• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer

Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

~ Trademark and Copyright Law Updates in Indiana

Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

Category Archives: Indiana

Indiana Copyright Litigation Update – Lioness Vizions v. Rhasha Hoosier

25 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Indiana, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Southern District of Indiana

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Breach of Fiduciary Duty, Breach of Operating Agreement, Civil Theft, Common Law Unfair Competition, Copyright Infringement, Right of Publicity, Tortious Interference, Wrongful Dissolution

Lioness Vizions, LLC et al v. Rhasha Hoosier et al

Court Case Number: 1:12-cv-00109-TWP-TAB
File Date: Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Plaintiff: Lioness Vizions, LLC, Angenita Childs, Delina Hill-Brooker
Plaintiff Counsel: Trezanay Michelle Atkins of The Brand Infringement Firm
Defendant: Rhasha Hoosier, Mikel Hoosier, Reign Media Group, Romantic Reign Group
Cause: Copyright Infringement, Wrongful Dissolution, Right of Publicity Infringement, Breach of Operating Agreement, Breach of Fiduciary Duty, Civil Theft, Tortious Interference, Common Law Unfair Competition
Court: Southern District of Indiana
Judge: Judge Tanya Walton Pratt
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Tim A. Baker

View this document on Scribd

Indiana Trademark Litigation Update – Norwood Promotional Products v. KustomKoozies (DECISION)

06 Friday Jan 2012

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Indiana, Litigation, Southern District of Indiana, Trademark

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Jane Magnus-Stinson, Kustom Koozie, Litigation Update, Norwood Promotional Products

Over two years later, the Kustom Koozies case is over.

Norwood Promotional Products is a large Indianapolis-based promotional products company which sells imprinted “insulated containers for beverage cans” under the KOOZIE® trademark. KustomKoozies, LLC (“Kustom”) is an internet retailer that sold insulated beverage can and bottle holders with customizable promotional imprinting, directly to end-customers in quantities as small as a dozen. On May 15, 2007, the USPTO issued a trademark registration to Norwood for the mark “KOOZIE®” (see abstract below). On May 6, 2008, Norwood sent a letter to Kustom indicating that it had come to Norwood’s attention that Kustom was in violation of the licensing agreement the parties had previously discussed because Kustom failed to set out KOOZIE in all capital letters and set forth the appropriate subscript following the term. In response to the May 6, 2008, letter, defendant Robert Liddle reviewed the agreement and Kustom’s website pages, making changes that he believed cured any noncompliance issues, but he did not succeed in making all necessary changes. Norwood sued for breach of contract and trademark infringement.

After the lawsuit was filed, Kustom did not attempt to make any changes to its website in order to avoid the trademark infringement claim, but it did attempt to terminate the licensing agreement with Norwood. However, the attempt to terminate was unsuccessful. The Court found as a matter of law that the settlement and license agreements were valid contracts between the parties and that Kustom breached those contracts by purchasing, owning, registering or operating internet domain names that contained the term “koozie,” and by using the term “koozie” or “KOOZIE” to describe and sell products on those internet sites. The Court also found that the mere use of the claimed mark after the failed attempt to terminate the license agreement did not constitute trademark infringement and grant summary judgment to Kustom.

Practical Lesson: Think twice before you commence litigation. It can be timely (almost 2 1/2 years here) and expensive. However, trademark owners have a legal obligation to police and enforce their trademark rights, often putting owners between a rock (losing their trademark) and a hard place (expensive litigation).

No: 1:09-cv-1378-JMS-WGH (December 21, 2011)
U.S. District Court, Southern District of Indiana
Before: Magnus-Stinson

View this document on Scribd

Kenan Farrell named YPCI 2011 Young Professional of the Year

20 Tuesday Dec 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Indiana, KLF Legal

≈ Leave a comment

The YPCI Young Professional of the Year Award recognizes and honors an individual who exemplifies excellence in professionalism, integrity, vision, drive, and perseverance in his or her professional and personal life. At the ’11 YPCI Gala, Kenan Farrell was named this year’s winner!

