ORDER RE: MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Pending before the Court are the following Motions: Plaintiff Fleischer Studios, Inc.’s (“Fleischer”) Motion for Summary Judgment (docket no. 177), and Defendant A.V.E.L.A., Inc., et alls (“Defendants”) Motion for Summary Judgment (docket no. 175). The parties filed Oppositions and Replies. The Court finds these matters appropriate for resolution without oral argument and therefore VACATES the hearing set for November 19, 2012. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 78, Local Rule 7-15. For the following reasons, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs Motion and GRANTS Defendants’ Motion.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This matter is before the Court following the Ninth Circuit’s Opinion vacating one ruling in the Court’s June 29, 2009 Order granting summary judgment for Defendants on all of Plaintiffs claims. See Fleischer Studios, Inc. v. A.V.E.L.A., Inc.,
Fleischer II remanded for further proceedings Plaintiffs claim for trademark infringement relating to the word mark “Betty Boop.” The Court set out a detailed factual background in its December 16, 2008 and June 29, 2009 Orders. Thus, here, the Court provides only a sketch of the facts, and summarizes the procedural history relevant to the remaining claim.
A. Factual Overview
This litigation concerns ownership of the intellectual property in the cartoon character Betty Boop. The following facts are undisputed and are adopted from prior orders and the parties’ submissions.
Starting in or around 1930, Max Fleischer, then head of Fleischer Studios, Inc. (“Original Fleischer”) developed a number of cartoon films featuring the fictional character Betty Boop. For a time, Original Fleischer licensed the Betty Boop image for use in toys, dolls, and other merchandise. Approximately ten years after creating her, Original Fleischer sold its rights to the Betty Boop cartoons and to her character. In 1946, Original Fleischer was dissolved.
Max Fleischer’s family attempted to revive the Fleischer cartoon business in the early 1970s. The family incorporated a new entity, Fleischer Studios, Inc. (“Fleischer”), with the same name as the first entity and attempted to repurchase the intellectual property rights to the Betty Boop character. Fleischer is the Plaintiff in this action and is a distinct legal entity from the long-defunct Original Fleischer that first owned Betty Boop.
Defendants, A.V.E.L.A., Inc., et al., also license Betty Boop merchandise such as posters, dolls, and apparel. Defendants’ merchandise includes or incorporates elements from vintage Betty Boop movie posters that Defendants argue were in the public domain and that they have restored. As relevant here, the elements derived from the posters include images of Betty Boop, the words Betty Boop, or both.
Plaintiff asserts that Defendants’ Betty Boop merchandise is unauthorized and infringes on its rights in the character Betty Boop. Plaintiff therefore pled claims for copyright infringement, trademark infringement, and several related state law claims.
B. Procedural History
In two Orders, the Court, Judge Cooper presiding, granted summary judgment for Defendants. The Court found that Plaintiff held neither a valid copyright nor a valid trademark in the Betty Boop cartoon character. See Order,
Initially, the Ninth Circuit upheld Judge Cooper’s orders in their entirety. See Fleischer Studios, Inc. v. A.V.E.L.A., Inc.,
The Ninth Circuit then withdrew Fleischer I and issued a new, superceding opinion, Fleischer II, supra. In Fleischer II, the Ninth Circuit upheld judgment for Defendants on the copyright claims and on the image mark claims, but vacated the ruling on the word mark claims. With respect to the word mark claims, the Court made the following rulings. The Court held that Plaintiff had “submitted proof that it possesses registered trademarks in the words ‘Betty Boop’ ”. Fleischer II,
C. Current Proceedings
The parties disagree about the scope of the remand: Defendants contend that the sole purpose of the remand is for the court to provide the legal reasoning behind the dismissal of Plaintiffs word mark claim; Plaintiff contends that, in effect, it has carte blanche to relitigate its word mark claim and present any and all arguments and evidence it has, regardless of whether it presented that material before or whether the district court previously rejected it.
The Ninth Circuit did not reverse the district court’s prior ruling, but remanded because the record was incomplete. However, Fleischer II does not expressly limit the remand to providing the missing reasoning. Nor does Fleischer II require the Court to re-open litigation over this claim entirely, that is, to allow the parties to relitigate the remanded claim anew. It therefore appears that the Court has some discretion as to what “further proceedings” entails and what arguments and evidence it will consider.
