U.S. Supreme Court Ends Al Johnson’s Trademark Debate
The United States Supreme Court refused to hear a petition from a New
York attorney who sought to cancel the “goats on a roof of grass”
trademark owned by Al Johnson’s. The court’s June 22 denial put the
decade-long lawsuit to rest for good.
Attorney Todd Bank has been
involved in attempts to strip Al Johnson’s of its trademark since 2011.
Bank claimed that the trademark was demeaning to goats, which caused
him personal harm. In December 2019, a federal circuit court dismissed
Bank’s petition on the grounds that he didn’t have standing to bring the
claim. In other words, even if the trademark was demeaning to goats,
Bank was not personally harmed by it.
Bank
petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court on April 15, claiming that the
federal circuit court “ignored the axiomatic principle that standing is
distinct from the merits.” The Supreme Court’s refusal to hear the case
essentially ended the debate.
“A party that wants to cancel a
registered trademark, like Al Johnson’s Goats on the Roof Trade Dress,
must first establish some type of harm,” said Al Johnson’s attorney,
Katrina Hull, in December. “Mr. Bank did not allege any facts that
suggested that he had been harmed in any way by the goats on the
roof.”Al Johnson’s obtained the legal trademark to “goats on a roof of
grass” from the United States Patent and Trademark Office in 1996. The
restaurant has defended that trademark through the years, even leading
to 2010 coverage in the Wall Street Journal.