call for submissions: Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, June 3-4, 2024

 Request for Submissions

Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum

June 3-4, 2024, Stanford Law School

Harvard, Stanford, and Yale Law Schools are soliciting submissions for the 2024 Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, to be held at Stanford Law School on June 3-4, 2024. Twelve to twenty junior scholars (with one to seven years in teaching) will be chosen, through a double-blind selection process, to present their work at the Forum. A senior scholar will comment on each paper. The audience will include the participating junior faculty, senior faculty from the host institutions, and invited guests. The goal of the Forum is to promote in-depth discussion on the selected papers and more general reflections on broader methodological issues, as well as to foster a stronger sense of community among American legal scholars, particularly by strengthening ties between new and veteran professors.

 

TOPICS: Each year the Forum invites submissions on selected topics in public and private law, legal theory, and law and humanities topics, alternating loosely between public law and humanities subjects in one year, and private law and dispute resolution in the next. For the upcoming 2024 meeting, the topics will cover the following areas of the law:

– Antitrust

– Bankruptcy

– Civil Litigation and Dispute Resolution

– Contracts and Commercial Law

– Corporate and Securities Law

– Intellectual Property

– International Business Law

– Private Law Theory and Comparative Private Law

– Property, Estates, and Unjust Enrichment

– Taxation

– Torts

A jury of accomplished scholars will choose the papers to be presented. There is no publication commitment. Stanford Law School will pay presenters’ travel expenses, though international flights may be only partially reimbursed.QUALIFICATIONS: Authors who teach law in the U.S. in a tenured or tenure-track position and have not been teaching at either of those ranks for a total of more than seven years are eligible to submit their work. American citizens or permanent residents teaching abroad are also eligible provided that they have held a faculty position or the equivalent, including positions comparable to junior faculty positions in research institutions, for less than seven years and that they earned their last degree after 2014. We accept jointly authored submissions, but each of the coauthors must be individually eligible to participate in the Forum. Papers that will be published prior to the Forum are not eligible. There is no limit on the number of submissions by any individual author. Faculty from Harvard, Stanford, and Yale Law Schools are not eligible.

PAPER SUBMISSION PROCEDURE: Electronic submissions should be sent to Corissa Paris cparis@law.stanford with the subject line “Junior Faculty Forum.” The deadline for submissions is February 23, 2024Remove all references to the author(s) in the paper. Please include in the text of the email and also as a separate attachment a cover letter listing your name, the title of your paper, your contact email and address through June 2024, and the topic under which your paper falls. Each paper may only be considered under one topic. Any questions about the submission procedure should be directed to Prof. Norman W. Spaulding, nspaulding@law.stanford.edu.FURTHER INFORMATION: General iquiries concerning the Forum should be sent to Norman Spaulding (nspaulding@stanford.law.edu) at Stanford Law School, Christine Jolls, (christine.jolls@yale.edu) or Yair Listokin (yair.listokin@yale.edu) at Yale Law School, Matthew Stephenson (mstephen@law.harvard.edu) or Rebecca Tushnet (rtushnet@law.harvard.edu) at Harvard Law School.

Christine Jolls

Yair Listokin

Matthew Stephenson

Rebecca Tushnet

Norman Spaulding

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/call-for-submissions.html

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over dissent, 6th Circuit holds that large player in fragmented market could show proximate cause under Lexmark

Campfield v. Safelite Gp., Inc., — F.4th —-, 2024 WL
164976, Nos. 22-3204/3225 (6th Cir. Jan. 16, 2024)

Over a dissent in relevant part, the court revived plaintiff
Ultra Bond’s Lanham Act claim relating to vehicle glass repair and replacement
(VGRR). Safelite provides windshield repair and replacement services, while
Ultra Bond supplies proprietary bonding resin to repair windshield cracks.
Ultra Bond alleged that Safelite violated the Lanham Act by falsely advertising
that windshield cracks longer than six inches could not be safely repaired and
instead required replacement of the entire windshield. Safelite counterclaimed
that Ultra Bond stole trade secrets. The district court granted summary
judgment against all claims, finding no valid causes of action. I won’t discuss
the trade secret issues, though the court of appeals revived some as not
time-barred.

Safelite is the VGRR market leader: in 2016, it had 35.4% of
the market; its closest competitor had just 3%. Safelite won’t repair
windshield cracks that are longer than six inches (“long cracks”). “Windshield
replacement is where Safelite makes its money, while its repair business
operates at break-even or at a loss. Ultra Bond makes patented products for
vehicle glass repairs, specifically for long cracks, and performs those repairs;
it accounts for over 50% of national long-crack repair product sales.

Safelite promoted its policy of repairing only cracks six
inches or shorter under a marketing campaign of “the dollar-bill rule”—if the
crack is shorter than the length of a dollar bill (approximately six inches),
Safelite can repair it. In 2007, the American National Standards Institute (ANSI),
in a process that included both Safelite and Ultra Bond, conducted a safety
study and concluded that cracks up to fourteen inches could be safely repaired
without requiring windshield replacement. It set that as the best practice nationally,
and Safelite voted to support that standard, but continued to market the
“dollar-bill rule” as the safety standard for windshield repairs and continued
to tell consumers that cracks longer than six inches require windshield
replacement.

