Posted On: September 29, 2009 by Jo-Anne Yau

Louis Vuitton Secures Landmark Contributory Trademark Infringement Ruling

louis-vuitton-logo.jpg Louis Vuitton, the high-end fashion retailer, has been awarded $32.4 million dollars in its trademark and copyright infringement case against Akanoc Solutions, Inc., and Managed Solutions, Inc., a pair of website hosting companies. The case, Louis Vuitton Malletier v. Akanoc Solutions, Inc. et al., was held in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California and a jury rendered the verdict.

What’s unique about this case is that the defendants did not commit any direct violations themselves, but hosted sites that sold Louis Vuitton knock-offs. Contributory trademark infringement is a legal theory wherein a defendant may be liable for assisting trademark infringement or having control over others who directly infringe.

In order to be held accountable for the acts of others, the defendant must know or should have known that another’s conduct constitutes infringement and the defendant must give substantial assistance or encouragement to those that directly infringe. I think it’s fair that secondary actors and entities that enable infringement are liable for either actively helping infringers or looking the other way!

Want to keep your trademark safe from any type of infringer? A trademark lawyer can preserve the strength of your brand!

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