Thursday, September 5, 2013

"[W]e find that a hot dog is a sandwich..."

That's a line in this recent decision from the Trademark Trial & Appeal Board. Technically it's dicta, but I think we can consider that important question settled. Next time I go to a ballgame I'm going to go up to the concession stand and say, "One hotdog sandwich, please," just to see what happens.

More importantly, the Board found that "footlong" is a generic term with respect to sandwiches, so Subway can't register a trademark on it.

Previous coverage of this issue here.

In case you're wondering, the last time I checked the litigation over whether Subway's "footlong" sandwiches are deceptively titled had been centralized into a Multi-District Litigation case in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. If I have time, I will see if there have been any post-worthy developments there.

--Bart Torvik

2 comments:

  1. Are you saying a hot dog is not a sandwich? In the court's defense,they cited to the dictionary definition of hot dog.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sometimes a hot dog is just a hot dog.

    A hot dog is a hot dog is a hot dog.

    It's a hot dog eat hot dog world.

    ReplyDelete

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