The vast majority of Safelite’s sales come from insurance
reimbursement. “And while insurance companies ultimately set the standards for
what kinds of damage it will cover, Safelite knows that its dominant market
position meant that it can set the standard for insurance companies.” It told
its insurance company clients that crack repair could not be safely performed
on cracks longer than six inches. “And although it told insurance companies
otherwise, Safelite never conducted its own technical study on the safety of
long crack repairs to support its assertions.” (Monopoly power has many defects;
here the anti-innovation face of monopoly also appears as misleading
advertising.) “Safelite made these statements to insurance companies knowing
that its insurance clients’ policyholders would choose long crack repair if it
were covered,” and it admitted that “its insistence on setting as strict a
crack repair standard as possible was tied to protecting its higher-margin
windshield replacement business.”

The district court found that Safelite’s statements to
insurers and directly to customers counted as commercial advertising or
promotion, but that statements made by Safelite through ghostwritten insurance
brochures and to customers purely in its capacity as a third-party
administrator for insurers did not. It found that there was no genuine issue of
material fact on whether the false advertising harmed Ultra Bond, and that
laches partly barred the claims because Ultra Bond delayed nearly two decades
before suing.

Faced with this story, the court of appeals found that Ultra
Bond’s Lanham Act claim should have survived Safelite’s motion for summary
judgment. Laches “bars only recovery of pre-filing damages; it does not prevent
Ultra Bond from obtaining injunctive relief or post-filing damages.”

Commercial advertising or promotion: The court of appeals
upheld the ruling that Safelite’s statements in ghostwritten brochures and
statements in its capacity as a third-party administrator for insurance
companies weren’t commercial advertising or promotion. They didn’t have any
indication that they were made with “the purpose of influencing customers to
buy the defendant’s goods and services.” Instead, it was the statements to insurance
companies and agents that led insurance companies to set their standards, which
were then set forth in the brochures and statements made by third-party administrators.
“Thus, Safelite, when functioning as a [third-party administrator] or providing
ghostwritten informational brochures to insurance companies, was simply acting
on the success of its allegedly misleading or false earlier statements.”

Causation: Under Lexmark, proximate cause can be
alleged by “a supplier of a company’s direct competitor where the decreased
demand caused by false advertising directly harms the supplier.” Proximate
cause doesn’t require any one specific fact pattern or theory. “In this case,
the structure of the market suggests that there is unlikely to be a more
directly injured commercial victim than Ultra Bond. (Safelite’s direct
competitors are VGRR businesses, often small shops, that provide both crack
repair and windshield replacement, so false statements that favor one service
over the other would not necessarily harm them.)”

Consumer affidavits and expert evidence also supported the causal
relationship between Safelite’s statements and decreased demand for Ultra Bond
products:

First, nine commercial customers
stated that they have experience with customers hearing from Safelite that long
crack repair is not safe, educating those individuals that such repair is safe,
and having those individuals choose long crack repair, which these customers
perform using Ultra Bond products. Second, when misleading ads regarding crack
repair were ordered to be removed from the marketplace in New Zealand, Ultra
Bond’s direct sales and distribution sales to the country doubled. Third, Ultra
Bond’s second expert … conducted a consumer survey and estimated that 24.5% to
30.6% of respondents who replaced windshields would have had them repaired
but-for Safelite’s allegedly false statements.

Safelite argued that the declarations from commercial
customers were conclusory and repeated claims about demand for Ultra Bond with
only slight variations across the declarations: “[I]f customer demand for long
crack repair were to increase as a result of customers being informed that long
crack repairs can be safely done … up to 14 inches, I would most certainly
have to compete for this increased customer demand by buying more … Ultra
Bond, Inc. products[.]” But this statement wasn’t presented alone: the VGRR
shop owners “explain how they have consistently met customers who learned from
Safelite that their long cracks could not be repaired. Some shop owners have
successfully reeducated customers and completed a long-crack repair using Ultra
Bond products, but others have detailed how they have lost customers who called
their insurance, were directed to Safelite as the TPA, and were told that long
crack repair is unsafe or that the windshield must be replaced.”

This created a genuine issue of material fact on injury
causation. “While Lexmark itself involved an alleged 1:1 ratio between
sales gained by the defendant and sales lost by the plaintiff, it does not hold
that § 1125(a) requires such a ratio in order to establish causation.” Plus,
the New Zealand evidence was “additional evidence” that would allow a jury to
find causation. Because reasonable minds may differ “as to the foreseeability
of a particular risk or the character of an intervening cause, the question is
one for submission to the jury under proper instructions as to proximate
cause.”

The court also upheld the dismissal of Safelite’s unfair competition
claim based on statements that, e.g., insurance companies “dupe[ ]” customers
“into paying $350 for a $20 windshield,” and that Safelite’s repair tool was
intentionally imperfect “as there is no way they could not know when it appears
to not work on two out of three repairs.” But Safelite didn’t show falsity, or sales
diversion.

Judge Bush dissented only on Lanham Act causation and would
have found no proximate cause. The dissent said that proximate cause usually
only allows the most direct victim to sue, and that Lexmark created a “narrow”
exception where there was a one-to-one decrease in sales for every increase for
the false advertiser. (Lexmark reasoned that the victims of false
advertising are always harmed by third parties withholding their
business because of the false advertising, and thus proximate cause encompasses
their injuries—which seems exactly the scenario here.)

