Jack Daniel’s v. VIP presented the question whether a dog toy, with the general appearance of a Jack Daniel’s bottle, infringed the Jack Daniel’s trademarks. The matter reached the Supreme Court because of a dispute over whether to (a) apply the customary likelihood-of-confusion factors under the Lanham Act, or (b) before applying those factors, apply “the Rogers test” that focuses on a First Amendent issue. The Supreme Court chose the simpler path and went straight to the factors:
Without deciding whether Rogers has merit in other contexts, we hold that it does not when an alleged infringer uses a trademark in the way the Lanham Act most cares about: as a designation of source for the infringer’s own goods. VIP used the marks derived from Jack Daniel’s in that way, so the infringement claim here rises or falls on likelihood of confusion. But that inquiry is not blind to the expressive aspect of the Bad Spaniels toy that the Ninth Circuit highlighted.
No. 22-148 (U.S. June 8, 2023) (citation omitted).
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