The Volokh Conspiracy
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Better Call Saul Episode Doesn't Infringe "Liberty Tax Services" Trademark
From JTH Tax LLC d/b/a Liberty Tax v. AMC Networks, Inc., decided today by Judge Paul Gardephe (S.D.N.Y.), rejects plaintiff's claim of trademark infringement in AMC's Better Call Saul:
[Season 6,] Episode 2 depicts a fictional tax preparation business called "Sweet Liberty Tax Services," which is operated by "convicted felon, Craig Kettleman, and his wife, Betsy Kettleman." Craig Kettleman was a client of Saul Goodman in Season 1 of Better Call Saul who was imprisoned after being convicted of embezzlement. The Kettlemans and Sweet Liberty defraud their clients "by skimming money from their tax refunds." Kim Wexler—one of the Show's central characters and Saul's wife—refers to the fictional tax business as a "rundown little mom and pop outfit." Wexler blackmails the Kettlemans by threatening to reveal their crimes to the IRS.
In the Amended Complaint, Plaintiff alleges that the Show's Sweet Liberty Tax Services "is an obvious imitation of an actual Liberty Tax location, but twisted to paint Liberty Tax in a negative and disparaging light[,]" with "just the word 'Sweet' added." According to Plaintiff, similarities between the fictional Sweet Liberty Tax Services and the real Liberty Tax Service include the use of an inflatable Statue of Liberty, the use of checks bearing a Statue of Liberty logo, a Statue of Liberty wall mural inside the tax preparation office, and the use of a red, white and blue motif on the location's exterior ….
No, says the court:
In Rogers v. Grimaldi (2d Cir. 1989), the Second Circuit "establish[ed] a new test for trademark infringement claims where the use of a trademark has both expressive and commercial components." The Rogers court instructed that "in general the [Lanham] Act should be construed to apply to artistic works only where the public interest in avoiding consumer confusion outweighs the public interest in free expression."
The court devised a two-prong balancing test where there are competing interests under the First Amendment and the Lanham Act. Where the title of an expressive work is at issue, the "balance will normally not support application of the [Lanham] Act unless the title has no artistic relevance to the underlying work whatsoever, or, if it has some artistic relevance, unless the title explicitly misleads as to the source or the content of the work." Although an allegedly infringing film title was at issue in Rogers, the case is now "generally applicable to Lanham Act claims against works of artistic expression."
And under the Rogers test, the court held, this use is not infringing: It is indeed artistically relevant to the show, and isn't explicitly misleading as to the show's source or content. Seems quite correct to me, and quite consistent with other cases (e.g., this one, in which my UCLA First Amendment Clinic filed an amicus brief).
AMC is represented by Allison N. Douglis, Gianni P. Servodidio & Susan Joan Kohlmann.
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So the entertainers won, but they might have avoided the hassle in the first place by calling the company something unambiguously made up like...well, the example I tried actually has a real-life (but non-income-tax-related) counterpart, so never mind.
And that's the root problem. Sure, you could avoid the hassle by making up something completely new - but there are just so very, very many institutions out there that someone almost certainly has something similar to anything you can come up with.
Sorry about the ad situation -- looking into this now.
It's all Good Man!
/thread
Here's a "real life" parody from the film Coming to America with Eddie Murphy.
McDowell’s Restaurant
Because of the name similarity, the film’s producers had to obtain permission from McDonald’s before using the name McDowell’s. During production in Queens, the owner of a nearby McDonald’s restaurant threatened a lawsuit, not knowing the fictional restaurant was part of a movie. The location of the restaurant is 8507 Queens Boulevard in Elmhurst, Queens, as specified accurately in the movie. The building now serves as a Wendy’s restaurant.
It's very meta, because it was a (minor) plot-point in that movie that the fast food restaurant had been deliberately named to confuse customers re McDonald's, and the owner acknowledges this with a throwaway wink and a nod.
[I'll point out that the pop-up ads are at their worst today. The same fucking ad pops up over and over and over. Then, finally, a different ad pops up for a bit. Then, back to the first one. At least 20 pop ups in the first 3 minutes. Most with no "x" in the upper-right, so there's not even a way to get them to disappear.]
The popup ads are bad all over. On every site, every page: Left, right, bottom, corners, ...they keep popping out everywhere. ["They're everywhere! They're everywhere!" :-)]
Sometimes it seems that I'm in an online-carnival shooting gallery, trying to rapidly spot the "X" target and "Blam," another one bites the dust! 🙂
Sorry to hear it -- looking into this now.
"Has your trade mark been ripped off by a large media company? Do you feel disparaged? Get the settlement you deserve. Call Bellino and Carnes now, at 1-800-BAZILLION"
This seems like a variation on the Streisand effect - I watched the show, and remember those characters, but for the life of me wouldn't have been able to tell you the name of their business. Now I can.
More importantly, what do you remember about their business model?
The plaintiffs' infringement argument is worse than if the Statue of Liberty had sued them.
I'd award costs and fees to the defendant if it were before Judge Beldar.
That's still coming. The Lanham Act allows attorney's fees in "exceptional cases." Sounds like there is a strong argument here to award them.
This is an easy case. You don't need the Rogers v. Grimaldi doctrine, which the Supreme Court whittled down just last term.
There is no likelihood of confusion and no use in commerce. The defendants didn't set up a tax preparation business, or indeed any business identified by that name. They put a fictional business in a show about crooked lawyers. No one thought it was real, and no one tried to use the services of this fictional tax preparation business. There is no trademark claim here, period.
(Arguably there could be a defamation claim, but that does seem to have been asserted.)
Episode 2 depicts a fictional tax preparation business called "Sweet Liberty Tax Services," which is operated by "convicted felon, Craig Kettleman, and his wife, Betsy Kettleman." Craig Kettleman was a client of Saul Goodman in Season 1 of Better Call Saul who was imprisoned after being convicted of embezzlement. The Kettlemans and Sweet Liberty defraud their clients "by skimming money from their tax refunds." Kim Wexler—one of the Show's central characters and Saul's wife—refers to the fictional tax business as a "rundown little mom and pop outfit." Wexler blackmails the Kettlemans by threatening to reveal their crimes to the IRS.
I once observed to the head partner at my former firm that just as dogs resemble their master, lawyers generally resemble their clients. Not in looks but in behavior -- nasty clients hire nasty lawyers, crooks hire lawyers who bend and break the rules, and honest clients hire straight lawyers. In my 25 years of practice, I only remember one instance when I was wrong.
This is essentially a libel case, yet it is being analyzed as if the question were concern about the origin of goods.
It strikes me that Liberty Tax has raised enough evidence of similarity that it could potentially prove its reputation was damaged by the episode, e.g. people might viscerally associate it with corruption and being cheated.
It would need evidence. People might, as the judge suggested, simply see it as having been picked on for being well-known, or see it as having been parodied. But they might indeed see it as Liberty Tax claims. That strikes me as a question of fact, not a question of law.
The complaint included defamation and trademark dilution claims but having dismissed the only federal law claim the court declined to exercise jurisdiction over those remaining state law claims.
I missed that one of the dismissed claims was defamation. That's a different kind of claim.
Reason that confusion was analyzed is because they brought this as a trademark claim, as well. That's their federal claim.