Judge Bush wasn’t willing to attribute customer beliefs
about the safety of long crack repair to Safelite’s advertising, making the
declarations speculative. It’s always possible to linguistically extend a causal
chain, and Judge Bush did:

One must assume first that there
are customers with long cracks in their windshields who would seek to get them
repaired rather than replaced but decided not to because of Safelite’s
statements; second, that those customers would choose one of Ultra Bond’s
commercial customers for repair services; and third, that this untapped
customer base is so substantial that commercial customers, who ostensibly use
Ultra Bond for repairs under six inches, would have to buy additional product
from Ultra Bond. And, for the injury caused by Safelite’s statements to
insurers, Ultra Bond’s theory additionally requires one to accept without proof
that, absent Safelite’s statements, the insurers would opt to change their
policies to cover repair for cracks longer than six inches for their customers.
This extended inferential chain is a far cry from the “automatic” injury at
issue in Lexmark.

Also, most of the declarants state that long crack repair is
only a small part of their business, so the causal chain also requires that
Ultra Bond’s direct customers could and would have absorbed their customers’
added demand for long crack repairs.

Ultra Bond’s own expert explained that the crack repair
industry is “highly fragmented,” which “makes assessing the particular impact
of Safelite’s actions to Ultra Bond difficult,” especially since Ultra Bond’s
products can be used to repair both long cracks and cracks under six inches. The
New Zealand evidence was only “a bare assertion from Ultra Bond’s owner to [an]
expert and, more importantly, does not translate into a triable issue that
Safelite’s advertisements in the United States ‘more or less automatically’
cause an injury to Ultra Bond as in Lexmark.” (Seems to me that the
empirical evidence takes the place of logic in showing injury, and that logic
is not the only or indeed, given judicial fallibility, the best way of
showing injury.) Thus, Ultra Bond wasn’t a “direct victim.”

The real weakness of the dissent, it seems to me, is the “if
not them, then who?” question. Maybe insurance companies, but given standard
principal/agent problems, they don’t necessarily have the right incentives
either. Ultra Bond seems like a good candidate!

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/over-dissent-6th-circuit-holds-that.html

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after experts excluded, slack fill class action fails

Krause-Pettai v. Unilever United States, Inc., — F.Supp.3d
—-, 2023 WL 6429805, No. 20-cv-1672-AGS-BLM (S.D. Cal. Sept. 30, 2023)

This case is about “nonfunctional slack fill,” or useless
empty space, inside underarm-deodorant sticks. The court rejected the claim on
summary judgment despite not finding it completely preempted.

Both the FDCA and California’s Sherman Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Law set the same baseline requirements for drugs and cosmetics: an
item is “misbranded” if “its labeling is false or misleading in any particular”
or if its “container” is “filled as to be misleading.” Because the Sherman
Law’s standard “is identical to” the FDCA’s, it is not preempted. But the
California Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (CFPLA) is explicitly preempted
because it states that any opaque container is “misleading” if “it contains nonfunctional
slack fill,” with some exceptions. Such a per se rule was not identical to the
FDCA. That is, a state legislature can’t determine that something within the
FDCA’s scope is misleading as a matter of law.

But the preemption wasn’t complete. The FDA’s failure “to
issue specific regulations” about nonfunctional slack fill does not mean
manufacturers may make cosmetics with “any” amount of it, even
refrigerator-sized deodorant sticks that are 99% empty. “[M]ere deliberate
agency inaction—an agency decision not to regulate an issue—will not alone
preempt state law.”

On to the merits. The court excluded plaintiffs’ experts.
The expert on product packaging didn’t adequately explain his testing
methodology or resolve apparent contradictions in his reports about how many
different products he tested; he didn’t have written records of what he did.

As for the consumer perception expert, plaintiffs offered
his opinions that: (1) consumers “spend limited time examining package labeling
information” and generally “assume that larger packages contain a larger
quantity of a product”; (2) “[n]et weight labeling information on product
packages is rarely examined (or understood) by consumers”; and (3) due to these
consumer tendencies and “general unfamiliarity with the concept of slack fill,
the relevant Unilever product package features suggest” that Unilever consumers
got “less product than they might have anticipated.” But he didn’t seem
familiar with the facts; plaintiffs’ central allegation was that Unilever’s
sticks were in larger packaging than competitors’ with the same net weight, but
he claimed that Unilever’s products “are roughly the same size (or larger) than
those used by its competitors,” but “contain less actual product.” He also
apparently never examined the deodorant and antiperspirant market, focusing his
research mainly on food and beverages; his two studies of grocery-shopping
habits that looked slightly beyond that didn’t provide much help, because one
of them lumped everything together, while, in the other, the two non-food
items—shampoo and toothpaste—had the longest average selection times, with
shoppers spending twice as long choosing shampoo as bananas. “If anything,
these results suggest that food-buying habits don’t apply equally to other
commodities.” Thus, the adequacy of his data was concerning, and plaintiffs
didn’t explain why his results could be generalized to deodorant buyers.

With the experts gone, plaintiffs’ deposition testimony that
they were deceived was insufficient to show that reasonable consumers were
likely to be deceived, because they were “unaccompanied by other pertinent
evidence of deception. By contrast, the testimony of even a single individual
may suffice if paired with patently false marketing or relevant extrinsic
evidence.” Here, each product was labeled with its actual net weight, which
could be used for value comparisons, and there were no relevant surveys.

