|
-
28th March 11, 06:46 AM
#11
 Originally Posted by Joseph McMillan
And in the United States, of course, there is neither a granting authority nor any legal provision for recognizing the validity of foreign grants of arms or protecting whatever rights those grants conveyed in the country of origin. That means that in the United States, an English or Scottish grant of arms has the same substantive status as arms assumed at will.
 Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown
Does it? I wonder? I would think that at the end of the day, if someone with a substantive grant of arms brought a suit against someone who had merely assumed the same coat that they would be on firmer ground re: ownership of the disputed devise. That said, the concept of "first past the post" might equally apply, especially if the proprietor of the assumed arms could prove usage ante-the date of the granted arms. Hmmm....
 Originally Posted by SlackerDrummer
First of all you are talking about the assumption of the same coat of arms that exists in a grant from a foreign authority. At the AHS we stress the importance of due diligence in creating a unique and original coat of arms if you are going to assume arms. So let's assume someone has usurped (intentionally or not) arms that were granted by a foreign authority to another person. Where would they sue and on what grounds?
 Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown
Presumably the suit would take place in the jurisdiction where the tort took place. One party (presumably the substantive armiger) would have to establish that some sort of injury or loss occurred because the assumptive armiger was trespassing on the intellectual property rights that are inherent within a personal mark of identification, such as a coat of arms or a cattle brand.
Other than in Scotland, where the mis-use of arms is a criminal offense (defrauding the government of statutory fees), a suit of this sort would be heard in civil court.
 Originally Posted by SlackerDrummer
Exactly. One would have to establish that damages occurred which would be very difficult unless 1) the grantee's arms were used in commerce and 2) the usurper's use of the arms had an impact on the grantee's business. And even then, I'm not sure a court would rule in favor of the grantee unless the actual image of the arms used by the usurper was one lifted from the grantee. I'm not sure, based on current American copyright or trademark law, that an original emblazonment owned by the usurper would be seen by the court as being the same as the grantee's.
There is a general assumption (no pun intended) put forth by Scott in this part of the debate that assumed arms are likely to be duplicates of granted arms. I don't know if that is an intentional effort to put forth the notion that people who assume arms are by and large usurpers of granted arms, but it is a gross mischaracterization of what it means to assume arms.
To add to I what have already said on this subject, ... if by coincidence identical arms are possessed by the grantee of "substantive" arms and by one who has assumed arms and the assumer can establish use of said arms prior to the date of the grant, he can just as easily sue for damages and would stand just as good a chance of winning as the grantee in Scott's example above. It is not a matter of grant trumping assumption, but a matter of when ownership of this intellectual property occurred.
Kenneth Mansfield
NON OBLIVISCAR
My tartan quilt: Austin, Campbell, Hamilton, MacBean, MacFarlane, MacLean, MacRae, Robertson, Sinclair (and counting)
-
Similar Threads
-
By Tiny in forum The Tartan Place
Replies: 15
Last Post: 18th July 10, 03:56 AM
-
By Iainkp in forum Kilt Board Newbie
Replies: 26
Last Post: 29th April 10, 10:25 AM
-
By Mike1 in forum How Do I...
Replies: 2
Last Post: 25th September 08, 07:36 AM
-
By tartanherring in forum Kilt Board Newbie
Replies: 44
Last Post: 31st August 08, 09:08 PM
-
By RockyR in forum USA Kilts
Replies: 58
Last Post: 17th July 07, 07:12 AM
Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks