This morning the General Court of the European Union (Seventh Chamber) gave its ruling in
Case T‑250/13 Naazneen Investments Ltd v
OHIM, Energy Brands, Inc. intervening. This decision concerns the fate of a Community trade mark for the SMART WATER brand of soft drinks. Never heard of it? That's not surprising. This is its story.
In June 1999 Water Concepts obtained the
registration of the Community word mark SMART WATER in respect of ‘beverages,
namely water with dietary supplements’ in Class 32. In February 2002 this mark was assigned to Gondwana which in June 2007 assigned the mark to Naazneen. In March
2008, registration of the mark was renewed for a further 10 years.
In 2009 Energy Brands
[trading as Glacéau but actually is a privately-owned subsidiary of The Coca-Cola Company; Glacéau's own smartwater brand can be viewed here] applied to revoke the mark, pointing to non-use for a period of
five years. The OHIM Cancellation Division revoked the registration in a decision that was subsequently upheld by the Second Board of
Appeal in February 2013, the Board concluding that
the evidence provided by Naazneen did not make it possible to establish that
the mark had been put to genuine use; nor were there any proper reasons for non-use. Naazneen then applied to the General Court to annul the Board of Appeal's decision on numerous grounds, including failure to state reasons, failure to grasp the fact that that there had been genuine use and that there were good reasons for its non-use, or minimal use.
This morning the General
Court dismissed Naazneen's application. In the court's view:
* A Board of Appeal doesn't have to state its reasons in its own words: nothing precludes it from reproducing
reasoning set out in an earlier decision (in this case the decision of the Cancellation Division) that is relevant to the case before
it. By confirming the Cancellation Division's analysis,
according to which proof of genuine use of the mark had not been
adduced, the Board had implicitly rejected Naazneen’s arguments.
* Naazneen relied, for evidence of use, on affidavits from the Chief
Executive Officer of Gondwana, and an external consultant to Gondwana who had a
contractual link with that company. Their evidential value was lower than affidavits coming from third parties. In any event, the Board of Appeal took them into account
and took the view that they did not serve to prove genuine use of the mark at
issue.
* There was evidence of the test sales of 12
pallets of bottles, representing 15,552 bottles. Since the goods in question were beverages in Class 32 -- mass-consumption goods aimed at the general
public -- and that the market for those goods was of a significant size, a quantity of 15,552 bottles could only be regarded so
modest that it did not constitute genuine use. In any event, the existence of those sales had not been proved.
* The Cancellation Division’s finding that use of the mark on a website that merely included the message "site is under construction, please visit us again
later!", and which did not show any actual commercial activity, was not genuine use, could not be challenged.
* The total value of transactions involving the mark over the relevant period, an
amount of 800 euros, was so token as to suggest, in the absence of
supporting documents or convincing explanations to demonstrate otherwise, that
use of the mark could not be regarded as sufficient, in the economic sector
concerned, for the purposes of maintaining or creating market shares for the
goods covered by that mark.
* It was no excuse that Naazneen had relaunched the marketing of its SMART WATER products since a period of almost three years had elapsed between
the attempt to launch the brand and the end of the relevant period in which genuine use had to be proved.
* Nor did Naazneen have an excuse that, since its beverages were produced
by a third party, the interruption to the marketing of them under the mark was
independent of the will of the mark's proprietor (at that stage, Gondwana) and that, since the goods were
defective, it had the choice either to stop using the mark at issue or to put
consumers’ health in danger: it was for Gondwana to
supervise and control the manufacture of the goods in question even though they
were being manufactured by a third party, so any interruption to the marketing of
those goods could not be regarded as independent of Gondwana's will. In any event, replacement products could have
been manufactured and placed on the market within a reasonable period. The
additional economic investments necessary for the manufacture of further
products form part of the risks that an undertaking must face.
* The fact that revocation proceedings have been brought
against a trade mark does not prevent the proprietor of that mark from using
it.
This Kat thinks that this is an unsurprising outcome, but one that should serve as a reminder to everyone that genuine use is not just a state of mind but something that has to be proved on the basis of credible evidence. The case law is quite clear on this: there has to be evidence, it must relate to actual commercial use and it must relate to the five-year period in which non-use is alleged -- even if it dates from outside that period itself. Nothing else will do.
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Smart (water) cat |
Says Merpel, while an outsider, merely viewing a dispute from the standpoint of the judgment itself and without having seen the evidence and heard the arguments, can only ever get an imperfect impression of the legal dispute that led to it, there doesn't seem any reason why any part of this application should have come even remotely close to succeeding. She wonders whether the application was as much motivated by the hope that Energy Brands would be willing to pay for the claim to be quickly and discreetly dropped as by an assessment that it was really and truly likely to succeed. Does anyone know?
The Israel Patent and Trademark Office also recently concluded that an ongoing opposition proceedings was no justification for not using a mark and that the mark could be canceled for lack of use.
ReplyDeleteSee http://blog.ipfactor.co.il/2015/03/11/ghi-can-a-mark-be-cancelled-for-non-use-if-the-non-use-was-the-result-of-opposition-proceedings/
Whom ever it may concern !
ReplyDeleteAs beeing the CEO of Gondwana and a direct involved party I can inform you, that this case is not over yet!
The this court has not encoutert any of the reasons Naazneen has presented at all!
For example, we, Gondwana, did produce over 250,000 bottles of Smart Water and had a complet distribution ready to go, including advertisment compaign. While shipping the products into the stores German wide, we had to call em back due to contanimation just days later.
As the legal fight with our copacker started we couldnt distribute any more product into the market, as we think: coustomer health is more important than use of Trade Mark!
(With our nowerdays knowledge, we would rather let people suffer from contaminated products than risking the Trademark due to nonuse! Is this correct and in the interest of law?)
Meanwhile "Coke" startet legal activities in various countries to stop us! With this in backround, Would You start another go with all the liabilities of evetual misuse of Trademark against Coke?
We are to small, to cover such risk against the WORLD GIANT - Challenger Coke! Even with our other brand Water Joe www.waterjoe.eu we had and still have more than 18 years of experience in developing and distributing nonalcoholic beverages in the European market. It sems again that the giant just have to snip with its finger and the judges know what to Do 😡
So Naazneen and Gondwana will continue to fight and hope that we can finaly use OUR brand! Still its not deleted but Coke is using and distributing Smartwater in the UK - hat a chame 😡
Hope we are not alone !
Happy Easter
Stephan Reeckmann
www.gondwana.ag