“With so little positive proof, plaintiffs cannot make their
case. And that’s before taking stock of the countervailing evidence that
undercuts their theory of deception.” First, there was no comparative evidence
to corroborate plaintiffs’ claims that Unilever is an outlier and that its
competitors suffer lost sales due to their more aboveboard packaging. Unilever
“introduced compelling comparative evidence” that its “Dove and Degree sticks
are generally in line with competing products.” Second, Unilever’s evidence
that “from 2016 to 2022, there were zero complaints from California consumers
concerning the empty space in the products at issue” was “highly relevant,” and
it wasn’t hard to discover given that all four plaintiffs became suspicious
because Unilever’s sticks seemed top-heavy. Third, Unilever’s expert testified
that any slack fill in the sticks at issue was functional.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/after-experts-excluded-slack-fill-class.html

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new article w/Mark Lemley: First Amendment Neglect in SCOTUS IP Cases

First
Amendment Neglect in Supreme Court Intellectual Property Cases

Mark A. Lemley & Rebecca Tushnet (forthcoming, Supreme
Court Review)

Abstract

The Supreme Court decided two cases of central importance to free speech during the 2022 term – in both cases without
addressing the First Amendment implications. In Andy Warhol Foundation
v. Goldsmith, the Court upheld a ruling that Andy Warhol’s
reworkings of Lynn Goldsmith’s photograph of the artist Prince into highly
stylized silkscreens and drawings were not transformative, and thus
were unfair, at least when images of the artworks were licensed
to illustrate articles about Prince. In Jack Daniel’s v. VIP
Products, the court found that a parody dog toy in the general shape
of a Jack Daniel’s bottle, with the label “Bad Spaniels,” deserved no
special protection for its parody against Jack Daniel’s trademark
claim. The Court reached these results using ideas about the lesser
status of profitable speech that it flatly rejected in other cases the
same term, and with rationales that seem directly at odds with
its First Amendment jurisprudence.

 In this article, we show that the Court’s decisions cannot be reconciled with its approach to any other area of speech,
and that they are already having pernicious effects in the lower
courts. We consider some possible explanations for the inconsistency:
the possibility that the Court just doesn’t see First Amendment
issues in IP cases; the possibility that a political realignment has
left conservative justices less enchanted with speech in the
marketplace; and the possibility that this is part of a broader trend
away from holding courts to the same constitutional standard as the
other branches of government, combined with statutes that leave
room for substantial judicial discretion in individual cases.
Whatever the explanation or explanations, the decisions in Warhol and
Jack Daniel’s to cut back dramatically on judicially-created
speech-protective rules may have the ironic effect of forcing the Court to confront
directly the constitutional fragility of much modern IP law.

 

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/new-article-wmark-lemley-first.html

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Tea Rose flour ads

 Thanks, Library of Congress! My search for depictions of the dueling Tea Rose flours in Hanover Star Milling Co. v. Metcalf, 240 U.S. 403 (1916), had previously been futile, but not any more.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/tea-rose-flour-ads.html

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“carbon neutral” plausibly misleading because consumers don’t understand it

Dorris v. Danone Waters, 2024 WL 112843, No. 22 Civ. 8717
(NSR) (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 10, 2024)

Plaintiffs alleged that advertising Evian as “carbon neutral”
violated the consumer protection statutes of New York, Massachusetts, and
California, and constituted breach of express and implied warranties, unjust
enrichment, and fraud. Most of the claims survived, though the NY and breach of
implied warranty claims failed.

Carbon Trust “Carbon neutral” logo

 

back of bottle with logo highlighted

multipack packaging with logo highlighted

Plaintiffs alleged that consumers are willing to pay more
for environmentally sustainable products. Carbon neutral” is technically
defined as “having or resulting in no net addition of carbon dioxide to the
atmosphere.” Plaintiffs alleged that manufacturing the products still causes CO2
release, and even if “carbon neutral” referred to offsetting emissions and
complying with the Carbon Trust standard, Danone fails to disclose “how it
calculates its carbon neutrality, the meaning of the Carbon Trust standard and
how Defendant complies to that standard, and whether the standards themselves
are ‘carbon neutral’ in that any pollution output is truly offset by other
projects.”

NY: None of the plaintiffs alleged that they were deceived
in New York, as required by the law.

Danone argued that (1) no reasonable consumer would
understand carbon neutral to mean the Product emits no carbon dioxide; (2)
Defendant accurately represented that Carbon Trust certified the Product
“carbon neutral”; and (3) Plaintiffs cannot challenge the Carbon Trust certification
as false or misleading. The court could not resolve these issues on a motion to
dismiss.

First, Danone argued, no reasonable consumer could
reasonably believe that Evian is transported from their factories in the French
Alps to California and Massachusetts without emitting any carbon at all. Indeed,
it continued, “(1) no carbon zero products exit, (2) the dictionary definition
of ‘carbon neutral’ describes the use of offsets to balance emissions, and (3)
the Product’s website explains evian® water’s approach to reducing and
offsetting carbon emissions.”

The court began with Merriam-Webster’s definitions, “both of
which lack specificity and may be difficult to comprehend”: carbon neutral
means (1) “having or resulting in no net addition of carbon dioxide to the
atmosphere” or (2) “counterbalancing the emission of carbon dioxide with carbon
offsets.” The term “carbon neutral” is

more technical and scientific,
unfamiliar to and easily misunderstood by the reasonable consumer. Consumers
thus may reasonably become confused with the term “carbon neutral” if it has
not previously been explicitly defined for them—as in, before seeing it on the
Product’s label. It is plausible then that the ambiguous term “carbon neutral,”
a technical word not within an average consumer’s common parlance and carrying
multiple meanings, could mislead a reasonable consumer.

