Daily Business Review: Margaritaville Brand Fight Over Rights in Bahamas

By October 31, 2018

The Daily Business Review shares the details about Kluger Kaplan’s Todd Levine’s latest intellectual property case.  

Margaritaville Brand Fight Over Rights in Bahamas

October 20, 2018

Restaurant operator Boss Investments claims the Margaritaville company is breaking a licensing agreement by allowing a different developer to use the name in the Bahamas for a resort.

Margaritaville — both a name and a laidback feel at tourist venues from New York to Costa Rica derived from Jimmy Buffett’s 1977 hit song — is accused of breaching an agreement for the exclusive use of the trademark in the Bahamas.
Kluger Kaplan Commercial Litigation
Boss Investments Ltd. claims it has the exclusive rights to develop and run venues under the Margaritaville trademark, which includes the name, Buffett images and song lyrics, and associated merchandise under a 2014 agreement.

Boss opened a restaurant, store and bar with live entertainment on Paradise Island, but its plans and partnership with Margaritaville went awry when it wanted to open a second, similar venue.

Boss said Palm Beach-based Margaritaville Holdings LLC; its intellectual property licensor, Margaritaville Enterprises LLC; and the IP sublicensor that signed the Bahamas trademark agreement with Boss, Margaritaville of Bahamas LLC, didn’t hold up their end of the deal.

Instead, they awarded a Margaritaville trademark for the development of another tourist destination on Paradise Island — a $250 million, 150-room resort on 6 acres with a spa, luxury condominiums, an 800-space garage, marina, restaurant and water park, according to Boss’ lawsuit filed Friday in Palm Beach Circuit Court.

Boss sued all three Margaritaville LLCs as well as Margaritaville Development president James Wiseman.
Margaritaville declined comment through a spokeswoman.

Boss said the new Bahamian resort will rise two miles from its existing venue and Margaritaville has discouraged Boss from moving ahead with a second venue at a promising location.

Boss, which opened its first restaurant in the Bahamas in 2015, has the right to open a second Bahamas venue within five years after the first location was open for a year, according to the complaint.

After Boss met with a Margaritaville representative in spring 2017 to show a prospective second location at the Port of Nassau, a busy cruise ship port, Wiseman called Boss to suggest a ” ‘slow play’ moving forward with the proposed location … because Margaritaville had ‘something better in that area for Boss,’ ” the lawsuit alleges.

This turned out to be a stalling tactic so Margaritaville could license its trademark to the resort developer, Boss’s attorneys, Todd Levine and Adam Steinberg, argue in the complaint.

Levine is a founding member and partner at Kluger, Kaplan, Silverman, Katzen & Levine in Miami, and Steinberg is a partner with The Law Offices of Adam J. Steinberg in Fort Lauderdale.

Wiseman and Boss representatives had a good working relationship, and Boss believed Wiseman was going to help with a second location, according to the complaint…
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