Entries in Trademark Infringement (368)
First U.S. Registrant Offers to Sell MUGGLES Trademark for $1 Million
I came across an interesting piece — the Ventura County Star reported on July 22 that California native Jim Salzer owns the first U.S. trademark registration for MUGGLES, which he had planned to use in connection with a nightclub to be called “Cafe Muggles.” The nightclub never got off the ground, but Mr. Salzer liked the sound of it so he held onto his registration, which he obtained in 1981. The word “muggles,” of course, entered the popular lexicon as a word for for people without magical powers beginning in June 1997 when J.K. Rowling published her first “Harry Potter” book.
Now, Mr. Salzer wants to sell his MUGGLES mark to Warner Bros., which owns the “Harry Potter” movie and merchandising juggernaut. His asking price? $1 million. Warner Bros. has refused to bite and now, the article says, Mr. Salzer is keeping a “watchful eye” on its use of the word.
I don’t know why. The article doesn’t indicate that Mr. Salzer ever put the mark to use, other than as a cat character with that name that he’s used in “advertising and products over the years.” If he hasn’t put the mark to trademark use — that is, to identify the source of goods or services — he doesn’t have any trademark rights to “sell.” However, the Patent and Trademark Office’s database confirms he has made at least some trademark use. It states he first used the mark in commerce in 1979, and that Mr. Salzer filed his ten-year affidavit of continued use in 2001. Yet, even if Mr. Salzer has continuously used MUGGLES as a trademark, his registration is for “retail gift and novelty store services, and restaurant and night club services.” Therefore, unless Warner Bros. opens a gift shop, restaurant, or nightclub under the name “Muggles,” I wouldn’t think that Mr. Salzer would have much of a case.
That’s one bit of trademark law Leo Stoller overlooked when he offered to license GOOGLE to Google and STEALTH to Columbia Pictures when it was marketing its movie, “Stealth.” (Background via the TTABlog here and here.) Indeed, that little flaw in Mr. Stoller’s business model led to his downfall as a trademark wheeler-and-dealer.
Speaking of Mr. Stoller, I can’t resist noting that the bankruptcy court for the Northern District of Illiniois yesterday reportedly auctioned off his trademark portfolio, such as it is. One of the bidders? A company calling itself the “Society for the Prevention of Trademark Abuse LLC.”
I’ve got some ideas, but someone really has to fess up to who’s behind this outfit.

The Stoller bankruptcy auction (and saga) continues. See Lance Johnson’s comment below for details. Lance, thanks much for bringing us up to date!
Microsoft Gets Default Judgment in New Jersey Counterfeiting Case
On July 13, Microsoft Corp. obtained a default judgment and permanent injunction in the District of New Jersey against Julio Gonzales for distributing infringing Microsoft software through his company, JFG TEK Computers.
Microsoft obtained the monetary damages it asked for: $844,742.85 in “statutory” damages, attorney’s fees, and costs, though the order does not say whether the damages stem from violations of the Copyright Act, the Lanham Act, or both. Mr. Gonzales is now permanently enjoined from, among other things, “imitating, copying or making any other infringing use or infringing distribution of software programs, components, end user license agreements, certificates of authenticity, or items protected by Microsoft’s registered trademarks and service mark….”
Microsoft’s complaint reveals its m.o. was the same as in its other default judgment cases (such as those discussed here and here): it suspected that Mr. Gonzales was advertising, marketing, installing, and selling software covered by Microsoft’s registered copyrights and bearing Microsoft’s registered trademarks or imitations thereof; it notified Mr. Gonzales about its belief; Mr. Gonzales disregarded the notice; and Microsoft used an investigator to purchase a computer system that contained infringing WINDOWS XP PRO and OFFICE 2003 PRO software. Having confirmed its suspicions, Microsoft then brought suit, Mr. Gonzales did not respond, so Microsoft moved for and obtained a default judgment. It’s becoming a familiary story.
The case cite is Microsoft Corp. v. Gonzales, 2007 WL 2066363, No. 06-04331 (D. N.J.).




Seattle Columnist Reports on ISSAQUAH COMMUNITY BANK Suit
On July 19, Seattle Post-Intelligencer business columnist Bill Virgin wrote about the Western District lawsuit Cascade Financial brought against Issaquah Community Bank over the defendants’ use of the ISSAQUAH COMMUNITY BANK name and mark. STL discussed the filing here.
He did a nice job framing the dispute: “If you start a bank in Issaquah, can you name it after the town you operate in?
“Issaquah Community Bank, which opened for business this week, thinks it can.
“Cascade Financial Corp., which bought a bank in Issaquah three years ago, says the new bank can’t, because it still holds the name.”
Mr. Virgin quotes Issaquah Community Bank’s president, defendant Robert Ittes, as saying: Cascade’s attempt to hold the name hostage is entirely unwarranted. Whatever rights they may have had were abandoned three years ago. More importantly, our name is a clear and honest reflection of the community we serve. It’s hard to see this as anything other than a frivolous lawsuit designed to suppress local competition.”
He goes on to quote from the complaint Cascade’s countervailing position that while Cascasde “began changing the name on Issaquah Bank’s two branches to Cascade in 2005, it continued to use the Issaquah name ‘in commercial and non-commercial ways, including use of the mark in connection with various financial products and services, and in connection with its sponsorship of community and charitable events.’”
I love it when the mainstream media recognize how interesting trademark disputes can be.




