Those squeaky dog toys made by an Arizona firm that mimic Jack Daniels bottles may be a thing of the past.
VIP Products infringed on the liquor companyβs trademark by producing its βBad Spaniel,β toy that even the company admitted was modeled after the Jack Daniels bottle, the U.S. Supreme Court said Tuesday in a unanimous ruling. The justices rejected claims by the attorney for the Scottsdale firm that the poop-themed toy automatically made it permissible parody.
The ruling could have implications far beyond that specific toy which, as of Thursday, was still available for sale on Amazon and several other websites.
VIP has offered similar products, including Heine Sniffβn in something that looks like a Heineken bottle, Mountain Drool that mimics a Mountain Dew bottle, and Cataroma that bears more than a passing resemblance to Corona. And there are other parody items like Jose the Perro toy that looks like a Jose Cuervo bottle, the Doggie Walker squeeze toy (think Johnny Walker) and a Canine Cola with a design similar to a Coca Cola can.
More broadly, the decision by the high court about what is β and is not β legally permissible as βparodyβ could pave the way for new lawsuits by other companies who are upset about products that look like their own. In fact, the issue attracted so much interest that attorneys for everyone from the Campbell Soup Co. to Levi Strauss & Co. filed legal briefs.
At the heart of the legal fight is the Bad Spaniels Silly Squeaker that Jack Daniels insisted cannot be sold because the company βhas a strong interest in protecting its trademarks and trade dress from association with juvenile bathroom humor.β
But there are differences between the whiskey bottle and the toy.
For example, the βOld No. 7 Tennessee Sour Mash Whiskeyβ on the label is replaced by βThe Old No. 2 on your Tennessee Carpet.β Itβs also labeled βBad Spanielsββ instead of βJack Daniels.β
And instead of alcohol-content descriptions, the toy was labeled β43% Poo by Vol.β and β100% Smelly.β
The whiskey company was not amused and sued.
A trial judge sided with the distiller, citing evidence that 29% of consumers believed Jack Daniels actually sponsored the toy, declaring that it infringed on the the companyβs trademark. But the appellate judges saw the issue through a different legal lens.
βThe toy communicates a humorous message, using word play to alter the serious phrase that appears on a Jack Daniels bottle β βOld No. 7 Brandβ β with a silly message β βThe Old. No. 2,ββ wrote Judge Andrew Hurwitz for the court. βThe effect is a simple message conveyed by juxtaposing the irreverent representation of the trademark with the idealized image created by the markβs owner.β
And Hurwitz said it βcomments humorouslyβ on Jack Daniels.
Justice Elena Kagan, writing for the court Thursday, said the flaw with that is that VIP used a trademark β the design of the Jack Daniels bottle β to claim its own ownership of the design of the toy.
βThat kind of use falls within the heartland of trademark law, and does not receive special First Amendment protection,β she said. βThe use of a mark does not count as noncommercial just because it parodies, or otherwise comments on, anotherβs products.β
Kagan said all that goes to the reason that companies trademark things like their βtrade dress,β the overall appearance of a product. That can make it instantly identifiable to consumers.
βA source-identifying mark enables customers to select the goods and services that they wish to purchase, as well as those they want to avoid,β the justice explained. βThe mark quickly and easily assures a potential customer that this item β the item with the mark β is made by the same producer as other similarly marked items the he or she liked (or disliked) in the past.β
And then thereβs the benefits of trademarks to the company that made the original item.
βThey ensure that the producer itself β and not some βimitating competitorβ β will reap the financial rewards associated with the productβs good reputation,β she said.
Still, the justices left intact earlier decisions that provide a bit of wiggle room in the cases of true parody and some βexpressive function.β
Consider, Kagan said, the song βBarbie Girlβ which contains lyrics like βLife in plastics, itβs fantasticβ and βIβm a blond bimbo girl in a fantasy world.β In tossing out a lawsuit by Mattel, she said, there was no confusion.
βA consumer would no more think that the song was produced by Mattel that would, upon hearing Janis Joplin croon βOh, Lord, would you buy me a Mercedes Benz?β suspect that she and the carmaker had entered into a joint venture,β Kagan said.
Similarly, she said, it was correct for a court to dismiss a lawsuit by Louis Vuitton because a character in the film βThe Hangover: Part IIβ described his luggage as Louis Vuitton, though she noted the actor even mispronounced the name.
But the legal line is crossed, the justice said, when someoneβs product may be βtrading on the good will of the trademark owner to market its own goods.β
In a footnote, Kagan said that not every claim of infringement on trade dress will require full-scale litigation β or a ruling against the other part.
βSome of those uses will not present any plausible likelihood of confusion β because of dissimilarity in the marks or various contextural considerations,β she wrote. βAnd if, in a given case, a plaintiff fails to plausible allege a likelihood of confusion, the district could should dismiss the complaint.β