Indiana Copyright Litigation Update – Keystone Builders Resource Group v. Kennis R. Went, Jr. et al

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Architectural drawings are copyrightable. In this matter, Defendant has allegedly used Plaintiff’s architectural drawings without authorization. Note that the court’s scanned copy is missing Page 9 (and many of the pages are askew), so there’s a third claim I did not reference.

Let me know in the comments if you’re interested in updates to this case.

Keystone Builders Resource Group, Inc. et al v. Kennis R. Went, Jr. et al

Court Case Number: 1:12-cv-00939-SEB-DML
File Date: Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Plaintiff: Keystone Builders Resource Group, Inc., Lockridge Homes-Indianapolis, LLC
Plaintiff Counsel: Paul Joseph Carroll of Mercer Belanger
Defendant: Kennis R. Went, Jr., Jennifer S. Went, David Martin, Cassidy Martin, Dennis Vessels
Cause: Copyright Infringement, Misappropriation of Trade Secret, Unjust Enrichment
Court: Southern District of Indiana
Judge: Judge Sarah Evans Barker
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Debra McVicker Lynch

Indiana Trade Dress Litigation Update – Mortar Net USA v. Masonry Reinforcing Corporation of America

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Mortar Net continues its attempts to protect its “dovetail-shaped line of fibrous mesh products for use in masonry applications” (see example in Exhibit A below). Mortar Net’s counsel have a pretty clear hurdle to overcome in the “functionality doctrine,” which prevents manufacturers from protecting specific features of a product by means of trademark law. If a feature gives a producer a competitive advantage which is not related entirely to its function as a brand identifier, then it cannot be trademarked, regardless of advertising and promotional efforts. Such features are more appropriately protected under patent law. This is Mortar Net’s third filing of the year (see Related Cases below) and all have been assigned to a different judge, so maybe they’ll get lucky and find a judge willing to extend trademark protection to their dovetail design.

Stay tuned for updates.

Related Cases:

Mortar Net USA Ltd v. Masonry Reinforcing Corporation of America

Court Case Number:    2:12-cv-00252-PPS-PRC
File Date:    Tuesday, July 03, 2012
Plaintiff:     Mortar Net USA Ltd
Plaintiff Counsel:     Daniel W Glavin of O’Neill McFadden & Willett LLP
Defendant:     Masonry Reinforcing Corporation of America
Cause:    Trade Dress Infringement, Federal Trademark Infringement, Trademark Infringement, Federal Unfair Competition, Common Law Infringement Infringement, Common Law Unfair Competition
Court:    Northern District of Indiana
Judge:     Chief Judge Philip P Simon
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Paul R Cherry

Complaint:

Exhibit A:

Stories from the Week that Was – 7/1/12-7/7/12

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Here are the top stories I followed this week:

Supreme Court to Decide Whether Patent Bullies Can Hit and Run

Defunct copyright troll Righthaven seeks resurrection

Hold Your Flow! Yoga Sequences Not Copyrightable

Drones decimating Taliban in Pakistan

U.S. drone ‘hijackings’ raise security concerns

Charles Carreon drops lawsuit against @TheOatmeal’s Matthew Inman

Facebook Users Hijack Walmart Campaign to Exile Pitbull to Remote Island

Yahoo and Facebook settle patent lawsuit with strategic deal

“Man is a slow, sloppy and brilliant thinker; the machine is fast, accurate and stupid.”  ~William M. Kelly

Indiana Trademark Litigation Update – Indian Industries d/b/a Escalade Sports v. Gnarly Sporting Goods

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Plaintiff, Indian Industries, Inc. d/b/a Escalade Sports, owns the marketing rights to several popular sporting good products, including Stiga® ping pong tables, Harvard® air hockey tables and the Goalrilla® basketball goal. Defendant, Gnarly Sporting Goods, is an alleged rogue online retail website, purporting to sell Plaintiff’s products. However, Plaintiff claims Defendant is not an authorized dealer and, apparently, doesn’t even sell the products but rather just lists them with below-market prices. In the Complaint (below), Plaintiff speculates that Defendant’s website is “for the purpose of forcing authorized distributors and authorized retailers with price matching policies to sell to consumers at artificially low prices.”

Leave a comment below if you or your company has dealt with a similar situation with a rogue online site.

Indian Industries d/b/a Escalade Sports v. John Doe d/b/a Gnarly Sporting Goods

Court Case Number:    1:12-cv-00900-RLY-TAB
File Date:    Friday, June 29, 2012
Plaintiff:     Indian Industries, Inc. d/b/a Escalade Sports
Plaintiff Counsel:     Charles Johnson Meyer, William A. McKenna of Woodard, Emhardt, Moriarty, McNett & Henry, LLP
Defendant:     John Doe d/b/a Gnarly Sporting Goods
Cause:    Trademark Infringement, False Advertising, Unfair Competition
Court:   Southern District of Indiana
Judge:     Judge Richard L. Young
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Tim A. Baker

Stories from the Week that Was – 6/24/12-6/30/12

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Here are the top stories I followed this week:

Indiana Court Upholds Social Media Ban for Sex Offenders

USPTO seeks to intervene in publisher’s copyright infringement suit against law firm

FTC v. Myspace Part II – The Takeaways

U.S. Supreme Court to hear Nike trademark case

“As far as I’m concerned, progress peaked with frozen pizza.” -Die Hard 2, spoken by the character John McClane