LEGO Builds TM and Breach-of-Contract Case on Allegations that Ex-Licensee Sold LEGO-Themed USB Drives after Sell-Off Period Ended


Danish companies LEGO Juris A/S and LEGO Systems A/S (collectively “LEGO”) have sued a Georgia-based company that it alleges is an ex-licensee that continued to sell LEGO-themed products after the expiration of a sell-off period specified in a licensing agreement.

On March 20, 2013, LEGO filed a complaint in the Northern District of Georgia against Atlanta-based Digital Blue, Inc. (“Digital Blue”) for trademark infringement, dilution, unfair competition, deceptive trade practices, and breach of contract.

LEGO’s complaint includes the following allegations:

The complaint alleges several breaches of the MLA, among them the offering of LEGO-related merchandise after the expiration of the sell-off period, and failure to pay LEGO $121,128.76 in royalties and interest arising from Digital Blue’s sales of licensed products in Q1 and Q2 of 2011.

LEGO requests injunctive and monetary relief, including not only treble damages and attorneys’ fees under the Lanham Act, but also “such punitive damages as the Court finds appropriate.”

The MLA, according to LEGO, has a choice-of-law provision making Danish law applicable.  Thus, the last count of the complaint is specifically-titled “Breach of Contract under the Law of Denmark,” presumably to comply with an applicable rule.[1]  Under Eleventh Circuit law, “forum-selection and choice-of-law clauses ‘are presumptively valid where the underlying transaction is fundamentally international in character,’” and such a presumption may only be overcome “by a clear showing that the clauses are ‘unreasonable under the circumstances.’”[2]

The case is LEGO Juris A/S and LEGO Systems A/S v. Digital Blue, Inc., No. 1:13-cv-0878-TCB, filed 03/20/13 in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division, assigned to U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten.


[1] “A party who intends to raise an issue about a foreign country’s law must give notice by a pleading or other writing.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 44.1.

[2] Lipcon v. Unterwriters at Lloyd’s, London, 148 F.3d 1285, 1295 (11th Cir. 1998) (citations omitted) (upholding choice-of-law provision subjecting agreement to British law).


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National Law Review, Volume III, Number 85