by Zachary Wadlé

The Heart Attack Grill in Chandler, Arizona (http://www.heartattackgrill.com) is unabashedly unhealthful. The morbidly titled restaurant proclaims its food has “a taste worth dying for,” and offers to feed all patrons 350 pounds and over for free. The menu features single through quadruple ”bypass burgers” (actual quadruple bypass burger pictured above), "flatliner fries" deep fried in pure lard, unfiltered “Lucky Strike” cigarettes, and Jolt Cola, amongst other fulsome fare. 

Continue Reading “The Heart Attack Grill” Commences Litigation Triage to Save Its Trade Dress

by Scott Hervey

A basic prerequisite for the ownership and registration of a trademark is that the mark is “used in commerce.”  The Trademark Act defines “use in commerce” as the bona fide use of a mark in the ordinary course of trade. Under the Act, a mark is deemed to be used in commerce when: (i) the mark is placed in any manner on goods, their containers, their displays, on the goods’ tags or labels and, in certain cases,  on documents associated with the goods or their sale; and (ii) the goods are sold or transported in interstate commerce.

Continue Reading Why Establishing Trademark Use Is Not As Easy As One Would Think

by Jeff Pietsch

A federal district court in Minnesota dismissed claims made under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (18 U.S.C. § 1030) (“CFAA”) for the receipt of unwanted text messages. The CFAA, which was originally adopted as criminal law to prohibit actions that damaged another’s computer system or stealing information from it, now permits a claim for civil damages. 

Continue Reading Unwanted Text Messages Does Not Equal Computer Fraud and Abuse

by Scott Hervey

After four years, the quest to obtain federal trademark protection for the mark MATTRESS.COM by owner 1800Mattress.com IP, LLC, formerly Dial-A-Mattress Operating Corp, has been put to bed. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has finally held that the mark is generic and not entitled to registration.

Continue Reading Federal Circuit Puts Generic 1800Mattress Trademark to Bed

by Jeff Pietsch

Earlier this year, the Tenth Circuit court upheld a preliminary injunction granted in favor of an electronics equipment manufacturer against a reseller of its goods in a trademark infringement action. In Beltronics v. Midwest Inventory Distribution, the reseller (Midwest) argued that it was able to resell the manufacturer’s goods based on the first sale doctrine. The court, however, disagreed with this assessment and ruled that the resellers violated the manufacturer’s trademark rights because Midwest’s sales caused consumer confusion.

Continue Reading When Product Resales are not Protected under the First Sale Doctrine