M. Arthur Gensler, Jr. & Assocs., Inc. v. Strabala, No. 12-2256 (7th Cir. 2014)

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After leaving Gensler, an architectural firm with projects throughout the world, where he had been a Design Director, Strabala opened his own firm, 2Define Architecture. Strabala stated online that he had designed five projects for which Gensler is the architect of record. Gensler contends that Strabala’s statements, a form of “reverse passing off,” violated section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C.1125(a). The district court dismissed, ruling that, because Strabala did not say that he built or sold these structures, he could not have violated section 43(a), reading the Supreme Court decision Dastar Corp. v. Twentieth Century Fox (2003), to limit section 43(a) to false designations of goods’ origin. The Seventh Circuit vacated, reasoning that Gensler maintains that Strabala falsely claims to have been the creator of intellectual property.

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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________   No.  12-­ 2256   M.  ARTHUR  GENSLER  JR.  &  ASSOCIATES,  INC.,   Plaintiff-­ Appellant,   v.   JAY  MARSHALL  STRABALA,   Defendant-­ Appellee.   ____________________   Appeal  from  the  United  States  District  Court  for  the   Northern  District  of  Illinois,  Eastern  Division.   No.  11  C  3945    Ronald  A.  Guzmán,  Judge.   ____________________   ARGUED  SEPTEMBER  12,  2013    DECIDED  AUGUST  21,  2014   ____________________   Before  POSNER,  EASTERBROOK,  and  SYKES,  Circuit  Judges.   EASTERBROOK,  Circuit  Judge.  After  leaving  Gensler,  an  ar-­ chitectural   firm   with   projects   throughout   the   world,   where   he  had  been  a  Design  Director,  Jay  Marshall  Strabala  opened   his   own   firm,   2Define   Architecture.   Strabala   stated   on   its   web   site   (http://www.define-­ arch.com/en/featured),   on   his   personal   Flickr   site,   or   both,   that   he   had   designed   five   pro-­ jects   for   which   Gensler   is   the   architect   of   record:   Shanghai   Tower,  Hess  Tower,  Three  Eldridge  Place,  the  Houston  Bal-­ 2   No.  12-­ 2256   let  Center  for  Dance,  and  the  headquarters  of  Tesoro  Corpo-­ ration.  Gensler  contends  that  Strabala s  statements,  a  form  of   reverse  passing  off  in  the  argot  of  this  field,  violate  §43(a)   of  the  Lanham  Act,  15  U.S.C.  §1125(a).  But  the  district  judge   dismissed   the   complaint,   ruling   that,   because   Strabala   did   not   say   that   he   built   or   sold   these   structures,   he   could   not   have   violated   §43(a).   2012   U.S.   Dist.   LEXIS   21255   (N.D.   Ill.   Feb.   21,   2012).   The   court   then   dismissed   Gensler s   state-­ law   claims,  relying  on  its  concession  that  the  outcome  of  its  fed-­ eral-­ law   claim   controls   the   whole   suit.   2012   U.S.   Dist.   LEXIS   21255  at  *8 9.   The   district   court   read   Dastar   Corp.   v.   Twentieth   Century   Fox  Film  Corp.,  539  U.S.  23  (2003),  to  limit  §43(a)  to  false  des-­ ignations   of   goods   origin and   since   Gensler s   claim   con-­ cerns  services  rather  than  goods,  the  court  held  that  Gensler   cannot   invoke   the   Lanham   Act.   That   conclusion   misreads   Dastar.   True   enough,   it   held   that   the   absence   of   a   false   or   misleading  designation  of  goods  origin  nixed  a  Lanham  Act   claim,   but   that   was   because   the   suit   involved   only   goods.   The   Supreme   Court   did   not   read   services   out   of   the   Lan-­ ham   Act.   Nor   did   it   hold   that   a   false   claim   of   origin   is   the   only   way   to   violate   §43(a).   If   it   had   done   that,   then   POM   Wonderful  LLC  v.  Coca-­ Cola  Co.,  134  S.  