05
August
2020
BREXIT and European intellectual property rights: United Kingdom is in transition until December 31, 2020, but what’s next?
The United Kingdom left the European Union on January 31, 2020. However, from an intellectual property point of view, the United Kingdom is still part of the European Union since a transition period has been put in place until December 31, 2020.
The TAoMA News team closely follows these changes and explains the impact of Brexit on your rights.
TRADEMARKS
First of all, if you were wondering whether your European Union trademarks are still valid in the United Kingdom, the answer is YES but only until December 31, 2020!
We explain hereafter the situation of European Union trademarks according to different scenarios.
1st situation: European Union trademarks registered until January 1st, 2021
No change to be expected until December 31, 2020, for:
The registered European Union trademarks;
The European Union trademarks currently under pending registration and the trademarks filed by the end of the transition period and which will be registered by December 31, 2020;
The European Union trademarks expiring before December 31, 2020, and duly renewed before that date (or within the grace period).
For all these trademarks, the UK Office will automatically create equivalent national trademarks on its register. These British equivalencies will be completely independent from the initial EU trademarks but will retain the corresponding filing and priority dates.
The good news is that no action and no cost should be incurred by trademarks owners.
The owners will not be notified by the UK Office and will not receive new registration certificate of their equivalence, but they will be able to access the details of their new trademarks on the UK Office website indicating the EU trademark number, preceded by the reference “UK009”.
Furthermore, these trademarks will have to be renewed before the UK Office when they expire as any national UK trademarks.
If an EU trademark owner does not want to obtain an equivalence, opt-out measures (renunciation to obtain an equivalence) will be possible as of January 1st, 2021, (the corresponding form which will be available on the website gov.uk should not be published before that date).
2nd situation: European Union trademarks in the process of being registered on January 1st, 2021
For the European Union trademarks filed before but not yet registered on January 1st, 2021, applicants will enjoy a period of 9 months (from that date, i.e. until October 1st, 2021) to request the maintenance of their rights in the United Kingdom and have their original European filing date retained.
However, contrary to the registered trademarks, trademarks under pending registration at the end of the period of transition:
Will only be transposed as national trademarks at the request of the owner within 9 months (otherwise, no equivalence will be created);
Will be examined by the UK Office as any new trademark application;
Will be subject to the payment of fees (in the order of £170 for 1 class and £50 for each additional class).
3rd situation: European Union trademarks expiring between January 1st and June 30, 2021
The equivalent trademarks transposed by the UK Office that expire between January 1st and June 30, 2021, will have to be renewed, as will the corresponding European trademark.
The UK Office will send, as far as possible, a reminder to the holder of the expiring equivalent trademark, inviting him to pay a renewal fee.
Given the circumstances, trademark owners will enjoy an additional period of 6 months from the receipt of the reminder from the UK Office to renew their trademarks in the United Kingdom (without surcharge).
Finally, the UK Office already specified that the early renewal of the European trademarks with the EUIPO before December 31, 2020, will not affect the equivalent British trademarks and will not exempt the owners from payment of the British renewal fees.
4th situation: International trademarks designating the European Union
Equivalent measures should be provided for international trademarks designating the European Union.
However, a particularity is to be expected since the British equivalence will be independent of the international trademark. The WIPO will soon provide us with details on the measures planned for these trademarks and the possible actions required by the owners concerned.
5th situation: What about the use and reputation of the European Union trademarks?
Finally, we close this paragraph on trademarks by specifying that the use and the reputation of the trademarks in the European Union, even outside the United Kingdom, in the 5 years preceding the end of the transition period, i.e. December 31, 2020, may be validly invoked in the United Kingdom.
DESIGNS
The same measures will be transposed to the designs, including unregistered Community designs for which a specific register will be created by the UK Office.
This measure is reassuring for the owners of such rights since, unlike conventional registered designs, an unregistered Community design confers a (more limited) protection for a non-renewable period of 3 years from the date of its first publication to the public on the territory of the European Union.
OTHER CONSEQUENCES
However, the Brexit could have a significant impact on contracts (coexistence agreements, engagement letters, licenses), on pending legal actions in United Kingdom as on the the date of January 1st 2021 based on an EU trademark or design, on opposition proceedings before the EUIPO on the basis of UK trademarks, or for .eu domain names registered on behalf of British owners, etc.
