PLAYBOY ENTERPRISES, INC. v.
Terri WELLES
279 F.3d 796 (9th Cir. 2002)
T.G. NELSON,
Circuit Judge.
Playboy Enterprises,
Inc. (PEI), appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment as to its
claims of trademark infringement, unfair competition, and breach of contract
against Terri Welles; Terri Welles,
Inc.; Pippi, Inc.; and Welles' current
and former "webmasters," Steven Huntington and Michael Mihalko. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1291, and
we affirm in part and reverse in part. . . . .
I.
Background
Terri Welles was on
the cover of Playboy in 1981 and was chosen to be the Playboy Playmate of the
Year for 1981. Her use of the title
"Playboy Playmate of the Year 1981," and her use of other trademarked
terms on her website are at issue in this suit. During the relevant time period, Welles'
website offered information about and free photos of Welles, advertised photos
for sale, advertised memberships in her photo club, and promoted her services
as a spokesperson. A biographical
section described Welles' selection as Playmate of the Year in 1981 and her
years modeling for PEI. After the lawsuit began, Welles included discussions of
the suit and criticism of PEI on her website and included a note disclaiming
any association with PEI.[1]
PEI complains of four different uses of its trademarked
terms on Welles' website: (1) the terms
"Playboy" and "Playmate" in the metatags of the
website; (2) the phrase "Playmate
of the Year 1981" on the masthead of the website; (3) the phrases "Playboy Playmate of the
Year 1981" and "Playmate of the Year 1981" on various banner
ads, which may be transferred to other websites; and (4) the repeated use of the abbreviation
"PMOY '81" as the watermark on the pages of the website. PEI claimed
that these uses of its marks constituted trademark infringement, dilution,
false designation of origin, and unfair competition. The district court granted defendants'
motion for summary judgment. PEI
appeals the grant of summary judgment on its infringement and dilution
claims. We affirm in part and reverse
in part. . . . .
II.
Standard of Review
We review the district court's grant of summary
judgment de novo. Viewing the evidence
in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, we must determine whether
there are any genuine issues of material fact and whether the district court
correctly applied the relevant substantive law.
The court must not weigh the evidence or determine the truth of the
matter but only determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.
III.
Discussion
A. Trademark
Infringement
Except for the use
of PEI's protected terms in the wallpaper of Welles' website, we conclude that
Welles' uses of PEI's trademarks are permissible, nominative uses. They imply no current sponsorship or
endorsement by PEI. Instead, they serve to identify Welles as a past PEI
"Playmate of the Year."7
We
articulated the test for a permissible, nominative use in New Kids On The Block v. New America
Publishing, Inc. The band, New Kids On
The Block, claimed trademark infringement arising from the use of their
trademarked name by several newspapers.
The newspapers had conducted polls asking which member of the band New
Kids On The Block was the best and most popular. The papers' use of the trademarked term did
not fall within the traditional fair use doctrine. Unlike a traditional fair use scenario, the
defendant newspaper was using the trademarked term to describe not its own
product, but the plaintiff's.10 Thus, the factors used to evaluate fair use
were inapplicable. The use was nonetheless
permissible, we concluded, based on its nominative nature.
We adopted the following test for nominative use:
First, the product or service in question
must be one not readily identifiable without use of the trademark; second, only so much of the mark or marks may
be used as is reasonably necessary to identify the product or service; and third, the user must do nothing that
would, in conjunction with the mark, suggest sponsorship or endorsement by the
trademark holder.12
We noted in New
Kids that a nominative use may also be a commercial one.13
In cases in which the defendant raises a nominative use
defense, the above three-factor test should be applied instead of the test for
likelihood of confusion set forth in Sleekcraft. The
three-factor test better evaluates the likelihood of confusion in nominative
use cases. When a defendant uses a trademark nominally, the trademark will be
identical to the plaintiff's mark, at least in terms of the words in
question. Thus, application of the Sleekcraft
test, which focuses on the similarity of the mark used by the plaintiff and the
defendant, would lead to the incorrect conclusion that virtually all nominative
uses are confusing. The three-factor
test--with its requirements that the defendant use marks only when no
descriptive substitute exists, use no more of the mark than necessary, and do
nothing to suggest sponsorship or endorsement by the mark holder--better
addresses concerns regarding the likelihood of confusion in nominative use
cases.
