Saturday, April 20, 2024

The Commodores: Florida Court Decides Which Founding Members Get to Use the Name

[videowaywire video_id=”M6GLVF2V23G0SN40″]

The Commodores
The Commodores

*A judge has decided which members of Lionel Richie’s former band The Commodores get to continue performing under the group’s name.

Three of the founding members have been fighting over the exclusive rights to the name and trademarks.

A Florida appellate court ruled Tuesday that the rights belong to a company run by founding members William King and Walter Orange.

Via The Hollywood Reporter:

Commodores Entertainment Corporation [CEC], a company run by King and Orange, in 2014 sued ex-bandmate Thomas McClary for trademark infringement after discovering that he had been performing using variations of the famous funk group’s name. (McClary left the band in 1984.)

A Florida federal court in August 2016 granted judgment as a matter of law in favor of CEC and entered a permanent injunction against McClary that prevented him from using the Commodores trademark except in instances of fair use. He can bill himself as “Thomas McClary, founder of The Commodores” but not refer to a performance as that of “The Commodores featuring Thomas McClary,” for example.

The guitarist appealed that decision, as well as the district court’s denial of his motion to dismiss the matter because CEC failed to include Ronald LaPread, another founding bandmember, in the litigation.

An 11th Circuit panel on Tuesday affirmed the trial court’s decision.

“[W]hen McClary left the band, he left behind his common-law rights to the marks,” writes U.S. Circuit Judge Stanley Marcus. “Those rights remained with CEC.”

When the band’s six original members formed a partnership in 1978, they agreed that if any of them died or quit, the majority of the partners retained the right to use the name The Commodores. Their 1979 deal with Motown Records also provided that bandmembers could perform with other groups, but “in no event” could they use the Commodores name. When Lionel Richie left the band in 1982, another agreement was signed and it provided that “no Leaving Member, nor heirs of any member have or will have the right to make any individual use of the Name.”

Eventually only King and Orange remained as original members still with the group and they transferred their common-law rights in the trademark to CEC, which registered four trademarks with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in 2001.

While the 11th Circuit acknowledges that the standard for granting a motion for entry of judgment as a matter of law is a demanding one, it agrees with the lower court’s judgment that the evidence was overwhelmingly in CEC’s favor.

Read the full opinion below.

McClary v CEC 11th Circuit Opinion by ashley6cullins on Scribd

 

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