Clearly, the Court cannot revisit any matters ruled upon by the Ninth Circuit. Thus, for example, Plaintiffs attempt in its opposition to revive its copyright claims, see Pl.’s Opp’n 12:6-9, is rejected because Fleischer II affirmed the dismissal of those claims. See Fleischer II,
Based on the foregoing, these proceedings will be limited to a re-examination of the Court’s “unexplained” prior rulings. This reexamination will be based solely on the evidence previously presented to the district court and preserved on appeal. This does not necessarily limit the Court to mechanically maintaining its prior ruling and simply providing the reasoning that was missing; the Court could change its ruling. If the Court changed its ruling, then it would reach the issues of owner
II. DISCUSSION
Although difficult to ascertain from Plaintiffs Motion, Plaintiffs remaining claims are for (a) trademark infringement pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1114, (b) false designation of origin pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), (c) state law trademark infringement and unfair competition, and (d) deceptive trade practices under California Business and Professions Code § 17200. The same analysis governs Plaintiffs trademark claims and tag-along state law claims. Cleary v. News Corp.,
A. Legal Standards
1. Summary Judgment
As the party asserting trademark and unfair competition claims, Plaintiff has the burden of proof at trial and the initial burden of production at summary judgment. Defendants may satisfy their initial burden with respect to Plaintiffs claims by “by pointing out that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party’s case.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
2. Trademark Law
Trademarks function as a designation of source or origin. See 15 U.S.C. § 1127 (defining “trademark” to include “any word, name, symbol, or device, or any combination thereof — (1) used by a person ... to identify and distinguish his or her goods ... from those manufactured or sold by others and to indicate the source of the goods, even if that source is unknown”). As the Trademark Trial and Appellate Board has explained:
The salient question is whether the designation in question, as used, will be recognized in and of itself as an indication of origin for this particular product. That is, does this component or designation create a commercial impression separate and apart from the other material appearing on the label?
The Procter & Gamble Company v. Keystone Automotive Warehouse, Inc.,
When, as here, trademark and unfair competition claims under 15 U.S.C. § 1114 and 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a) are based on the same infringing conduct, courts apply the same analysis to both claims. E. & J. Gallo Winery v. Gallo Cattle Co.,
B. Defendants’ Use of the Betty Boop Word Mark is Not Infringing.
Defendants argue that they cannot be liable for trademark infringement because their use of the words Betty Boop is not a trademark use. This echoes the Court’s finding in its June 2009 Summary Judgment Order that Plaintiff did not show that any of Defendants’ artwork represented a use of Plaintiffs word mark in commerce. While that order did not provide much reasoning for this conclusion, the Ninth Circuit in Fleischer I did. Although the Ninth Circuit withdrew Fleischer I and remanded the case, the reasoning set forth in Fleischer I is nevertheless sound and applicable.
1. Defendants’ Use of the Mark is Aesthetically Functional.
This analysis rests on the aesthetic functionality doctrine adopted by the Ninth Circuit in International Order of Job’s Daughters v. Lindeburg & Co.,
In Job’s Daughters, the defendant jeweler produced rings and pins that bore a fraternal organization’s trademarked insignia. The Ninth Circuit examined whether that use was an actionable “trademark use” or some other kind of use. Because trademark law is concerned only with identification of the maker of the product so as to avoid confusing consumers, it “does not prevent a person from copying so-called ‘functional’ features of a product which constitute the actual benefit that the consumer wishes to purchase, as distinguished from an assurance that a particular entity made, sponsored, or endorsed a product.” Job’s Daughters,
To determine whether a use is an “aesthetically functional” use or a trademark use, “a court must closely examine the articles themselves, the defendant’s merchandising practices, and any evidence that consumers have actually inferred a connection between the defendant’s product and the trademark owner.” Id. at 919. After considering these factors, the Court concluded that although the insignia at
In Aur-Tomotive Gold, the Court discussed the development of the doctrine and set out a two-step test for aesthetic functionality. First, to ascertain “functionality,” the court must ask whether the alleged “significant non-trademark function” of the mark “[is] essential to the use or purpose of the article [or] affects [its] cost or quality.” Aur-Tomotim Gold,
While “[t]he concept of an ‘aesthetic’ function that is non-trademark-related has enjoyed only limited application,” it is nevertheless a viable theory. Id. at 1073. “In practice, aesthetic functionality has been limited to product features that serve an aesthetic purpose wholly independent of any source-identifying function.” Id. Thus, although Aur-Tomotive Gold and Job’s Daughters use somewhat different language to describe the test for aesthetic functionality, the focus of the inquiry turns on whether the use of the mark has a source-identifying or “reputation-related” function. If not, then the use may be “aesthetically functional” and is not a trademark use.
