Small Bicycle Distributor Sues Ralph Lauren Subsidiary For Unfair Business Practices
The complaint alleges that Club Monaco, a subsidiary of Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, used images of A Black Bike´s bicycles as the centerpiece of its Spring 2009 advertising campaign, without A Black Bike´s authorization, and while publicly representing that the images were instead bicycles manufactured by the Dutch bicycle company Koninklijke Gazelle.
A Black Bike, founded in 2008, is owned by Muna Whitfield, a fashion model and documentary filmmaker who was born in Kenya and grew up in Holland. A Black Bike garnered significant attention towards the end of 2008, culminating in an article in the "What´s Hot" section of the December 2008 issue of Elle Décor magazine, featuring A Black Bike.
In January of 2009, following the upswing of A Black Bike´s publicity, the complaint alleges that Club Monaco purchased a bicycle from A Black Bike and discussed a national advertising campaign that would feature A Black Bike´s bicycles. Although a deal was never reached, in part because Club Monaco insisted that A Black Bike provide free bicycles for the campaign, the complaint alleges that the A Black Bike bicycle was prominently featured in Club Monaco´s Spring 2009 advertising campaign, without A Black Bike´s authorization. Furthermore, instead of crediting A Black Bike, the complaint alleges that Club Monaco confused consumers by falsely representing that the bike in the campaign was a "Gazelle," manufactured by the Dutch company, Koninklijke Gazelle, a competitor of A Black Bike.
As evidence of this deception, the complaint points to a New York Times article from April 16, 2009, entitled "Riding the It Factor," where Club Monaco´s advertising campaign featuring the A Black Bike bicycle garnered national attention. In the article, a Club Monaco executive claims that the bike used in the advertising campaign was in fact a "Gazelle" bike he had discovered while vacationing in England. However, the complaint alleges that the A Black Bike logo on the bicycle is clearly visible in Club Monaco´s Spring 2009 campaign, indicating that the executive´s story about the bike´s origins is inaccurate.
Club Monaco, which placed Gazelle bicycles in its stores in conjunction with the Spring 2009 campaign, claims that it sold a significant quantity of Gazelle bicycles within the first week of the campaign.
Following these events, A Black Bike suffered a large drop in sales due to Gazelle´s benefit from the advertising campaign in the U.S. market.
The complaint was filed in federal district court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan, by A Black Bike´s attorneys at Shlansky & Co., LLP. The case is docket number 10CV893.