Contracts can last longer than headaches: 1990 consent decree bars comparisons today

Pfizer Inc. v. McNeil-PPC, Inc., 183 F. Supp. 3d 491
(S.D.N.Y. 2016)
A twenty-six-year-old consent decree resolving false
advertising claims bans certain comparisons between Advil (Pfizer) and Tylenol
(McNeil). Several years after the decree’s entry, Pfizer introduced Advil
products designed for children and infants. The court determined that the
consent decree barred claims comparing the newer Advil products to Tylenol.
The initial lawsuits involved both parties’ comparative
claims about Tylenol and Advil’s side effects and safety, as well as Advil ads
that claimed, “Like Tylenol, Advil doesn’t upset my stomach.” Am. Home Products
Corp. v. Johnson & Johnson, 654 F.Supp. 568 (S.D.N.Y.1987) (Advil I);
McNeilab, Inc. v. Am. Home Products Corp., 675 F.Supp. 819 (S.D.N.Y.1987)
aff’d, 848 F.2d 34 (2d Cir.1988) (Advil II).  The relevant consent judgment enjoined
Pfizer’s predecessor (and Pfizer, as a party in privity) from “stating in words
or substance in any advertisement that ADVIL is ‘like TYLENOL’ in the respect
of adverse effects on the stomach ….”
After signing that order, Pfizer’s predecessor conducted a
study titled the Children’s Analgesic Medicine Project. The CAMP study compared
the safety of Advil’s active ingredient, ibuprofen, and Tylenol’s active
ingredient, acetaminophen, in over 41,000 children suffering from fever and
pain, over 14,000 of whom were infants under the age of two.  The parties now disputed the meaning of the
word “ADVIL” in the order. Pfizer argued that it meant only the 200 milligram
adult Advil tablet on the market at time the order was drafted, allowing Pfizer
to run comparative stomach safety advertisements for pediatric Advil products.
McNeil argued that the order covered all Advil products that contain the drug
ibuprofen, including pediatric Advil.

Consent decrees are contracts, and interpreting them is a matter of ordinary
contract interpretation, which allows consideration of documents expressly
incorporated in the consent judgment, as well as of extrinsic evidence of the
parties’ intent where a term is ambiguous. 
However, “because consent decrees are normally compromises in which the
parties give up something they might have won in litigation and waive their
rights to litigation, it is inappropriate to search for the ‘purpose’ of a
consent decree and construe it on that basis.”
On its face without including incorporated documents, the
order was ambiguous: “ADVIL” could plausibly mean all Advil products, including
later-created ones.  The order contained “no
limitation on the word Advil or reservation of rights in relation to specific
dosages or variations of Advil products.” Still, it was also plausible to read
the order as limited to the “ADVIL” that existed at the time of drafting.  However, the court concluded that the Advil
II order incorporated the opinions from the Advil I and Advil II cases.  Given that incorporation, the order
unambiguously included all Advil products whose active ingredient is
ibuprofen.  The Advil I opinion spent a
lot of time discussing the side effects caused by the products’ active
ingredients, not just the brand name/specific formulation: the Advil I findings
were findings about ibuprofen the drug. 
The Advil II court then equated “ADVIL” with ibuprofen. Because the
Advil II court used “Advil” and “ibuprofen” interchangeably, the court here
found that the term “Advil” “encompasses not just the specific Advil products
contemporaneously on the market, but any Advil product whose active ingredient
is ibuprofen.”
McNeil’s interpretation didn’t expand the plain meaning of
the word Advil to include all Advil products that contain ibuprofen: it was the
plain meaning. Plus, allowing Pfizer to interpret the order to include only 200
milligram adult Advil, which was what was on the market at the time, “would
make it virtually meaningless, because it would allow Pfizer to escape its
application merely by manufacturing and selling slightly modified versions of
the 200 milligram tablet.”

