After 70 Years, Supreme Court Will Once Again Weigh in on The Exterritorial Reach of Lanham Act
The Briefing by the IP Law Blog - Podcast autorstwa Weintraub Tobin - Piątki
The U.S. Supreme Court will weigh in on the reach of the Lanham Act and whether it can protect against the infringement of a U.S. trademark in a foreign territory. Scott Hervey and Josh Escovedo discuss this case in this episode of The Briefing by the IP Law Blog. Watch this episode here. Show Notes: Scott: What’s the reach of the Lanham act? Can it protect against the infringement of a U.S. trademark in a foreign territory? The U.S. Supreme Court is taking up the appeal of a 10th Cir case of Abitron Austria GmbH v. Hetronic International, Inc. to hopefully shed light on the matter. This is what we are talking about on this installment of the Briefing by the IP Law Blog. Scott: Here are the underlying facts of Abitron Austria GmbH v. Hetronic International, Inc. Hetronic International, Inc., a U.S. company, manufactures radio remote controls—used to remotely operate heavy-duty construction equipment. The Defendants distributed Hetronic’s Products in Europe. The distributor relationship deteriorated, and the Defendants began manufacturing their own products—identical to Hetronic’s—and selling them under Hetronic. Brand in Europe. Hetronic sued Abitron in the U.S., and a jury in the Western District of Oklahoma awarded Hetronic over $100 million in damages, most of which related to Defendants’ trademark infringement relating to sales outside of the US. Then on Hetronic’s motion, the district court entered a worldwide injunction barring Defendants from selling their infringing products. On appeal to the 10th Circuit, the defendants insist that the Lanham Act’s reach doesn’t extend to their conduct, which generally involved foreign defendants making sales to foreign consumers. Josh: The Lanham Act governs federal trademark and unfair competition disputes. It subjects to liability any person who uses in commerce any . . . “colorable imitation of a registered mark,” or “[a]ny person who . . . uses in commerce any” word, false description, or false designation of origin that “is likely to cause confusion . . . or to deceive as to the affiliation,” origin, or sponsorship of any goods. the Act defines commerce broadly as “all commerce which may lawfully be regulated by Congress. The sole Supreme Court case on the exterritorial application of the Lanham Act is the 70-year-old case of Steele v. Bulova Watch Co., That case involved a Lanham Act claim brought by the Bulova Watch Company, against Sidney Steele, a U.S. citizen residing in Texas. Using component parts he had procured from the United States and Switzerland, Steele assembled watches in Mexico City and branded them ‘Bulova’. The “Bulova Watch Company’s Texas sales representative received numerous complaints from retail jewelers in the Mexican border area [of Texas] whose customers brought in for repair defective ‘Bulovas’ which upon inspection often turned out not to be products of that company. The Supreme Court held that Steele’s activities were covered by the Lanham Act. The fact that [Steele] affixed the mark ‘Bulova’ in Mexico City rather than in the US was not determinative..” The Court explained that Steele’s “operations and their effects” were “not confined within the territorial limits of” Mexico. Steele had bought components for his watches in the United States. And Steele’s watches filtered through the Mexican border into the US,” and those “competing goods could well reflect adversely” on Bulova’s “trade reputation in markets cultivated by advertising here as well as abroad.”. The Court further noted that because Steele did not have trademark rights to the “Bulova” mark under Mexican law, applying the Lanham Act to his conduct would not create any conflict with foreign law.