While “carbon neutral” “may be understood by manufacturers,
distributors, and other entities within the industry, the common consumer may
attach a layperson’s understanding to the term.” What reasonable consumers
would think was for a factfinder.  

The FTC’s Green Guides supported this conclusion. Massachusetts Chapter
93A incorporates FTC regulations, and the Green Guides warn:

Unqualified general environmental
benefit claims are difficult to interpret and likely convey a wide range of
meanings. In many cases, such claims likely convey that the product, package,
or service has specific and far-reaching environmental benefits and may convey
that the item or service has no negative environmental impact. Because it is
highly unlikely that marketers can substantiate all reasonable interpretations
of these claims, marketers should not make unqualified general environmental
benefit claims.

The complaint plausibly alleged that the average American
consumer does not know the term’s technical definition, as “nearly sixty
percent … do not understand what the term ‘carbon neutral’ means” and that “reasonable
consumers often mistake ‘carbon neutral’ for ‘carbon zero or carbon free,’ ”
even if “carbon zero” products do not currently exist. As for the explanations
on Danone’s website, which links to the Carbon Trust website, “[r]easonable
consumers are not expected to look beyond misleading representations on the
front of the container” or “to do research.” The requisite research was not “minimal,”
either—“reasonable consumers should not be expected to visit two separate
websites and read several pages to fully understand the meaning of ‘carbon
neutral’ and ‘certified by Carbon Trust.’”

Danone argued that, if consumers don’t understand “carbon
neutral,” they couldn’t be misled; the survey cited by plaintiffs showed that
lots of people didn’t know exactly what it meant. “[A]lthough respondents may
not understand the precise definition of the term, they could still be
persuaded by the environmentally friendly sounding representation.” Indeed,
such consumers “are exactly the type of consumers who would be reasonably
swayed by misleading marketing practices.”

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/carbon-neutral-plausibly-misleading.html

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always-available, effortless discount plausibly makes higher “regular” price misleading

Vizcarra v. Michaels Stores, Inc., — F.Supp.3d —-, 2024
WL 64747, No. 23-cv-00468-PCP (N.D. Cal. Jan. 5, 2024)

Vizcarra alleged that Michaels deceptively advertises its
products as discounted when in fact they are always available for at least 20%
less than the purported “regular” price. The court dismissed her unjust enrichment
claim but otherwise allowed her consumer protection claims to proceed.

Allegations: On Michaels.com, Michaels’ entire inventory is
always available at a discount of at least 20% off of the “regular” listed
prices, and these discounts are prominent in stores and on its webpages. E.g.,
in January 2023, in search and product pages, the text “Save 20% with code
22MADEBYYOU” appeared in red text immediately below list prices. At least one
sitewide discount code offering at least 20% off of all merchandise is always
offered (screenshots covered Jan. 2021-Feb. 2023). Similar discounts are
offered in stores via coupons that are available both online and in stores. Thus,
Michaels’ products are always available—in store and online—for at least 20%
off the prices Michaels characterizes as “regular.” For Vizcarra’s in-store
purchase, her receipt indicated she saved $11.65.

California’s FAL specifies: “No price shall be advertised as
a former price of any advertised thing, unless the alleged former price was the
prevailing market price as above defined within three months next immediately
preceding the publication of the advertisement or unless the date when the
alleged former price did prevail is clearly, exactly and conspicuously stated
in the advertisement.”

Michaels argued that it “advertises current—not
former—prices,” so it wasn’t covered by the former price rule. But current prices
can be former prices—or, more to the point, consumers can receive the message
that they are former prices, and that the product was previously available only
at the non-discounted price. (And, since reference prices matter a lot to consumers,
there’s an obvious incentive to advertise prices no consumer ever actually had
to pay, which is where the restrictions on discount advertising have their genesis.)
The question wasn’t whether all discount codes or coupons were covered “former
price” advertising, but whether it’s possible to offer such a scheme in a way that
presents the higher current price as a former price, and whether Michaels did
so. By contrast, club memberships or “[c]oupons offered in exchange for
receiving something from a consumer, like sharing personal information or
repeat purchases, are clearly distinguishable.” The law covered situations
where “former” was implicitly conveyed to a reasonable consumer, rather than only
explicitly. As another court wrote, “the requirement that a consumer enter a
coupon code to obtain the advertised discount is merely a routine, procedural
step in the purchase transaction and is not material.”

Drawing all inferences in Vizcarra’s favor, the court found
it plausible that “most consumers, when confronted with two prices including a
lower price that can be obtained with negligible additional effort, will opt
for the lower price.” That would mean that the prevailing market price was the
lower, discounted price, whether the products were exclusive to Michaels or
otherwise.   

The other consumer protection claims also survived because this
conduct was plausibly misleading to consumers, as did claims for intentional
misrepresentation and breach of warranty.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/always-available-effortless-discount.html

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where cross-examination exposes lack of TM confusion, out-of-court confusion “evidence” becomes less credible

Florida Virtual School v. K12, Inc., 2024 WL 22039, No: 6:20-cv-2354-GAP-EJK
(M.D. Fla. Jan. 2, 2024)

Some interesting comments on when individual instances of “confusion”
don’t count, as well as their relevance to evaluating out-of-court social media
etc. statements as evidence of confusion.

