Milo & Gabby LLC v. amazon.com, Inc.

693 F. App'x 879
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 2017
Docket2016-1290
StatusUnpublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 693 F. App'x 879 (Milo & Gabby LLC v. amazon.com, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milo & Gabby LLC v. amazon.com, Inc., 693 F. App'x 879 (Fed. Cir. 2017).

Opinion

O’Malley, Circuit Judge.

Milo & Gabby LLC and Karen Keller (collectively, “Milo & Gabby”) appeal from decisions of the Western District of Washington finding that Amazon.com, Inc. (“Amazon”), through its provision of an online marketplace for third parties and its “Fulfillment by Amazon” services, does not infringe the patents, copyrights, and trademark of Milo <& Gabby. Because the district court did not err in granting summary judgment on Milo & Gabby’s copyright and trademark allegations, and because Milo & Gabby failed to preserve its patent infringement arguments, we affirm.

I. Background

A. The Parties’ Relevant Products and Services

Milo & Gabby designs and sells a line of “Cozy Companion” pillowcases. The Cozy Companion pillowcase line includes animal-shaped pillowcases for children that turn a child’s pillowcase into a stuffed animal. Milo & Gabby owns five U.S. design patents for the designs on its pillowcases that are relevant to this case. The company also holds copyrights for its pillowcases, its website, and various other marketing images, including pictures of the founders’ children holding the pillowcases.

Amazon operates a website that offers an online marketplace for customers. Although Amazon sells some of the products available on its website, most of the products offered for sale on Amazon’s website are offered by third-party sellers. When a third-party seller uses Amazon’s website to sell a product, the seller provides information regarding the product, such as a product description, images of the product, and a price for the product. Amazon’s website then automatically generates a “product-detail page” that displays the information and identifies the seller.

Amazon also offers third-party sellers a service called “Fulfillment by Amazon,” which allows third-party sellers to take *881 advantage of Amazon’s logistical network. When using this service, a third-party seller sends its product to an Amazon fulfillment center, where Amazon stores the product. If a customer buys the product from the third-party seller, Amazon pulls the product off the shelf, packages it, and ships it to the customer on behalf of the seller. A third-party seller even can use this service when selling products outside of Amazon’s online marketplace; for example, a third-party seller can use the service when selling the product on another website, such as eBay. i

Third-party sellers using the Fulfillment by Amazon service maintain full ownership of the products stored by Amazon. The third-party seller using this service can remove its stock at any time by requesting that Amazon return the product to the third-party seller. 1

B. Sales of Knock-Off Pillowcases

When Milo & Gabby began selling their pillowcases, Karen and Steven Keller, the owners of Milo & Gabby, used pictures of their children with the pillowcases to promote the products. In 2013, Milo & Gabby discovered pillowcases selling on Amazon’s website that were knockoffs of Milo & Gabby’s Cozy Companion pillowcases. The depictions of the pillowcases for sale actually were of Milo & Gabby products, including depictions of the products being used by the Kellers’ children. But Amazon did not directly sell any of the knock-off pillowcases offered on Amazon’s website. The product-detail pages for the knock-off pillowcases identified ten different entities as third-party sellers. Out of the ten third-party sellers selling the knock-off pillowcases, only one, FAC System, used the Fulfillment by Amazon service.

Milo & Gabby filed a complaint against Amazon on October 24, 2013. Upon notice' of the lawsuit, Amazon removed the product listings and suspended the third-party sellers from Amazon’s online marketplace. Some of the third-party sellers tried to relist the knock-off pillowcases on Amazon’s online marketplace by changing the product name, but Amazon removed the new listings and new sellers as soon as it learned of them.

C. Procedural History

Milo & Gabby’s complaint against Amazon asserted various state and federal claims, including patent infringement, copyright infringement, false designation of origin under the Lanham Act, and trademark counterfeiting under the Lan-ham Act. Relevant to this appeal, the district court granted in part Amazon’s motion for summary judgment on July 16, 2015. Milo & Gabby, LLC v. Amazon.com, Inc. (Summary Judgment Order), No. C13-1932RSM, 2015 WL 4394673, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92890 (W.D. Wash. July 16, 2015). The district court granted the motion as to direct copyright infringement because it found “no evidence in the record that Amazon actively reviewed, edited, altered or copied [Milo & Gabby’s] images.” Id. at *4, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92890, at *11. The district court further noted that “Amazon is not the seller of the alleged infringing products” because “third-party *882 sellers retain full title to and ownership of the inventory sold by the third-party.” Id. at *6, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92890, at *15-16.

The district court also granted Amazon’s motion for summary judgment as to Milo & Gabby’s Lanham Act claims. The court found that Milo & Gabby had provided no evidence of any violation of a valid, enforceable mark entitled to protection under the Lanham Act. The court also rejected Milo & Gabby’s “palming off’ allegation because it found that Milo & Gabby had not raised the claim or alleged any facts in the complaint to put Amazon on notice of this theory.

The district court denied Amazon’s motion for summary judgment as to Amazon’s liability for direct patent infringement, however. Amazon argued that it never sold or offered to sell the products within the meaning of § 271(a). In response to Amazon’s motion, Milo & Gabby argued that Amazon was liable for direct patent infringement because it offered to sell the products; Milo <& Gabby did not argue that Amazon “sold” the products, either individually or jointly. The district court determined that a factual question precluded summary judgment on the “offer to sell” theory.

Prior to trial on the direct infringement claim’s “offer to sell” theory, Amazon filed a motion for attorney’s fees and costs because of its status as a prevailing party under both the Copyright Act and the Lanham Act. The district court denied Amazon’s motion with respect to the copyright claims, finding that they were not frivolous. But it granted Amazon’s request with respect to the Lanham Act claims, finding that Milo & Gabby “essentially pursued a claim for which they had no evidentiary basis, and then attempted to circumvent that problem by improperly raising legal arguments never pled in their Complaint.” Milo & Gabby, LLC v. Amazon.com, Inc., No. C13-1932RSM, 2015 WL 5156330, at *4, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117213, at *12 (W.D. Wash. Sept. 1, 2015).

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693 F. App'x 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milo-gabby-llc-v-amazoncom-inc-cafc-2017.