We group the uses
of PEI's trademarked terms into three for the purpose of applying the test for
nominative use. First, we analyze
Welles' use of the terms in headlines and banner advertisements. We conclude that those uses are clearly
nominative. Second, we analyze the use
of the terms in the metatags for Welles'
website, which we conclude are nominative as well. Finally, we analyze the terms as used in the
wall-paper of the website. We conclude
that this use is not nominative and remand for a determination of whether it
infringes on a PEI trademark.
1. Headlines and
banner advertisements.
To satisfy the first part of the test for nominative use,
"the product or service in question must be one not readily identifiable
without use of the trademark[.]" This
situation arises "when a trademark also describes a person, a place or an
attribute of a product" and there is no
descriptive substitute for the trademark.
In such a circumstance, allowing the trademark holder exclusive rights
would allow the language to "be depleted in much the same way as if
generic words were protectable." In
New Kids, we gave the example of the trademarked term, "Chicago
Bulls." We explained that
"one might refer to the 'two-time world champions' or 'the professional
basketball team from Chicago,' but it's far simpler (and more likely to be
understood) to refer to the Chicago Bulls." Moreover, such a use of the trademark would
"not imply sponsorship or endorsement of the product because the mark is
used only to describe the thing, rather than to identify its source." Thus, we concluded, such uses must be
excepted from trademark infringement law.
The district court
properly identified Welles' situation as one which must also be excepted. No descriptive substitute exists for PEI's
trademarks in this context. The court
explained:
[T]here is no other way that Ms. Welles can identify or
describe herself and her services without venturing into absurd descriptive
phrases. To describe herself as the
"nude model selected by Mr. Hefner's magazine as its number-one
prototypical woman for the year 1981" would be impractical as well as
ineffectual in identifying Terri Welles to the public.
We agree.
Just as the newspapers in New Kids could only identify the band
clearly by using its trademarked name, so can Welles only identify herself
clearly by using PEI's trademarked title.
The second part of the nominative use test requires that
"only so much of the mark or marks may be used as is reasonably necessary
to identify the product or service[.]"
New Kids provided the following examples to explain this
element: "[A] soft drink competitor
would be entitled to compare its product to Coca-Cola or Coke, but would not be
entitled to use Coca-Cola's distinctive lettering." Similarly,
in a past case, an auto shop was allowed to use the trademarked term
"Volkswagen" on a sign describing the cars it repaired, in part
because the shop "did not use Volkswagen's distinctive lettering style or
color scheme, nor did he display the encircled 'VW' emblem." Welles'
banner advertisements and headlines satisfy this element because they use only
the trademarked words, not the font or symbols associated with the trademarks.
The third element requires that the user do "nothing
that would, in conjunction with the mark, suggest sponsorship or endorsement by
the trademark holder." As to this
element, we conclude that aside from the wallpaper, which we address
separately, Welles does nothing in conjunction with her use of the marks to
suggest sponsorship or endorsement by PEI. The marks are clearly used to
describe the title she received from PEI in 1981, a title that helps describe
who she is. It would be unreasonable to
assume that the Chicago Bulls sponsored a website of Michael Jordan's simply
because his name appeared with the appellation "former Chicago Bull."
Similarly, in this case, it would be unreasonable to assume that PEI currently
sponsors or endorses someone who describes herself as a "Playboy Playmate
of the Year in 1981." The
designation of the year, in our case, serves the same function as the
"former" in our example. It
shows that any sponsorship or endorsement occurred in the past.
In addition to doing nothing in conjunction
with her use of the marks to suggest sponsorship or endorsement by PEI, Welles
affirmatively disavows any sponsorship or endorsement. Her site contains a clear statement
disclaiming any connection to PEI. Moreover, the text of the site describes her
ongoing legal battles with the company.
For the foregoing
reasons, we conclude that Welles' use of PEI's marks in her headlines and
banner advertisements is a nominative use excepted from the law of trademark
infringement.
2. Metatags.
Welles includes the terms "playboy" and
"playmate" in her metatags.
Metatags describe the contents of a website using keywords. Some search
engines search metatags to identify websites relevant to a search. Thus,
when an internet searcher enters "playboy" or "playmate"
into a search engine that uses metatags, the results will include Welles' site. Because
Welles' metatags do not repeat the terms
extensively, her site will not be at the top of the list of search
results. Applying the three-factor test
for nominative use, we conclude that the use of the trademarked terms in
Welles' metatags is nominative.