Nor did the language of the consent decree in Advil I change
things: that consent decree included broad language that enjoined Pfizer from
making certain advertising claims related to “Advil, any other ibuprofen
products, or ibuprofen in general.”  But,
even if extrinsic evidence could be considered, that language referred to a
specific claim that “ibuprofen interacts with fewer drugs than acetaminophen or
that ibuprofen is comparable or superior to acetaminophen with respect to
adverse drug-drug interactions.” And the Advil II court later used the terms
Advil and ibuprofen interchangeably with respect to that claim.

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Does this image evoke the Starbucks logo?

Circles and colors and coffee: is that enough for dilution?

 

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Hamilton, the gift that keeps on giving …

Apparently this shirt is available at Ash Lawn, Monroe’s home.  I desperately want one:

Young man I’m from Virginia, so watch your mouth

Too short a phrase for copyright?

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MOB receives early Xmas present: 2d Circuit affirms LV’s loss

Louis Vuitton Malletier S.A. v. My Other Bag, Inc.,
16-241-cv (2d. Cir. Dec. 22, 2016)
Contrary to my expectations for the Second Circuit, this is a quick summary affirmance—testament to Judge Furman’s
careful reasoning below (which one would hope supports MOB’s fee application). Even assuming de novo review of each Polaroid factor, the court of appeals
agreed on infringement. “Specifically, obvious differences in MOB’s mimicking
of LV’s mark, the lack of market proximity between the products at issue, and
minimal, unconvincing evidence of consumer confusion compel a judgment in favor
of MOB on LV’s trademark infringement claim..”
Dilution: MOB’s bags mimic LV’s designs and handbags “as a
drawing on a product that is such a conscious departure from LV’s image of
luxury—in combination with the slogan ‘My other bag’—as to convey that MOB’s
tote bags are not LV handbags.”  Although
“the joke on LV’s luxury image is gentle, and possibly even complimentary to
LV,” it’s still a parody, reminding us we’re free to laugh at the mark’s
meaning.  That’s the “very point of MOB’s
plebian product,” as opposed to using a mark just to promote goods or services,
“which is impermissible.”  [Unfortunately,
citing the Charbucks case despite the fact that Charbucks was ultimately found
non-diluting, as well as Harley Davidson, Inc. v. Grottanelli, 164 F.3d 806,
813 (2d Cir. 1999) (enjoining use of altered version Harley-Davidson logo to
advertise motorcycle repair shop on confusion grounds).]
LV argued that MOB used LV’s marks as a designation of
source, precluding dilution fair use. 
The district court found that this wasn’t so, and the court of appeals
agreed.  “[T]he nature of MOB’s
business—it sells quite ordinary tote bags with drawings of various
luxury-brand handbags, not just LV’s, printed thereon—and the presence of ‘My
other bag,’ an undisputed designation of source, on one side of each bag,
independently support summary judgment for MOB on this designation-of-source
issue.”
State law: though there’s no explicit fair use defense in
state law, “the manifest parodic use here precludes the requisite finding that
the marks are ‘substantially similar.’”  [We all know this makes no sense, right?  How about: at the very minimum, free speech
limits on dilution lead to reading this defense into state law.]

Copyright: MOB’s parodic use of LV’s designs produces a “new
expression [and] message” that constitutes transformative use. The remaining
fair-use factors either weighed in MOB’s favor or were irrelevant.  [Judge Calabresi at oral argument was really
interested in the question of the relevance of “intent” to parody, but that
didn’t translate to any commentary in the opinion.]

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Update on my suit against ICE

Today my lawyer Michael Kirkpatrick had oral argument before Judge Cooper of the DDC.  One of the highlights, for me, was the government’s lawyer’s concession that he couldn’t imagine a situation in which “Yankees Suck” would be counterfeit or infringing.  It’s good to hear the government say as much, given that this whole thing started with an ICE representative saying that mocking a team was counterfeiting; that at least some of the manuals provided by the leagues to enforcers use parodies as examples of infringing material; and that parodies/critical versions that couldn’t possibly cause confusion are, we’ve found, at least occasionally swept up in seizures.  One thing that more information may help us learn is whether these instances of overreaching against non-counterfeits are accidents or whether they reflect a defect in practices or training.

