Arica Institute, Inc. v. Palmer

761 F. Supp. 1056, 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 2013, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4731, 1991 WL 57897
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 9, 1991
Docket90 Civ. 5153 (RPP)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 761 F. Supp. 1056 (Arica Institute, Inc. v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arica Institute, Inc. v. Palmer, 761 F. Supp. 1056, 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 2013, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4731, 1991 WL 57897 (S.D.N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

*1058 OPINION AND ORDER

ROBERT P. PATTERSON, Jr., District Judge.

Plaintiff, a non-profit educational institution, charges defendants with copyright infringement in violation of the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. § 101 et seq., trademark infringement in violation of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), and common law unfair competition. Plaintiff moved by order to show cause for a preliminary injunction pursuant to Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. For the reasons set forth below, plaintiffs motion is denied.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Arica Institute, Inc. (“Arica”) is a not-for-profit tax-exempt educational institution founded in the state of New York in 1971 by Oscar Ichazo (“Ichazo”). According to Arica’s Executive Director Elliott Dunderdale (“Dunderdale”), Arica offers training for the whole human being focused on the clarification of consciousness. Tr. at 270. 1 Arica operates forty franchise training centers throughout the United States, South America, Europe and Australia which have enrolled from 1971 to present approximately 250,000 students. Tr. at 279-80.

The history of Arica dates back to April 1971 when Oscar Ichazo conducted the first Arica training in the city of Arica, Chile. 2 Ichazo, born in Bolivia in 1931 and trained in Zen, Sufism, Yoga, Buddhism, Confucianism, I Ching and the Kabbalah, taught a system that is now known within Arica as the system of “ego fixations.” Tr. at 272-73, 290-291. Fifty-five people, including John Lilly (“Lilly”), Joseph Hart (“Hart”) and Claudio Naranjo (“Naranjo”), attended the 1971 seminar in Chile and tape recorded Ichazo’s lectures. Tr. at 274-76. Upon returning to the United States, every student except Naranjo returned his or her tapes to Arica’s archives. Arica transcribed the lecture tapes and in 1973 registered them with the Copyright Office as eight separate volumes which share the title The Lectures of Oscar Ichazo. PI. Exh. 15.

“Enneagons” or “enneagrams” are nine-pointed stars typically surrounded by a circle. 3 It is undisputed that enneagrams have appeared throughout history, although Elliott Dunderdale (“Dunderdale”), Executive Director of Arica since 1989, testified that no one has used the enneagram in the way Arica uses it “in terms of the process of the ego fixations as it applies to human psyche.” Tr. at 369. Dunderdale testified that Arica uses enneagrams as “a map of process or a guide to process.” Tr. at 292. In simplest terms, the Arica system uses a total of 108 enneagrams, 4 which Ichazo claims to have “discovered,” 5 as a “method of working with the nine parts of the body and nine parts of the human psyche,” Tr. at 273, and as a method of explaining “the [ego] fixations and the ideas that cure them.” Interviews with Oscar Ichazo (Arica Institute Press 1982) at 13.

From the student’s perspective, Arica training comprises nine successive levels of dietary, physical, meditative, logical and analytical instruction which can be completed in approximately three years. 6 Tr. at 373. *1059 Tuition for each training ranges in price from $75 to $750 and several training levels are offered as intensive two-week residential programs. Tr. at 370-73.

In addition to conducting training sessions, Arica publishes various training manuals, books by Ichazo, and a journal entitled The Arican. Over the years, Arica has obtained copyright registrations for approximately 46 of these works. PI. Exh. 15. The copyrighted training manuals, including the “Manual of the Arica Forty Day Training” and the “Three Month Manual,” are not available to the public — students are required to return the manuals to Arica at the end of the training. The student manuals, home study manuals and The Arican can be purchased at Arica training centers and the book Interviews with Oscar Ichazo is sold publicly in bookstores. Tr. at 281-82.

Defendant Helen Palmer (“Palmer”) is a psychology professor who currently resides in California. According to Palmer, Claudio Naranjo, a Chilean psychologist, had a personal falling out with Ichazo after the 1971 training in Chile because Naranjo wanted to apply psychological ideas to Ichazo’s material in order to “bring[] it into contemporary life and out of secrecy.” Tr. at 183-84. Palmer testified that it was Naranjo who chose the English words associated with the points on Ichazo’s ennea-grams because Ichazo spoke little English when he lectured in Chile. Tr. at 201, 205. 7

After 1971, Ichazo and Naranjo both taught enneagram theory using a method described as “intense, small group psychological growth work.” Pl. Exhs. 1, 9 at xiv (C. Tart, Preface to H. Palmer, The Ennea-gram ); Tr. at 225-28. Palmer began studying under Claudio Naranjo in 1973. Tr. at 184. However at that time, she was already familiar with enneagrams. Since 1965 Palmer had been associated with the Gurdjieff Society, an international organization named for a scholar born in 1870 in Russia named G.I. Gurdjieff. Tr. at 180. Palmer testified that, the enneagram diagram “is almost synonymous with Gurd-jieff.” Tr. at 186. According to Palmer, Gurdjieff taught that the nine points of an enneagram represented the Seven Deadly Sins (anger, pride, envy, greed, gluttony, lust and sloth) plus two additional sins Palmer believes were classified by Ichazo as self-love and fear. Tr. at 186-87. Using the enneagram as a guide, Gurdjieff identified nine “chief features” of “temperament,” Tr. at 191, or nine personality types. Palmer testified that after studying with Naranjo she concluded that Ichazo was teaching Gurdjieff-based material but claiming he “got it on his own.” Tr. at 207.

Palmer began teaching enneagram theory in 1974 when she founded the Center for the Investigation and Training of Intuition (“CITI”). Tr. at 172-73. CITI is located in Berkeley, California and has a yearly enrollment of approximately 1500 students primarily from the psychological community, i.e., persons with bachelor’s, master’s or PhD degrees in psychology. Tr. at 173-74.

Palmer’s book The Enneagram, published by HarperCollins in hardback in November 1988, 8 opens with the passage:

The Enneagram is an ancient Sufi teaching that describes nine different personality types and their interrelationships.

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761 F. Supp. 1056, 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 2013, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4731, 1991 WL 57897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arica-institute-inc-v-palmer-nysd-1991.