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  • Big News Fender Loses Trademark Case

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    BIENSTOCK & MICHAEL, P.C. WINS LANDMARK TRADEMARK RULING
    AGAINST FENDER MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS CORPORATION

    On March 25, 2009, the United States Trademark Trial and Appeal Board overwhelmingly ruled in favor of a large group of guitar manufacturers and retailers by denying Fender Musical Instruments Corporation’s (“FMIC”) applications for federal trademark registrations of the two-dimensional body shape outlines used on its Stratocaster, Telecaster and Precision Bass electric guitars and basses. At the end of a five-year proceeding (Stuart Spector Designs, Ltd., et al. v. Fender Musical Instruments Corp., Consolidated Opposition No. 91161403), Bienstock & Michael, P.C. successfully represented all of the companies who opposed FMIC’s applications. The Board affirmed the opposers’ position that they, and the entire guitar industry, would be substantially harmed if these registrations were issued, as this would grant FMIC a monopoly to three of the most common guitar shapes used and promoted by the industry as a whole for
    almost fifty years.

    In a 75-page precedent-setting decision, the Board ruled that the body shapes were generic and that consumers do not solely associate these shapes with FMIC. All three applications were denied.

    Ronald S. Bienstock, senior partner at Bienstock & Michael, P.C., who also argued the case at the oral hearing at the United States Patent and Trademark Office in Alexandria, VA, said, “This is an important victory, not only for our clients, but for the guitar industry as a whole. The TTAB has prevented FMIC from gaining a monopoly on these body shapes that have been used by hundreds of manufacturers for half a century. This ruling affirms what our clients, and everyone else in the industry, have known all along: these body shapes are generic and belong to everyone.” Bienstock added, “This decision has a broad impact on any trademark case where a company is attempting to recapture a trademark that it introduced some time ago, but neglected to police or protect it in any way while other companies used, marketed and promoted it.”

    This dispute began in 2003 when FMIC filed three applications with the USPTO seeking trademark registration for the two-dimensional body shapes it uses on its Stratocaster, Telecaster and Precision Bass. In 2004, a group of large and small guitar manufacturers and retailers, in a “David v. Goliath” action, formally opposed the applications filed by musical instrument giant FMIC. These manufacturers included Indoor Storm, Ltd., Jim Triggs Guitars, JS Technologies, Inc., Lakland Musical Instruments, LLC, Levinson Musical Products, Ltd., Michael Tobias Design, Peavey Electronics Corporation, Raise Praise, Inc. d/b/a Tom Anderson Guitarworks, Sadowsky Guitars Ltd., Saga Musical Instruments, Schecter Guitar Research, Inc., Stuart Spector Designs, Ltd., The ESP Guitar Company, Tradition Guitars, Inc., U.S. Music Corp., Warmoth Guitar Products, Inc. and WD Music Products, Inc. Bienstock and Michael, P.C. was unanimously chosen to represent all of the opposers in this proceeding.

    After five years of hard-fought litigation, which included over twenty thousand pages of evidence demonstrating countless companies who have manufactured, marketed and sold guitars that use the body shapes, the TTAB concluded, “The evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that these configurations are so common in the industry that they cannot identify source. In fact, in the case of the [Stratocaster] body outline, this configuration is so common that it is depicted as a generic electric guitar in a dictionary.” The entire decision can be read at:

    http://ttabvue.uspto.gov/ttabvue/v?p...ty=OPP&eno=246.

    Bienstock and Michael, P.C. is a full-service intellectual property and entertainment law firm with offices located at Continental Plaza, 411 Hackensack Ave., 7th Floor, Hackensack, NJ 07601 and 250 West 57th Street, Suite 808, New York, NY 10107. The firm can be reached at (201) 525-0300 or through their website, www.musicesq.com
    Special deals for JCF members on Jackson/Charvel, Suhr, Anderson, Nash, Splawn, Bogner, LSL, Ibanez, Diezel, Friedman, Bad Cat, 3rd Power, Dr. Z, ENGL and more. FREE SHIPPING! 0% FINANCING!

  • #2
    How about that....
    Mr. Patience.... ask for a free consultation.