Ct.  2228  (2014),  could   not  have  come  out  as  it  did,  for  there  was  no  dispute  about   who  made  what,  as  opposed  to  whether  one  seller  was  try-­ ing  to  deceive  consumers  about  what  its  product  contained.   Dastar   held   that   a   copyright   can t   be   extended   by   using   the   Lanham   Act.   Dastar,   the   defendant,   copied   and   sold   some   videos   after   the   copyright   expired.   Dastar   correctly   identified   itself   as   the   producer   of   the   physical   objects   that   embodied   the   intellectual   property;   doing   so   satisfied   both   No.  12-­ 2256   3   statutes,  the  Court  held.  Twentieth  Century  Fox,  which  had   owned   the   copyright   before   its   expiration,   did   not   contend   that  Dastar  had  falsely  identified  itself  as  the  videos  creator,   wrongly  imputed  the  newly  made  copies  to  Twentieth  Cen-­ tury   Fox,   or   made   any   other   false   claim.   Because   the   origin   of   goods   had   been   correctly   designated,   and   no   false   state-­ ment   made,   the   Court   held   that   §43(a)   did   not   supply   a   claim   for   relief.   Gensler,   by   contrast,   does   assert   there   has   been   a   false   claim   of   origin though   of   services   rather   than   goods.  Gensler  maintains  that  Strabala  falsely  claims  to  have   been   the   creator   of   intellectual   property   (the   designs   of   the   five   buildings).   Architects   success   in   winning   clients   de-­ pends  on  what  they  have  accomplished;  Gensler  has  a  strong   interest   in   defending   its   reputation   for   creativity   and   pre-­ venting  a  false  claim  that  someone  else  did  the  design  work.   Section  43(a)(1)  reads:   Any  person  who,  on  or  in  connection  with  any  goods  or  services,   ¦   uses   in   commerce   any   word,   term,   name,   symbol,   or   device,   or   any   combination   thereof,   or   any   false   designation   of   origin,   false  or  misleading  description  of  fact,  or  false  or  misleading  rep-­ resentation  of  fact,  which   (A)  is  likely  to  cause  confusion,  or  to  cause  mistake,  or  to  de-­ ceive   as   to   the   affiliation,   connection,   or   association   of   such   person  with  another  person,  or  as  to  the  origin,  sponsorship,   or  approval  of  his  or  her  goods,  services,  or  commercial  ac-­ tivities  by  another  person  [shall  be  liable  in  a  civil  action.]   Gensler   contends   that   Strabala   made   a   false   or   misleading   representation   of   fact   (his   role   in   designing   the   five   build-­ ings)  that  is   likely  to   ¦  deceive  as  to  the   ¦  connection[]  or   association   of   such   person   [Strabala]   with   another   person   [Gensler]   and   to   deceive   clients   about   the   origin   of   the   designs.   Nothing   in   Dastar   forecloses   such   a   claim.   See   So-­ 4   No.  12-­ 2256   ciete  des  Hotels  Meridien  v.  LaSalle  Hotel  Operating  Partnership,   LP,   380   F.3d   126   (2d   Cir.   2004).   The   district   court   thought   that  Gensler  should  have  relied  on  copyright  law  rather  than   the  Lanham  Act,  but  Strabala  did  not  make  or  sell  copies  of   any  plans  or  drawings  in  which  Gensler  claims  a  copyright.   A  false  claim  of  authorship,  without  the  making  of  copies  (or   some   other   act   covered   by   17   U.S.C.   §106),   is   outside   the   scope   of   copyright   law.   Gensler s   only   plausible   federal   claim  rests  on  §43(a).   The   question   remains,   however,   whether   Gensler   has   a   tenable  claim.  It  charges  Strabala  with  a  form  of  fraud,  so  we   would   expect   its   complaint   to   allege   with   particularity   the   nature   of   the   grievance what   Strabala   said   and   why   it   is   false.  See  Fed.  R.  Civ.  P.  9(b).  Yet  the  complaint  contains  only   a  few  quotations  and  does  little  to  explain  what  part  of  each   is  false.  