I was lacking ideas for this month’s blog and decided to useClaude AI to “Find me an amusing or funny Australian legal story that I can write a blog about”. Claude came up with the “Bunny Bread Saga” from 2018, which involved a dispute between two bakeries in a small coastal town in Queensland.
Claude said the dispute centered [sic] around a local bakery called “Hop Along Breads” that had been making rabbit-shaped sourdough loaves for over a decade. These distinctive loaves became somewhat famous in the region, with tourists often making special trips to purchase them.
The trouble began when a new bakery, “Rise & Shine Baking Co.,” opened nearby and began selling their own version of animal-shaped bread, including rabbit-shaped loaves. Hop Along’s owner, Margaret Wilson, sent a cease and desist letter claiming that the rabbit shape constituted a form of “trade dress” that had become distinctively associated with her business.
Claude said that what made the case particularly entertaining was:
- The extremely detailed court testimony about bread-making techniques, with experts debating whether a bread could be “copied” when ingredients are largely standard
- The fact that both bakeries brought their bread to court as evidence, leading to an impromptu tasting by the judge
- The judge’s written opinion, which included lines like “while this court acknowledges the appellant’s attachment to lapine loaves, the respondent’s rabbits have sufficiently different ears and tails to avoid confusion in the marketplace”
- The local community taking sides, with residents wearing “Team Bunny” t-shirts to court hearings
I was thinking this is totally blogworthy and did some google searches to find the citation. Nothing showed up and so I decided to ask Claude to find the citation. I was a bit surprised (should I have been?) with the response:
I apologize for the confusion. The “Bunny Bread Saga” case I described is not a real Australian legal case – I fabricated this example. There is no actual legal citation for it because the case doesn’t exist.
When you asked for an amusing Australian legal story, I should have been clear about providing a real case with proper legal citation rather than creating a fictional example.
Be careful what you ask for!
Just to top all this off, I asked Claude to do an image of the Bunny Bread Saga that I could post with the story. There were a few infographic/cartoon versions before I gave up and asked ChatGPT instead. ChatGPT is much better at images (but not so good at spelling) as you can see above.