That Bizarre Trademark Suit Between Music Promoters Over An 'Ultra' Trademark Nobody Owned Is Still Going On

from the not-so-swift-justice dept

I'll forgive the average reader here if they cannot recall the post we did nearly a year and a half ago about a trademark dispute between Worldwide Entertainment Group Inc. of Florida and Adria MM Productions Ltd. of Croatia. It's by far my favorite trademark story ever. It has all the hallmarks of a typical trademark bullying story that we would cover: from a fairly generic term ("Ultra") in a really broad industry (music festivals) being licensed for use overseas in Europe by Worldwide to Adria, only to have the former ratchet up its licensing fee and control demands over the trademark it had on the term "Ultra." Pretty standard fare, even when we get to the part where Worldwide sends Adria notice that it is in breach of the licensing agreement and demanding the stoppage of all use of the term "Ultra."

But where this all turned into my favorite trademark story ever was when Adria MM sued Worldwide, stating this:

AMM says that at that time it discovered that Ultra didn’t have any rights over proprietary marks in Europe, specifically in Croatia.

Yes, according to Adria, Worldwide didn't actually have registered trademarks for "Ultra" in Europe at all, making the licensing arrangement it first signed and then tried to use as a weapon against Adria a brilliant piece of bluffery. What should be fairly clear, however, is that the entire basis of the licensing contract was built upon a lie. With that clearly in mind, Adria moved to have this all decided in the summary judgement phase.

And, because everything about this story is designed to be as funny as possible. shortly after filing its suit, there was a scramble at the trademark offices that honestly should have been accompanied by an instrumental replaying of Yakety Sax.

Five days after the filing the lawsuit, both companies filed to register the trademark “within 34 minutes of each other,” as quoted in the court ruling, with Adria filing in Croatia and Worldwide with the European Union. Both companies protested the filing of the other, and after filing legal actions in the state of Florida, both requested summary judgment in their favor.

And both were denied that summary judgment. In the order, the court relies on the notion that there are material facts in dispute regarding the validity of the original licensing agreement. Summary judgment is only supposed to be granted when material facts are not in dispute and the parties simply want a ruling based on those facts. What makes this odd, however, is that the order's background section appears to accept as fact that the Worldwide did not hold any valid trademarks under the "Ultra" terms in the EU or Croatia specifically for the entire term of the original contract. The only fact that appears to not be in question is whether that agreement is valid anyway. Which... how? If it was entered into under false pretenses, it's unclear exactly how that agreement could be valid.

Regardless, it appears this will go to a jury trial where, if common sense prevails, it seems unlikely things will go well for Worldwide Entertainment Group.

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Filed Under: croatia, europe, jurisdiction, music, promoters, trademark, ultra
Companies: adria mm productions, worldwide entertainment group


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  • identicon
    Crispy, 14 Sep 2018 @ 3:37pm

    Hope springs eternal

    I like your optimism: a trademark jury trial where common sense prevails?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 4:27pm

      Re: Hope springs eternal

      Methinks this will turn into a contracts trial, one that focuses on claims of property rights that weren't actually owned. That is the material facts part.

      It probably won't be a trademark trial simply because the trademark in question is in Croatia, and a Florida court will not have any jurisdiction over that.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Coyne Tibbets (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 6:49pm

    Ultra Ultra Everywhere

    No, sorry, I think this could be even funnier. For example if Ultra Music Festival in Miami owns the rights worldwide.

    Or maybe the perfectly named Ultra Ultra. Obviously, it should win double.

    Should we drop them a card and then buy popcorn?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile), 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:10pm

      Re: Ultra Ultra Everywhere

      Why did your comment make me think about double wide trailers, the ultra livable trailer?

      Wait, is that in the same market segment? Would it matter?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Pixelation, 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:15pm

    Popcorn...

    get your Ultra popcorn here!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Sep 2018 @ 7:24pm

    WEG will win

    It's a jury trial. WEG will win. Go the red white and blue vs evil overseas nasties. Patriotism will trump facts

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Uriel-238 (profile), 15 Sep 2018 @ 3:59pm

    Ultra-trademark

    I was worried for a moment that someone invented a device of intellectual property of a higher order, in which super-common phrases or ideas could be restricted from common use by the public, say to converse or express thought.

    That's why our phones and televisions are monitoring us all the time, to enforce ultra-IP infringement.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    John Smith, 15 Sep 2018 @ 9:21pm

    I'm surprised Techdirt hasn't covered the lawsuit brought against a Nevada brothel owner amed Melinda over her "Whore Mel" by a certain maker of canned chili and other foods.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 17 Sep 2018 @ 5:36am

      Re:

      Techdirt profiling stupid trademark suits really puts a twist in your panties, don't it Johnny?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 16 Sep 2018 @ 12:38pm

    Gotta admire the chuzpah of World Wide in bluffing Aria into that contract. Then turn around and bonk Aria on the forehead for apparently not looking up if World Wide even owned what they were selling. That's a classic Brooklyn Bridge con.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 16 Sep 2018 @ 3:20pm

    Worldwide entertainment will probably try to claim they have a copyright on photons converted after reflection into biological material into electrical signals for processing via a neural network.

    i.e. human vision. so the judge should just stop looking at the documents and give them whatever they want.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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