As we discussed
above with regard to the headlines and banner advertisements, Welles has no
practical way of describing herself without using trademarked terms. In the context of metatags, we conclude that
she has no practical way of identifying the content of her website without
referring to PEI's trademarks.
A large portion of
Welles' website discusses her association with Playboy over the years. Thus, the trademarked terms accurately
describe the contents of Welles' website, in addition to describing
Welles. Forcing Welles and others to use absurd turns of phrase in their
metatags, such as those necessary to identify Welles, would be particularly
damaging in the internet search context.
Searchers would have a much more difficult time locating relevant
websites if they could do so only by correctly guessing the long phrases
necessary to substitute for trademarks.
We can hardly expect someone searching for Welles' site to imagine the
same phrase proposed by the district court to describe Welles without referring
to Playboy--"the nude model selected by Mr. Hefner's
organization...." Yet if someone could not remember her name, that is what
they would have to do. Similarly,
someone searching for critiques of Playboy on the internet would have a
difficult time if internet sites could not list the object of their critique in
their metatags.
There is simply no
descriptive substitute for the trademarks used in Welles' metatags. Precluding their use would have the unwanted
effect of hindering the free flow of information on the internet, something
which is certainly not a goal of trademark law. Accordingly, the use of trademarked terms in
the metatags meets the first part of the test for nominative use.
We
conclude that the metatags satisfy the second and third elements of the test as
well. The metatags use only so much of
the marks as reasonably necessary and
nothing is done in conjunction with them to suggest sponsorship or endorsement
by the trademark holder. We note that
our decision might differ if the metatags listed the trademarked term so
repeatedly that Welles' site would regularly appear above PEI's in searches for
one of the trademarked terms.31
3.
Wallpaper/watermark.
The background, or wallpaper, of Welles' site
consists of the repeated abbreviation
"PMOY '81," which stands for "Playmate of the Year 1981."32 Welles' name or likeness does not appear
before or after "PMOY ' 81." The pattern created by the repeated
abbreviation appears as the background of the various pages of the
website. Accepting, for the purposes of
this appeal, that the abbreviation "PMOY" is indeed entitled to
protection, we conclude that the repeated, stylized use of this abbreviation
fails the nominative use test.
The repeated
depiction of "PMOY '81" is not necessary to describe Welles. "Playboy Playmate of the Year
1981" is quite adequate. Moreover,
the term does not even appear to describe Welles--her name or likeness do not
appear before or after each "PMOY '81." Because the use of the
abbreviation fails the first prong of the nominative use test, we need not
apply the next two prongs of the test.
Because the defense
of nominative use fails here, and we have already determined that the doctrine
of fair use does not apply, we remand to the district
court. The court must determine whether
trademark law protects the abbreviation "PMOY," as used in the
wallpaper.
B. Trademark
Dilution
The district court granted summary judgment to Welles as to
PEI's claim of trademark dilution. We
affirm on the ground that all of Welles' uses of PEI's marks, with the
exception of the use in the wallpaper which we address separately, are proper,
nominative uses. We hold that
nominative uses, by definition, do not dilute the trademarks.
Federal law provides protection against trademark dilution:
The owner of a famous mark shall be
entitled, subject to the principles of equity and upon such terms as the court
deems reasonable, to an injunction against another person's commercial use in
commerce of a mark or trade name, if such use begins after the mark has become
famous and causes dilution of the distinctive quality of the mark.... 33
Dilution, which was not defined by the statute, has been described by
the courts as "the gradual 'whittling away' of a trademark's value." Traditionally, courts have recognized two forms
of dilution: blurring and tarnishment.
Blurring occurs when another's use of a mark creates "the
possibility that the mark will lose its ability to serve as a unique identifier
of the plaintiff's product." Tarnishment,
on the other hand, occurs "when a famous mark is improperly associated
with an inferior or offensive product or service." . . . .
