Court Approves Trader Joe's Lawsuit Against Canadian Lookalike "Pirate Joe's"
MONROVIA, CA - Trader Joe’s now has the authority to continue its lawsuit against Canadian store Pirate Joe’s, which is allegedly designed to be a knockoff and reseller of Trader Joe’s products. Earlier this week, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned an earlier court's decision to dismiss California-based Trader Joe's federal trademark claims.
While the original court that had denied the lawsuit argued that Trader Joe’s could not clearly explain how the Canadian knockoff could affect U.S. commerce, the 9th Circuit says the store’s conduct could harm Trader Joe's reputation, decreasing the value of its American-held trademarks.
The defendant and creator of Pirate Joe’s, Michael Hallatt, reportedly buys Trader Joe’s products from Washington State, and resells them at higher prices in his Vancouver-based store. According to the Chicago Tribune, a Trader Joe’s location even refused to sell to Hallatt, but he put on disguises to avoid detection, shopped at other stores as far away as California, and hired others to shop for him. The lawsuit estimates that Hallatt spent more than $350,000 on its products.
“Pirate Joe's is an unaffiliated unauthorized re-seller of Trader Joe's products (we were sued, they lost, they appealed, they won a second try),” Pirate Joe’s explains on its website. “We stock what we are asked to stock by Trader Joe's lovers who don't always have the time (or a car or a passport) to head south to Bellingham (the nearest Trader Joe's)."
Hallat responsed in court documents by saying he was providing a service and never represented himself as an authorized reseller of Trader Joe's products or as an affiliate of Trader Joe's.
As of now, the 9th Circuit sent the case back to the district court for further proceedings, so keep watching AndNowUKnow for more on the continued legal battle.