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kefir confusion: court finds definition of little-known product to be up for grabs

Lifeway
Foods, Inc.
v. Millenium Products, Inc., No. CV 16-7099-R, 2016 WL 7336722, — F. Supp. 3d – (C.D. Cal.
Nov. 17, 2016)
Before
the case was dismissed on statute of limitations/laches grounds, the court
denied a preliminary injunction. Lifeway makes kefir products, while defendants
make
a
non-dairy beverage that
they
called kefir made with coconut water.
Typically,
kefir is a dairy-based beverage.
”  Lifeway argued that kefir was,
by definition, dairy-based and thus defendants’ CocoKefir was falsely
advertised.  Lifeway sent the relevant
defendant a C&D in 2010, and again in 2012.
 In 2011, the FDA also sent the defendant a warning letter
stating that it believed the CocoKefir name may mislead customers because it
could imply that the product was a dairy-based beverage.
But, after CocoKefir’s
response, the FDA

in 2013

issued a close out letter stating that CocoKefir had addressed its concerns.
The
court declined to grant a preliminary injunction.  Although Lifeway cited “
a wide range of dictionary
definitions and websites supporting its argumen
t that kefir must contain dairy,”
the court found these sources “minimally convincing,” given that kefir only
recently rose to popularity.
Because
the market for kefir
was
relatively small and not yet fully developed
, “these websites’ and
dictionary’s definitions do not provide a convincing definition of kefir, but
rather, a surface-level understanding of a relatively new product.
No regulatory body, including the FDA, had agreed;
the FDA decided not to take regulatory action. 
Lifeway

argued that kefir has a more
historical and specific definition as a dairy-based drink than
soy milk,” but also argued that it had spent “millions” of
dollars branding its kefir as a dairy-based drink.
If the meaning of kefir was so clear and ‘enshrined,’ it would seem unnecessary
to spend millions of dollars specifically branding kefir as a dairy-based
beverage.
Even if
kefir was by definition dairy-based, making CocoKefir misleading, Lifeway didn’t
show that a substantial number of consumers were likely to be misled.  A survey created by counsel wasn’t
convincing, and neither were social media comments.
Nor
could Lifeway show irreparable harm. 
Lifeway argued that, because the market for kefir was
relatively new and small,
CocoKefir
would
cut into

Lifeway’s
sales. The court was unconvinced: CocoKefir is advertised as
a vegan beverage, while Lifeway Kefir is a dairy product.
This type of speculative
evidence offered by Plaintiff regarding a possible loss of market share is
insufficient to establish irreparable injury under
Herb Reed.

The
balance of equities didn’t favor Lifeways: forcing defendants to pull the
product would be a serious harm, while Lifeway has survived seven years of
competition with CocoKefir.

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Court finds Lanham Act laches on the pleadings given p’s delay

Lifeway
Foods, Inc. v. Millenium Products, Inc., No.
CV 16-7099-R, 2016 WL 7336721, — F.
Supp. 3d – (C.D. Cal. Dec. 14, 2016)
Lifeway
sued defendants under federal and state false advertising law for allegedly
selling a product that didn’t contain the ingredients represented on the label.
The court found that, on the pleadings and the facts subject to judicial notice,
the claims were
time-barred
by the applicable statutes of limitations and the doctrine of laches.
 Here, the key documents of which the court
took judicial notice were a
June 3, 2013 “Close Out Letter” from the FDA to defendant CocoKefir; CocoKefir’s trademark application; a declaration filed
earlier in
the case by Lifeway’s Vice
President of Communications,
stating
that Lifeway was aware of CocoKefir in 2011
; and social media posts by
CocoKefir
,
offered

