Home It v. Wupin Wen, et. al., 19-cv-7070 (MK) (EDNY December 26, 2019)

Plaintiff Home It alleges it has made common law use of the mark SAGANIZER for various home organizing products since 2015. It has not filed a trademark application. Defendant WuPin Wen of Guangdong, filed a U.S. application for SAGANIZER for various housewares in August 2016. Its specimen looks like this:

I’m going to zoom in on the mark affixed to the goods:

OK, I’m going to make two assertions, and it’s up to you to draw conclusions. The first: PTO believes that there is a problem with fraudulent specimens. Second: we’re looking at lettering affixed to a round metal object. The surface is curved – the lettering is razor straight. Plaintiff doesn’t mince words: it recognizes its product in the photo and says this photo is ‘shopped.

So there are problems with defendant’s registration.

It gets worse for plaintiff. Around December 13, plaintiff learns that the registrant approached Amazon, and proffered its registration for SAGANIZER, booting Home It off Amazon.

Plaintiff then applies for a TRO, citing, for example, its ruined Christimas season. As an aside, plaintiff seems to run afoul of the Court by not precisely following instructions as to service on opposing parties [practice pointer – don’t run afoul of courts’ instructions]. At the hearing, plaintiff notes testimony before Congress that there is a pattern of Chinese companies filing trademarks and booting the ‘real’ trademark owners off of Amazon. Coverage here.

Held: TRO denied for failure to show irreparable harm (brief discussion of irreparable harm case-law in the decision pages 4 to 6).

N.B. In a separate filing, a defendant was enjoined from additional contact with third-parties asserting infringement.

BTW, the moral of this, and of every story, is to file for trademark protection early and often.

[embeddoc url=”https://www.schwimmerlegal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/833/2020/01/trynow-tro-decision-1.pdf” download=”all”]

INTA Position: The Court should remand the case to the district court for fact finding on whether the defendant is advertising, distributing, and/or offering goods that are potentially infringing or counterfeit and clarify the use in commerce, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1114, includes more than the act of selling goods. 

[embeddoc url=”https://www.schwimmerlegal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/833/2020/01/OSU-v.-Redbubble-INTA-Amicus-Brief-1.pdf” download=”all”]

woot woot. Congratulations to my colleagues Rob Isackson, Matt Kaufman, Henry Gabathuler, Hoda Rifai-Bashjawish, Leana Lorenzana, and Natania Buchbinder. After prevailing at summary judgement that it had not infringed plaintiff’s patent claims, our client Repro-Med Systems Inc. was awarded $992k in fees. We now have legal holdings that Rob is a ‘seasoned patent litigator’ and that our firm’s fees are reasonable.

[embeddoc url=”https://www.schwimmerlegal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/833/2019/11/rms-fee-decision-1.pdf” download=”all”]

Well, maybe I’ve overstating it. In a turn of events suspected by some, but nevertheless surprising, the CAFC has ruled that the judges of the PTAB are not appointed properly under the Appointments Clause of Article 2. As ‘principal officers,’ PTAB judges should be appointed by the President, and confirmed by the Senate. Presently, PTAB judges are appointed by the Secretary of Commerce. Two intrusive thoughts occur – how does this affect prior acts by the PTAB, and does this analysis apply to the TTAB as well.

[embeddoc url=”https://www.schwimmerlegal.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/833/2019/10/arthrex-18-2140.Opinion.10-31-2019-1.pdf” download=”all”]