Consequently, we recommend you proceed with audits of your current portfolios, contracts and procedures in order to anticipate at best as possible the consequences of the effective exit of the United Kingdom from the European Union.
The entire TAoMA team is mobilized on these issues and remains at your disposal to support you during this transition period.
Marion Mercadier
Juriste
Laura Fretaud
Stagiaire juriste
07
April
2020
Impact of revocation for non-use on an infringement action based on the revoked trademark
Author:
teamtaomanews
The complex trademark SAINT GERMAIN was registered in France on May 12, 2006 by the company AR for alcoholic beverages, ciders, digestives, wines and spirits. For its part, the company COOPER International Spirits distributed, under the name “St-Germain”, a liqueur manufactured by the companies St Dalfour and Etablissements Gabriel Boudier.
On June 8, 2012, AR sued these three companies for trademark infringement before the Paris court of first instance. However, in parallel proceedings, the Nanterre court of first instance ruled that AR’s rights to the complex SAINT GERMAIN trademark would be revoked for non-use as of May 13, 2011, first day following the grace period. The owner of the revoked registration nevertheless maintained its infringement action targeting now acts committed during the period prior to revocation, i.e., between June 8, 2009 and May 13, 2011, a period during which the mark was not yet subject to prove use.
In 2015, all its claims were dismissed by the Paris court of first instance; the judgment was upheld by the Paris Court of Appeal, on September 13, 2016. The Court held that AR could not claim infringement of the SAINT GERMAIN trademark by an identical sign in competition with it, while it did not present any probative evidence of the trademark’s genuine use. The judges therefore seem to have subordinated the potential conviction for infringement to the proof, missing here, that its owner was exploiting it, even though the five-year period for starting the use of the trademark was still running.
The French supreme court, before which a writ of certiorari was filed, decided to stay proceedings and to refer the matter to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) for a preliminary ruling. In essence, the question referred to the CJEU was to determine whether the owner of a trademark which has been revoked due to a lack of genuine use, nevertheless retains the right to claim compensation for damages suffered as a result of the use by a third party – prior to the effective date of revocation – of a similar sign which creates a likelihood of confusion with its trademark.
Possibility of compensation for damages prior to the effective date of revocation for non-use
The Court points out first of all that, according to its own case-law, the owner of a trademark which has not yet been put to genuine use – that is to say, before the end of the five-year period following its registration – may very well bring an infringement action on the basis of the goods and services designated, without having to prove that it is using its trademark (CJEU, 21 December 2016, Länsförsäkringar, C-654/15).
However, the situation is different in the present case. The difficulty lies precisely in the scope of the owner’s rights on the trademark at the end of the period of grace, even though the revocation has already been ordered. In a nutshell, can such a revocation affect the owner’s ability to claim for damages, after the expiration of the period of grace, for infringements of its trademark during that period?
The CJEU gives a positive response, holding that the Member States have“the option of allowing the proprietor of a trade mark whose rights in that mark have been revoked on expiry of the five-year period from its registration because he or she failed to make genuine use of the mark in the Member State concerned in connection with the goods or services for which it was registered to retain the right to claim compensation for the injury sustained as a result of the use by a third party, before the date on which the revocation took effect, of a similar sign in connection with identical or similar goods or services that is liable to be confused with his or her trade mark”.
Indeed, it recalls that Directive 2008/95 left it to the Member States to determine the extent of the effects of the revocation of a trademark and that the French lawmaker has chosen to make the revocation effective as from the expiration of the grace period and not earlier. France has therefore not chosen to allow the alleged infringer to raise the objection of lack of use during the grace period to exempt itself from liability for acts of infringement.
Thus, the owner of a mark which has been revoked for lack of genuine use retains the right to claim compensation for the damages suffered as a result of the use, by a third party, prior to the effective date of revocation, of a similar sign creating a confusion with its mark.
Considering the lack of genuine use during the grace period in the calculation of the damages
The CJEU then specifies the scope of its own decision, stating that the lack of genuine use during the grace period is still an “an important factor to be taken into account in determining the existence and, as the case may be, the extent of the injury sustained by the proprietor and, accordingly, the amount of damages that he or she might claim”.
Thus, the prejudice suffered by the owner of a trademark that does not use it is restricted to the infringement to the right of ownership and excludes compensation for loss of earnings and for unfair profits. Moral damages are equally relative.
