Plaintiff, a manufacturer and distributor of engine bearings and connecting rods for internal combustion engines, brought suit in a federal district court to enjoin the defendant from marketing and distributing the latter\u27s products in containers which closely resembled those of the plaintiff, thereby falsely representing that the goods were produced by and originated with the plaintiff. The cause of action was based solely on section 43(a) of the Lanham Act. In dismissing the complaint, the district court ruled that any attempt to characterize the complaint as charging a false description or representation was without merit, and that false designation of origin, as referred to in the act, is limited to geographic origin and does not...
There are two things that can be learned from this paper. First, the analytical framework developed ...
Stably, Inc. v. M. H. Jacobs Co., 183 F. 2d 914 (7th.Cir. 1950), cert. denied 95 L. Ed. 146
Several independent franchised soft ice-cream outlets brought suit for treble damages against Carvel...
Plaintiff brought suit in a state court seeking injunctive relief, alleging unfair competition by de...
Statutes, like human beings, may experience a mid-life crisis. One notable illustration of this phen...
Plaintiff\u27s trade-mark, Minute Maid, had been registered under the Lanham Act in 1952 and had b...
In an action for trademark infringement under the Lanham Act and for unfair competition, the Distric...
Does the Lanham Act permit a foreign business that has neither used nor registered its trademark in ...
Federal and state trademark laws regulate concurrently: The Lanham Act does not preempt state law, a...
Integral to the success of a business is its ability to protect its trademark. When another individu...
The Lanham Act bars trademark infringement and false advertising in nearly identical and often overl...
Part II discusses the case’s factual and procedural background. Part III provides background on the ...
Book Chapter Mark McKenna, Trademark Law\u27s Faux Federalism, in Intellectual Property and the Comm...
Plaintiff, a Michigan trucking company subject to the LMRA, brought suit in a Michigan court agains...
The trouble with the Federal law of trademarks is that it rests on unstated assumptions about how ma...
There are two things that can be learned from this paper. First, the analytical framework developed ...
Stably, Inc. v. M. H. Jacobs Co., 183 F. 2d 914 (7th.Cir. 1950), cert. denied 95 L. Ed. 146
Several independent franchised soft ice-cream outlets brought suit for treble damages against Carvel...
Plaintiff brought suit in a state court seeking injunctive relief, alleging unfair competition by de...
Statutes, like human beings, may experience a mid-life crisis. One notable illustration of this phen...
Plaintiff\u27s trade-mark, Minute Maid, had been registered under the Lanham Act in 1952 and had b...
In an action for trademark infringement under the Lanham Act and for unfair competition, the Distric...
Does the Lanham Act permit a foreign business that has neither used nor registered its trademark in ...
Federal and state trademark laws regulate concurrently: The Lanham Act does not preempt state law, a...
Integral to the success of a business is its ability to protect its trademark. When another individu...
The Lanham Act bars trademark infringement and false advertising in nearly identical and often overl...
Part II discusses the case’s factual and procedural background. Part III provides background on the ...
Book Chapter Mark McKenna, Trademark Law\u27s Faux Federalism, in Intellectual Property and the Comm...
Plaintiff, a Michigan trucking company subject to the LMRA, brought suit in a Michigan court agains...
The trouble with the Federal law of trademarks is that it rests on unstated assumptions about how ma...
There are two things that can be learned from this paper. First, the analytical framework developed ...
Stably, Inc. v. M. H. Jacobs Co., 183 F. 2d 914 (7th.Cir. 1950), cert. denied 95 L. Ed. 146
Several independent franchised soft ice-cream outlets brought suit for treble damages against Carvel...