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    • #3
      Too bad Leo and the boys didn't trademark their designs back in the day, I'm sure this case would have been easier to win if they did.
      Special deals for JCF members on Jackson/Charvel, Suhr, Anderson, Nash, Splawn, Bogner, LSL, Ibanez, Diezel, Friedman, Bad Cat, 3rd Power, Dr. Z, ENGL and more. FREE SHIPPING! 0% FINANCING!

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      • #4
        Don't feel "too" bad for them Matt. They are making more than enough money as it is.
        Mr. Patience.... ask for a free consultation.

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        • #5
          First PRS vs Gibby, now this. Viva la free trade! j/k

          I doubt this will be the end of it, though. My guess is FMIC's lawyers will appeal, and drag it on further. They probably have almost no hope of winning this, but little to lose by continuing on through the legal appeals.

          If only this would lead to an end to the "gentleman's agreement" on body shapes, and we could get the old Gibby-esque body styles out of the custom shop again. Not gonna happen, though.

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          • #6
            Can you imagine how it would effect the industry if they had won? Everyone and their mother makes guitars that have some variation of these body styles. What, is every single guitar built going to involve a licensing fee?

            And why were Warmoth and WD named in the suit... don't they already pay licensing fees to Fender for the parts they sell?
            Special deals for JCF members on Jackson/Charvel, Suhr, Anderson, Nash, Splawn, Bogner, LSL, Ibanez, Diezel, Friedman, Bad Cat, 3rd Power, Dr. Z, ENGL and more. FREE SHIPPING! 0% FINANCING!

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            • #7
              Originally posted by mattsmusiccenter View Post
              And why were Warmoth and WD named in the suit... don't they already pay licensing fees to Fender for the parts they sell?
              Headstock styles (necks), yes. But I don't believe they do so for body styles.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by mattsmusiccenter View Post
                Can you imagine how it would effect the industry if they had won? Everyone and their mother makes guitars that have some variation of these body styles. What, is every single guitar built going to involve a licensing fee?

                And why were Warmoth and WD named in the suit... don't they already pay licensing fees to Fender for the parts they sell?
                I don't think Warmoth and WD were named in the suit, but willingly joined the opposition to help fight Fender from getting trademark rights to the shapes. It was a group who had an interest in Fender not having the right to the body shapes.

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                • #9
                  Maybe they can challenge the headstock trademarks while they are on a roll?
                  _________________________________________________
                  "Artists should be free to spend their days mastering their craft so that working people can toil away in a more beautiful world."
                  - Ken M

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Axewielder View Post
                    Maybe they can challenge the headstock trademarks while they are on a roll?
                    I was thinking the exact same thing.

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                    • #11
                      Nothing against lawyers, but notice who wins, no matter who wins.
                      "Wow,... that was some of the hardest rockin ever. Hardest to listen too."
                      --floydkramer

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Axewielder View Post
                        Maybe they can challenge the headstock trademarks while they are on a roll?
                        Not a chance in hell.
                        Unlike body shapes, headstock shapes are indeed unique by design.
                        The USPTO already made that clear back in the 70's and 80's.
                        -Rick

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                        • #13
                          And, unlike the body styles, Fender has a long history of seeking to enforce its trademarks on headstocks. On bodies, Fender never established the trademarks, and essentially did little or nothing for decades to protect them as proprietary.
                          Last edited by shreddermon; 03-27-2009, 10:23 AM.

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                          • #14
                            fuck 'em in the ass... the man who designed these and who would have had the right to claim them as his intellectual property has been dead for 18 years.
                            The losers who want to sue everyone and get tons of cash out of it put ZERO effort behind the creation of those instruments.
                            Last edited by Endrik; 03-27-2009, 10:35 AM.
                            "There is nothing more fearful than imagination without taste" - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

                            "To be stupid, selfish and have good health are three requirements for happiness, though if stupidity is lacking, all is lost" - Gustave Flaubert

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                            • #15
                              So when the "vs Gibson" suit is settled next week, that should put an end to the monopoly on the Les Paul, SG, Flying V, and Explorer shapes, right?

                              Does this mean Charvel can replace the Style2 with a P-bass?
                              I want to depart this world the same way I arrived; screaming and covered in someone else's blood

                              The most human thing we can do is comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.

                              My Blog: http://newcenstein.com

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