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Following a jury trial early this year, Chanel and What Goes Around Comes Around (“WGACA”) are in the midst of phase two, which is seeing them go back forth over equitable remedies. As was previously reported first by TFL, Chanel filed a motion for a permanent injunction in March, in which it is seeking to bar WGACA from continuing to partake in infringing activities, such as “unfairly competing” with Chanel by taking any action that is likely to cause confusion or mistake among consumers; making unauthorized use of Chanel marks “other than to identify the items being offered for sale”; advertising, offering for sale, or selling any CHANEL-branded items that have not been authorized for sale by Chanel; and making any representations regarding the genuineness of any CHANEL-branded items or its ability to make such claims without proper documentation, among other things.

 

WGACA’s response: WGACA has since responded to Chanel’s motion, arguing that the court should reject Chanel’s proposed motion on the basis that it is “impermissibly overbroad and overreaching,” particularly as “the evidence establishes that WGACA acted in good faith and built its reputation and success by establishing itself as a trustworthy purveyor of authentic luxury items.” 

 

We reported on WGACA’s response at a high level here, including its allegations that Chanel is trying to use the injunction to exert control over (and stifle) the secondary market, but I think a few of WGACA’s arguments are worth flagging. Among these are Chanel’s bid to: (1) require WGACA to obtain permission from Chanel before legally marketing any Chanel items; (2) require WGACA to include a disclaimer; (3) restrict WCAGA’s ability to sell refurbished items; and (4) prohibit WGACA from offering to guarantee the authenticity of its items. 


Read More Here

Some Litigation Updates …


> Christian Dior v. Café Dior: Dior is waging a new trademark infringement and dilution case against the owners/operators of a similarly-named coffee shop in Massachusetts.  

 

> New Balance Athletics v. Golden Goose USA: New Balance and Golden Goose have settled their dad shoe-centric TM clash, alerting the court that they have stipulated and agreed that “all of New Balance’s claims in this action are dismissed with prejudice” & Golden Goose’s counterclaims are dismissed w/o prejudice.

 

> Nike v. USAPE: Nike has lodged its answer to the cancellation counterclaims that BAPE has waged against it. (More on that case here.)

In some deal-making (and other finance) news this week …

– Julie Zerbo
Founder & Editor-in-Chief

Here are TFL’s top articles of the week …

1. New Lawsuit Lifts the Lid on Shein’s AI-Powered Ultra-Fast Fashion Model. Giana argues that Shein uses “algorithms, AI & related computerized monitoring systems to identify trending and ‘viral’ images and designs on social media, apps, and websites.”


2. Jury Sides With Urban Outfitters in Le Tote Trade Secret Case. Urban Outfitters has beaten trade secret misappropriation claims waged against it by Le Tote following a federal jury trial in Philadelphia.


3. WGACA Says Chanel is Using “Broad” Injunction to Stifle Secondary Market. The reseller is angling to avoid a broad injunction that would prevent it from continuing to make use of Chanel’s TMs in connection with its sale of pre-owned products, among other things. 

4. How Do Luxury Brands Sell to the 0.0001 Percent? Are companies engaging in illegal tying or are they merely rewarding their most loyal clients?

5. Our Running Tracker of AI Legislation is up to date. The newest bill on the list: the Generative AI Copyright Disclosure Act. 


6. Ye Settles Multi-Year Clash Over YZY Trademarks. Ye (formerly Kanye West) appears to have prevailed in a fight to keep one of the TM registrations tied to his Yeezy apparel and footwear brand intact.

7. European Regulator Calls Off Probe into Fashion Brands’ Alleged Price Fixing. The European Commission has called off a competition-centric probe that reportedly centered on fashion brands’ potential price fixing efforts.

8. Loyalty Programs May Limit Competition & Push Prices Up For Everyone. On competitive grounds, alone, loyalty programs can sometimes harm all consumers – both ordinary shoppers & the program’s own members.