Readers of this blog
already know that U.S. shoe maker Converse
has filed a trademark infringement and trade mark dilution
suit against K Mart
in the Eastern District of New York and also requested the U.S. International
Trade Commission to institute an investigation under
Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 based on the unlawful importation to the U.S. of such allegedly
infringing shoes.
U.S. shoe designers have to rely on trade mark, trade dress,
or design patent to protect their creations, as shoes cannot be protected by
copyright in the U.S., because copyright does not protect “useful articles.”
Only elements which can be separated from the design can be protected, such as,
say, the buckle of the shoe.
A Work Must Be
Original to be Protected by French IP Law
The law is different in France, and shoes can be protected
by French “copyright,” le
droit de la
propriété littéraire et artistique, if they are original. However, French
law does not define what is original, and so courts have decided that a
particular work is original if it is the imprint or the reflection of the
personality of its author. Similarly, the European Court of Justice held in
2009 in
Infopaq that “
the various parts of a work… enjoy
protection under Article 2(a) of Directive 2001/29, provided that they contain
elements which are the expression of the intellectual creation of the author of
the work.”
One may wonder how a mundane shoe can reflect the personality
of its author, but under the theory of the
unité
de l’art (art unity), as stated by
article L. 112-1 of the French
Intellectual Property (IP) Code, the French IP Code “
protects
the rights of
authors in all works of the mind, whatever their kind, form of expression,
merit or purpose.” As such, the French IP Code protects sculptures,
symphonies, or shoes, as long as they are original.
Plaintiff’s Shoe is Original
This particular ROCK PERFECTO model, was first sold by
Plaintiff in 2004, which described it as “combining
an opening system with a zip on a boot with a pointed toe and a one centimeter height
heel, thus closing the front portion of the interior of the shoe and finishing on
the outside of the ankle through the top of the shoe.”
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Plaintiff's ROCK PERFECTO |
Plaintiff claimed that, as such, “the imprint of the personality of its author derives from the
combination of elements that make up this boot, and even more so as these items
are not in themselves necessary to the composition of a boot.”
Plaintiff argued that the combination of these different elements,
“which are not necessary for the creation
of a boot, denoted a aesthetic choice, in particular as they reveal the
arbitrary choice of associating the inside curve of the boot to the curved side
of its outer sides, the heel in the shape of a horseshoe, with the effect of
triangle sides and the very sharp tip,” and argued that the combination of
these different elements were done by choice, and, as such, is original.
Plaintiff also argued that the patent leather used for the shoe,
along with the thinness of the its heel, were original elements and explained further
that it had wanted “to transfer by
association of these components the shape of the “Perfecto” jacket in boots,”
thus revealing further a creative input.
Defendant Sonia Rykiel argued that this particular way to
close a boot was not original and that Plaintiff had not produced any evidence
about the creative process leading to this particular model of shoes. Sonia
Rykiel argued further that “the mere
combination of previously known elements cannot establish the originality of a
work, as it fails to reveal the existence of a creative process” and that
the arbitrary choice made by Plaintiffs are not enough to characterize the
originality “which could not derive from
a simple variation, adaptation to fashion trends or a transposition from one
genre to another.”
As an aside, this shows that designers, whether they are
famous or not, would be well inspired to keep some records of the creative
process which led to a particular idea. When I was a fashion intern in Paris,
the design team kept a mood board and a tableau
de collection it used to record every change and source of inspiration. I
was in charge of cutting and gluing the new silhouettes. [Am I THAT old?]. Now,
this is, of course, done digitally.
|
Ah Non, Zeez Shoes Are Not Ze Same! |
But for the Tribunal
de Grande Instance, the boots were original, as “that the combination of the elements constituting the shoe ROCK
PERFECTO results from an arbitrary choice of collecting specific items, none of
which appear to be dictated by the function of a shoe, which gives it, in an
overall assessment, a particular shape which reflects an aesthetic bias bearing
the imprint of the personality of its author” (p. 8). The Court concluded,
therefore, that the ROCK PERFECTO boot
model is protectable by copyright.
No Counterfeiting
The Court examined Plaintiff’s and Defendant’s shoes side by
side and noted that there were enough differences to decide that Defendant had
not copied Plaintiff’s shoes. For instance, the heel of the shoe sold by Defendant
was higher, the closing by zip was somewhat different, and “if these two shoes have common features, [Defendant’s]
shoe does not include the original combination claimed by Plaintiff.”
The Court concluded that the defendants had not infringed the plaintiff’s
shoes.
On a side note: Rock Perfecto's "original creation" is also suspiciously reminiscent of an early eighties Swiss design
ReplyDeletehttp://www.stefitalman.ch/zip/