Click here for full story.

More at Inside INdiana Business.

About Young Professionals of Central Indiana:

The mission of the Young Professionals of Central Indiana (YPCI) is to bring together emerging leaders from professional, technical, governmental and non-profit fields to foster business development and to connect and retain young professionals in the Central Indiana community. YPCI seeks to create a cohesive network of business contacts and to connect young professionals in Central Indiana with professional, educational, leadership, and civic opportunities.

Indiana Trademark Litigation Update – Wheaton Van Lines v. Unigroup

02 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Indiana, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Southern District of Indiana, Trademark

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Denise K. LaRue, Federal Trademark Infringement, Litigation Update, Richard L. Young, Trademark Dilution, Unfair Competition, Unigroup, Wheaton Van Lines

Wheaton Van Lines Inc. v. Unigroup Inc. et al

Plaintiff alleges that it’s WE MOVE YOUR LIFE trademark is infringed by Defendant’s domain name, www.yourlifeonthemove.com.

Court Case Number: 1:11-cv-01590-RLY-DKL
File Date: Thursday, December 01, 2011
Plaintiff: Wheaton Van Lines Inc.
Plaintiff Counsel: S. Andrew Burns of Cox Sargeant & Burns PC
Defendant: Unigroup Inc., United Mayflower Container Services LLC
Cause: Federal Trademark Infringement, Federal and State Unfair Competition, Trademark Dilution
Court: Southern District Court of Indiana
Judge: Judge Richard L. Young
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Denise K. LaRue

View this document on Scribd

Measuring the Impact of Patent Reform on Life Sciences Companies

26 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Federal Initiatives, Indiana, Legislation, Patent

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Indiana Health Industry Forum, Life Sciences

Kristin Jones, President and CEO of the Indiana Health Industry Forum, has an editorial piece in the latest Indianapolis Business Journal on the impact of the new U.S. patent law on life sciences companies:

For others, this act has been labeled an “innovation killer,” handing over market control to large corporations, driving inventors and potential entrepreneurs back into their labs to toil in secret, and basically halting America’s leadership in research and development.

For Indiana’s life sciences sector, it both raises hopes and creates challenges for continued growth.

For large or small companies, the product development life cycle for a biological therapy comes with a lot of risk. It can take a decade or more and over $1 billion to bring a product to market, and the product can fail at pretty much any point in that process. For the majority of the time in development, a company’s intellectual property is its primary asset.

For larger companies, that risk is spread across multiple products (the company’s pipeline); for smaller companies, everything may depend on the success or failure of a single molecule or protein. Large or small, intellectual property plays a huge role in a life sciences company’s valuation and business strategy.

Check out IBJ.com for the full story.

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Categories

  • Advertising Law (1)
  • Artists (23)
  • Authors (20)
  • Bloggers (37)
  • Branding (29)
  • Business Law (9)
  • Copyright (327)
  • Dear KLF Legal (4)
  • Defamation (5)
  • Entertainment Law (14)
  • Estate Law (2)
  • Family Law (2)
  • Fashion (5)
  • Federal Initiatives (33)
  • Indiana (603)
  • Indianapolis (51)
  • Intellectual Property (662)
  • Just for Fun (25)
  • KLF Legal (19)
  • Legislation (34)
  • Litigation (595)
  • Musicians (13)
  • Nonprofit (6)
  • Northern District of Indiana (215)
  • Patent (44)
  • Privacy (15)
  • Right of Publicity (8)
  • Social Media (56)
  • Southern District of Indiana (369)
  • Stories from the Week that Was (42)
  • Supreme Court (13)
  • Tech Developments (119)
  • Trade Dress (26)
  • Trade Secret (15)
  • Trademark (363)
  • What I'm Reading (8)

Bloggers Copyright Federal Initiatives Indiana Indianapolis Intellectual Property Legislation Litigation Northern District of Indiana Patent Social Media Southern District of Indiana Stories from the Week that Was Tech Developments Trademark

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Indiana Intellectual Property Blog
    • Join 81 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Indiana Intellectual Property Blog
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...