Does the Typical CGL's "Advertising Injury" Coverage Extend to IP Claims?
August 2004
Uncertainty exists regarding whether a CGL
policy's "advertising injury" claim may be used to cover trade secret misappropriation,
patent, trademark, trade dress, or copyright infringement. Analyzing the law
on a state-by-state basis provides some clarity. Even then, however, important
changes to "advertising injury" clauses have yet to be interpreted in many jurisdictions.
Therefore, the best way to address the resultant uncertainty is by modifying
standard policies to be less ambiguous—if the marketplace allows you to do so.
by Sanford
E. Warren Jr. and E.E. "Jack" Richards II
Winstead Sechrest
& Minick
Tell me if you've heard this one before. A start-up company, Winkler Widgets,
Inc. (WW), makes widgets in a market sector populated by a handful of competitors.
You ask Wink Winkler, the company's CEO, chief engineer, and head bottle-washer,
if he is interested in a specialty-risk insurance policy that would provide
defense for any future patent infringement claims. After all, WW does make widgets
in a field occupied by competitors with moderate patent portfolios. Mr. Winkler
passes on the patent infringement policy and only takes out a commercial general
liability (CGL) policy.
WW later implements a broad campaign to launch its new product, the Wizard
Widget. A WW competitor is so impressed with the Wizard advertising that it
sues WW for patent, copyright, and trademark infringement. Mr. Winkler calls
his general counsel and asks, "Can he afford to fight this lawsuit?" Then Counsel
gives the following sage advice to Mr. Winkler:
- A word is not a crystal, transparent and
unchanging, it is the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color
and content according to the circumstances and time in which it is used. —Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (1841-1935)
In other words, Mr. Winkler may not need to worry about the costs of a defense
because his insurance carrier may have a duty to defend the lawsuit. Counsel
may be able to use the CGL policy so that its "advertising injury" coverage
extends to cover the claims for patent, copyright, and trademark infringement.
If you think Counsel has turned Holmes’s quote on its ear, consider the following.
Standard Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO), CGL policies place a duty
to defend and indemnify an insured against claims constituting an "advertising
injury" if:
- The activity is one that is specifically
enumerated by the policy,
- The named insured’s activity constitutes an advertising injury, and
- The advertising activity causes one of the specifically enumerated offenses.1
Each prong from this three-part test is considered below. You will quickly
see that various CGL policies provide a great deal of ammunition for Mr. Winkler's
counsel to find coverage you may not have imagined. As a result, you may need
to consider provisions and specific exclusions concerning specific intellectual property (IP) claims if the uncertainty in
the law disturbs you. On the other hand, if you are the risk manager of a corporation,
you may want to make sure that there are no specific
exclusions in your CGL policy.
Prong 1: Specifically Enumerated Activities (1986 ISO CGL Policy)
Various versions of ISO CGL policies have existed in the past. Each such
policy has tweaked each of the three prongs in one way or the other. Regarding
the first prong, the 1986 ISO CGL enumerates several activities that require
coverage such as:
- "Misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business,"
or
- "Infringement of copyright, title or slogan."
Patents and Copyrights
There is some certainty here. Most courts have held that patent infringement
constitutes neither a "misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing
business," nor "infringement of copyright, title or slogan."2 In contrast, copyright infringement claims are specifically listed as an enumerated
right and consequently covered.
Trademarks
In contrast, courts have split on whether trademark infringement, and its
common law cousin "unfair competition," are covered by the 1986 ISO CGL. For
example, some courts hold that a trademark is inherently an advertising idea.3 Consequently, any infringement of the trademark constitutes a misappropriation
of an advertising idea. Other courts disagree.
The split in interpretation also extends to claims for false advertising
and trade dress infringement.4 Of particular interest,
even if Mr. Winkler finds himself in a jurisdiction that denies coverage for
trademark infringement, all has not been lost. For example, some parties have
garnered coverage by arguing a term, which might normally be considered a trademark
(e.g., "The Wearable Light"), may also constitute a slogan.5 This is an important nuance because slogans are specifically included in the
coverage under the 1986 ISO CGL policy.
