US Supreme Court Sides With Jack Daniel's In Dog Toy Row

The toy has the shape and other distinctive features of a bottle of Jack Daniel's.

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After an initial court victory, Jack Daniel's lost on appeal.

The US Supreme Court on Thursday ruled against a chew toy for dogs resembling a bottle of Jack Daniel's. In a 9-0 decision, the nation's highest court ruled against VIP Products, maker of the "Bad Spaniels" squeaky chew toy, in a trademark dispute, BBC reported. 

The toy has the shape and other distinctive features of a bottle of Jack Daniel's. "This case is about dog toys and whiskey, two items seldom appearing in the same sentence," Justice Elena Kagan said in the opening sentence of the unanimous opinion, reported AFP.

While the Tennessee whiskey boasts an alcohol content of 40 per cent, "Bad Spaniels," for example, is -- allegedly -- made of "43 per cent poo."

Jack Daniel's, which is owned by Kentucky-based Brown-Forman Corp., took legal action against VIP Products in 2014 when the dog toy appeared on the market.

After an initial court victory, Jack Daniel's lost on appeal.

The Supreme Court disagreed with the appeals court ruling and said the "Bad Spaniels" chew toy was not deserving of First Amendment free speech protections.

"It is not appropriate when the accused infringer has used a trademark to designate the source of its own goods -- in other words, has used a trademark as a trademark," Kagan wrote.

"That kind of use falls within the heartland of trademark law, and does not receive special First Amendment protection."

VIP, which also sells fake cans of "Canine Cola," also claimed it should be shielded behind the right to parody, which authorizes infringements of copyright in the cultural sphere.

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The Supreme Court tossed out that argument as well.

"The use of a mark does not count as noncommercial just because it parodies, or otherwise comments on, another's products," Kagan wrote.

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