06
May
2020
Major changes in the French Trademark Prosecution
Author:
teamtaomanews
The long-awaited upheaval in French trademark law is finally here!
Directive (EU) 2015/2436 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2015 to approximate the laws of the Member States relating to trademarks has been transposed in France, at last, following the adoption of an order dated November 14, 2019.
This transposition entails a major overhaul of French trademark law and practice in certain aspects and notably regarding the application and renewal of trademarks.
=> The end of the requirement of graphical representation
Until now, to be eligible to a protection under trademark law, a sign needed to be capable of being represented graphically. Such condition has been abandoned by the new regulation. This abonnement does not necessarily open protection to non-traditional trademarks that were previously refused, such as olfactive or gustative marks, as the legislation still requires the sign applied for to be represented on the Register in a manner which enables anyone to determine precisely and clearly the subject matter of the protection afforded to its proprietor.
Yet, some non-conventional trademarks that were rarely accepted in the past will likely be adopted more easily now, as new formats of representation will become available. For instance, with respect to sound trademarks, it will now be possible to submit audio files, while for the representation of motion trademarks or hologram trademarks, the applicant will be able to furnish video files, gifs, etc.
If opening the trademark filing to new representation formats seems to be good news for future applicants, this will necessarily generate practical issues, in particular in the context of litigation. From now on, how should be compared a traditional verbal mark and a sound mark represented by an audio file? In this specific case, what will become of the visual comparison?
This new disposition will, no doubt, change significantly the office’s practice, which would have to get creative in developing new reasonings.
=> New official taxes
While the old system provided for a single flat fee for the filing of a trademark from one up to three classes, with an additional class fee from the third class onwards, the reform abandoned it in favor of a system of one fee per class.
The same system has been adopted for the renewal of trademarks.
=> Examination
The new disposition broadens the list of grounds for refusal, especially, the number of signs that can constitute opposable prior rights to the filing of a new trademark application. This will make it even more necessary to carry out prior right searches before considering filing any trademark application, as the sign for which registrations will be sought is likely to face more types of obstacles.
Now the following applications can be refused by the French Office:
Signs consisting exclusively of “the shape or other characteristic of the product imposed by the nature of the product itself, necessary to obtain a technical result or which confers substantial value on the product”. The reference to “another characteristic of the product” is new and broadens the ground for refusal specific to shape marks, which can now be applied more broadly and to all marks, and in particular to atypical marks whose filing is facilitated.
A trademark including “appellations of origin and geographical indications, traditional wine names and guaranteed traditional specialities” protected by national or European Union legislation or by international agreements.
A trademark consisting of the name of an earlier plant variety.
A trademark that has been filed in bad faith by the applicant.
The new provision also makes the lack of distinctiveness a proper and independent ground for refusal when, in the past, it was closely link to the condition of non-descriptiveness. Distinctiveness and non-descriptiveness are now two different conditions that a mark should comply with in order to be registered.
=> A new deadline for the renewal of trademark registrations
If, in the past, a trademark could be renewed up to the last day of the expiration month, the renewal would have to be filed, from now on, before the end of the expiration date. An additional period of six months is still allowed to proceed with such a renewal, subject to the payment of an additional fee. The starting point of this 6-month grace period is no longer the day after the expiration month but the day that follows the expiration date.
Our team is at your disposal to assist you and help you to better understand all the workings of this reform.
Blandine Lemoine
Lawyer
Jean-Charles Nicollet
European Trademark & Design Attorney
Head of Legal Department
28
April
2020
Pacte Law: The trademark opposition procedure new generation
Author:
teamtaomanews
We have been waiting for it for several years and France has finally transposed the European Directive 2015/2436 of 16 December 2015, approximating the laws of the Member States on trademarks by the Pacte Law.
One of the major changes in French law concerns the reform of the opposition procedure before the INPI against a trademark application infringing the prior rights of a third party. This new-generation opposition applies only to French trademarks, or international trademarks designating France, filed on or after December 11, 2019. For trademarks filed before this date, the old procedure remains applicable.
We therefore offer you a comparison between the new and the old opposition proceedings.
Grounds for opposition
The old opposition was characterized by the obligation to invoke only one prior right per procedure. Thus, if a holder wished to base his opposition on two trademarks, he had no choice but to file two oppositions.
The new procedure makes it possible to invoke several earlier rights in the same opposition. Similarly, the earlier rights that can be used to support the opposition procedure have been extended.
The official tax has changed and is now of €400 for the fist prior right invoked and of €150 for any additional rights invoked.
Course of the procedure
If the deadline to file an opposition is still of two months from the publication of the contested trademark, it is now possible to file a formal opposition. The brief setting out the arguments in support of the action must be submitted within 1 month of the expiry of the opposition period.
The adversarial principle has also been strengthened since the parties can exchange several sets of written submissions in order to make their case. In return, the opposition procedure is lengthened and can last up to 10 months before the final decision is taken, as opposed to a maximum of 6 months under the old procedure.
As part of his defense, the applicant of the contested mark may require the opponent to provide proof of genuine use of the earlier marks invoked which have been registered for more than 5 years. Such a possibility was already available in the old opposition proceedings.