Trade Secrets
When a trade secret concerns something like a list of customers, courts have
inconsistently found coverage because such lists constitute methods of gaining
customers, which in turn entail "advertising ideas." In contrast, trade secrets
dealing with technical matters, such as a recipe for producing a certain type
of plastic, have consistently been held to require coverage.6
Prong 1: Specifically Enumerated Activities (1998 ISO CGL Policy)
The 1998 ISO CGL differs from the 1986 ISO CGL policy in its enumeration
of activities that require coverage, such as:
- "Infringing upon another's copyright, trade dress or slogan in your
advertisement," or
- "The use of another's advertising idea in your advertisement."
Patents
If you want clarity, look elsewhere! The courts have yet to provide any real
direction on whether the 1998 CGL policy will coverage patent infringement claims.
Of course some legal commentators are skeptical as to whether the changed wording
will provide any new grounds for coverage. More than likely, the new wording
will not provide any more coverage for patent claims than currently exists,
i.e., none. Still, a determinative answer remains to be seen.
Trademarks
In contrast to the 1986 ISO CGL standard policy, the 1998 policy specifically
covers trade dress infringement. Considering trade dress and copyright infringement
are specifically included, courts may unsurprisingly find that trademark infringement
is not covered because it was not specifically addressed when the authors could
have easily done so. Unfortunately, there is little case law that actually treats
coverage for trademark infringement under the 1998 ISO CGL policy. Consequently,
there is still uncertainty concerning this form of intellectual property.
Trade Secrets and Copyrights
Simply put, nothing has really changed here. Trade secrets are treated the
same. As for copyrights, just like the 1986 policy, copyright infringement is
specifically addressed.
Summary
Prong 1 of the three-part test for whether coverage exists is less than crystal
clear. Patent infringement is usually not covered under the 1986 ISO policy.
Its interpretation under the 1998 policy is unclear, but probably will be the
same. Copyright is covered. Trade secrets are largely fact sensitive and turn
on just how technical the subject matter of the trade secret is. Trademarks
are largely split according to which state law governs the policy.
Prong 2: Act Must be an "Advertising Activity"
Even if Prong 1 is satisfied because the activity in question fits within
an "enumerated activity," the activity must also constitute an "advertising
activity." But what is an "advertising activity?" While some argue that an "advertising
injury" is strictly defined by the enumerated activities, some courts have not
limited their analysis in such a manner.
Patents
Courts have traditionally held that patent infringement could not be read
to be an "advertising activity." Then, in 1996 patent laws were amended to include
"offering [a infringing device] for sale" as a form of patent infringement.
In doing so, the legal waters were muddied with courts splitting on whether
using an advertisement to offer an infringing product for sale constitutes advertising
activity.7
Trademarks, Trade Secrets, and Copyrights
Decisions regarding offenses concerning these intellectual property rights
are largely fact-based. In general, although there are numerous exceptions,
the more people exposed to the activity, the greater the chances are that the
activity will constitute "advertising." The following are examples of activities
that constitute "advertising activity."
- Use of ill-gotten customer lists to contact customers wherein the customer
lists constitute trade secrets.
- Promotion of copyright protected paper products to large retailers,
and not the general public, still constitutes advertising activity.
- Small, targeted mailing of protected work to select clients when the
population of potential clients is small.
- Distribution of letterhead wrongfully incorporating another's trademark.
- Use of a domain name that incorporates another's trademark.8
- A contractor placing a sign with his contact information outside a home
he wrongfully built using copyright-protected plans.9
The following are examples of activities that do not constitute "advertising
activity."
- Use of ill-gotten customer lists because the work was not distributed
to the public at large but instead, constituted person-to-person persuasion.
