Intellectual Property, Information Technology & Cybersecurity

The Importance of Discipline In Branding: An Interesting, Unlikely Case Study Courtesy of Fletcher V. Doig

As the owners of international brands know well, vigilance is critical to sustaining and enhancing global identity, exclusivity, differentiation and, ultimately, dominance and the long-term profitability that go along with them.

Sometimes, this means seizing counterfeit items at the border to prevent entry into Canada. Sometimes it means writing to an internet service provider to require takedown of infringing or disparaging content. Other times, it may mean there is no choice but to differentiate oneself from the offensive activities through litigation, whether as a plaintiff or a defendant.

While litigation is not an attractive last resort, ultimately it may be a business-saving necessity, whether the brand is large or small.

This is but one of the important reminders for businesses of all types and sizes about the need to manage their brands in disciplined and systematic ways in order to protect what they own and sustain their viability.

The reminders, explicit and implicit, are to be found, interestingly enough, in a story about the fine art market. The story emerges from a recent American court case concerning a painting, who really made it and, therefore, what its value was, or wasn’t.

By all media reports the case, Fletcher v Doig, is one of the first of its kind, a case in a U.S. court arising from refutation of “authorship” of a painting that was created in Canada. When an internationally renowned artist, Peter Doig, denied authorship of a painting, he was sued for damages.

At the time of this writing, the decision had been widely reported in Canadian media based on the oral remarks of District Judge Gary Scott Feinerman of Northern Illinois. The written reasons for the decision had not yet become available.

1. NAMES, BRANDING AND REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
To understand the implications of refutation of authorship, it is helpful to understand the commercial value of a good name.

Take the case of an old violin (a work of artistic craftsmanship). Place the violin in the hands of a musician on King Street in Toronto, Sherbrooke Street in Montreal or 56th Street in Manhattan. Watch the passersby move along with barely a glance or a pause. Listen to the same violinist on the stage of Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto or Lincoln Centre in Manhattan. When program notes identify the lineage of the rare instrument and the name of the celebrity performer, box office sales make the point: reputation matters.

The visual arts market rises and falls with artist identification (as do other markets in relation to product identity). Depending on whose signature appears on a canvas, the price of a work can rise or fall dramatically. Authorship affects market prices. This is a truism that correlates to production, reproduction and licensing of works that are protected by copyright and moral rights. Within the market for content, which is international, reasonable minds may differ, and applicable laws may clash over the approach to valuation. Few would disagree that the identification of authorship is critical.

2. THE PARTIES AND THE STORY
Well known artist Peter Doig was sued for damages because he denied he had painted a canvas signed “Pete Doige 76”. He was believed, first by the market, which sank the sale price, and then by the U.S. trial court, which dismissed the claim for damages on August 23, 2016. An appeal is expected.

Peter Doig was born in Scotland. He went to high school in Ontario, Canada. Over time, his reputation grew. His paintings have sold for millions. Upon learning that a canvas signed Doige was offered for sale as one of his works, he refuted that connection. The effect on the sale price of the canvas was dramatic and immediate, allegedly dropping by some $70 million.

Pete Doige, the signatory of the disputed canvas, was deceased at the time of trial. He was born in Scotland. He spent some time during his high school years, in Thunder Bay, Canada. While incarcerated in Thunder Bay for possession of LSD, he took art classes and completed a canvas which he sold to his correctional officer. Authorship of this painting is the subject of this litigation.

Fletcher, a co-plaintiff, is a former correctional officer and the alleged owner of the canvas. He purchased the disputed painting from Pete Doige who, he alleges, is the very same person as the defendant, Peter Doig. Fletcher claims he has suffered damages because Peter Doig has refuted the assertion that he, Peter Doig, is “Pete Doige”. Peter Doig says he never created the painting, never met Fletcher, and never went to prison while in Canada. Fletcher finds motive in Peter Doig’s refutation of authorship: a desire to distance himself with the venue of creation and the context of the initial sale.

Each of Fletcher and his co-plaintiff, the gallery that was retained to sell the painting, allege financial harm arising from Peter Doig’s refutation of authorship. The co-plaintiffs, Fletcher and the gallery, dispute Peter Doig’s refutation, vigorously maintaining that “Pete Doige” and Peter Doig are one and the same.

Obviously, there is no word to be had from the alleged artist, Pete Doige, who has since died. Similarities in style between the Pete Doige canvas and the corpus of artwork in circulation by the well known artist Peter Doig were drawn by experts retained by the co-plaintiffs. Pete Doige’s sister filed statements on behalf of the defendant, Peter Doig, rather than on behalf of her late brother, Pete Doige, recalling that her late brother told her of a landscape that he completed while in a Canadian prison.

Peter Doig, whose artwork actually sells for millions, has the resources to mount a solid defence to the claims for damages. More resources could be necessary as reports of an anticipated appeal continue to surface.

3. CONCLUSION
The value of a reputation can be analyzed from many perspectives, each of which affects authors (and other producers of other goods), buyers and sellers. When an artist denies that he has created a work, the dip in market value that follows can be rapid and irreversible. Refutation of authorship highlights the uncertainties that inform and plague artists, creators, valuators, buyers and sellers of their works.

The art market is taking careful note of the clear linkage between artist identification and value: upwards of 10s of millions of dollars. The impact extends beyond the visual arts market. A personal name can acquire recognition as a brand – whether associated with a product or a service. This is recognized under existing trademark laws throughout the world.

Reputation is the currency of the artist or any brand owner. Registration, licensing and enforcement of goodwill through contracts and litigation can be critical strategic elements in brand management. These steps maintain the integrity of the work product, the reputation of the artist as a brand owner, and the stability in the market on which investors depend.

The costs of litigation may seem daunting. While an artist or other brand owner may choose to refrain from litigation, a defendant swept involuntarily into litigation over authentication loses the choice to participate. As an involuntary defendant, Doig was thrust into litigation for having refuted authorship. It was necessary to preserve the market value of his artwork. For Doig, his name and signature are his brand. As an artist, he knows that key components of reputation/brand management are monitoring and enforcement.

Fletcher v. Doig sets a new benchmark for the high stakes in global reputation management. Artists and others have no choice but to preserve the market value of their brands. In the world of branding and reputation management, marketing entails monitoring and the preservation of value requires enforcement.

The old adage, use it or lose it, is as true as ever in the global market.

Build it, use it, and protect it, or lose it, though not without repercussions, are critical to reputation management.

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Andrea Rush, a partner in Blaney McMurtry’s corporate/commercial practice group, is certified by the Law Society of Upper Canada as a specialist in copyright and trademark law. She is also a registered patent and trademark agent in Ontario and Quebec. Ms. Rush, who has been recognized by Chambers Canada, which identifies and ranks the most outstanding law firms and lawyers in the country, represents Canadian and global rights owners and users in the registration, commercialization and enforcement of their brands. She has appeared before the Supreme Court of Canada, Federal Court of Appeal, the Copyright Board and the Trademarks Opposition Board. She has served on a number of distinguished bodies including the federal government’s Information Highway Commission, the Copyright Society of the USA and the advisory board of Stanford University’s Program on Law, Science and Technology.

Andrea may be reached directly at 416-593-2951 or arush@blaney.com.

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