In 2011, Plaintiff sued defendants for using the marks “Florida
Virtual Academy/Program” and the associated acronyms, “FLVA/P.” The parties
settled in 2015; defendants agreed to cease their use of those marks and to
avoid the words “Florida” and “Virtual” together in a mark. The agreement
listed four examples of prohibited marks as well as acceptable marks, but did
not require defendants to use the acceptable examples. In 2019, defendants launched
the “Florida Online School,” abbreviated “FLOS.” About a year later, plaintiff
demanded that defendants stop using that too, which they did, but plaintiff
sued anyway, seeking (by the time of trial) an injunction and disgorgement.

Plaintiff has seven registered trademarks involving Florida
Virtual School or FLVS; two of the registrations are incontestable.

registrations with graphical elements

The “Florida Online School” mark included an image of a
Florida panther.

blurry panther mark

Strength: Plaintiff’s marks at issue were all highly descriptive. Acknowledging
that the Eleventh Circuit has said that circuit precedent is probably wrong
about this, the court accorded artificial strength to the incontestable ones,
in the form of secondary meaning, but then—also following circuit precedent—suggested
that this presumption of strength was easily rebutted with real marketplace
evidence. And defendants did rebut it—all the marks were commercially weak. (Also,
the incontestability was procured under “dubious circumstances”; although
defendants’ cancellation counterclaim was precluded by the prior settlement
agreement, the plaintiff admitted that it made at least one material
misrepresentation to the PTO in its registration application, and there was evidence
of further misrepresentations “in its effort to establish secondary meaning and
overcome the initial rejection of its application for these marks.”)

The evidence of weakness was substantial:

Apart from the geographic,
descriptive nature of its marks, Plaintiff’s own internal materials tend to
illustrate their inherent weaknesses. While multiple witnesses testified as to
Plaintiff’s significant marketing and advertising efforts, that alone is not
indicative of strength. Plaintiff’s Director of Marketing … testified that
changing a logo and using it in different ways “can dilute a brand” in the same
breath as she acknowledged that, in only twenty-five years of existence,
Plaintiff has changed its logo six times. [Another witness] discussed a nearly
$5 million effort to rebrand Plaintiff’s global operations as recently as 2020.

… Plaintiff argues that “Florida
consumers consistently recognize FLVS significantly more than they recognize
K12 and other[s].” However, upon review, the survey Plaintiff cites shows that
its superiority is marginal—often within ten percentage points ….

In a 2018 survey of parents with
school-aged children that Plaintiff commissioned while researching its brand
effectiveness, its mark had only 15% more awareness than Defendants’ mark and,
moreover, only 30% of respondents recognized Plaintiff’s brand, even when
prompted. Similarly, in a 2020 commissioned survey, without prompting, only 1%
of respondents could name Plaintiff as an online education provider. While
Plaintiff’s full-name marks garnered around 36% awareness among prospective
families, the acronym marks had less than 15% awareness among prospective and
current families. Indeed, in an internal marketing presentation from January 4,
2022, Plaintiff itself used words like,
“plain…bored…uninspired…nondescript…[and] sterile” to describe the brand
identity of its acronyms. This is strong evidence of the commercial weakness of
these marks.

Also, Florida county school districts often incorporate the
phrase “VIRTUAL SCHOOL” into the brand for their online educational offerings,
in partnership with both plaintiff and defendant. A plaintiff witness testified
that these school districts are “using their county name[s] to distinguish
[themselves] from us or anyone else,” e.g., the Broward Virtual School, which
weakened the mark. “Though use of a mark by licensees supports its strength,
the use of Plaintiff’s hybrid marks throughout Florida’s 67 counties to cover
services that are actually provided by both Plaintiff and Defendants weakens
Plaintiff’s marks significantly.” The court thought it was ridiculous to argue
that “Virtual” & “School” together were not infringing, while “Florida”
& “School” together were. “Though some of these third-party users operate
as Plaintiff’s franchise partners, the fact that these franchise relationships
also allow Defendants to provide substantial services (e.g. an entire
elementary school program) under the same marks significantly undercuts the
strength of Plaintiff’s marks.”

Plaintiff also failed to provide evidence of actual
confusion. There’s a lot of general confusion about online education, and about
the fact that, in order to provide their services, plaintiffs have to associate
with public school districts, which are overseen by the Florida DOE, of which
defendant is a subagency.

But trademark confusion? No. The only live evidence of
actual confusion was the testimony of two parents who mistakenly enrolled their
children with Defendants’ Florida Online School. But the initial testimony that
the names were confusing “readily disintegrated under live cross examination.”
One witness “testified on multiple occasions that her confusion stemmed from
her misconception that there was only one online education provider available
to her.” And it was plaintiff’s own delay in assigning a teacher that led her
to switch back to a brick and mortar school. The other, who was vision-impaired,
testified that she enrolled one of her sons with defendants’ Florida Online
School, “not realizing the schedule, and then immediately realized that wasn’t
the right thing for us as a family and put him into [Plaintiff’s school].” Her “repetitive
emphasis on her son’s need for a flexible schedule as the reason for
unenrolling him undercut[] the relevance of that guided testimony.”

Given how the supposed evidence of confusion deteriorated
under cross-examination, the court also mostly rejected twenty-one emails from
the parties’ employees, parents, students, and other third parties. (Portions
were likely admissible as party statements.) For purposes of trial, the emails
were not trustworthy evidence of confusion, even as state of mind: “Was the
author really confused? What was the nature of the confusion? Who caused the
confusion? Was Plaintiff harmed by the confusion? The answers to these
questions require cross-examination.” The court pointed to the fact that the
two live witnesses’ emails could support an inference of confusion, but upon
cross-examination, “it became clear that the source of confusion was not
Defendants’ name.” Thus, these out-of-court statements weren’t reliable.  “[I]f anything, they support the fact that
online educational service providers exist in a muddled marketplace replete
with generically and descriptively named participants.”

