If you like the smell of L'Oréal, you'll just love the ECJ reference ...

Yesterday the IPKat noted L'Oréal v Bellure [2007] EWCA Civ 936, a major decision of the Court of Appeal for England and Wales on the extent to which well-known branded perfumes are protected against the allusory use of their names, presentation and packaging by traders in smell-alike perfumes under trade mark and passing off law. Today the Kat returns to the case, in which Lord Justice Jacob gave a leading judgment with which Lord Justice Keene and Mr Justice Blackburne concurred,

L'Oréal's main complaint was that the defendants' products smell-alike perfume products were marketed in packaging that took unfair advantage of its own product names, packaging and brand image. L'Oréal also argued that comparison charts, comparing its own brands with the defendants' products, were used when selling the defendants' products and when dealing with customers' queries, which amounted to same-mark, same-goods infringement. The company also claimed alleged passing off and unfair competition. At trial, Mr Justice Lewison upheld the trade mark infringement claim for some of the defendants' products, since the trade marks in question enjoyed a reputation of which the defendants took unfair advantage, but he dismissed the passing off claim. Everyone appealed - L'Oréal on the passing off/unfair competition points and the defendants on the issue of trade mark liability.

Dismissing L'Oréal's appeal, the Court of Appeal stayed the defendants' appeals and referred the following questions to the European Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
"1. Where a trader, in an advertisement for his own goods or services uses a registered trade mark owned by a competitor for the purpose of comparing the characteristics (and in particular the smell) of goods marketed by him with the characteristics (and in particular the smell) of the goods marketed by the competitor under that mark in such a way that it does not cause confusion or otherwise jeopardise the essential function of the trade mark as an indication of origin, does his use fall within either (a) or (b) of Art 5 of Directive 89/104?" [Jacob LJ explains: "The reason I propose asking virtually the same question as in O2 [see IPKat post here] is to ensure it is answered. One cannot rely on a parallel reference actually reaching the Court otherwise. In particular it may settle in which case the question will remain unanswered in this case. Of course (as I hope) this case may catch 02 up, in which case the Court will deal with the question in both cases. If not, the answer in O2 will very probably answer the question here too": para.34]

"2. Where a trader in the course of trade uses (particularly in a comparison list) a well-known registered trade mark for the purpose of indicating a characteristic (particularly a smell of a fragrance product) of his own product (particularly its smell) in such a way that:
it does not cause any likelihood of confusion of any sort; and
it does not affect the sale of the products under the well-known registered mark; and
it does not jeopardize the essential function of the registered trade mark as a guarantee of origin and does not harm the reputation of that mark whether by tarnishment of its image, or dilution or in any other way; and
it plays a significant role in the promotion of the defendant's product
does that use fall within Art. 5(1)(a) of Directive 89/104?" [explains Jacob LJ: "This question does not include any reference to "without due cause" or a "taking of unfair advantage". That is deliberate. The phrases are by no means easy to interpret. They are not used expressly in Art.5(1)(a) although, by virtue of the decision in Davidoff v Gofkid ... they are, I think, implicit. The point of the question is to confine the assumption to the facts": para.48]

"3. In the context of Art 3a(g) of the Misleading Advertising Directive (84/240) as amended by the Comparative Advertising Directive (97/55), what is the meaning of "take unfair advantage of" and in particular where a trader in a comparison list compares his product with a product under a well-known trade mark, does he thereby take unfair advantage of the reputation of the well-known mark?" [para.66]

"4. In the context of Art. 3a(h) of the said Directive what is the meaning of "presenting goods or services as imitations or replicas" and in particular does this expression cover the case where, without in any way causing confusion or deception, a party truthfully says that his product has a major characteristic (smell) like that of a well-known product which is protected by a trade mark?" [para.68]

"5. Where a trader uses a sign which is similar to a registered trade mark which has a reputation, and that sign is not confusingly similar to the trade mark, in such a way that
(a) the essential function of the registered trade mark of providing a guarantee of origin is not impaired or put at risk;
(b) there is no tarnishing or blurring of the registered trade mark or its reputation or any risk of either of these;
(c) the trade mark owner's sales are not impaired; and
(d) the trade mark owner is not deprived of any of the reward for promotion, maintenance or enhancement of his trade mark.
(e) But the trader gets a commercial advantage from the use of his sign by reason of its similarity to the registered mark
does that use amount to the taking of "an unfair advantage" of the reputation of the registered mark within the meaning of Art.5(2) of the Trade Mark Directive?" (para.91)
As to the passing off/unfair competition issue, the court reaffirmed that passing off law did not currently encompass unfair competition law, adding at para.161:
"... I think the tort of passing off cannot and should not be extended into some general law of unfair competition. True it is that trading conditions have changed somewhat over time – but I cannot identify any particular change which makes a general tort of unfair competition desirable, still less necessary. If the courts (or indeed Parliament) were to create such a tort it would be of wholly uncertain scope – one would truly have let the genie out of the bottle. Accordingly I would dismiss the "unfair competition" appeal".
The IPKat waits excitedly to see what response the Court of Appeal gets for its requests for a preliminary ruling. He's also relieved that passing off isn't metamorphosing into a tort of unfair competition in a piecemeal, sideways manner: if it is to be done, it should be done cleanly and efficiently by Parliament, rather than being funded by generations of litigants who can't find out whether a particular course of commercial conduct is lawful or otherwise except by going to court.
If you like the smell of L'Oréal, you'll just love the ECJ reference ... If you like the smell of L'Oréal, you'll just love the ECJ reference ... Reviewed by Jeremy on Thursday, October 11, 2007 Rating: 5

7 comments:

  1. For me the most exciting part of this case is Jacob LJ's suggestion that the defendant's get up might count as a 'parody', and therefore benefit from the parody defence in the US Trademark Dilution Revision Act 2006.

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  2. I'm glad you two are excited.

    Surely by now you'll have realised however that the ECJ specialises in complete anticlimax. Either they don't answer the questions, or they give bland responses and send the juicy bits back to be decided under national law.

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  3. I agree with the comment above by Anonymous - but this must be the first time ever that Sir Robin has expressed his sentiments under cover of anonymity.

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  4. I guess its just semantics but interesting to refer back to Aldous in the Aresnal case

    "I realise that there was no appeal on the conclusion reached by the judge on the cause of action traditionally called passing off, perhaps best referred to as unfair competition. ... The traditional form of passing off .....no longer definitive of the ambit of the cause of action."

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  5. I don't like this sort of thing, which is an affront to Parliamentary Sovereignty. We have a perfectly good Trade Marks Act which says whether or not you are allowed to use someone else's trade mark to identify their goods. Why should we have to go cap in hand to Europe to get an answer to this question, and why isn't the question whether the use is legal under our law, rather than whether the use is legal under what Europe would like our law to be?

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  6. I think this misses the point. Our Trade Marks Act implements a European Directive. Where the meaning of provisions of European Directives is unclear, a reference to the ECJ is unnecessary. If that situation is undesireable then blame our membership of the EU, not trade mark law.

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  7. Very tactfully put, Ilanah! Yes, I do blame our membership of the EU - and indeed voted against this membership in the last two general elections, though clearly to not much effect as yet. But I can still be annoyed when I see our law being overruled in this way, even where there are interesting IP issues as well.

    ReplyDelete

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