Jackson State 19, Plaintiffs 0

August 29, 2022

The plaintiffs in Lee v. Andrew Lawrence Collection LLC sought to register the trademark “THEEILOVE” – a phrase associated with the alma mater of Jackson State University. Then they sued that university’s licensing agent and some licensees.

The defendants successfully moved to dismiss under the infrequently-used combination of Fed. R. Civ. P. 19 and 12(b)(7), based on the university’s interest in the subject matter, and the Fifth Circuit affirmed. It reasoned:

  • Interest. The university had a non-frivolous interest in the ownership of the mark based on the university’s consistent usage of it, and that interest could be “practically impaired” by a decision on that topic in this case (as distinct from an analysis of whether a judgment would in fact be preclusive). Thus, the university was a required party under Rule 19(a)(1)(B)(i).
  • Proceed or dismiss? As a state university, Jackson State had sovereign immunity from suit; that interest “is necessarily impaired when plaintiffs try to use the state’s sovereign immunity to lure it into a lawsuit against its will.” That issue alone favored dismissal. The Court noted that the other, practically focused factots in Rule 19(b) also favored dismissal.

No. 20-30796 (Aug. 24, 2022).  (In honor of this fairly rare analysis of Rule 19, here is a link to Paul Hardcastle’s 1985 hit Nineteen.)

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