I found about this about this case, which involves a product
known by virtually every American, by reading this
tweet from fellow New York
attorney Mark H. Jaffe, who also provided a link to the
complaint.
Plaintiff is Crayola Properties, Inc., which is a subsidiary
of Hallmark Cards [the level of cuteness of a Hallmark card written in crayolas
is almost unbearable] and Defendant is Alex Toys, LLC. Defendant is allegedly counterfeiting the famous crayons
and infringing and diluting the Crayola trade mark. Defendant sells crayons which
bear, according to the complaint, the term
“crayola” printed on their sides and sometimes on their packaging as
well.
The complaint explains the origin of the Crayola mark, which
has been used since 1905. The mark was coined by the wife of a co-founder of the
company from the French word “craie”
(chalk) and “ola,” short for “oleaginous” [not for oh là là]. So Crayola is an oily chalk, and, as such, has been
happily used by toddlers, in age or in spirit, for more than a century, either on
paper or on freshly-repainted kitchen walls. Two hundred billion Crayola crayons have been sold and 3
billion are produced each year.
A Famous Mark
Plaintiff owns over 20 registrations for Crayola trade marks
and for trade marks containing the term Crayola.The complaint argues that Crayola is a famous trade mark,
and it would be difficult to disagree, as they are sold in every U.S.
supermarket I have ever visited, toys stores, office supply stores, and they grace
the tables of family-style restaurants coast to coast, keeping kiddos busy
while they wait for their grilled cheese sandwiches. Also, crayolas have been
featured on an U.S. stamp and are on
permanent display at the
Smithsonian. Plaintiff argues that “[
a]
n overwhelming majority of consumers think of
the CRAYOLA mark without prompting when asked to name a brand of crayons.”
If the case goes to trial, this question would certainly be part of a survey
presented as evidence by Plaintiff.
Willful Trade Mark
Counterfeiting Claim
Plaintiff claims that Defendant‘s use of the Crayola trade
mark on its products is willful trade mark counterfeiting, in violation of
sections 32(1) and
34(d) of the Lanham Act, and is asking to be awarded
compensatory and treble damages. Indeed, the latter are mandatory under Section
35(b) of the Lanham Act if the use of the counterfeit mark has been willful.
Plaintiff argues that infringement is willful as Defendant has hired
Plaintiff’s former General Manager of Sales as its Executive Vice President of
Sales.
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Genericide Is No Laughable Matter |
Trade Mark Dilution
Claim
Plaintiff also claims that Defendant’s unauthorized use of
the famous crayola trade mark dilutes it, in violation of
Section 43(c) of the Lanham Act. Dilution by blurring, as defined by the Lanham Act, occurs when a
trade mark similar to a famous mark impairs the distinctiveness of the famous
mark. In our case, the trade mark “Crayola” is printed on Defendant’s crayons
as such: crayons crayons crayolas. It could be argued that consumers may
believe that crayolas mean “crayon” in another language, as it follows
“crayons” in English and “crayons” in French.
Of course, having a trade mark becomeg a generic term is the
nightmare of every trade mark holder, as a mark considered to be generic by a
court can no longer play its role of indicator of the goods or services’
origin.
Trade Mark
Infringement Claim
Plaintiff also argues that Defendant infringed its trade
mark by using it on its web site and on its products and that, as Plaintiff has
“no control over the nature and quality
of the goods and services of Defendant… [a]ny failure, neglect, or
default by Defendant in providing goods or services will reflect adversely on
Crayola as the believed source of origin.” Filing this suit is a way for
Crayola to prevent improper use of its trade mark by a third party and thus possibly
losing its rights by genericide, should a court determine that indeed crayons
and crayolas are merely similar nouns.
There are a lot of shades of gray and difficulties in trademark law. I think this is not one of them. If you call your crayons Crayola, you will lose.
ReplyDeleteI think the cute Hallmark cards are written in Crayolas, not crayolas.
ReplyDelete