In Caster Trademark Case
Venue Change Denied Many Grand Pianos Cited
For Possible Zoom Trial
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- The
Source
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Sept 3 – Algood Casters sued
Caster Concepts alleging
infringement on its MAXX
trademark. Its president Craig
Guttmann complained of a
Caster Concept tweet on July
29 "using Plaintiff's
tradement MAXX in standalone
fashion."
On August
19, U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of New
York Judge Lewis J. Liman held
a proceeding. Inner City Press
covered it, below.
On
September 3, Judge Liman again
convened the parties. He
denied the request to change
venue, then listened as the
lawyers spoke about their
clients' strong caster wheels.
How many grand pianos could
each kind carry? This will
perhaps come out at trial.
Judge Liman offered a Zoom
trial, saying he has one lined
up for September. One of the
lawyers said he's going to a
seminar about virtual trials.
Inner City Press will continue
to cover this case.
Back on
August 19 the defendant said
that tweet had been posted by
its outside publicity firm,
and had since been taken down.
After that, Judge
Liman declined to issue a
temporary restraining order.
He established a briefing
schedule and set a future
conference on September 3.
One of the
lawyers asked for more time,
noting a lack of electricity
and describing a Connecticut
suburb where people park near
the library to use the
Internet with iPads and
laptops. Tweeting trademarked
material, no doubt.
This case is
Algood Casters Limited v.
Caster Concepts, Inc.,
20-cv-4623 (Liman)
***
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