The world of high-end watchmaking is a good case study for the importance of intellectual property (IP) rights.
- Many leading watchhouses are built on groundbreaking patented inventions, like Abraham-Louis Breguet’s tourbillion, Hans Wilsdorf’s waterproof oyster seal or Richard Mille’s tonneau-shaped timepieces [see here].
- In addition to being works of scientific achievement, many luxury timepieces are artistic wonders with innovative designs, like some of the reportedly 100 000 (!) watch designs created by Gerald Genta, including the Patek Philippe Nautilus, the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak or Genta’s famously playful line of Disney-themed watches (not to be confused with your own first plastic Mickey Mouse wristwatch, which likely has a considerably lower second-hand value).
- Brands like Rolex, Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet hold rich trade mark and design portfolios and enforce their rights vigorously.
- In January 2024, Rolex was successful in a US trade mark infringement case against BeckerTime before the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. BeckerTime’s business was to customize old Rolexes with new materials, including by adding diamonds and aftermarket bezels that are not found on Rolexes, and to market the modified watches as “Genuine Rolex”. BeckerTime’s argument that its customization work was allowed under the so-called misnomer exception in Champion Spark Plug Co. v. Sanders (1947) did not succeed and BeckerTime’s modified timepieces was found to infringe Rolex trade mark rights. This decision followed the Second Circuit’s earlier decision in Hamilton International Ltd v. Vortic LLC (2021), where a refurbisher of old Hamilton pocket watches found itself on the right side of the law and did not infringe Hamilton’s trade mark rights since there was no likelihood of confusion.
- February 2024, a trade mark infringement case was decided by the Swiss Supreme Court in litigation between Rolex and an un-named Swiss defendant (but widely reported to be the aforementioned atelier Artisans de Geneve) [see here]. In this case, Rolex argued that the defendant’s customization work, which required it to remove and then re-apply Rolex trade marks on the dials alongside the atelier’s own trade mark, amounted to trade mark infringement. In contrast with the US cases reported above, the Swiss Supreme Court made an important distinction between the private and commercial uses of trade marks, that is between:
1) the atelier’s supply of watch customization services to private individuals who brough their privately-owned Rolex watches to the atelier and wished to have them customized according to specific instructions; and
2) the atelier selling customized Rolexes to its customers on a larger scale.
The atelier’s customization work was found to be allowed under the first private use scenario but not under the second. - On March 4, 2024, the Swedish first instance Patent and Market Court handled similar questions in case PMT 8939-23 between watchmaker Tissot and Swedish company IFL Watches. In this case, the Swedish company sold Tissot watches directly to the customer, the customer could decide to have the watch customized whereby the Swedish company customized the watch according to a number of different concepts and delivered the finished watch to the customer (that is akin to the second scenario in the Swiss litigation above).
The Swedish court did not accept the defendant’s argument that its customization work constituted an extension or part of the customer’s private use of the watch and therefore did not constitute trade mark use and infringement. The court pointed out that the customization procedure was an integrated part of the customer’s purchase of the watch and could not be compared to for example an engraver providing engraving services on a watch which was brought into the shop by a customer. In line with the Swiss decision above, there thus seems to be an important distinction under European trade mark law between carrying out customization work on timepieces (or other products) provided to the craftsman by customers (i.e. for private use) and selling customized watches directly to customers on a larger scale.
As to the issue of trade mark consumption under Article 15(1) in Directive (EU) 2015/2436 (the EU Trade Mark Directive), the Swedish court stressed that the defendant had the burden of proof to prove that the Tissot watches had been put on the market in the EU by the trade mark owner. Based on the evidence in the case, the court found that the defendant had not been able to show that the watches had been put on the EU market by the trade mark holder. This Katfriend notes that a somewhat more nuanced view of the issue of burden of proof for consumption of trade mark rights was recently set out by the Court of Justice of the European Union in C-367/21, Hewlett Packard Development Company LP v Senetic S.A., EU:C:2024:61 (see IPKat post here) but the facts of that case was different from this case in many aspects.
The court also obiter confirmed that Tissot had the right under Article 15(2) of the EU Trade Mark Directive to object to the further marketing of the customized Tissot watches, even if the trade mark rights in the watches had in fact been consumed. The court reached this conclusion based on a finding of passing-off and the customers getting the impression that there was a commercial relationship between Tissot and IFL Watches.
These cases all raise interesting questions of trade mark law that are particularly timely in the context of recent discussions in IP circles about sustainability and the right to repair. The same questions can of course be discussed from the perspective of copyright and other IP rights, which ensures many more interesting enforcement cases in the world of horology in the years to come.
Could you please publish a link to the Swedish judgment in in case PMT 8939-23?
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