Texas Lottery Claims It Owns ‘Texas Two Step’ Trademark, Sues Vodka Brand

Texas Lottery Claims It Owns ‘Texas Two Step’ Trademark, Sues Vodka Brand.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

The Texas Lottery Commission is two-stepping a vodka distillery to court. That s because it claims the copyright of the aforementioned is property of the state.

Texas LotteryThe Texas Lottery has run its popular Texas Two Step draw since 2001. But can a lottery product really be confused with a drink? And what do any of these things have to do with line dancing? (Image: Texas Lottery Commission)

Ali Ansari owns a “craft” vodka distillery outside . He decided to call his signature brand of vodka “Texas Two Step” after the much-loved dance and filed to trademark it with the US Patent and Trademark Office. The application was accepted.

The only problem was the Texas Lottery has offered a $1 draw ticket called “Texas Two Step” since 2001. And it believes Ansari is two-stepping on its toes.

The lottery owns the patent for the mark for gambling products. But it argues the vodka brand will cause confusion among consumers and damage its reputation by association.

Texas Hold’em Polka

In April, the Patent Office s Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB) determined that the two brands could happily co-exist without causing undue confusion. Now, the lottery commission is asking a US District Court in Austin to reverse that decision.

“Plaintiff has enormous goodwill in its ‘Texas Two Step’ mark,” claims the commission in its lawsuit. “As a state agency, Plaintiff must exercise caution in the advertising of its goods or services in order to protect the goodwill in the mark or make sure that the trust and confidence that the public has in Plaintiff and in its goods and services is not undermined.”

If Texas Two Step Vodka is allowed to proceed to registration, the Lottery argues, it is likely to “cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive as to the affiliation, connection, or association of Defendant or Defendant’s products with Plaintiff or Plaintiff’s products or services, and/or as to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of Defendant’s commercial activities.”

The Lottery says the association of its product with alcoholic beverages could “adversely impact” and “dilute” its brand. This could cause “irreparable damage,” including loss of revenue and sales and “tarnish Plaintiff’s mark and the goodwill therein in the minds of consumers.”

Who’s Tarnishing Whom?

But Ansari told The Houston Chronicle this week that the idea his distillery could taint the name of a gambling operation was ridiculous.

Our argument was, you’re in the gambling business, which mostly is illegal in Texas,” he said. “And we’re in the legal distilled spirits business. So, who’s tarnishing who?”

His lawyer, Steve Abbot, put it just as succinctly: “I have Delta faucets in my home. But I don’t get confused when I buy a Delta airline ticket,” he said.

Article Sources
Lottoland Launches Bitcoin Lottery With 1,000-Coin Jackpot editorial policy.
  1. Conor McGregor Dodges Jail Time in UFC 223 Melee, Betting Odds Already Offered on Next Fight

Compare Accounts
×
Taiwanese Shipping Firm Buys Up Shares of Tigre de Cristal Casino in Russia
Provider
Name
Description
Underground Bank Laundered $220 Million a Year Through BC Casinos, Claims Province’s Civil Forfeiture Office  Tabcorp and Tatts Complete Integration, Look Towards Global Expansion  Suspected Kidnappers Arrested in ‘5Dimes Tony’ Case, But Sportsbook Owner Still Missing  Seneca Nation Told to Pay Millions as Arbitrators Side With New York in Compact Dispute  Japanese Gamblers Spend $200 Billion Per Year on Pachinko, But Figures Fail to Tell the Whole Story  Controversial Rules Cost NFL Teams Victories, Bettors Money  Japanese Gamblers Spend $200 Billion Per Year on Pachinko, But Figures Fail to Tell the Whole Story  Tesla Powered Down by Atlantic City Officials, Company Barred From Doing Business With Casinos  DC Sports Betting Decision Delayed Amid Contracting Monopoly Concerns  Mount Airy Satellite Casino Extension Approved, Pennsylvania Operators Slow to Build Venues