John Wayne’s heirs tell Duke University to back off
John Wayne’s heirs and a certain North Carolina university known for its basketball squads are locked in a legal shootout over their right to the word Duke.
John Wayne Enterprises, a Newport Beach-based corporation that brands products — including bourbon — with the legendary actor’s nickname, alleges in a complaint filed federal court in Orange County that the university has been trying for years to block its rightful use of the name.
On three occasions since 2005, Duke University has opposed attempts by John Wayne Enterprises to trademark the name, court documents say.
Most recently, the university filed a notice of opposition to the company’s attempt to trademark an emblem that appears on a Duke-branded bottle of small batch Kentucky straight bourbon — an image that also encompasses a stylized picture of Wayne himself -- hat, gun and all.
The university also opposed John Wayne Enterprise’s trademark of the word Duke, written in a blocky serif font, the complaint says.
Now, Wayne’s heirs say, enough is enough.
To remove a “cloud” of an eventual trademark infringement claim, the company is seeking a judge’s official declaration that the dueling Dukes can coexist without diluting either of their brands.
John Wayne’s childhood dog named Duke inspired the nickname that would stick with him throughout his long career, the document says. In Newport Beach, where Wayne lived and partied for years, a waterfront hangout at the Balboa Bay Club was called Duke’s Place, in the actor’s honor.
Duke University, the complaint says, “does not own the word ‘Duke’ in all contexts for all purposes.”
Furthermore, it adds, Duke has never “been in the business” of marketing alcohol. Therefore, bottles of the hard stuff bearing the word Duke are unlikely to be mistaken for school-sanctioned party fuel.
But university spokesman Michael Schoenfeld wrote in an email that “the university doesn’t object to the use of ‘Duke’ on alcoholic beverages, as long as it is clearly linked to John Wayne’s likeness.”
However, he wrote, Wayne’s estate wants the rights to use the word with or without the star’s image attached.
“While we admire and respect John Wayne’s contributions to American culture, we are also committed to protecting the integrity of Duke University’s trademarks,” Schoenfeld wrote in a statement.
“As Mr. Wayne himself said,” the statement continues, “ ‘Words are what men live by ... words they say and mean.’ ”
John Wayne Enterprises’ lawyer could not immediately be reached for comment.
No court date has been set.
For Orange County news, follow @JillCowan
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.