Republic Technologies (NA), LLC et al v. BBK Tobacco & Foods, LLP d/b/a HBI International
Filing
793
MOTION by Plaintiffs Republic Technologies (NA), LLC, Republic Tobacco L.P. for judgment Republic's Rule 50(a) Motion (Roeser, Peter)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION
REPUBLIC TECHNOLOGIES (NA), LLC
and REPUBLIC TOBACCO, L.P.,
Plaintiffs,
Case No. 16-cv-03401
vs.
BBK TOBACCO & FOODS, LLP d/b/a
HBI INTERNATIONAL,
Judge Thomas M. Durkin
Defendant.
REPUBLIC’S RULE 50(a) MOTION
“Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a)(1) allows a district court to enter
judgment against a party who has been fully heard on an issue during a jury
trial ‘if a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to
find for the party on that issue.’” Howell v. Wexford Health Sources, Inc., 987
F.3d 647, 658 (7th Cir. 2021).
HBI has now been fully heard on its claims of copyright and trade dress
infringement, and the result is clear. HBI has failed to prove a likelihood of
confusion between its trade dress for RAW Organic Hemp and the trade dress
for OCB Organic Hemp. Moreover, HBI has failed to prove copying of any
original or creative element of its copyrighted materials.
I.
TRADE DRESS
The Court is well familiar with HBI’s claimed trade dress. It involves the
word “RAW” in a distinctive tone of red, pitched at an upward angle from left to
right, in a distressed serif font that, as Mr. Kesselman described it, looks as
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though it has been “stamped” instead of printed. HBI’s trade dress includes
none of those things.
Ian Kobe, HBI’s graphics director, testified that the key elements that
make the “RAW” brand recognizable to consumers were: (1) the “RAW” as
described above; (2) the realistic-looking “string” graphic that appears to
encircle the package as though the package were actually tied up in string; (3)
an image of green grass at the foot of the packaging; (4) a round “button” or
“stamp” with “purest natural hemp fibers” or similar language; (5) particular
language (“natural unrefined hemp rolling papers”) beneath the “RAW,” also
pitched at an angle; (6) a pleasant beige background; and (7) specific colors of
red and brown.
Republic’s OCB Organic Hemp trade dress shares but one of these
elements, a beige background. As the evidence has shown, beige or tan
backgrounds are not at all unusual, particularly for rolling papers targeting the
“natural” segment of the rolling paper market. Moreover, OCB’s tan color is on
a distinctly burlap-looking background; the beige background on the RAW
packages is smooth.
Every other one of the identified distinctive elements of the RAW trade
dress is absent on the OCB trade dress. The introductory 99-cent OCB trade
dress has its “OCB” lettering in red, but it is not pitched at an angle, is a sansserif font, is not distressed, and bears a double-strike through the “C” that is
characteristic of many OCB brands world-wide, and does not resemble any
element of the RAW packaging. The full-priced package is even further from the
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RAW look, with the “OCB” in what most any lay person would describe as
brown, not red.
“This circuit uses the following seven factors to determine
the likelihood of confusion: (1) the similarity between the marks in appearance
and suggestion; (2) the similarity of the products; (3) the area and manner of
concurrent use; (4) the degree of care likely to be exercised by consumers; (5)
the strength of the plaintiff's mark; (6) any evidence of actual confusion; and (7)
the intent of the defendant to ‘palm off’ his product as that of another. No
single factor is dispositive, but we have said that three are especially
important: the similarity of the marks, the intent of the defendant, and
evidence of actual confusion.” Sorensen v. WD-40 Co., 792 F.3d 712, 726 (7th
Cir. 2015).
Not only are the two products’ trade dresses quite dissimilar, HBI’s effort
to demonstrate actual confusion is second-hand and anecdotal (at best). Not a
single would-be purchaser (neither a consumer or reseller) testified of having
the slightest confusion between the competing products. And even the secondhand evidence was not indicative of actual confusion, such as Mr. Colvard’s
mini-mart manager who already carried the RAW Organic Hemp product, and
decided to pick up a box of the OCB Organic Hemp at a “cash-and-carry”
because he thought it looked similar and wanted to give it a try. This actually
constitutes affirmative evidence of non-confusion; he knew it was a distinct
product (he already carried the RAW), and wanted to try it. That’s not
confusion; it’s competition.
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A reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to
find for HBI on trade dress infringement. Judgment on trade dress
infringement should be entered in Republic’s favor.
II.
COPYRIGHT
A.
NO INFRINGEMENT
As with the trade dress claims, Republic’s products and marketing
materials are so completely different from HBI’s that no inference of copying is
permissible on this record.
HBI has not even identified any protected expression in its claimed
copyrights. To the extent there is anything in HBI’s works that even
conceivably meets the “minimal degree of creativity” threshold to set them
apart from the hundreds of other rolling papers sold in rectangular booklets
and their marketing materials, there is no evidence that Republic has copied it
B.
NO DISGORGEMENT
Even if any portion of HBI’s copyright infringement were to go to the jury,
the issue of disgorgement of profits should not. Disgorgement of profits from
sales of an infringing good may be available for a copyright claim, but where, as
here, the copyright is allegedly being infringed to sell something distinct from
the copyrighted work itself, the claimant (here HBI) has a burden to
demonstrate how much of the infringer’s profits came about as a result of the
alleged infringement. See Taylor v. Meirick, 712 F.2d 1112, 1122 (7th Cir. 1983)
(“If General Motors were to steal your copyright and put it in a sales brochure,
you could not just put a copy of General Motors’ corporate income tax return in
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the record and rest your case for an award of an infringer’s profits”). A case
where an accused copyright infringer “did not sell the copyrighted work, but
used the copyrighted work to sell another product” is an “[i]ndirect profit case.”
Bergt v. McDougal Littell, 661 F. Supp. 2d 9116, 927 (N.D. Ill. 2009). “A plaintiff
cannot simply presume that the sales of a defendant’s products are due to
copyright infringement.” Fox Controls, Inc. v. Honeywell, Inc., No. 02 C 346,
2005 WL 1605832, *8 (N.D. Ill. July 14, 2005) (Honeywell used plaintiff’s
copyrighted training manuals; where plaintiff “fail[ed] to present any basis
upon which to conclude that Honeywell derived any profit from the use of
plaintiff’s works, much less any particular amounts,” plaintiff’s evidence was
“insufficient to create a triable issue of fact”).
HBI has not met its burden. Its damages expert, Mr. Burns, attempted to
apportion the profits earned by HBI to each assertedly false advertising claim,
but neither he nor any other witness even attempted to ascertain or
demonstrate what portion of Republic’s profits on OCB Organic Hemp rolling
papers are related to the alleged infringement of HBI’s copyrights. This is a
complete absence of proof, and the jury has been provided no basis for
evaluating the issue, and thus it should not go to the jury.
Dated: June 22, 2021
Respectfully submitted,
REPUBLIC TECHNOLOGIES (NA), LLC,
REPUBLIC TOBACCO, L.P.,
By: /s/ Peter S. Roeser
One of their attorneys
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Charles S. Bergen
Peter S. Roeser
Matthew D. Tanner
ROESER TANNER & GRAHAM LLC
Two North Riverside Plaza, Suite 1850
Chicago, IL 60606
(312) 300-2525
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on June 22, 2021, the above and foregoing was filed
electronically with the Clerk of the Court using the CM/ECF system, which sent
notification to all ECF registrants that are counsel of record for this matter
/s/ Peter S. Roeser
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