For  example,  it  quotes  this  from  Strabala s  Flickr  site:   Shanghai  Tower  was  designed  by  American  architect  Mar-­ shall  Strabala.  But  it  does  not  say  why  the  statement  that  he   designed  the  building  is  false.   We  can  think  of  three  ways  in  which  an  architect s  asser-­ tion  that  he  designed  a  building  could  be  false:   ¢   The   architect   did   not   have   anything   to   do   with   the   design,  never  having  worked  on  the  project.   ¢   The   architect   worked   on   the   project   but   overstated   his   role.   For   example,   the   architect   may   have   de-­ signed  some  of  a  building s  details,  but  not  its  basic   appearance  or  attributes.   ¢   The  architect  worked  on  the  project  and  contributed   some  or  even  all  important  features,  but  the  project   No.  12-­ 2256   5   was  so  complex  that  no  one  person  bore  full  respon-­ sibility.   The  first  of  these  would  be  like  Strabala  claiming  to  have  di-­ rected   the   motion   picture   Casablanca.   The   second   would   be   like  a  junior  associate,  who  did  some  research  but  contribut-­ ed  only  a  few  pages  of  text,  claiming  to  have  been  the  author   of   Arnold,   Fortas   &   Porter s   brief   in   Gideon   v.   Wainwright.   Frank   Lloyd   Wright   was   accused   of   overstating   his   role   at   Adler   &   Sullivan   in   this   way,   in   order   to   get   commissions   after  he  set  up  his  own  practice  in  1893.   Gensler s   complaint   does   not   contend   that   Strabala s   statements   are   false   or   misleading   in   either   of   these   ways.   Instead  Gensler  appears  to  rely  on  the  third  possibility:  that   big   buildings   are   team   jobs   that   no   one   designs.   The   com-­ plaint  alleges,  for  example:   The  Gensler  team  that  designed   the   Shanghai   Tower   included   approximately   one   hundred   people  who  devoted  significant  time  to  the  project.  [Strabala]   was  one  of  many  members  of  that  Gensler  team.  Gensler,  not   [Strabala],   is   the   source   of   the   architectural   and   design   ser-­ vices  rendered  in  designing  the  Shanghai  Tower.  It  is  as  if   Warner  Bros.  wanted  Michael  Curtiz,  who  directed  Casablan-­ ca,   to   keep   silent   about   his   role   because   the   film   could   not   have   succeeded   without   Humphrey   Bogart s   and   Ingrid   Bergman s  acting,  Max  Steiner s  music,  Arthur  Edeson s  cin-­ ematography,  Murray  Burnett s  and  Joan  Alison s  play,  Jul-­ ius  and  Philip  Epstein s  screenplay,  and  the  contributions  of   a  hundred  others or  at  least  to  append  to  any  claim  of  di-­ rectorship   something   along   the   lines   of   many   persons   in   addition  to  directors  bear  credit  for  a  film s  success  or  blame   for   its   failure.   As   Gensler   sees   it,   the   auteur   approach   to   6   No.  12-­ 2256   filmmaking   is   legally   impermissible   in   the   architectural   business.   Yet   if   the   gist   of   Gensler s   complaint   is   that   big   projects   require   big   teams and   that   Gensler   insists   on   institutional   rather   than   personal   credit where s   the   falsity?   If   Strabala   (like   Frank   Lloyd   Wright   during   much   of   his   career)   de-­ signed   houses   for   unsophisticated   clients,   then   Gensler   might   have   a   point,   though   it   would   have   trouble   proving   damages.   (Gensler   does   not   allege   that   it   designs   houses   or   other  small  projects,  so  it  could  not  be  injured  by  a  stratagem   that  boosted  Strabala  in  the  eyes  of  naïve  clients.)  But  as  far   as  we  can  see,  from  the  parties  web  sites  as  well  as  the  com-­ plaint,  both  Gensler  and  2Define  specialize  in  large  projects,   which  have  sophisticated  clients may  indeed  have  in-­ house   architects   to   oversee   the   hiring   and   work   of   firms   such   as   Gensler   and   2Define,   just   as   large   businesses   have   in-­ house   counsel   to   oversee   legal   projects.   