for the fact that Lifeway could have observed CocoKefir’s public activity from
2011 until
now.
Under
California law, the statute of limitations for claims of false advertising is
three years
, and
for
unfair
competition under § 17200
it’s
four years.
Statutes of limitations
accrue when a plaintiff discovers the wrongful conduct or a reasonable person
in plaintiff’s position would have discovered the wrongdoing.
” 
Lifeway discovered CocoKefir in 2011, at which point the statute of
limitations accrued, meaning that the limitations period expired long before
Lifeway sued.  Lifeway argued that its
delay was justified because
CocoKefir withdrew from the market “not long after
the FDA’s warning letter” in November 2011
, but that allegation was directly contradicted by
evid
ence
subject to judicial notice: the
FDA continued to pursue action against CocoKefir
after its initial warning letter in November 2011
; CocoKefir applied to register a mark in
October 2015; and its
social media pages contained consistent posts promoting
and advertising the company from 2011 until present day
…. This Court makes no
determination as to the substance of these posts, but their mere existence
renders the allegation that CocoKefir withdrew from the market implausible.
 A reasonable
company concerned with a competitor’s erosion of its market share
would have discovered CocoKefir’s continued marketing.
That
took care of the state law claims.  What
about laches under the Lanham Act?
 Without another explanation to
justify Lifeway’s delay, the court found the delay unreasonable.  Lifeway’s only response to defendants’
argument that they were prejudiced by the delay was that they hadn’t been
active in the market since 2011, but that was contradicted by the judicially
noticed evidence.
 Defendants
have relied on the FDA’s Close Out Letter approving of their labels and
proceeded to develop their business accordingly. They would not have continued
to invest in their brand had they known that Plaintiff would bring suit five
years after discovery of their brand.
”  Thus, laches barred the claim.  [I appreciate the reasoning here but I’m not
entirely sure about the finding of prejudice based on the pleadings.  Were defendants prejudiced as a matter of
law? The court’s statements about investment in the brand sure sound like
factual findings, but maybe they are really policy statements.  Or maybe this is what plausibility means post-Twiqbal–even though I’m not sure anything about prejudice was alleged in the pleadings either way.]

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The NYT on Frederik Colting’s latest endeavor

I’m quoted in the story, though not in full–I think this is a very hard case that could go either way.  One real issue is whether the kiddie versions take any more of the expression of the works than a standard, reasonably detailed review–they recount the key elements of the plot, that’s for sure, but I’m not sure that suffices for substantial similarity in expression.  I think we should not too easily move to using fair use to defend reviews and summaries; though fair use is capacious, substantial similarity should have its own role to play.  And then, for fair use, I think the transformativeness inquiry could be quite interesting–does sanitizing On the Road for children inherently comment on it?  Does the fact that 2001: A Space Odyssey makes no sense in summary work as comment on it?

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SCOTUSblog symposium on Tam

My contribution is here.

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Facebook, Twitter fans could substitute for sales to show secondary meaning, 6th Cir. rules

