Oprah Faces Lawsuit Over 'Own Your Power'
Oprah Winfrey will have to defend in court her use of the phrase "Own Your Power" in her magazine and on her website, a U.S. appeals court said Friday.
Overturning a lower
court ruling, the 2nd Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals revived claims brought by
the owner of a motivational services business who claimed she owns a trademark
on the phrase.
The case should go
forward, the appeals court said, because the plaintiffs have plausibly alleged
that Winfrey was "attempting to build a new segment of her media empire
around" the phrase "Own Your Power."
She and her
company, Harpo Inc, have repeatedly used the phrase, including on a website,
for promotional events, and on the cover of the October 2010 issues of O, The
Oprah Magazine, the court said.
Winfrey's
continuous use of the phrase could become "symbolic shorthand" for
her products and message as a whole, the court said.
Winfrey is one of
the most popular talk show hosts in history and now runs the cable network OWN
in a joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc.
Harpo, as well as
Hearst Corp, which publishes O, The Oprah Magazine, and Estee Lauder Companies
Inc are also defendants in the lawsuit.
A representative
for Harpo was not immediately available for comment.
U.S. District Judge
Paul Crotty of New York
had dismissed the lawsuit in March 2012, finding no one seeing the Oprah
magazine or information about the related events would think they were created
by the plaintiffs, Simone Kelly-Brown and Own Your Power Communications Inc.
The plaintiff also
alleged that Winfrey would have known the Own Your Power trademark already
existed due to searches that would have been done when her television network,
OWN, was developed.
The appeals court
agreed it was possible, and those issues will also now be reviewed by the lower
court.
Patricia
Lawrence-Kolaras, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said the case has been an
uphill battle and that her clients are "ecstatic" about the opinion.
The court did rule
that Winfrey and her co-defendants would not have to face allegations relating
to logos used on the magazine or at the events.
In a concurring
opinion, Circuit Judge Robert Sack said Friday's decision should not be
interpreted to mean that a publisher is always forbidden from using a
trademarked term to describe its content, such as on a magazine cover or in a
headline.
In this case, Sack
wrote, it was Winfrey's repeated use of the phrase in an attempt to build an
association with consumers that concerned the court.
Representatives of
Hearst and Estee Lauder were not immediately available for comment.
The case is
Kelly-Brown et al v. Oprah Winfrey, et al., U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit, No. 12-1207.
Culled from ENSTARZ
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