Gensler s   complaint   ob-­ serves  that  2Define  describes  itself  as   specializ[ing]  in  com-­ plex   high   profile   projects ,   which   is   how   Gensler   describes   its   own   business.   People   who   pay   millions   for   substantial   projects   (Shanghai   Tower   will   cost   more   than   $4   billion   by   the  time  it  is  finished  in  2015)  know  full  well  that  it  takes  an   architectural  team  to  design  and  execute  the  plans.  They  also   know  that  teams  have  leaders and  Gensler  has  not  alleged   that  Strabala  said  anything  false  by  implying  that  he  was  the   (or  a)  leader  of  the  teams  on  these  five  projects.   If  sophisticated  clients  would  not  be  misled,  then  this  suit   represents  an  effort  by  Gensler  to  conceal  the  fact  that  a  de-­ signer  of  Shanghai  Tower  (and  other  big  projects)  has  flown   the  coop.  That  fact  is  known,  to  be  sure,  but  if  Gensler  wins   this  case  other  architects  who  leave  will  be  required  to  keep   No.  12-­ 2256   7   mum   about   their   accomplishments and   then   it   will   be   Gensler,   not   the   departing   architect,   that   is   in   a   position   to   make   a   misleading   presentation   to   a   future   client.   If   only   Gensler   and   not   any   real   person   designs   a   building,   the   firm  can  never  suffer  from  the  departure  of  talented  design-­ ers,   because   Gensler   the   corporation   remains.   Alternatively   the  suit  could  be  understood  as  an  effort  to  impair  competi-­ tion  by  imposing  costs  on  a  departing  architect,  even  though   setting  up  a  new  firm  does  not  violate  any  contract  (and  the   old   employer   does   not   allege   a   theft   of   trade   secrets).   New   competition  by  people  who  leave  large  firms  to  set  up  small   rivals  is  beneficial  for  consumers.   These  considerations  make  it  tempting  to  affirm  the  dis-­ trict  court s  judgment,  though  not  for  the  district  court s  rea-­ sons.   Yet   Strabala   has   not   asked   us   to   take   that   course.   His   brief  defends  the  district  court s  reasoning  and  does  not  ask   us   to   affirm   on   a   different   ground.   It   does   not   invoke   Rule   9(b)  or  contend  that  sophisticated  clients  understand  that  no   single  architect  is  the  sole  designer  of  a  monster  project  such   as   Shanghai   Tower.   The   district   court   dismissed   the   com-­ plaint  under  Rule  12(b)(6),  and  we  do  not  think  that  Gensler   has   pleaded   itself   out   of   court   just   by   alleging   that   Strabala   tries  to  attract  sophisticated  customers  for  large  projects.  At   least   for   now,   Strabala   is   not   arguing   that   any   of   Gensler s   allegations,  or  the  suggestion  that  sophisticated  clients  might   think  Strabala  the  sole  designer  of  a  billion-­ dollar  building,  is   implausible  as  Ashcroft  v.  Iqbal,  556  U.S.  662  (2009),  and  Bell   Atlantic  Corp.  v.  Twombly,  550  U.S.  544  (2007),  use  that  term.   Nor  does  Gensler s  complaint  rule  out  the  possibility  that  it   competes   with   Strabala   to   build   some   smaller   projects   with   less   sophisticated   clients.   We   have   explained   why   the   com-­ plaint s   legal   theory   is   tenable,   and   the   possibility   that   it   8   No.  12-­ 2256   might  fail  on  the  facts  does  not  authorize  a  court  of  appeals   to  dismiss  a  suit  before  the  parties  have  joined  issue  on  vital   topics.   The   judgment   is   vacated,   and   the   case   is   remanded   for   proceedings  consistent  with  this  opinion.  

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