Taking into account the lack of use takes its last ammunition from the owner of a revoked trademark. If French law allows it to assert its trademark for acts anterior to the effective date of revocation, it would indeed be inappropriate for the owner to be able to claim substantial damages. This would indeed amount to the legitimization of the practice of “trademark trolls“, those trademark owners that do not exploit their portfolios and use them only to extort money from third parties wishing to use them, through licensing agreements or infringement actions.
The clarification of the EUCJ tempers its answer to the preliminary ruling request and allows to sanction such practices: the owner of a revoked trademark may claim compensation for acts infringing its trademark before the date on which the revocation took effect but, if it did not exploit it, its compensation will be limited.
Synthia TIENTCHEU TCHEUKO
Trainee Attorney
Jérémie LEROY-RINGUET
Attorney-at-law
Reference and date: Court of Justice of the European Union, March 26, 2020, C‑622/18
Read the decision on Curia
04
November
2019
EU Court of Justice “cottoned” on to trademarks and bad faith
Author:
teamtaomanews
An applicant, holder of earlier semi-figurative trademarks KOTON designating the European Union territory, filed an opposition before the EUIPO against the application for registration of the trademark STYLO & KOTON filed-for in classes 25,35 and 39. As for the earlier trademarks, the term KOTON included a cotton flower which both vowels were stylized.
The opposition was successful only in classes 25 and 35 which allowed the registration of the STYLO & KOTON trademark for the services of the class 39.
As a consequence, the applicant filed a cancellation action against the trademark for the services of the class 39 but also for the goods and services of the classes 25 and 35 on the basis of a filing in bad faith, according to Article 52(1)(b) of the European regulation No.207/2009 that was applicable at the time when the application was filed.
The cancellation division and then the EUIPO board of appeal having rejected the cancellation action, the applicant appealed to the General Court of the European Union which also reject the argument of a filing in bad faith.
The European regulation n°207/2009 of 26 February 2009 does not offer a definition of “bad faith” but strictly refers to a filing made by an applicant “of bad faith” (EUTMR, art.59(1)(b)).
The Court of Justice of the European Union (“CJEU”) has tried to define it, in particular in the Chocoladefabriken Lindt & Spüngli judgment of 11 June 2009 (ECJ, 11 June 2009, C-529/07, pt. 53) stating that the bad faith of the applicant must be assessed globally taking into account all the factors relevant to the circumstances of the case and existing at the time of filing, and in particular:
the fact that the applicant knows or must know that a third party uses, in at least one Member State, an identical or similar sign for an identical or similar product or service which creates a risk of confusion with the applied-for sign;
the intention of the applicant to prevent that third party from continuing to use such a sign;
the degree of legal protection enjoyed by the sign of the third party and the applied-for sign.
According to the General Court, the judgment of 11 June 2009, Chocoladefabriken Lindt & Sprüngli does not mean that the existence of bad faith can only be found in the hypothesis, which the Court was then questioned on, where there is use on the internal market of an identical or similar sign for identical or similar goods which are confusing with the applied-for sign. This is only a relevant factor among others to be considered (points 51-55).
By following this approach, the General Court refrained from taking into consideration, in its overall assessment, all the relevant factual circumstances as they arose at the time the application was filed. This, it should have been taken into account that the trademark owner had requested the registration of a sign bearing the stylized word ‘KOTON’ as an EU trademark not only for services in class 39, but also for goods and services in classes 25 and 35 which corresponded to those for which the applicant had registered trademarks bearing that stylized word (points. 59-60).
Moreover, the General Court raised, only for the sake of completeness, the fact that there had been commercial relations between the trademark owner and the applicant and that they had been broken by the applicant; it also refrained from examining whether the application for a trademark containing the stylized word “KOTON” for goods and services in classes 25, 35 and 39 presented a commercial logic with regard to the activities of the trademark owner (point 62).
As the EUCJ decided to cancel the judgment of the General Court and the decision of the Board of Appeal, it is for the EUIPO board having jurisdiction to take a new decision on the basis of an overall assessment which takes into account the application for the contested trademark as filed for goods and services not only in class 39, but also in classes 25 and 35.
Alexis Valot
Lawyer
Anne Messas
Attorney at law, partner
Read the decision here