Skip to content
June 3, 2026
  • Business & Finance
  • Entertainment
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • U.S. News
  • World News

Trendsetter Tribune

Primary Menu
  • Business & Finance
  • Entertainment
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • U.S. News
  • World News
Light/Dark Button
Subscribe
  • Home
  • World News
  • High Court of Australia Backs Local Fashion Brand In 17-Year Battle with Katy Perry
  • World News

High Court of Australia Backs Local Fashion Brand In 17-Year Battle with Katy Perry

Trendsetter Tribune May 23, 2026 (Last updated: May 23, 2026)
katy-perry-fashion

Talk about a real-world “David vs. Goliath” battle. On March 11, 2026, Australia’s highest court handed down a definitive ruling, officially ending a nearly 17-year trademark saga between global pop star Katy Perry (Katheryn Hudson) and Sydney-based independent fashion designer Katie Perry (Katie Taylor).

The High Court of Australia ruled in a tight 3–2 majority decision in favor of the designer, protecting her clothing brand and establishing a massive legal precedent for intellectual property law.

The case boiled down to a crucial lesson in trademark law: You cannot cancel someone else’s valid trademark just by becoming more famous than them.

How the Dispute Unfolded

The conflict began because of a tight overlap in timing when both women were establishing their respective brands:

The Label Launch

April 2007

Australian designer Katie Taylor began designing and selling a line of loungewear under her maiden name, KATIE PERRY. She had not heard of the singer at the time.

The Rise to Fame

Mid-2008

American pop star Katy Perry achieved massive global and Australian fame following the release of her breakout single “I Kissed a Girl”.

The Trademark Filing

September 2008

The Australian designer officially applied to register “KATIE PERRY” as a trademark for clothing in Australia.

First Legal Skirmish

May 2009

The pop star’s legal team sent a cease-and-desist letter to the designer and attempted to block the registration. They later offered a co-existence agreement, which the designer declined. The pop star then began selling tour merchandise in Australia anyway.

The Lawsuit Begins

2019

After years of overlapping activity, the designer sued the pop star’s company, alleging that the sale of Katy Perry tour merchandise in Australia infringed on her registered trademark.

The Legal Volleying

2023–2024

A trial judge initially ruled in favor of the designer. However, the pop star appealed to the Full Federal Court, which flipped the decision, ordering that the designer’s trademark be cancelled entirely because Katy Perry’s massive global celebrity meant consumers would be confused.

The Final Verdict

March 11, 2026

The High Court of Australia overturned the appeal court’s order, permanently reinstating the designer’s trademark and finding the pop star’s company liable for trademark infringement.

Why the High Court Sided with the Designer

The High Court’s ruling bypassed the celebrity headlines to look strictly at the mechanics of Australian trademark law. They highlighted three major legal principles:

  • Fame doesn’t automatically cross industries: The court ruled that just because a pop star has an immense reputation in music and entertainment, it does not mean their trademark automatically possesses a reputation in clothing. The fact that pop stars commonly sell tour merch wasn’t enough to override the designer’s earlier filing date.
  • A decade without confusion: The court noted that both brands had operated simultaneously in Australia for more than 10 years without any substantial evidence of actual consumer confusion.
  • The “Assiduous Infringer” Principle: The High Court ruled that Katy Perry’s merchandise company had been an “assiduous infringer.” They continued to sell clothing merchandise in Australia despite being fully aware of the designer’s registered mark. The court ruled that a large company cannot persistently infringe on a small business’s trademark, manufacture consumer confusion through sheer market dominance, and then use that confusion as an excuse to erase the small business’s superior rights.

The Takeaway: This landmark ruling is being hailed as a monumental win for independent business owners. It reinforces that a trademark registration acts as a shield, ensuring that corporate scale and global fame cannot retroactively strip a small creator of their legitimate brand name.

The case has now been sent back to the Full Federal Court solely to determine the final damages and costs that Katy Perry’s companies must pay to the Australian designer.

Trendsetter Tribune

Trendsetter Tribune

See author's posts

Post navigation

Previous: The Fractured Mirror of Pan-Africanism: Ghana and Nigeria Face Down Pretoria Over Xenophobic Violence
Next: From Outcast to Frontrunner: How a Rebuke for Antisemitism Didn’t Stop a Texas Democrat’s Runoff Rise

Related Stories

Soludo-headshot
  • World News

Blood on the Road: Gunmen Kill Four in Ambush on Convoy of Soludo’s Chief of Staff in Anambra

Trendsetter Tribune June 2, 2026
Babachir-Lawal-1280x720
  • World News

“Massively Rigged”: Babachir Lawal Dumps ADC Over Alleged Primary Election Fraud

Trendsetter Tribune June 2, 2026
HJwh2aWXkAACaRI
  • World News

The “Cultural Christian” Debate: Kemi Badenoch and Piers Morgan Clash Over Faith and British Identity

Trendsetter Tribune June 2, 2026
  • Business & Finance
  • Entertainment
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • U.S. News
  • World News
  • Business & Finance
  • Entertainment
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • U.S. News
  • World News
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | ReviewNews by AF themes.