Major League Baseball Claims Dodgers Still Own Trademark On Brooklyn Logo, Despite Leaving Town 53 Years Ago

from the brooklyn-bums dept

A few folks sent in the story from the NY Daily News saying that the Los Angeles Dodgers had filed a lawsuit against the owners of Brooklyn Burger, for using a version of the old stylized “Brooklyn” logo as part of its own logo:

brooklyn burger
Of course, (not surprisingly) it appears that the NY Daily News account is not accurate. Apparently it’s actually Major League Baseball who put in the claim “on behalf of the Dodgers.” It’s also not quite a lawsuit, but just an opposition to the trademark filed by the burger place. MLB’s reasoning is the standard cop out from companies asserting trademark claims in questionable situations, as they say “oh we have to do this.”

“As MLB, we are obligated by law to protect our trademarks or we are at risk of losing them.”

Of course, this ignores the bigger point, which is that the Dodgers left Brooklyn in 1957 and haven’t used the logo since then. On top of that, it’s not at all clear that the Dodger’s original trademarked logo would cover food at all. And, of course, it’s not as if anyone (moron in a hurry or not) would rush by the Brooklyn Burger restaurant and think “gee, the Dodgers have opened a restaurant!” The whole thing feels like yet another (in a long line of) intellectual property overreaches by Major League Baseball.

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Companies: brooklyn burger, major league baseball

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Comments on “Major League Baseball Claims Dodgers Still Own Trademark On Brooklyn Logo, Despite Leaving Town 53 Years Ago”

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30 Comments
Brian (profile) says:

Use in commerce?

I thought trademarks actually had to be used in commerce for you to keep them or you lost it after a certain number of years of them not being in use. I could very well be wrong though so any correction is welcome. I know that when you file initially, you can file an “in good faith” saying that you will use it but then you have to at some point actually use it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Yep the Cooperstown Hall of Fame sells Brooklyn jerseys.
http://shop.baseballhall.org/Don-Sutton-Brooklyn-Dodgers-Cooperstown-Replica-Jersey-_-1915500827_PD.html

I think that they should be forced to field a team in these uniforms once every few years to maintain the trademark. What does it say about teams who have direct food ties like the Phillies and Phillies Franks.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Their corporate offices are. Many teams don’t play in the city they’re named for. The Dallas Cowboys play in Arlington. The Washington Redskins play in Landover, Maryland. The Detroit Lions finally moved back to Detroit after decades in Pontiac, MI. Giants Stadium is actually the closest stadium to midtown Manhattan that any NY sports team plays in (outside of Madison Square Garden).

Anonymous Coward says:

And they wonder why I am only interested in the world series. I never let my kids watch because of the alcohol ads. Most of the fathers I know let their kids watch and one of those kids just died from alcohol poisoning at the age of 18. Hey MLB is not responsible. Exactly! The MLB is not a responsible organization and tries to be through the power of lawyers. The last lawyer that came on my family’s property uninvited left with an ass full of buckshot. Yea!

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Most of the fathers I know let their kids watch and one of those kids just died from alcohol poisoning at the age of 18. Hey MLB is not responsible. Exactly!

You’re right in one sense. MLB is not responsible, bad parenting is responsible. I love the fact that children are telling their parents what to do these days. If the parent tries to “discipline” the child, all they do is call CPS.

Tom Landry (profile) says:

….we are obligated by law to protect our trademarks or we are at risk of losing them.”

can someone PLEASE explain to me WHY this is so? This seems to be the basis of most of the asinine “trademark” lawsuits. It seems to me you should either have protection for “X” amount of years or you don’t. Maybe I’m being far too simplistic but I would guess that if things were better defined it would cut out many frivolous lawsuits, no?

Michael (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I’m not defending it, but if your trademark is used enough, it can become a generic term. Take ‘Elevator’ – this was, actually, a trademarked name. It was used so much, it became a generic term and the trademark was lost. ‘Jello’ was in jeopardy of this for awhile.

However, at the end of the day, it is pretty stupid. People recognize this evolution and can handle it. Eventually, you may have to tag something with ‘Original’ to note that you started the use of the term. In addition, you can issue anyone a free license for use of your term and suddenly you do not have a problem. This is just the MLB doing a money grab again.

Gene Cavanaugh (profile) says:

Brooklyn logo

Right on! Trademarks are supposed to be “use it or lose it”, and restricted to a specific product. If only the courts would:
1. Do something about costs, such as forcing someone bringing a lawsuit (if MLB does) in such a case to pay all fees and a penalty to the injured party, and
2. Provide a pretrial test so that abuse like this would never even get into the courts!
At this time, large entity IP is becoming a very bad joke.

baseballfan (profile) says:

Don’t criticize what you don’t understand.

1. While you generally cannot trademark a geographic city name, you can trademark a distinctive style of writing that name. Every sports team and College or University does it in some form or another, like an interlocking LA or NY or old Boston B or the style of print. And you want that to be the case, or else the market would be even more flooded than it already is with crappy knock-offs of the trademark.

2. The Dodgers use the Brooklyn mark extensively in commerce. Look at the Cooperstown Collection apparel. Someone posted that they should be forced to use it on the field. They have, repeatedly, including at Old Timers functions and Hall of Fame games. One of the reasons many sports teams have been using flashback or throwback uniforms (like the Jets using Titans stuff) is to establish that they still use their old trademarks.

3. Why do you think the burger place used the distinctive Brooklyn script? Because they want to specifically reference and enjoy the benefit of all the good will the baseball team generated with that logo. That is not right. The Dodgers have invested a ton of money generating that. Shouldn’t they be entitled to protect it? The burger joint is free to use another print style and create its own good will; don’t try to take a free ride on someone else’s.

4. Someone posted that Baseball should license the burger joint to use the logo. How do you know that they haven’t made that offer? That is common in circumstances like this. Maybe the burger joint rejected it? Or refused to maintain certain quality standards, or not sell t-shirts that with the Brooklyn script, etc., etc. Don’t jump on the team unless you know the entire background.

5. Trademark holders are forced to take action when someone tries to trademark a similar logo. If they let everyone use the trademark and did not police and protect it, you would jump on them for not taking sufficient steps to keep it disinctive (and the law would agree with you). You can’t have it both ways — criticize them for not protecting it and then criticize them for protecting it. Nor can they wait. What if the burger joint is successful and opens another and then another and then another burger joint, and then the Dodgers take action. Then you would argue that they slept on their rights and it isn’t fair to the burger joint because they have now invested in building a name and market using the name.

6. The decision in the prior lawsuit involving MLB and the Brooklyn Dodgers logo linked to above was VACATED by the court, meaning that it was withdrawn, is not binding, and has no value as precedent.

baseball training (user link) says:

Many teams don’t play in the city they’re named for. The Dallas Cowboys play in Arlington. The Washington Redskins play in Landover, Maryland. The Detroit Lions finally moved back to Detroit after decades in Pontiac, MI. Giants Stadium is actually the closest stadium to midtown Manhattan that any NY sports team plays in (outside of Madison Square Garden).

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