Consistent with Job’s Daughters, the Court has closely examined Defendants’ products, Defendants’ merchandising practices insofar as they are reflected in the record, and whether there is any evidence that consumers have connected Defendants’ products with Plaintiff. The Court finds, as a matter of law, that Defendants’ use of the Betty Boop word mark is not a trademark use. As in Job’s Daughters, Defendants use the words Betty Boop as a prominent feature on their product, including t-shirts bearing movie poster images, dolls, and packaging adapted from movie posters. In this regard, the Betty Boop mark as adapted from the restored Betty Boop posters is a decorative component: it is part and parcel of the aesthetic design of those goods. As for Defendants’ merchandising practices, Defendants never designated their merchandise as “official” or otherwise indicated sponsorship by Plaintiff; rather, Defendants’ products all identify one of Defendants as their source. Considering that Defendants use the words Betty Boop as an artistic design element and identify themselves as the source of the goods, their use of the words Betty Boop simply cannot be viewed as source-identifying. Indeed, Plaintiff has not presented a single instance of a consumer who was misled about the origin or sponsorship of Defendants’ products.
These same considerations show that Defendants’ use of the Betty Boop word mark is aesthetically functional within the parlance of Aur-Tomotive Gold. The Court assumes that Defendants’ use of the word mark Betty Boop is not functional in the utilitarian sense because Defendants’
The Court therefore turns to whether the mark is nevertheless aesthetically functional. Because, as noted above, Defendants’ use of the mark is a decorative feature of their merchandise and is not source-identifying, “protection of the feature as a trademark would impose a significant non-reputation-related competitive disadvantage” on Defendants. Were Defendants to market their goods bearing the image of Betty Boop or Betty Boop movie posters without the words Betty Boop to identify the character, that would make their products less marketable than the same product that included the BETTY BOOP name. This is because the words Betty Boop serve to name the famous character depicted on those goods and are part and parcel of the movie posters printed on Defendants’ merchandise. For example, Plaintiff points to one of Defendants’ dolls that includes packaging bearing imagery from a Betty Boop movie poster, and a product tag that is a miniature reproduction of the movie poster. Both uses of the poster imagery bear the following text: “Adolph Zukor presents BETTY BOOP with HENRY the Funniest Living American”. See Pl.’s Mot. P. 3, Opp’n p. 17. Removing the words BETTY BOOP from these items would render the textual aspect of the poster reproductions incomplete and the remaining words would be nonsensical. It would be obvious to the average consumer that such merchandise would be missing something. Clearly, merchandise that is missing something is less marketable and therefore at a competitive disadvantage. In addition, because Defendants’ use of the Betty Boop word mark is not source identifying and simply does not trade on the “reputation” of any source, barring Defendants from using those words would “impose a significant non-reputation-related competitive disadvantage.”
For the foregoing reasons, there is no triable issue of fact as to whether Defendants’ use is a trademark use; instead, as a matter of law, Defendants’ use of the Betty Boop mark is an aesthetically functional use, and not a source-identifying trademark use; such uses are not infringing.
2. Alternatively, Defendants’ Use of the Mark is Fair Use.
If Defendants’ use of the mark is not aesthetically functional, then it is “fair use”. The Lanham Act provides that fair use is a defense to trademark infringement. “Fair use” is defined as “the use, otherwise than as a mark, ... of a term [ ] which is descriptive of and used fairly and in good faith only to describe the goods or services of [the] party.” 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b)(4). The fair use defense applies when a mark is used in its primary descriptive sense rather than its secondary trademark sense. See Cairns v. Franklin Mint Co.,
The purpose of trademarks is to designate source or origin. See 15 U.S.C. § 1127. Thus, whether a use is “otherwise than as a mark” depends on several factors, including “whether the term is used as a ‘symbol to attract public attention’ [and] whether the allegedly infringing user undertook ‘precautionary measures such as labeling or other devices designed to minimize the risk that the term will be understood in its trademark sense.’ ” Fortune Dynamic, Inc. v. Victoria’s Secret Stores Brand Mgmt., Inc.,
Similarly, there is no triable issue of fact as to whether Defendants are using the words in their primary, descriptive sense. Defendants’ use has “descriptive purity” and there are no “other words available to do the describing.” Fortune Dynamic,
Finally, no jury could conclude that Defendants use the words Betty Boop in bad faith. This factor is similar to the intent factor in the likelihood of confusion analysis: “whether defendant in adopting its mark intended to capitalize on plaintiffs good will.” Fortune Dynamic,
In short, when any of Defendants’ products are viewed as a whole, it is clear that the phrase Betty Boop describes or identifies by name the character Defendants depict on their products, that is, that this use is “otherwise than as a mark,” descriptive, and not in bad faith.
