Judge grants Hermès request to halt all ‘MetaBirkin’ NFT sales

The MetaBirkin creator argued that his project was protected under the first amendment as artistic expression, however that defense ultimately fell short.

French luxury fashion house Hermès International has notched another win in its infringement case against artist Mason Rothschild, after a Manhattan judge ordered a permanent injunction on all “MetaBirkin” non-fungible token sales.

Hermès initially submitted the request to the Southern District of New York in March to block all sales of the MetaBirkin NFTs.

Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff officially granted the request on June 23, as he offered a skeptical take on Rothschild’s defense against Hermès’ suit, while questioning Rothchild’s continued marketing of the project.

“[The] defendant’s entire scheme here was to defraud consumers into believing, by his use of variations on Hermes’ trademarks, that Hermes was endorsing his lucrative MetaBirkins NFTs,” Judge Rakoff said, adding that:

“Nothing in the First Amendment insulates him from liability for such a scheme.”

The MetaBirkin collection consists of 100 NFT artworks depicting furry Birkin style handbags, with Rothschild reportedly generating more than $1 million worth of sales from the project.

The legal dispute began in January, after Hermès accused Rothschild’s NFT collection of improperly using its Birkin trademark and leading customers into believing the brand was supporting the project.

In February, the court ruled that Rothschild had violated Hermès trademark following a nine-member jury verdict, with the artist ordered to pay $133,000 in damages.

Rothschild had argued that his project was an artistic expression protected by the first amendment, in a similar vein that enabled Andy Warhol to legally make and sell art featuring Campbell’s soup cans.

Additionally, the artist asserted that he hadn’t explicitly misled consumers, as he had provided disclaimers explaining that Hermès had no affiliation.

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However, the judge and jury also refuted this, as the use of the word “Birkins” was brought into question.

“The jury found that his decision to use Hermès’ trademarks in the name and design of the MetaBirkins NFTs — and not just his marketing and sales techniques — was in itself explicitly misleading, and rejected his disclaimer defense,” the court doc reads.

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