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Help! A Texas-Sized BBQ-Bacon Burger Fight Is Brewing

Restaurant Business

Question:

I am being accused of copying another restaurant's menu. We both have a Texas barbecue bacon burger on the menu, which is something they are well known for. They are also saying I'm using similar toppings on my burgers and chicken sandwiches. They are threatening a lawsuit and asked me to change the menu and the names of things.

Answer:

This is a tricky one—food can be a gray area when it comes to intellectual property. 

[...]

David M. Perry, partner and co-chair of the Intellectual Property and Technology Practice Group at Blank Rome said, “Primarily the question comes down to copyright. Copyright law notoriously does not protect mere listings of ingredients. Copyright would require some modicum of authorship in a menu.” So, listing a burger with barbecue sauce, bacon and pickled onions does not steal anyone else’s idea and it’s not protectable.

Perry says, “If we are getting into the territory of creative and unique names for these items, then we get into trademark territory. Most menu names are descriptive so not protectable under trademark law. If you wanted to call your Texas Barbecue Bacon Burger the “Grab the Bull by the Horns,” you could conceivably use branding to distinguish yours from someone else’s.”

Perry recommends this strategy if you feel you are offering something truly unique. The trademark process is a long and pricey one—but one that can protect your hard work. “That’s what you’d do to secure nationwide rights and put yourself on the map,” he says.

To read the full article, please click here.

"Help! A Texas-Sized BBQ-Bacon Burger Fight Is Brewing," by Jonathan Deutsch was published in Restaurant Business on January 26, 2024.