In this context—seeking millions of dollars of disgorgement—the
absence of confusion evidence, including survey evidence, weighed heavily
against finding likely confusion, especially given that potentially millions of
consumers were exposed to the alleged infringement over two years, which was
plenty of time for any such evidence to emerge.

Intent: The Eleventh Circuit says: “If it can be shown that
a defendant adopted a plaintiff’s mark with the intention of deriving a benefit
from the plaintiff’s business reputation, this fact alone may be enough to
justify the inference that there is confusing similarity.” This requires a
“conscious intent to capitalize on [its] business reputation, w[ere]
intentionally blind, or otherwise manifested improper intent in adopting [the
Florida Online School] name and acronym.”

Plaintiff’s “strongest evidence” of intent was that defendants
continue to use the words, “Florida online school,” on their website — “contending,
incredibly, that any use of those words in any context constitutes trademark
usage. It was not enough that Defendants completely rebranded their entire
online school; Plaintiff now insists that Defendants—who operate an online
school in Florida—must not use those words anywhere on their websites.” No.
Although defendants did change some website language during trial, the court’s
review found that this just reflected “ill- informed, non-attorney employees
scrambling to avoid the swinging arms of a bully rather than any kind of
concerted effort to alter evidence.” Non-trademark usage of the words “Florida
online school” was ultimately irrelevant to the analysis.

“The complete dearth of evidence of any ill intent on behalf
of Defendants is enhanced by their testimony that the Florida Online School
name was never of particular importance …—they simply chose a descriptive name
that was not on the list of marks prohibited by the Settlement Agreement.” And,
when plaintiff complained in August of 2020—one year after the school had begun
operations as Florida Online School—defendants began “instantly” working with its
contracted school district to change the name. “The fact that it took in excess
of one year to accomplish a complete rebranding of a school name, including
updating email addresses and all school literature, is not unreasonable.”

Ultimately, there was no evidence of intent to trade on
plaintiff’s good will, weighing strongly against infringement.

Mark similarity: Textual similarity in a crowded field with
a limited number of descriptive terms wasn’t probative, and the visual elements
were very distinct.

Consumer sophistication: “Though the expense associated with
a college education is largely absent from these providers, the nature and
importance of a parent’s choice of where to educate their child is comparable
to that decision. The fact that Plaintiff presented two individuals who
experienced confusion with this marketplace—one of whom freely admitted that
she undertook no research while the other plainly changed her mind based on
scheduling concerns unrelated to any mark confusion—does not suggest that the
thousands of other customers of these parties are not sophisticated.”

Similarity of services slightly favored plaintiff; the trade
channels were similar, but defendants’ customers weren’t individual parents and
students, but rather a school district. And they targeted school districts in
their marketing. Plaintiff focuses on parents and students. Defendants market
only their K12 brand nationally. “Indeed, any parent who stumbles onto the
Florida Online School website would be unable to enroll and would be directed
to the main K12 website if they were interested in enrollment.”

Balancing: Defendants win.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/where-cross-examination-exposes-lack-of.html

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“2x Omega” that wasn’t 2x the regular product was plausibly misleading

Caldwell v. Nordic Naturals, Inc., 2024 WL 24325, No.
23-cv-02818-EMC (N.D. Cal. Jan. 2, 2024)

Caldwell alleged that the dietary supplement product
“Ultimate® Omega 2X” misled consumers into thinking that there is double the
amount of omega-3  per serving than the
amount of omega in the Nordic Naturals product named “Ultimate® Omega.” The
court kicked out quasi-contract, unjust enrichment, and restitution claims with
leave to amend and claims for injunctive relief without leave to amend, but
otherwise sustained the basic consumer
protection
theory.

Ultimate Omega contains 1280 mg of omega per serving, while
Ultimate Omega 2X contains 2150 mg, not 2560 mg of omega. Nordic argued that
Caldwell’s claims failed because the product label states on the front, in bold
letters, that the contains 2150 mg of omega.

The packages

The court summarized the relevant principles:

Where the label of a product is
ambiguous, meaning a reasonable consumer would realize the label could have
more than one meaning, the court should consider other information available to
the consumer aside from the label to determine if a reasonable consumer would
be misled. To this end, a consumer might be expected to consider information on
the back label of the product; common consumer knowledge and price of the
product is also relevant to the analysis. On the other hand, where the front of
the product creates more than mere ambiguity, but instead misleads a consumer
into thinking one thing (i.e., that the product contained snacks made of fruit
juice) that in fact is not true, the consumer is not required to dig through
the other information (including the back label) to dispel that falsity. Otherwise,
companies would be allowed to mislead a consumer into thinking one thing is
true about the product, while shielding the company from liability through fine
print.

Here, the front label was plausibly misleading, not just ambiguous,
based on the commonly understood meaning of “2X.” The mg disclosure on the
front label didn’t change the issue: Caldwell argued not that she believed the
product contained more than 2150 mg of omega, but that she was under the
impression that the amount of omega in the 2X product equated to two times the
amount included in the original product. The 2150 mg label “does nothing to
clarify whether the product is two times stronger than the original product on
its face. Rather, the truth can only be learned by viewing the 2150 mg amount
in relation to the contents of the original product – an entirely separate
product with its own label.”

