Appeals court allows artist to sell painting of Tiger Woods
* A long-awaited decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals in Cincinnati (6th
Cir.) holds that a painting of the famous golfer violates neither trademark
nor privacy law.
June 20, 2003 -- An artist's painting of Tiger Woods at the 1997 Masters
tournament is not a violation of trademark law and does not infringe on the
golfer's right to publicity, a federal appeals court held in a long-awaited
opinion issued today.
The decision is a win for artist Rick Rush, whose limited-edition lithograph
depicting three images of Woods shadowed by those of other golf champions,
was deemed by the court to be an "informational and creative" form of
"expression which is entitled to the full protection of the First
Amendment."
ETW Corp., Woods's licensing agent, filed the lawsuit in June 1998 against
Jireh Publishing Inc., the Alabama company that published the artwork. The
suit was originally dismissed by a district court in Cleveland in 2000. The
case had been pending before the appeals court for close to three years.
In its appeal, Jireh claimed the painting, titled "The Masters of Augusta,"
should be afforded First Amendment protection from ETW's claims of federal
and state trademark infringement and violation of Woods's right of
publicity.
"A piece of art that portrays a historic sporting event communicates and
celebrates the value our culture attaches to such events," wrote Judge James
L. Graham, a district court judge sitting by designation, on behalf of the
majority. "It would be ironic indeed if the presence of the image of the
victorious athlete would deny the work First Amendment protection."
With respect to ETW's trademark claims, the court said Woods was wrong in
assuming he had a trademark right to every image produced of himself.
"[T]here are undoubtably thousands of images and likenesses of Woods taken
by countless photographers, and drawn, sketched, or painted by numerous
artists, which have been published in many forms of media, and sold and
distributed throughout the world," Graham wrote. "No reasonable person could
believe that merely because these photographs or paintings contain Woods's
likeness or image, they all originated with Woods," and therefore deserved
trademark protection.
The court stated, as a general rule, that a person's image or likeness
cannot function as a trademark.
In response to ETW's claim that Jireh violated Woods's right of publicity --
a form of privacy claim that asserts a right to control the commercial use
of one's identity -- the court balanced the "societal and personal interests
embodied in the First Amendment" against Woods's property rights.
"[W]e conclude that the effect of limiting Woods's right of publicity in
this case is negligible and significantly outweighed by society's interest
in freedom of artistic expression," Graham wrote.
In one of several friend-of-the-court briefs submitted in the case, The
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press had argued against adoption of
a broad right of publicity.
In a dissent, Judge Eric L. Clay said he would have remanded the trademark
issue back to the trial court for a determination by a jury.
On the right of publicity claim, Clay said he would have found in favor of
ETW. In his opinion, the right of free expression did not outweigh Woods's
right to control his name and image.



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