Kibler v. Hall, No. 15-2516 (6th Cir. Dec. 13, 2016)
Lee Jason Kibler, a disc jockey, sued Robert Bryson Hall,
II, a rapper, and professional entities supporting Hall’s work for trademark
infringement and dilution.  Kibler has performed
and released several albums under the name “DJ LOGIC” since 1999 though he
currently has no record deal. Kibler registered “DJ LOGIC” as a trademark in
2000, allowed the registration to lapse in 2003, and re-registered the name in
2013. He’s also been known as just “LOGIC.”
Hall has performed under the name “LOGIC” since 2009. His
2014 album sold over 170,000 copies.
The court found that the strength of the mark favored
defendants.  DJ LOGIC was moderately
strong conceptually, but lacked commercial strength.  “A mark cannot be strong unless it is both
conceptually and commercially strong.” 
(American Airlines?  Disney?  OK, 6th Circuit, whatever.)  Conceptual strength requires inherent
distinctiveness, and courts presume that incontestable marks are conceptually
strong.  [This is one of the worst games
of telephone played in the courts in the trademark area.  (1) Incontestability goes to precluding
arguments based on mere descriptiveness, and descriptiveness (even with
secondary meaning) is conceptual weakness,
(2) no, most circuits don’t presume strength of any kind from incontestability, and the key one that did
recently expressed discomfort with doing so. 
Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John v. Florida Priory of
the Knights Hospitallers of the Sovereign Order of Saint John, 809 F.3d 1171,
1183 (11th Cir. 2015) (“The law in this Circuit is almost certainly
incorrect. The incontestability of a mark, by itself, says nothing about its
strength.”).]
The district court found that “DJ LOGIC” is moderately
strong conceptually because “DJ” is descriptive but “LOGIC” is arbitrary.
Kibler argued that the court erred in not considering the mark’s
incontestability—wait, what?  The expired
registration lost its incontestability and the new registration is at most
three years old. The court of appeals didn’t address this argument because the
district court’s finding “renders ‘DJ LOGIC’ at least as conceptually strong as
a finding of incontestability would.”  [I
feel a little sick to my stomach.]
Anyway, “a mark can be conceptually strong without being commercially
strong, and thus weak” for the purposes of likely confusion.  Plaintiffs without survey evidence need other
evidence of “broad public recognition” to show strength, and Kibler didn’t have
it.  Kibler sold fewer than 300 albums in
the past three years and fewer than 60,000 albums in the past sixteen years; he
currently lacked a recording contract; and he’d never had a recording contract
with a major label. Third parties weakened the mark even further by marketing
music under nearly ninety variations of “logic.”
Not sufficient evidence of strength: a sworn declaration
that Kibler advertised in print and online, including on MySpace (!), Twitter,
and Facebook; a 2006 Downbeat article featuring him, a 2001 New York Times
review mentioning him, and a 1999 Gig article featuring him; and appearances on
television shows such as The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, The Today
Show, and Good Morning America.  Kibler
failed to provide the number of his Facebook “likes” or Twitter followers, and
he testified that appeared on the television shows to support other, headlining
artists.  Kibler’s evidence of
Twitter/Facebook promotion was marketing, and magazine and TV appearances were
evidence of commercial strength, but “some proof is not enough.” Kibler didn’t
offer evidence that would permit a reasonable jury to determine that “wide
segments” of the public recognize “DJ LOGIC” as a mark. “This means ‘extensive’
marketing and ‘widespread’ publicity around the music and mark.” The number and
kind of Kibler’s Twitter followers could have provided such evidence.  “A large number of followers, or celebrities
likely to re-tweet Kibler’s messages to their large number of followers, for
example, would suggest that many types of people know his work and mark.”  Ditto with Facebook.  [The court of appeals does not say the same
for MySpace.]  Nor did Kibler provide the
circulations or target audiences of Downbeat and Gig, “which appear to be niche
publications,” and he was only a supporting musician mentioned in the NYT
review focusing on two other artists. Plus, these were over fifteen years old,
and continuing awareness is required.
The court of appeals found that it was correct that Kibler
enjoyed limited commercial success, but commented that “[a]lbum sales and even
recording contracts are less critical markers of success than before because of
widespread internet use.”  Thus, “web-based
indicators of popularity, e.g., YouTube views” could also suffice to show
commercial success, but Kibler didn’t.
The court of appeals also found that third parties hadn’t
weakened the mark, because “[d]efendants identify the parties’ marks as
trademarks in their brief, but do not show they are registered.”  [Of course, registration isn’t evidence of
commercial strength, and the PTO applies the opposite—and probably more
appropriate, for a use-based system—rule, which is that what people in the
market are doing is more important for assessing similar uses than the
existence of registrations without evidence about use.]  Anyway, the defendants didn’t show use in the
