"Here comes that Landeshauptmann : now where shall I hide my title?" |
"Many thanks for the post about Ilonka Sayn-Wittgenstein. But may I respectfully disagree with you - I don't think she should be allowed to use the title as part of her legal name. Like you, I have no interest in allowing or preventing the use of titles as names, but I do not think that it is justified in this case.Resisting the temptation to take a poll of readers, the IPKat is nonetheless interested to receive interesting and thoughts about choice of name and its interface with (i) regular IP and (ii) rights of privacy/publicity. Please post your comments below.
As you note, there are historical reasons for the Austrian law - but I do think it is still an important law. Nobility has been part of central European history for a very very long time, and the law is the consequence of a long historical process across central Europe in the 18th -19th century. It was a real achievement at the time. Both Germany and Austria abolished the rights relating to titles in 1919 although they are still very much present in Germany, today.
In principle, I don't agree that a person can request that her name is changed contrary to the national law that applies to that name because the (German) authorities failed to apply the correct conflict of law rules. I agree with the Landeshauptmann that the Germans in this case didn't know their own law: they should have applied Austrian law first time round. And I do not think it is correct to rely on such obvious mistakes to push something through that is against the law.
Even under German law she may no longer be allowed to use the title. I haven't double-checked the Wikipedia entry about this but, if it is correct, then German law does not accept a title as part of a name if the country in which the relevant person is a national did not accept it as part of the name. So it seems that even in the event that Ilonka took German nationality she would still not be allowed to use the title in Germany because, according to Austrian law, she never legally carried the name it in the first place.
I think that there should be a clear difference between using one's name as a personal name and using it as a trade mark or commercial name. This does not appear to come out of the ECJ judgment too clearly. For different reasons, different rules apply to both and they cannot be mixed up. Personal name rights have evolved over centuries and are part of a cultural heritage of a country. Personal names must take into account the names of children and personality rights. Similarly, commercial names comply with certain rules such that they must be non-descriptive and distinguishable. Even if someone chooses to use his or her personal name as a trade mark and/or commercial name he or she has to accept that they are subject to different rules depending on where and how they are used. If looking at the EU with its 27 countries, and cross-border issues, it is ever more important to distinguish between rights linked to a person's nationality and commercial rights. The EU is primarily a commercial union, and any impact on (national) name rights should be considered in this context - i.e. to facilitate the movement of persons not the movement of goods and services".
Popular titles involving princesses:
The Princess and the Pea here
Princess for a Day here
Princess Daisy here
Princess in Rags here
If I remember this correctly, the only person who (after 1945 at least) was permitted the use 'von' in his name was Herbert von Karajan. Even the pretender to the Austrian throne is called merely Otto Habsburg (or Otto Habsburg-Lothringen), rather than 'O. von H.'.
ReplyDeletePerhaps the dislike of inherited titles (which I believe is anchored in the Austrian constitution) is more than balanced by the Austrian habit of addressing people by the titles they have earned in some way or another (Frau Doktor, Herr Ingenieur, Herr Hofrat etc.) I guess no Austrian would dream of calling O. von H. anything other than Dr. Habsburg.
I've written a short essay (in Portuguese) for college regarding Conflict Law applicable to names and its relation to the EU law.
ReplyDeleteIf you are interested in this subject, you should definitely read the following case-law: C-168/91 (Konstantinidis), C-148/02 (Garcia Avello) and C-353/06 (Grunkin-Paul). There's also an interesting article written by Matthis Lehmann concerning this subject: "What's in a name? Grunkin-Paul and beyond, in Yearbook of Private International Law”, Vol. 10 (2008).
I am thinking about re-writing such essay, so that I may publish it with these new developments. If any of the fellow readers knows about some articles regarding this matter (languages: portuguese, english, french and spanish), I would very much appreciate if you share such information.
Thanks in advance,