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Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

~ Trademark and Copyright Law Updates in Indiana

Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

Tag Archives: False Designation

Equestrian Arena Equipment Manufacturer Sues Competitor for Breach of Contract, Misappropriation of Trade Secrets

13 Tuesday Apr 2021

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Business Law, Indiana, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Patent, Southern District of Indiana, Trade Secret, Trademark

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Breach of Contract, Common Law Trademark Misappropriation, Common Law Unfair Competion, Doris L. Pryor, False Advertising, False Designation, Lanham Act Violations, Misappropriation of Trade Secrets, Sarah Evans Barker

Here’s an interesting lawsuit, which seems like it wants to be a patent lawsuit but instead is masquerading as a breach of contract or trade secret lawsuit.

In September 2016, the parties allegedly into a “Product Lines Purchase Agreement,” by which the Plaintiff purchased “all specifications, shop drawings, blueprints, records and intellectual property rights” relating to the Kiser DragMaster and Kiser Edge, equipment used for grooming and maintaining equestrian arenas.

Despite selling the intellectual property for those products to Plaintiff as a part of the deal, the Defendants are now accused of selling knockoff products, although under different product names. It seems that what Plaintiff really wants to do is prevent the sale of competing products, but they don’t have any patents to truly protect their product designs. As such, the Plaintiff’s lawyers had to get creative and try to bring breach of contract, trademark, and trade secret claims.

Apparently, representatives of the Defendants have referred to the Defendants’ products as a “redesign” of Plaintiff’s DragMaster. Even if true, the Defendants could claim a nominative fair use defense, as such references seem to actually be referring to old DragMaster products. The law around comparative advertising is pretty well-settled in favor of consumer knowledge, absent evidence of false endorsement. Competitors comparing a new product to an older competing product via name is typically allowed.

By way of example, the Complaint (below) contains the following diagram comparing the Defendants’ “Kiser 1000” to the Plaintiff’s “ABI DragMaster”:

Similarly, the “Kiser 200” is compared to the “ABI Edge”:

These are the types of comparison drawings you’d typically see in a patent lawsuit. All of the features being compared are utilitarian product features. The product names (i.e. trademarks) aren’t compared because they aren’t similar at all…Kiser 1000 vs. ABI DragMaster.

Proving a breach of contract or misappropriation of trade secrets will necessarily depend on proving that the Defendants’ products are actually infringing on the intellectual property owned by Plaintiff. Without any prior patent protection, that could be difficult to do in this context.

Stay tuned to see how the Defendants respond, perhaps with a Motion to Dismiss for some of the claims.

ABI Attachments, Inc. v. Kiser Arena Specialists, Inc. et al.

Court Case Number: 1:21-cv-00890-SEB-DLP
File Date: Monday, April 12, 2021
Plaintiff: ABI Attachments, Inc.
Plaintiff Counsel: James M. Lewis, Michael J. Hays of Tuesley Hall Konopa LLP
Defendant: Kiser Arena Specialists, Inc., Robert D. Kiser, James Kiser
Cause: Breach of Contract, Misappropriation of Trade Secrets, Lanham Act Violations, False Designation, False Advertising, Common Law Unfair Competition, Common Law Trademark Misappropriation, Unjust Enrichment
Court: Southern District of Indiana
Judge: Sarah Evans Barker
Referred To: Doris L. Pryor

Complaint:

View this document on Scribd

National Veterans Memorial sues to prevent use of National Veterans Memorial & Museum trademark

16 Thursday Feb 2017

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

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False Designation, Federal Trademark Infringement, Matthew P. Brookman, Richard L. Young, Unfair Competition

The Plaintiff in this trademark lawsuit operates a small museum called the National Veterans Memorial in Elberfeld, Indiana. Since 2008, Plaintiff has owned a federal registration for the NATIONAL VETERANS MEMORIAL mark in connection with “Promoting public awareness of the need for reconciliation and recognition of all veterans.”

Plaintiff is seeking to prevent the use of the name National Veterans Memorial & Museum by a new museum opening in Columbus, Ohio. The Ohio museum began construction in 2015 and is set to open in 2018. The Defendant filed a federal “intent to use” application in October 2016, which has received an initial refusal by the Examining Attorney based on Plaintiff’s registration.

Stay tuned for updates.

screen-shot-2017-02-16-at-10-17-04-am

Henager Family Museum, Inc v. Columbus Downtown Development Corp.

Court Case Number: 3:17-cv-00028-RLY-MPB
File Date: Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Plaintiff: Henager Family Museum, Inc d/b/a National Veterans Museum
Plaintiff Counsel: Keith E. Rounder, Gary K. Price of Terrell, Baugh, Salmon & Born, LLP
Defendant: Columbus Downtown Development Corp.
Cause: Federal Trademark Infringement, Unfair Competition, False Designation
Court: Southern District of Indiana
Judge: Richard L. Young
Referred To: Matthew P. Brookman

Complaint:

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Past President sues Military History Museum for Trademark Infringement

07 Wednesday Dec 2016

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

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False Designation, Federal Trademark Infringement, Matthew P. Brookman, Richard L. Young, State Unfair Competition, Unfair Competition

Plaintiff is the owner of a federal trademark registration for FREEDOM HERITAGE MUSEUM, registered on April 19, 2016. He first used the mark in 2012 in connection with a military history museum of which he was the founding president and a board member.

Plaintiff left the museum in October 2016 and notified the museum that it could no longer use the trademark. He has begun promoting a new Evansville museum with the same name.

screen-shot-2016-12-07-at-8-24-30-am

This case serves as a good reminder for small businesses and non-profits to own their own trademarks, rather than registering them in the name of an owner or board member.

screen-shot-2016-12-07-at-8-13-22-am

Litov v. Freedom Heritage Museum

Court Case Number: 3:16-cv-00241-RLY-MPB
File Date: Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Plaintiff: Richard Litov
Plaintiff Counsel: Keith E. Rounder, Gary K. Price of Terrell, Baugh, Salmon & Born, LLP
Defendant: Freedom Heritage Museum, Inc.
Cause: Federal Trademark Infringement, Unfair Competition, False Designation, State Unfair Competition
Court: Southern District of Indiana
Judge: Richard L. Young
Referred To: Matthew P. Brookman

Complaint:

View this document on Scribd

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