that indicates it is a
JUUL product.” Similarly, the OVNS branding and the supplementary nature of the
charger meant that the use indicated compatibility, not source. “Here the label
and branding of another logo eliminates any likelihood of confusion.”
However, where there was infringement, it was willful, so
this wasn’t a case of a court bending over backwards to avoid liability, but
rather avoiding precedent that would sweep in legitimate sellers of compatible
goods. The court awarded $2 million in statutory damages.
from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2023/06/even-counterfeiters-can-make.html