- Display of an unauthorized copy of a copyright protected artwork.
Modifications to the 1998 ISO CGL have been made to clarify what constitutes
an "advertising injury." For example, "[A]dvertisement does not include the
design, printed material, information or images contained in, on or upon the
packaging or labeling of any goods or products."10 Case law interpreting this change, however, is scarce.
Summary
Prong 2 of the three-part test for whether coverage exists is less than crystal
clear. Remarkably, there is little guidance on the 1996 patent law changes.
As for other forms of intellectual property, case law determinations are largely
fact based.
Prong 3: Adverting Activity that Constitutes an Enumerated Offense Must
Cause Complained of Injury
Finally, even if the activity in question satisfies the first and second
prongs of the three-prong test, the insured faces a tough obstacle in showing
the complained of injury was "caused" by the enumerated advertising activity.
The following are examples of activities that satisfy the causation element.
- Display, distribution, marketing and offering for sale of unauthorized
copies of copyrighted works.
- Use of customers’ lists to contact customers wherein the lists contained
detailed information about the customer and the customer's preferred services.
- Trade dress infringement where an advertisement displayed the infringing
device.
- Trademark infringement where the trademark was displayed in the advertisement.
- Inducement to patent infringement or contributory patent infringement
through advertising of infringing device.
- Use of "magazine.com" domain name which constituted trademark infringement
of the "magazines.com" trademark.11
- Advertisement of videotapes wherein the videotapes utilized copyright-protected
audio recordings and further wherein the videotapes themselves were considered
to be advertisements.
- Sale of a patented product by mail order catalogue, thereby demonstrating
that the advertisement itself is directly linked to the prohibited sale
of the product.
- Wrongfully building a home using copyright-protected plans, in conjunction
with the display of signage touting the builder's name, caused the advertisement
injury.12
The following are examples of activities that do not satisfy the causation
element.
- Patent infringement based on activities other than "offering to sell"
a protected device or service, such as the manufacture of the protected
device.
- Copyright infringement where the injury was due to customers buying
copyright protected software and not where the advertisement itself constituted
copyright infringement.
- Advertising a product that was developed from wrongfully acquired trade
secrets that concerned a method for cooking chicken.
- Copyright infringement for software that contained a feature for generating
bills that displayed advertisements.
No doubt you will notice that some of the above factual scenarios and their
holdings are in conflict with one another. Furthermore, some of the scenarios
that passed the "prong 3 muster" seem like they shouldn't pass either of the
first two prongs, but courts have held that they did. In addition, one cannot
escape the extremely fact-sensitive nature of cases in this area of law. When
cases are fact-dependent, the odds of conflicting opinions being made skyrockets.
Therefore, the only way to address the resultant uncertainty is by modifying
standard policies to be less ambiguous. For example, the 1998 ISO CGL policy
insists that the offense occur "in your advertisement" rather than "in the course
of advertising." However, case law is scarce on how this change will be interpreted.
Conclusion
Uncertainty exists regarding whether a CGL policy's "advertising injury"
may be used to cover trade secret misappropriation or patent, trademark, trade
dress or copyright infringement. Analyzing the law on a state-by-state basis
provides some clarity. Even then, however, important changes to "advertising
injury" clauses have yet to be interpreted in many jurisdictions. Therefore,
the best way to address the resultant uncertainty is by modifying standard policies
to be less ambiguous if the marketplace allows you to do so.
E.E.
("Jack") Richards II is an associate
with Winstead Sechrest Minick in Austin, Texas, where he specializes in intellectual
property, technology, litigation, dispute resolution, and nanotechnology. He
received his BS degree from Texas A&M and his JD degree, cum laude, from the
University of Houston Law Center. Before entering law school, he worked as an
engineer for a start-up company in the medical device industry, focusing on
electronics and software related to cardiac data (electrophysiology and hemodynamics).
Mr. Richards can be reached at .
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