Prof. McCarthy Calls 2nd Circuit's Bukhara Decision an "Embarrassment"
The July issue of InsideCounsel magazine reviews the Second Circuit’s March 28 decision on famous foreign trademarks in ITC Limited vs. Punchgini, Inc., __ F. 3d. __, 2007 WL 914742, No. 05-0933 (2nd Cir.). In that case, New Delhi’s Bukhara Restaurant claimed it should be able to enforce its internationally-famous mark despite its abandonment of the mark here. The defendants were owners of a Manhattan Indian restaurant who called their establishment the “Bukhara Grill” because there was “no restaurant Bukhara in New York, and we just thought we will take the name.” The Bukhara Grill also copied the Bukhara Restaurant’s “logos, decor, staff uniforms, wood-slab menus, and red-checkered customer bibs.” Departing from the Ninth Circuit’s decision validating the famous marks doctrine in Grupo Gigante S.A. de C.V. v. Dallo & Co., 391 F.3d 1088, (9th Cir. 2004), the Second Circuit found that continuing international use of a famous trademark was not sufficient to sustain trademark or trade dress infringement claims under U.S. law. The Second Circuit certified to the New York Court of Appeals the question of whether such a right existed under New York state law.
When InsideCounsel asked Prof. J. Thomas McCarthy about the decision, he did not hold back. “They were wrong,” he said. “There was a way to [implicitly] incorporate the doctrine into the federal trademark statute. But the 2nd Circuit wanted to see explicit words saying the doctrine is enforceable. They gave a narrow reading to the statute.”
Prof. McCarthy warned that the decision has international implications. “This decision can be used as a club to beat our trade negotiators, with foreign governments saying, ‘Who are you to criticize us? You are not living up to your treaty obligations.”
As he told InsideCounsel, the decision is “a great embarrassment for the U.S.”





SM Licensing Obtains Preliminary Injunction Over COOKIE DIET Mark
On July 13, the Southern District of Florida granted a preliminary injunction in favor of one weight-loss doctor enjoining a competing weight-loss doctor from using the common law trademark “COOKIE DIET.”
The court found in 1975, Dr. Sanford Siegal (pictured below left), president of plaintiff SM Licensing Corp., which obtained the injunction, created an 800-calorie diet in which the patient eats one meal a day, a prescribed dinner, and replaces all other meals with six specially-formulated cookies that suppress hunger. The diet has become known as the COOKIE DIET.
In 2002, defendant Dr. Sasson Moulavi (pictured right) and his company, U.S. Medical Care, Inc., entered into an agreement with Siegal Weight Management, Inc., a company that Dr. Siegal controls, which gave Dr. Moulavi an exclusive license to use Dr. Siegal’s diet and certain of his intellectual property throughout the United States and Canada in exchange for a fee and royalties. Included in the deal was Dr. Moulavi’s right to sell weight-loss products that he agreed to purchase exclusively from Dr. Siegal. Dr. Moulavi also licensed a number of trademarks from Dr. Siegal’s SM Licensing Corp., though none of the agreements mentioned the COOKIE DIET mark.
The court sided with SM Marketing. It found: “The evidence is overwhelming that Siegel was the first to identify his weight-loss program and products as the Cookie Diet, and that he did so as early as 1975. The Court finds the testimony of Siegel, his staff and patients of many years credible, and specifically finds that Siegal and his staff routinely identified his services and products as the Cookie Diet in their daily interactions with patients, and that patients and other members of the dieting public came to associate them with the Cookie Diet.”
The court also found that Dr. Moulavi later adopted and used COOKIE DIET as a trademark, but that he failed to show that SM Marketing had abandoned its prior rights in the mark because Dr. Siegal continued to make “conversational” use of the mark. In the court’s words, “Siegal remained consistent in his use of the trademark, both before his agreement with Moulavi and during the four years of their contractual relationship; that is, he avoided its use in written materials, signage and advertising, but continued its conversational use with patients and participated in television news stories about ‘his Cookie Diet.’ Siegal did tell Moulavi on a number of occasions that he did not like the mark and did not want it used to promote his weight-loss program. During this same period of time, however, Siegal appeared on multiple television news programs knowing that the focus of the story would be the idea that cookies could lead to weight loss, and suggesting to the reporters that he be identified as the creator of the Cookie Diet.”
Finally, the court found that Dr. Moulavi’s use of the mark inured to the benefit of Dr. Siegal even though it was not licensed to him because “Moulavi chose to use the trademark Cookie Diet in close association with the Siegal marks” that he did license. As the court explained: “Moulavi appropriated the Cookie Diet from Siegal in an effort to benefit from Siegal’s good will. In the process, he clearly furthered the association in the public’s mind between the weight-loss program Siegal developed and the Cookie Diet, and extended the geographic scope of Siegal’s ownership of not only his Siegal trademarks, but also the Cookie Diet trademark throughout the United States.”
The case cite is SM Licensing Corp. v. U.S. Medical Care Holdings LLC, No. 07-20293 (S.D. Fla.).