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Suit: This town not big enough for two Living Rooms


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Good catch. I did not know there was a W hotel opening up in Boston.

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would be tainted for at least the next 50 years, at least 'round these parts.

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... the letter "W" and the number 9.

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This is quite clear cut, and frankly speaks really poorly about Starwood and the W.

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I'm not a lawyer, but I don't think it's so clear cut. The W chain uses the "Living Room" label for the lobby bar in all of the hotels. And since they are trans-regional, they may have better standing to claim the trademark than a local (unless the local actually has it registered, which I doubt). My company went through the process of brand trade marking and long standing use of a name is no guarantee if there is another claimant using it in multiple locations.

A larger point might be that the term living room is used generically by everybody in this country to mean place for relaxation. I doubt it can be owned as a label anyway. My guess is that the local restaurateur is hoping for some publicity and a cash settlement.

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(I've just been aprty to about 5 different suits concerning trademarks)

The Living Room's complaint says they do have it trademarked, and I for one think it is beyond obvious how confusing it might be to an individual trying to find out where "Living Room" is. They have a very strong case here and I'd be shocked if they don't prevail.

Many words have common usage (such as "living room") but when trademarked for a specific use, another similiar business can not use the same name.

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Pretty much the exact same situation: large multi-national chain vs small local operator who had the local trademark first:

Burger King (Mattoon, Illinois)

The result was a demarcation of mutual exclusion zones: only the local operator can use the name 'Burger King' in a 20-mile radius around his restaurant, and only the large chain can use it outside that radius.

I expect the same thing will happen here, and W will need to find a new name for their Boston restaurant, which is a half-hour walk from the real Living Room on Atlantic Avenue.

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When I was growing up in Oregon, there was a chain of steak houses known throughout the Northwest as "Black Angus". In the Portland area, it was known as "Cattle Company". That's because there was a pre-existing Black Angus steakhouse, and Oregon law gave a 50-mile radius exclusive on that name to the business that registered it first. Squatting didn't count - you had to be doing business under that name first.

I think it was set up so that there wouldn't be these lawsuits ... the rules were established ahead of time.

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So you probably ate Best Foods mayonnaise, instead of Hellman's :-).

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IMAGE(http://www.wayfaring.com/waypt/image1/24191/mcdowells-xlarge.gif)

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that no one else has mentioned the late, lamented stripjoint in the 1960's Combat Zone called "The Living Room".

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