Lodi News-Sentinel

Marijuana businesses can trademark almost anything — except for marijuana

- By James Rufus Koren

LOS ANGELES — Hi is a cannabis brand. Its logo — “hi” in white letters inside an orange circle — can be found above the front door of a Portland, Ore., marijuana shop and on a handful of cannabis products, including massage oil and Hi Releaf pain-relief balm.

But you wouldn’t guess any of that from Hi’s trademark filings. In 2015, the brand’s parent company, Cannabis Sativa Inc., filed a trademark applicatio­n — not for any of Hi’s core products, but for hats, Tshirts and a wide array of other apparel.

If the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office signs off on the applicatio­n, Cannabis Sativa would be able to stop other companies from using the Hi brand on clothing, but it might not be able to stop rivals from setting up Hi-brand marijuana shops or selling knockoff Hi-brand products.

This is the odd state of affairs for trademark protection in the cannabis industry, one of the many byproducts of the gap between state and federal marijuana laws.

Though cannabis is legal for recreation­al or medicinal use in 28 states, it remains illegal under federal law. As a result, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office will not register trademarks for marijuana retailers or for products that contain cannabis.

“You want to protect what you’re doing with the brand name,” said David Tobias, president of publicly traded Cannabis Sativa, “but you have to dance around it.”

One popular strategy for cannabis companies that can’t trademark their core products is to seek protection for a host of ancillary products and services.

“I call it the ‘circle the wagons’ approach,” said Todd Winter, an attorney outside Los Angeles who works with marijuana companies. “We get everything trademarke­d that we can, tangential to the actual cannabis product itself.”

The idea, one that is largely untested so far, is that if a cannabis company registers its trademark for other products it will scare off would-be copycats and allow the company to be first in line if the federal government eases its stance on pot.

Cannabis Sativa applied for an apparel trademark and hopes to put its Hi brand on other products, including lozenges for smokers.

Stoner comedian Tommy Chong’s brand, Chong’s Choice, which sells a line of pre-rolled marijuana cigarettes, has applied for a trademark for vaporizers and “tobacco” jars.

Altai, a brand of cannabis chocolates, is seeking trademark protection for its name brand as a provider of informatio­n about medical cannabis.

Mary Shapiro, a San Francisco attorney, said the goal is to get something federally trademarke­d — and the more closely related to marijuana, the better. She is working with Salinas firm Indus Holdings, Altai’s parent company, on its trademark applicatio­n.

Once a company has even applied to register a trademark, it’s noted in a federal database. When companies set out to submit trademark applicatio­ns of their own, they search that database to see if their brand name is already in use — and if so, how it’s being used.

The goal of trademark law is to prevent consumer confusion, and different companies can use the same name for products as long as their products are in different categories and wouldn’t cause confusion.

The Patent and Trademark Office would likely reject a trademark applicatio­n for a soap brand with a name similar to Unilever’s Dove, but it didn’t stop candy company Mars from trademarki­ng Dovebrand chocolate.

The same rules apply in the cannabis industry, but it’s tricky. Unilever can make clear in its trademark applicatio­n that Dove makes soap, which lets other companies know they shouldn’t try applying for a similar trademark for soap-related products.

Cannabis companies, however, have to be more circumspec­t, hoping that a trademark for rolling papers or providing cannabis informatio­n will be enough of a hint that a company has laid claim to a cannabis-related trademark.

“It raises a red flag that there’s a company already operating in the space,” Shapiro said. “Basically, it’s a warning sign that someone else has claimed rights to the name in connection to cannabis.”

Along with scaring off potential competitor­s, there’s another potential benefit: If the Patent and Trademark Office were to start approving trademarks for cannabis products, companies with cannabis-related marks could be first in line.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Hal Lewis, national sales director for Cannabis Sativa Inc., with Hibrand cannabis balm and other products.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Hal Lewis, national sales director for Cannabis Sativa Inc., with Hibrand cannabis balm and other products.

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