Dilution works its harm not by causing confusion in
consumers' minds regarding the source of a good or service, but by creating an
association in consumers' minds between a mark and a different good or service. As
explained in a First Circuit case, in dilution (as compared to infringement)
"an entirely different issue is at stake--not interference with the source
signaling function but rather protection from an appropriation of or free
riding on the investment [the trademark holder] has made in its
[trademark]."39 Thus,
for example, if a cocoa maker began using the "Rolls Royce" mark to
identify its hot chocolate, no consumer confusion would be likely to
result. Few would assume that the car
company had expanded into the cocoa making business. However, the cocoa maker would be
capitalizing on the investment the car company had made in its mark. Consumers readily associate the mark with
highly priced automobiles of a certain quality. By identifying the cocoa with the Rolls
Royce mark, the producer would be capitalizing on consumers' association of the
mark with high quality items. Moreover, by labeling a different product
"Rolls Royce," the cocoa company would be reducing the ability of the mark to
identify the mark holder's product. If
someone said, "I'm going to get a Rolls Royce," others could no
longer be sure the person was planning on buying an expensive automobile. The person might just be planning on buying
a cup of cocoa. Thus, the use of the
mark to identify the hot chocolate, although not causing consumer confusion,
would cause harm by diluting the mark.
Uses that do not create an improper association between a
mark and a new product but merely identify the trademark holder's products
should be excepted from the reach of the anti-dilution statute. Such uses cause no harm. The anti-dilution statute recognizes this
principle and specifically excepts users of a trademark who compare their
product in "commercial advertising or promotion to identify the competing
goods or services of the owner of the famous mark."40
For the same reason uses in comparative
advertising are excepted from anti-dilution law, we conclude that nominative
uses are also excepted. A nominative
use, by definition, refers to the trademark holder's product. It does not create an improper association
in consumers' minds between a new product and the trademark holder's mark.
When Welles refers
to her title, she is in effect referring to a product of PEI's. She does not dilute the title by
truthfully identifying herself as its one-time recipient any more than Michael
Jordan would dilute the name "Chicago Bulls" by referring to himself
as a former member of that team, or the two-time winner of an Academy Award
would dilute the award by referring to him or herself as a "two-time
Academy Award winner." Awards are
not diminished or diluted by the fact that they have been awarded in the
past. Similarly, they are not diminished
or diluted when past recipients truthfully identify themselves as such. It is in the nature of honors and awards to
be identified with the people who receive them. Of course, the conferrer of such honors and
awards is free to limit the honoree's use of the title or references to the
award by contract. So long as a use is
nominative, however, trademark law is unavailing.
The one exception to the above analysis in this case is
Welles' use of the abbreviation "PMOY" on her wallpaper. Because we determined that this use is not
nominative, it is not excepted from the anti-dilution provisions. Thus, we reverse as to this issue and remand
for further proceedings. We note that
if the district court determines that "PMOY" is not entitled to trademark
protection, PEI's claim for dilution must fail. The trademarked term, "Playmate of the
Year" is not identical or nearly identical to the term "PMOY."
Therefore, use of the term "PMOY" cannot, as a matter of law, dilute
the trademark "Playmate of the Year." . . . .
[1] The disclaimer reads as follows: "This site is neither endorsed, nor sponsored, nor affiliated with
Playboy Enterprises, Inc. PLAYBOY® PLAYMATE OF THE YEAR® AND PLAYMATE OF THE
MONTH® are registered trademarks of Playboy Enterprises, Inc."
7 See New Kids on the Block v. News America Publ'g, Inc.,
971 F.2d 302, 306 (9th Cir.1992) (describing a nominative use as one that
"does not imply sponsorship or endorsement of the product because the mark
is used only to describe the thing, rather than to identify its source").
10 The "classic fair use case" is one in which
"the defendant has used the plaintiff's mark to describe the defendant's own
product." Id.
at 308 (emphasis in original).
12 New Kids, 971 F.2d at 308 (footnote omitted).
13 Id. at 309 ("Where, as here, the use does not imply sponsorship or endorsement, the fact that it is carried on for profit and in competition with the trademark holder's business is beside the point.").
31 PEI asserts that it
introduced evidence showing that Welles' site has been listed before PEI's on
occasion. However, an examination of
the evidence PEI cites shows that Welles' site, although sometimes ranked
highly, was still listed below PEI's in search results.
32 "PMOY" is not itself registered as a trademark. PEI argued before the district court that it is nonetheless protected because it is a well-known abbreviation for the trademarked term "Playmate of the Year." In this court PEI cites one affidavit that supports this argument.
33 15 U.S.C. §
1125(c)(1).
40 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(4)(A).