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25 Yale J.L. & Tech. 1 (2023)

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  LIVING  WITH   THE  MERCHANDISING RIGHT (OR HOW I
  LEARNED   TO STOP   WORRYING AND LOVE FREE-RIDING
                          STORIES)

                      Michael Grynberg*

                 25 YALE  J.L. & TECH. 1 (2023)

 Trademark scholars love to hate the merchandising right (i.e., the
 use of trademark law to give trademark owners control over product
 markets in which the trademark is the good e.g., a BOSTON RED
 SOX  baseball cap). We think that trademark law should protect
 consumer interests. If no one thinks that sports teams manufacture
 their own merchandise,  then there's no possibility of source
 confusion. Rather than benefitting consumers, the merchandising
 right artificially increases consumer costs by giving trademark
 holders an unwarranted monopoly  over the use of their marks as
 products.

 Nobody  cares. Whatever law professors may think, people and
 importantly, judges generally believe that trademark  holders
 should control merchandising markets. Hard-wired moral intuitions
 suggest that the resulting profits are a fair reward for creating
 popular brands and that others should not 'free ride off of these
 efforts. These intuitions are resistant to argument. We are therefore
 likely stuck with the merchandising right.

 Nonetheless, the  merchandising   right is  inconsistent with
fundamental   trademark  doctrine. Accommodating it creates
difficulties that ripple throughout trademark law and reach cases
that have nothing to do with merchandising logos. The problem is
especially acute in those cases in which it is the trademark owner
who  is trying to capture an unearned benefit. These cases turn the
intuitions behind the merchandising right on their head, but courts
do not have a vocabulary for distinguishing them from traditional
merchandising   disputes. The result is a  muddle  that affects
trademark  law as a whole.

We  might ameliorate the problem by taking anti-free riding moral
intuitions seriously. If they are to be part of trademark law, then they
may  be used to limit the merchandising right and reconcile it to
trademark  law. To be sure, living with the merchandising right is

    * Professor of Law, DePaul University College of Law. Comments welcome
at mgrynber@depaul.edu.


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