The addition of the phrases “Next Generation Fish Oil,” and
“More Powerful. Naturally.” on the front label was “consistent with the
interpretation that the product is two times the potency of the original
product.” Indeed, Nordic didn’t offer its own intention about what 2X was
supposed to mean, if not twice the potency, only suggesting that it could
mean “next generation.” The court found this “hardly convincing” and certainly
not enough to render misleadingness implausible.

“The label at issue does not include the sort of inherent
ambiguity which might put a consumer on notice to investigate the meaning of
the label further.” “2X” “commonly and clearly” denotes “two times.” Moreover,
the additional information that could be investigated (that two times the omega
of the original amounts to 2560 mg and not 2150 mg) “is contradictory to and
not a mere clarification of an ambiguity in the front label.” Nor would reviewing
the back label have helped. A reasonable consumer is not required to
cross-check a different product label “under these circumstances if at all,”
especially when that would require doing math. “Unlike cross-referencing the
back label of a product, it is not clear if another product will be available
for inspection at time of purchase—rendering it less appropriate for a consumer
to be expected to reference that label.”

Finally, the court declined to dismiss a nationwide class at
this stage. Nordic is a corporation with its principal place of business in
California, shifting the burden to it to show, under California’s choice of law
rules, why California law should not apply to her nationwide claims. This it
had not (yet) done.

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/2x-omega-that-wasnt-2x-regular-product.html

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sending emails under former employees’ names may be reverse passing off

LoanDepot.com, LLC v. CrossCountry Mortgage, LLC, 2023 WL
9022893, No. 22-cv-5971 (AS) (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 29, 2023)

loanDepot alleged that CCM, its chief competitor,
“improperly poached” 32 employees, and CCM and various former employees. CCM
counterclaimed for abuse of process and for violations of the Lanham Act and
related state laws; one ex-employee also brought counterclaims against
loanDepot for breach of contract and breach of the implied covenant of good
faith and fair dealing. I’m only going to discuss the false association/false advertising
bits; as to the latter, state law provides more protection than federal because
of the “commercial advertising or promotion” requirement for Lanham Act false
advertising.

Counterclaims for false association and false advertisement
under the Lanham Act, unfair competition under New York common law, and unfair
business practices under the New York Deceptive Practices Act were all based on
allegations that loanDepot sent blast marketing emails advertising loanDepot’s
services from the loanDepot email addresses of former employees after those
employees had begun working for CCM.

The false association/coordinate state law claims survived.
loanDepot allegedly violated the Lanham Act by using “the name and likeness of
CrossCountry employees, including Scott Bonora, Faheem Hossain, and others, in
false advertisements sent to potential customers in May and July 2022,” which
“wrongly passed off the products and services of CrossCountry as products and
services of loanDepot.” There was no requirement that CCM’s name or reputation
be invoked for a false association claim, because the Lanham Act also covers “reverse
passing off,” in which “A promotes B’s products under A’s name.” Thus, it
sufficed to allege that loanDepot “was falsely passing off the services of Mr.
Bonora and Mr. Hossain as the services of loanDepot rather than services of
CrossCountry.” (I’m not sure this works—at least not without secondary meaning
in Bonora and Hossain’s names.)

loanDepot argues that the names weren’t material, but CCM
alleged that “loanDepot knew that the identity of Mr. Bonora’s and Mr.
Hossain’s employer was material to those contacts, as it was important to the
decision by customers to apply for a loan or by referral sources to refer a
borrower” and that loanDepot was attempting to “influence a consumer to apply
for a loan at loanDepot, or for a referral source to refer a borrower to apply
for a loan at loanDepot.” Claims brought by former employees themselves (citing
Rubris, Inc. v. Ankura Consulting Grp., LLC, 2021 WL 7210782 (D.D.C. Mar. 26,
2021)) were distinguishable because the employee would have to allege “a
commercial interest in his name that could be damaged” and because “nothing
about the advertisement itself gives rise to a plausible inference that [the
employee’s] name holds commercial value.” And CCM pled that it lost customers
based on the use of its employees’ identities in these emails. But the court
noted that loanDepot could reprise its arguments at summary judgment (citing Reed
Const. Data Inc. v. McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 638 F. App’x 43, 45–46 (2d
Cir. 2016) (affirming summary judgment on Lanham Act claim when “[d]iscovery
revealed only one customer who arguably relied upon [defendant’s] advertising
in deciding between” the defendant and plaintiff)). This also allowed the
state-law unfair competition claim to move forward; the extra requirement of
bad faith was pled by alleging, inter alia, that loanDepot continued to send
the emails months after the loan officers left CCM and after CCM sent
cease-and-desist letters, and that loanDepot sent similar emails from the
accounts of other loanDepot employees who also left to join CCM.

But false advertising failed because “[m]aking allegedly
false statements to a finite number of identifiable individuals does not
constitute ‘advertisement or promotion’ for Lanham Act purposes.” It was
possible that the emails could constitute “an organized campaign to penetrate
the market,” as the Second Circuit requires, allegations that emails were sent
to “all” of a former employee’s contacts were insufficient. “These allegations
provide no information about the size of the market or the number of customers
to receive the allegedly false advertising.” Dismissed without prejudice.

The result under NY GBL §349 differed, because it requires alleging
only that “(1) the defendant’s deceptive acts were directed at consumers, (2)
the acts are misleading in a material way, and (3) the plaintiff has been
injured as a result.”

from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2024/01/sending-emails-under-former-employees.html

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