relevant market.  “Music sold in the US
on Amazon and iTunes” was too broad a market, as was hip-hop: it should have been
“DJ music.”
Product relatedness: “Products belonging to the same industry
are not necessarily related. To be related, they must be marketed and consumed
in ways that lead buyers to believe they come from the same source.”  Here, this factor was neutral because the
products were related but not directly competitive—only Hall used his vocals,
and Hall markets himself as a rapper while Kibler markets himself as a disc
jockey.
Similarity of marks: based on the anti-dissection rule, this
factor favored defendants because “DJ” changed the look and sound of the mark,
as well as its meaning.  Kibler was wrong
to argue that the court should “focus on the dominant features of each mark and
disregard the non-dominant features”; that’s precisely what the anti-dissection
rule forbids. Although Kibler argued that he’d used “LOGIC” alone as a
trademark, he hadn’t registered it (which the court of appeals thought ended
the matter).
Actual confusion: This is the strongest proof of likely
confusion, but its weight depends on the amount and type of confusion, in
context. Persistent mistakes and confusion by actual customers is really
important, but inquiries rather than purchases aren’t.  Kibler’s evidence was of at most ten
instances of actual confusion. These include tweets and webpages advertising a
performance by “DJ Logic,” but meaning Hall; an email offering to book “DJ
Logic,” but meaning Hall; and inquiries about whether Kibler would be
performing somewhere advertising “logic” and referring to Hall. But “[i]f
‘LOGIC’ really threatened to confuse consumers about the distinctions between
Hall and Kibler, one would see much more than ten incidents throughout 170,000
album sales, 1.7 million album downloads, and 58 million YouTube views.”  Plus, none of the incidents were
purchases.  Kibler failed to present the
quantity or type of proof that would tilt the actual confusion factor
substantially in his favor.
Marketing channels: Most entities advertise online today. In
determining whether that matters, the court of appeals asked: “First, do the
parties use the internet as a substantial marketing channel? Second, are the
parties’ marks used with web-based products? Third, do the parties’ marketing
channels overlap in any other way?” The court of appeals found that the
district court was right that this factor was neutral, but underestimated the
impact of the internet.  There’s overlap
in terms of Twitter and Facebook promotion, and Amazon and iTunes sales, but “the
popularity of these channels makes it that much less likely that consumers will
confuse the sources of the parties’ products. There are just too many other
contenders.”  So widespread use decreases
likely confusion—which might actually mean something about the expected
sophistication of internet users, not so much “marketing channels” per se.  Even though they performed at some of the same
venues, so did thousands of artists, making it less likely that any one
attendee encountered them both, let alone confused them.
Likely degree of consumer care: varies greatly among music
consumers; the appropriate pool was not just fans of each artists, but a wide
variety of people.  This factor was
insignificant here.
Intent: the court of appeals followed the common, but
unfortunate, rule that (1) likely confusion can be inferred from intent to
confuse, and (2) (the bad part) evidence that the defendant knew of the
plaintiff’s trademark can be sufficient circumstantial evidence of intent to
confuse.  The court explicitly rejected
defendant’s argument that intent to usurp goodwill is required for bad intent.  Lack of intent is irrelevant.  Kibler argued that a Google or YouTube search
for “logic music” or “logic musician” yielded “DJ LOGIC” and Kibler’s picture
or music before Hall adopted “LOGIC.” Hall testified that he ran Google,
Facebook, and Twitter searches for “any other rappers” using “LOGIC” before
adopting it, “[t]o see if [any rapper] with this name was already at a level
where it wouldn’t make sense for two people to coexist with the same name.”  This factor was neutral.  While evidence that defendants knew of “DJ
LOGIC” while using “LOGIC” would be sufficient circumstantial proof of intent,
there was no proof that Hall searched for “logic music” or “logic musician,” no
reason to believe he had to, and thus no evidence he knew of “DJ LOGIC” before
adopting “LOGIC.”
Likely expansion: the district court properly found this
factor neutral, concluding that it was “unlikely that the parties will expand
their markets to put them in competition.” Kibler offered no proof that the
parties would expand their businesses, which was his burden.
Balancing the factors, confusion was unlikely.  Evidence of actual confusion favored Kibler “only
marginally” and strength of plaintiff’s mark and similarity of the marks favored
defendants; these were the most important factors.

Federal dilution: a famous mark is a “household name.” That
is, “when the general public encounters the mark in almost any context, it
associates the term, at least initially, with the mark’s owner.” “It is
difficult to establish fame under the Act sufficient to show trademark
dilution.” No reasonable jury could find “DJ LOGIC” famous.

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