Larry W. McFarland
Partner

1801 Century Park East Suite 2300, Los Angeles, CA USA 90067

Two Embarcadero Center Suite 1900, San Francisco, CA USA 94111

Overview

Larry McFarland focuses his practice on litigation and counseling in all areas of intellectual property law, including copyright, trademark, rights of publicity and privacy, and unfair competition. Mr. McFarland is the Managing Partner of the firm's Los Angeles office.

Mr. McFarland has successfully represented start-up to Fortune 500 companies across a broad spectrum of industries. He specializes in litigating cases, both on behalf of plaintiffs and defendants, involving reverse confusion, idea submission, cybersquatting, licensing disputes, commercial disputes, trade libel, business torts, trade secrets, work for hire agreements and product piracy.

Mr. McFarland has extensive experience counseling global clients with respect to the maintenance and protection of their intellectual property assets, including advice regarding trademark registration programs, anti-counterfeiting programs, work for hire agreements, license agreements and e-commerce.

Prior to joining Kilpatrick, Mr. McFarland was a founding partner of Keats McFarland & Wilson LLP in Beverly Hills, California, a boutique intellectual property law firm with extensive involvement in the development, protection, and enforcement of famous brands as they relate to consumer products, entertainment and the Internet.

Mr. McFarland was recommended by Legal 500 US for Trademarks: Litigation in 2013, 2014, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024 and for Copyright and Trademarks: Litigation in 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018. He is listed in the 2024 and the ten immediately preceding editions of World Trademark Review 1000 – The World's Leading Trademark Professionals. Mr. McFarland was named a "Trademark Leader" in 2023 and 2024 by World IP Review. He was named a Southern California "Super Lawyer" for Intellectual Property Litigation in 2023 and the eight immediately preceding years by Super Lawyers magazine. Mr. McFarland was recognized by The Best Lawyers in America® in 2023 and 2024 in the area of Intellectual Property Litigation. He is listed in the 2017 edition of Chambers USA: America's Leading Lawyers for Business in the area of Media and Entertainment and in its 2022, 2023 and 2024 editions for Intellectual Property: Trademark, Copyright & Trade Secrets. Los Angeles Business Journal listed Mr. McFarland as one of its “Los Angeles 2024 Top 100 Lawyers.” He was also among a select group of influential attorneys when recognized as a "2017 Los Angeles Business Journal Leaders in Law Nominee."

More
Experience

Represented Yahoo! against the plaintiff’s claim that she had common law trademark rights in her personal name. Plaintiff asserted that the use of her name as a Pay-Per-Click keyword and in search results she did not authorize infringed her rights. We defended the case for three years through several amended complaints and successfully opposed the plaintiff’s attempts to add misappropriation of identity claims to the case. We successfully educated the judge about common law trademark rights and obtained summary judgment for Yahoo!.

The Santee Alley district in Los Angeles and the Canal Street district in New York were notorious centers for the retail sale of counterfeit merchandise. Because of the itinerant nature of businesses in these districts, and because of these businesses' cooperative efforts to thwart efforts of police or U.S. Marshals, traditional methods of enforcement did not deter their illicit activities. Under these circumstances, we sought joint renewable seizure orders. The district court issued the requested orders which were executed by the U.S. Marshals against 20 defendants located in and around the Santee Alley District, resulting in the seizure of thousands of units of counterfeit merchandise, along with artwork, silkscreens and machinery used with the manufacture of counterfeit apparel. Later, after demonstrating to the Court that Santee Alley retailers were again engaged in the sale of counterfeit goods, the court renewed the seizure orders. Pursuant to the issuance of this unique form of relief, U.S. Marshals again seized thousands of additional items of counterfeit merchandise from over 20 vendors and retailers during these supplemental actions.

Represented Warner Bros. to remove counterfeit Looney Tunes products from retail sales areas around the country to support the holiday sales performance of Warner Bros.' licensees and retailers. In this case, we sought and obtained a multidistrict temporary restraining order and seizure and impoundment order, which was executed under our attorneys' supervision by U.S. Marshals and local law enforcement agencies in California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Washington D.C. This was an unprecedented seizure order allowing simultaneous and repetitive seizures across multi districts (precedent cases dealt with successive seizures around venues during a single artist’s concert tour).

Defended Zynga against trademark infringement claims alleging that Zynga’s “Oregon Trail” element of its FrontierVille game violated The Learning Company’s rights in its Oregon Trail educational computer game. We defeated the plaintiff’s motions for TRO and preliminary injunction based on evidence of historical references to pioneers and the Oregon Trail, and the case settled favorably and cost-effectively thereafter because of our push for early mediation.

