Court axes demand by owner of Lizzie Borden's house that coffee shop next door stop calling itself Miss Lizzie's immediately
A federal appeals court yesterday took several whacks - possibly as many as 41 - at the company that runs a B&B in Lizzie Borden's old home in Fall River, denying its request for a temporary restraining order to get the upstart Miss Lizzie's Coffee next door from glomming onto the gruesome story as its trademark case against the coffee place continues to percolate through the courts.
Sure, the B&B, which also offers tours, and the coffee shop both have an axe in their logos. But as the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Boston noted, the house's logo shows a simple notched blade, while Miss Lizzie's logo axe has a handle and bright red blood spurting from the top.
The court acknowledged US Ghost Adventures, which owns the house, had proffered some evidence of confusion in the marketplace:
One tour guide explained that guests were frustrated to learn that they could not bring Miss Lizzie's coffee on their tours of the Lizzie Borden House, having bought the coffee under the erroneous impression that the coffee shop was affiliated with the historical site. Another visitor separately attested to his belief that the businesses were affiliated. And Ghost Adventures' director of operations recounted that a Fall River city official had telephoned the company to discuss its "new business in the building next door named Miss Lizzie's."
But in general, the court continued, US Ghost would just have to suck up its wounds because the confusion wasn't widespread, and the coffee shop had put up a sign advising patrons it was unaffiliated with any other Lizzie Borden-related establishments. Also, the coffee shop was clearly paying homage to the basic story of the woman who may or may not have had an axe, which she used to give her mother 40 whacks, which is not trademarkable, rather than to the house's specific "Lizzie Borden" trademark. And the confusion might come not because of the similarity of the names, but because of the general association of Lizzie Borden with that part of Fall River.
Also, the appellate judges continued, they agreed with a US District Court judge who ruled that while both establishments were in the broad category of "hospitality," they were not in direct competition:
Ghost Adventures attracts sophisticated tourists who purchase tickets in advance and travel to Fall River to visit the historical site of the Lizzie Borden House, whereas Miss Lizzie's attracts passersby hoping for a caffeine kick or a bite to eat.
The court also rejected Ghost Adventures' claims that its house had become so associated with the legend of Lizzie Borden that it now, effectively, owned the rights to its name in the "hospitality" sector. Nope, the court said: The story of Lizzie Borden remains very much a public story and that simply because the company has used its trademark for a long time and has a "long history of investing" in promoting its brand does not mean the public now associates the story of Lizzie Borden with the house of Lizzie Borden specifically.
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this headline
you outdid yourself
This story makes me dizzy, Miss Lizzie
But Adam, I like how you rock 'n roll with puns.
Eh: 40, 41, who's counting?
https://youtu.be/cw01aTuiKnk
The commercialization of
The commercialization of history and folk. Pah!
People been doing that for centuries, tenderfoot.
Ever hear of Plymouth Rock?
I think rather than fight the
I think rather than fight the coffee shop it would make sense to find ways to cooperate. It's so hard to get people to care about history, it makes sense to build coalitions.
As for nlt being able to take the coffee inside, that's just common sense. I've been to house musuems with built in cafes and coffee shops and they don't want you bringing their own coffee into the house. I guarantee you that if that was a Dunkin Donuts they would still have angry customers who wanted to bring it in. If its an issue beyond the explanation suggest that they get a refund from the coffee shop.
Maybe I'm wrong
But "US Ghost Adventures" isn't trying to run a historic, educational museum. They are a for-profit concern that is afraid the coffee shop is cutting into their racket.
what i find
what i find interesting is that the wiki page states this was sold in 2021. The previous owners had owned it since the 1990s. Maybe the new owners aren't so friendly and this was done out of spite.
I agree with the courts, the lizzie borden story isn't synonymous with the house, it stands on its own. It just so happens the house still exists. This all happened 130+ years ago, I like to think this becomes just local lore and public domain by now. Plus Lizzie herself moved out of the house shortly after she was acquitted but stayed local. Her story follows her, not just the house it happened in.
And there's no brand confusion really, a cafe vs a tourist trap. Its not even a historic building or even has a historic marker. Its just local folklore.
@cybah
I agree with you. No one would know this was the house if it didn't have a sign on it. We have houses that look like that in almost every neighborhood in Boston for Pete's sake.
Not a museum
It's a bed and breakfast.
I do not want to know
how they grind their coffee beans...
Gears
The grind their coffee with the gears of their neighbors in the hotel
Lizzy Borden must be relieved
https://www.facebook.com/Reallizzyborden/
I can only hope
If I chopped up my family into bits, in 150 years a coffee shop and B&B will be arguing over who gets to use my name.
She was acquitted
Turns out there were a number of folks with motive and hatred enough to do the deed. Also, some very sloppy detective work.
Yeah, doesn't mean she didn't do it. But she wasn't convicted of it.
I dunno
A poem told me she did it. Poems are art, art is beauty, and beauty- truth.
Unless the B&B is selling coffee
they have no case, and the rest of the tourist businesses in Fall River won't be happy with them. This lawsuit will get chopped off quickly. Less than forty whacks.