The Court has reviewed all of the examples of Defendants’ products presented in the briefs, and nothing about Defendants’ use of the word mark Betty Boop can be considered source-identifying; for the reasons set out above, those uses are, as a matter of law, either aesthetically function
C. Plaintiff has Not Shown a Triable Fact as to Likelihood of Confusion.
“The test for a likelihood of confusion is whether a ‘reasonably prudent consumer’ in the marketplace is likely to be confused as to the origin of the good or service bearing one of the marks.” Dreamwerks Prod. Grp., Inc. v. SKG Studio,
The Court notes Plaintiffs contention that the doctrine of legal equivalents applies in this case. This doctrine recognizes that words and pictures that have the same meaning can be confusingly similar. Thus, a word mark can infringe a picture mark if the word mark evokes the picture mark, and a picture mark can infringe a word mark where the picture is a depiction of the word. See, e.g., Mobil Oil Corp. v. Pegasus Petroleum Corp.,
Plaintiff argues that the picture mark Betty Boop is the legal equivalent of the word mark Betty Boop, and that therefore the Court “should find for purposes of determining a likelihood of confusion, [that] the well-delineated image of Betty Boop is equivalent to Fleischer Studios’ registered BETTY BOOP word marks.” Pl.’s Mot. 14:25-28.
As the Betty Boop image mark is a representation of the Betty Boop character, and the Betty Boop word mark is that character’s name, it is self-evident that these marks could be considered legal equivalents. But Plaintiff does not show how this helps its case. Importantly, “the question of confusing similarity does not arise unless the defendant’s use of the picture in question is in a trademark man
Plaintiff has not even argued, let alone shown, that Defendants’ use of the Betty Boop image is a trademark use such that it may be deemed the legal equivalent of the Betty Boop word mark. For example, those cases in which “the owner of a word mark received protection against infringing use of a picture mark, or vice versa, involved a true picture mark, a single pictorial representation used repeatedly as an indication of origin.” Pirone,
Accordingly, the Court concludes that, as a matter of law, Defendants’ non-trademark use of the Betty Boop word mark and image cannot give rise to any likelihood of consumer confusion over the source of Defendants’ goods.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court find that, as a matter of law, Defendants are not using the words “Betty Boop” or the image of Betty Boop as a trademark; therefore, Defendants have not infringed Plaintiffs Betty Boop word mark. Accordingly, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment and GRANTS Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. Defendants are ordered to lodge a Proposed Judgment within ten (10) days of the issuance of this Order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court is troubled by Plaintiffs casual conflation in its submissions of itself and the unrelated, long-defunct Original Fleischer that initially owned the rights in Betty Boop. See, e.g., Mot. 5:23-26 (stating, "Fleischer Studios' association with Betty Boop began in 1930 when Max Fleischer created a cartoon character ... ’’). As this Court and the Ninth Circuit have noted, the present Fleischer Studios is legally unrelated to the original 1930s Fleischer Studios. Evidently, Plaintiff used this sleight-of-hand in an attempt to persuade the reader that its legal interest in Betty Boop is of longer standing than it actually is. The
. The Ninth Circuit upheld the district court's exclusion of the following evidence as untimely: evidence that Plaintiff owned a federally-registered trademark in the image of Betty Boop, and evidence that Fleischer's word mark has achieved incontestible status. See Fleischer II,
. Although the parties did not raise this theory in the prior district court proceedings, it was put in issue by Fleischer I and the parties properly briefed and addressed it in the present papers. Plaintiff stridently contends that the aesthetic functionality doctrine is not viable in this circuit. Indeed, there appears to be some confusion applying the doctrine, perhaps stemming from the semantics of the phrase "aesthetic functionality”. However, it is clear from Au-Tomotive Gold, Inc. v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc.,