Represented DC Comics, Disney, Nike, and Warner Bros. in a lawsuit against a swap meet owner and its vendors based on the sale of counterfeit and infringing merchandise on the swap meet's premises. Relying on the landmark Fonovisia v. Cherry Auction decision, the action against the swap meet owner was based on contributory and vicarious copyright infringement and contributory trademark infringement. We successfully resolved this matter with the swap meet owners adopting a three strikes policy wherein they agreed to evict any tenant who has sold or offered for sale infringing merchandise after the third such occasion. Time Warner Entertainment, Co., L.P. v. B.C.P. Toys, Inc., 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 4989 (9th Cir.).

Filed suit against the defendant for trademark infringement and unfair competition based on his unauthorized sale and distribution of apparel bearing Polo's trademarks. While litigating the action, we discovered that the defendant had received in excess of $14 million from the sale of counterfeit shirts. The cases proceeded to trial. Several days into the trial, the defendant agreed to settle the case on terms favorable to our client. After the defendant failed to pay the required settlement amount, Polo discovered that the defendant had funneled assets to other sources. We obtained a TRO freezing his assets. The defendant violated the TRO and continued to funnel assets. We filed a motion for an order finding the defendant in contempt, and the Court sent the defendant to jail for civil contempt.

Represented the International Anticounterfeiting Coalition, Inc. in the Ninth Circuit and filed an Amicus Brief on behalf of numerous intellectual property owners seeking to overturn a lower court's decision that flea market owners could not be liable for the infringing acts of flea market vendors. The Ninth Circuit, relying on our brief, held that flea market owners can be found liable for contributory and vicarious copyright infringement resulting from the sale by its vendors of counterfeit merchandise. The Ninth Circuit further stated that a flea market owner "cannot disregard its vendors' blatant trademark infringements with impunity," and that a flea market owner can be held liable for contributory trademark infringement. Fonovisa, Inc. v. Cherry Auction, Inc., 76 F.3d 259 (9th Cir. 1996).

Obtained an ex parte temporary restraining order and seizure order and seized thousands of infringing shirts on behalf of Marvel, the owners of the copyrights in the Spider-Man, Hulk, and characters, and Funimation Productions, the owner of the copyrights in the Dragon Ball Z property.

Represented Yahoo! in a national class action case for false advertising, breach of contract and unfair competition. The plaintiffs sought to certify a class of Yahoo! Pay-Per-Click advertisers asserting claims that they were paying for low quality traffic. We worked with a team of contract lawyers and eDiscovery experts to collect and review tens of gigabytes of data regarding Yahoo!’s advertising network. We were able to settle the case on favorable terms after filing an opposition to the class certification motion.

Represented Viacom, Inc. in trademark infringement action in which M2 Software alleged that Viacom's use of its M2: Music Television mark infringed M2 Software's rights in its M2 mark. The plaintiff sought a preliminary injunction to halt the launch of MTV’s second broadcasting network, and over $1 billion in damages. Although the judge found that the plaintiff was likely to succeed on the merits, we defeated the motion by showing that the plaintiff had unreasonably delayed in seeking an injunction. After extensive discovery, including depositions across the country, we moved for summary judgment on all of the plaintiff’s claims. The court noted that it had altered its view on the merits based on our motion, and found in our favor on all counts. The case was reversed on appeal on one count, reverse confusion. On remand, after significant motion practice, we moved for summary adjudication on the basis that the plaintiff was not entitled to any damages. The district court granted our motion and the decision was upheld on appeal by the Ninth Circuit. M2 Software, Inc. v. Viacom, Inc., 119 F.Supp.2d 1061, (C.D. Cal. 2000).

Represented Zynga Inc. in multinational lawsuits against Vostu. Zynga alleged that Vostu had launched on a Brazilian social networking site several online social games which closely emulated Zynga games and business model. Zynga alleged that Vostu had begun migrating these games to the U.S. via the Facebook platform. We filed the initial U.S. action, and directed the subsequent Brazilian action, in which we obtained a preliminary injunction against all of Vostu’s online games in South America. We defeated the defendant’s emergency request for an anti-suit injunction from the U.S. Court to stay the litigation in Brazil, and thereafter obtained a favorable settlement including money and drastic changes to all of Vostu’s games. Zynga, Inc., v. Vostu USA, Inc., 816 F. Supp. 2d 824 (N.D. Cal. 2011).

More
Insights
Education

University of Houston J.D. (1986) University of Houston Law Review, Member (1984-1986)

University of Texas at Austin B.A. (1983)

Admissions

California (1987)

Court Admissions

U.S. Court of Appeals

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

U.S. District Court for the Central District of California

U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California

U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California

U.S. Supreme Court

More
Professional & Community Activities

Beverly Hills Bar Association, Intellectual Property Section, Member

State Bar of California, Member

International Trademark Association, Member

International Anti-Counterfeiting Coalition, Member

Law360, Media & Entertainment Editorial Board (2022)

More
close
Loading...
If you would like to receive related insights and information from Kilpatrick Townsend, please provide your contact details by filling out the form and clicking “Agree.” If you would like to access the PDF only, please click “Download Only.”