Hurley International filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Old Navy late last week in federal court alleging the retailer is ripping off Hurley’s Phantom boardshorts.
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Hurley was awarded two patents relating to components of material, construction and stretch and how those elements work together in the Phantom, in 2010 and 2012, according to the suit.
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Phantom, first launched in 2007, raised the bar in industry boardshorts and has been awarded SIMA’s Boardshort of the Year for four consecutive years.
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There was some uncertainty in the industry when Hurley was awarded the patent whether the company would file a rash of lawsuits against industry competitors.
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In light of this recent lawsuit, something Mark Weber of Hurley told me in an interview in 2011 about the patents seems prescient.
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Since boardshorts are at the heart of the surf industry, “We believe if we as an industry own the boardshort we have a much better chance of controlling our own destiny,” Mark said at the time.
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He also said then that Hurley sees the patent as a huge asset going forward that Hurley and its key retailers can leverage together as a point of differentiation from the rest of the larger retail world.
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Two of the Old Navy boardshort styles cited in the lawsuit are selling for as low as $12 on the Old Navy website.
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The lawsuit, filed on Aug. 2, asks for a jury trial for the patent infringement case.
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Hurley declined to comment on its decision to file the suit against Old Navy.
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