SUMMARY ORDER
Jill Stuart (Asia) LLC and Ronald Curtis, as Trustee for the Stuart-Curtis Family Trust (together, “Jill Stuart”), appeal
1. Motion to Dismiss
We review de novo the District Court’s partial grant of a motion to dismiss. See Standard Inv. Chartered, Inc. v. Nat’l Ass’n of Sec. Dealers, Inc.,
The District Court concluded that the Permanent Assignment Agreement (“PAA”), which assigned to Sanei the Jill Stuart trademark for certain categories of goods in certain territories, does not contain a provision prohibiting Sanei’s use of the mark on other products as to which the PAA is silent. Relying primarily on Two Guys from Harrison N.Y. v. S.F.R. Realty Associates,
Moreover, whereas the PAA contains an explicit prohibition against uses of Jill
2. Motion for Summary Judgment
We review de novo the District Court’s grant of summary judgment. Garcia v. Hartford Police Dep’t,
Sanei admits that it breached the PAA by copying Jill Stuart’s Palm Tree Print 1 (“Palm Print”) design and using it (1) on Sanei’s website, (2) in a promotional booklet, and (3) on an iPhone cover. On summary judgment, however, Jill Stuart failed to show that any of these uses caused lost profits by damaging the Jill Stuart brand. Jill Stuart’s “reasonable royalty” theory also fails because, even assuming that a hypothetical reasonable royalty amount could support a non-speculative consequential damages determination under New York law, Jill Stuart failed to show sufficiently similar royalty contracts on which to base such a determination. Jill Stuart having failed to show reasonably certain, adequately proven, and sufficiently non-conjectural consequential damages, the District Court did not err in awarding nominal damages only.
We have considered Jill Stuart’s remaining arguments and conclude that they are without merit. For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Jill Stuart's argument for an implied negative covenant under Harper Brothers v. Klaw,