However, the INPI now has the power to exercise a thorough control of the evidence to be provided by the opponent. It will therefore be necessary for the latter to be in a position, prior to the initiation of opposition proceedings on the basis of a trademark registered for more than 5 years, to provide proof of genuine use of the trademark for all the goods and/or services invoked in the context of the proceedings.
The new generation opposition procedure is therefore a major step forward for holders of prior rights by providing them with a broader basis for action and a strengthened adversarial principle. The other side of the coin is the need to demonstrate the genuine use of its trademarks registered for more than 5 years, at the request of the defendant, for all the goods and/or services invoked in support of the opposition.
Jean-Charles Nicollet
European Trademark and Design Attorney
Head of Legal Department
13
February
2020
ECJ’s « Sky » decision: a whistle in the wind?
Author:
teamtaomanews
Failing to force holders to restrict the goods/products designated by their trademarks, is the ECJ whistling in the wind?
The British satellite and cable television operator Sky, who holds several eponymous trademarks, took legal action, in the United Kingdom, for infringement of those trademarks against the Cloud service provider SkyKick, who had registered the trademark “Skykick” and variations thereof. The startup counterclaimed that the registration of the trademarks relied on by Sky was wholly or partially invalid on the grounds that (i) the lists of goods and services in respect of which the trademarks were registered lacked clarity and precision and (ii) the applications for registration had been filed in bad faith. Indeed, the trademarks had been filed to protect “software”, “communication systems” and “television” services, when in reality only one activity was considered: the sale of a satellite pay-TV package.
From a strategic point of view, the stakes of this case are essential since it deals with a major issue in trademark legislation. It is indeed important, when applying for a trademark, to have a forward-looking vision and to consider whether new products/services could be marketed under this sign. However, this logic must not lead to the monopolization of signs for a very broad list of goods and services when their owners have no intention of using the aforementioned signs for all of them.
The High Court of Justice (England and Wales), before which the proceedings were brought, decided to stay the proceedings and to refer a number of questions to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) for a preliminary ruling.
Lack of clarity and precision of goods and services for which the trademark is registered: an absolute ground for invalidity?
As a reminder, in 2012[1], the ECJ delivered a resounding judgment[1] in which it ruled that an applicant for a trademark must designate the goods and services for which protection is sought with sufficient clarity and precision, failing which the application must be dismissed.
SkyKick attempted to extend this logic to registered trademarks, but the Court held that a trademark of the European Union or a national trademark “cannot be declared wholly or partially invalid on the ground that terms used to designate the goods and services in respect of which that trade mark was registered lack clarity and precision“, since this requirement is not part of the exhaustive list of absolute grounds for invalidity provided for in the texts.
Overly broad range of good and services at the time of application: ground for invalidity based on bad faith?
While a trademark may be declared invalid if the applicant was acting in bad faith when submitting the application, this notion is not defined by the texts.
The European judges had already had the occasion to offer some possible interpretations, holding that bad faith is established when it is apparent from relevant and concordant indicia that the proprietor of a trademark has filed the application for registration not with the aim of engaging fairly in competition, but with the intention of undermining , in a manner inconsistent with honest practices, the interests of third parties, or with the intention of obtaining, without even targeting a specific third party in particular, an exclusive right for purposes other than those falling within the functions of a trademark, in particular the essential function of indication of origin[2] (see our TAoMA News of November 4, 2019).
With regard, more specifically, to the registration of a trademark without any intention of using it for the goods and services covered by the registration, the ECJ considered that it is likely to constitute an act of bad faith, which may affect all of the goods and services covered by the registration or only some of them. However, such bad faith can only be established if there are objective indications that the applicant intended to harm the interests of third parties in a manner contrary to honest practices or to obtain an exclusive right for purposes other than those falling within the functions of a trademark at the time of filing.
Finally, the ECJ declares that EU law does not preclude a provision of national law from requiring an applicant for registration of a trademark to state that this trademark is used in connection with the registered goods and services, or that he has a bona fide intention to do so, n so far as the infringement of such an obligation does not constitute, in itself, a ground for invalidity of a trade mark already registered.
Although this decision is a first step towards cleaning up the registers of European offices, which are cluttered with unused trademarks, it does not mark the 180° shift that some had expected and endorses a kind of status quo of the current trademark system under EU law, leaving a heavy burden on third parties to challenge the good faith of an owner.
If the recent Trademark Package – and its implementation into French law – does not directly address this issue, the single fee for trademark registration (the cost of which did not vary between one and three classes) it introduced could be an incentive for applicants to think twice before registering their trademarks for too many goods and services.
Date and reference: European Court of justice, January 29th 2020, decision C‑371/18
Read the decision on Curia
Synthia TIENTCHEU TCHEUKO
Trainee-Lawyer
Anita DELAAGE
Lawyer
[1] ECJ, june 19th 2012, C-307/10 « Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys » known as IP Translator decision
[2] ECJ, september 12th 2019, C-104/18 « Koton Mağazacilik Tekstil Sanayi ve Ticaret/EUIPO »