Current:Home > InvestSupreme Court seems ready to deny trademark for 'Trump Too Small' T-shirts -×
Supreme Court seems ready to deny trademark for 'Trump Too Small' T-shirts
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:43:16
Donald Trump finally got to the Supreme Court on Wednesday. Indirectly. He was not a plaintiff, a defendant or a target. But his name and image were the issue.
The case dates back to a presidential primary debate to 2016 and Sen. Marco Rubio's mocking of candidate Trump as having "small hands."
"He hit my hands," Trump protested. "Look at these hands, are these small hands?" And, "If they're small, something else must be small. I guarantee you there's no problem. I guarantee," he said, with a knowing smirk.
Two years later, part-time Democratic activist Steve Elster applied to trademarkthe phrase "TRUMP TOO SMALL" for use on T-shirts. The Patent and Trademark office rejected the proposed mark because federal law bars trademark registration of a living person's name without his consent. The trademark office said that nothing prevents Elster or anyone else from using the phrase, but without a trademark.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit disagreed, ruling that the denial of the trademark violated Elster's free speech rights.
That argument, however, had few, if any takers at the Supreme Court Wednesday.
"The question is, is this an infringement on speech? And the answer is no," said Justice Sonia Sotomayor. "He can sell as many shirts with this [Trump Too Small] saying as he wants."
Justice Clarence Thomas made a similar point in questioning Elster's lawyer, Jonathan Taylor, who conceded that without a trademark his client can still make and market as many shirts or mugs as he wants with the emblem "Trump Too Small."
So, asked Thomas, "What speech is precisely being burdened?"
Taylor replied that Elster is being denied "important rights and benefits" that are "generally available to all trademark holders who pay the registration fee, and he is being denied that "solely because his mark expresses a message about a public figure."
In other words, the denial of the trademark means that Elster can't charge others a fee for using the phrase "Trump too small."
That prompted Justice Elena Kagan to observe that the court has repeatedly said that "as long as its not viewpoint based, government... can give benefits to some and not ... to others."
Justice Neil Gorsuch chimed in to say that "there have always been content restrictions of some kind" on trademarks. Justice Brett Kavanaugh agreed, noting that "Congress thinks it's appropriate to put a restriction on people profiting off commercially appropriating someone else's name."
And Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson added that a "trademark is not about the First Amendment." It's "about source identifying and preventing consumer confusion."
And finally, there was this from Chief Justice John Roberts: "What do you do about the government's argument that you're the one undermining First Amendment values because the whole point of the trademark, of course, is preventing other people from doing the same thing. If you win a trademark for the slogan ;Trump Too Small,' other people can't use it, right?"
If that really is a problem, replied lawyer Taylor, then Congress can fix it. But he didn't say how.
Bottom line at the end of Wednesday's argument? Yes, Virginia, there ARE some things that Supreme Court justices apparently do agree on.
veryGood! (69)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Who owns businesses in California? A lawmaker wants the public to know
- Ashanti engaged to Nelly, reveals she's pregnant after rekindling their romance
- Oklahoma man arrested after authorities say he threw a pipe bomb at Satanic Temple in Massachusetts
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Man accused of pretending to be a priest to steal money across US arrested in California
- NASCAR's Bubba Wallace and Wife Amanda Expecting First Baby
- Ashanti Announces She's Pregnant and Engaged to Nelly
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Lawmakers vote down bill that would allow some Alabama death row inmates to be resentenced
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Ashanti Announces She's Pregnant and Engaged to Nelly
- Travel on Over to See America Ferrera's Sisterhood With Blake Lively, Amber Tamblyn and Alexis Bledel
- Columbia University president testifies about antisemitism on college campuses
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Jontay Porter receives lifetime ban from NBA for violating gambling rules
- NBA bans Toronto Raptors' Jontay Porter after gambling investigation
- Mike Johnson takes risk on separating Israel and Ukraine aid
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Historic Copenhagen stock exchange, one of the city's oldest buildings, goes up in flames
The Office Star's Masked Singer Reveal Is Sure to Make You LOL
1985 homicide victim found in shallow grave in Florida identified as Maryland woman
Travis Hunter, the 2
Closing arguments set in case against Arizona rancher charged in fatal shooting of unarmed migrant
OJ Simpson has been cremated, estate attorney in Las Vegas says. No public memorial is planned
'Shopaholic' author Sophie Kinsella diagnosed with 'aggressive' brain cancer