LEGALFORCE RAPC WORLDWIDE, PC V. LEGALFORCE, INC., No. 23-2855 (9th Cir. 2024)
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LegalForce RAPC Worldwide, P.C. ("LegalForce USA"), a California S corporation operating legal services websites, sued LegalForce, Inc. ("LegalForce Japan"), a Japanese corporation providing legal software services, for trademark infringement. LegalForce USA alleged that LegalForce Japan's U.S. expansion plans, website ownership, and advertising and selling of equity infringed its trademark. The district court dismissed the website claims for lack of jurisdiction and the expansion plan claims as unripe. The claims concerning equity were dismissed for failure to state a claim.
The United States District Court for the Northern District of California dismissed all claims except those related to the advertising and selling of equity. The court held that it had jurisdiction over these claims but dismissed them for failure to state a claim, reasoning that advertising and selling equity is not connected to the sale of goods or services and thus cannot constitute trademark infringement. The court also found that LegalForce USA failed to justify an extraterritorial application of the Lanham Act.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court's dismissal. The court held that using a trademark in connection with the sale of equity does not constitute using the mark in connection with "goods or services" under the Lanham Act. The court also affirmed that LegalForce Japan's services in Japan could not satisfy the "in connection with" goods or services requirement under the Lanham Act, as the relevant conduct occurred outside U.S. territory. The court concluded that the Lanham Act does not apply extraterritorially in this context.
Court Description: Lanham Act. The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal, for failure to state a claim, of an action under the Lanham Act alleging trademark infringement in defendant’s advertising and selling of equity.
LegalForce RAPC Worldwide, P.C. (“LegalForce USA”), a California S corporation that operates legal services websites, sued LegalForce, Inc. (“LegalForce Japan”), a Japanese corporation that provides legal software services, for trademark infringement, alleging that Legal Force Japan’s United States expansion plan, website ownership, and advertising and selling of equity all infringed LegalForce USA’s mark. The district court dismissed the website claims for lack of jurisdiction and dismissed the expansion plan claims as unripe. The district court dismissed the claims concerning equity for failure to state a claim.
As to the equity claims, the panel affirmed the district court’s conclusion that advertising and selling equity is not connected to a sale of goods or services, and so cannot constitute trademark infringement.
The panel also affirmed the district court’s conclusion that LegalForce USA failed to justify an extraterritorial application of the Lanham Act because LegalForce Japan’s services in Japan could not satisfy the “in connection with” goods or services requirement under the Lanham Act.
Concurring in the judgment, Judge Collins agreed that a company’s own equity or stock shares do not count as a “good” or “service” it offers to customers in the market for purposes of the Lanham Act. Judge Collins wrote that, in his view, it was not necessary to reach any additional issues in order to resolve this case, and he disagreed with the majority’s importation, into the Lanham Act, of a definition of “goods” limited to goods that are “movable” or “tangible.”
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