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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Youview TV Ltd v Total Ltd [2012] EWHC 3158 (Ch) (09 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/3158.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3158 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
ON APPEAL FROM THE TRADE MARKS REGISTRY
Rolls Building London EC4A1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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YouView TV Limited |
Appellant |
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Total Limited |
Respondent |
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Simon Malynicz (instructed by Williams LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 1st November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Floyd :
"(2) A trade mark shall not be registered if because –
….
(b) it is similar to an earlier trade mark and is to be registered for goods or services identical with or similar to those for which the earlier trade mark is protected,
there exists a likelihood of confusion on the part of the public, which includes the likelihood of association with the earlier trade mark."
Class 09: Database programs and Databases.
Class 35: Provision of commercial business information by means of a computer database; computerised database management; compilation of information into a database.
Class 38: Providing access to computer databases; telecommunication services.
The first ground of appeal: similarity of goods and services
9. In comparing the respective specifications, all relevant factors should be considered, as per Canon Kabushiki Kaisha v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. where the CJEU stated at paragraph 23 of its judgment:
"In assessing the similarity of the goods or services concerned, as the French and United Kingdom Governments and the Commission have pointed out, all the relevant factors relating to those goods or services themselves should be taken into account. Those factors include, inter alia, their nature, their intended purpose and their method of use and whether they are in competition with each other or are complementary."
'Complementary' was defined by the General Court ("GC") in Boston Scientific Ltd v Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market (Trade Marks and Designs) (OHIM) Case T-325/06:
"82 It is true that goods are complementary if there is a close connection between them, in the sense that one is indispensable or important for the use of the other in such a way that customers may think that the responsibility for those goods lies with the same undertaking…".
10. Additionally, the criteria identified in British Sugar Plc v James Robertson & Sons Limited ("Treat") [1996] RPC 281 for assessing similarity between goods and services also include an assessment of the channels of trade of the respective goods or services.
11. If goods or services fall within the ambit of terms within the competing specification, they are considered to be identical, as stated by the General Court ("GC") in Gérard Meric v OHIM, case T-133/05.
12. A great deal of the submissions made at the hearing, in writing and via evidence, focussed on the meanings of terms in the specifications. The significance of classification and the relevance of class numbers were considered by …the courts in Altecnic Ltd's Trade Mark Application (CAREMIX) [2002] R.P.C. 639. In Avnet Incorporated v Isoact Limited [1998] F.S.R. 16 Jacob J held that:
"In my view, specifications for services should be scrutinised carefully and they should not be given a wide construction covering a vast range of activities. They should be confined to the substance, as it were, the core of the possible meanings attributable to the rather general phrase."
Jacob J also said, in Treat:
"When it comes to construing a word used in a trade mark specification, one is concerned with how the product is, as a practical matter, regarded for the purposes of trade. After all a trade mark specification is concerned with use in trade".
13. Specifications should not be given an unnaturally narrow meaning, as per Beautimatic International Ltd v Mitchell International Pharmaceuticals Ltd and Another [2000] FSR 267. In Thomson Holidays Ltd v Norwegian Cruise Lines Ltd [2003] RPC 32, although in the context of a non-use issue, the court considered interpretation of specifications:
"In my view that task should be carried out so as to limit the specification so that it reflects the circumstances of the particular trade and the way that the public would perceive the use. The court, when deciding whether there is confusion under section 10(2), adopts the attitude of the average reasonably informed consumer of the products. If the test of infringement is to be applied by the court having adopted the attitude of such a person, then I believe it appropriate that the court should do the same when deciding what is the fair way to describe the use that a proprietor has made of his mark. Thus, the court should inform itself of the nature of trade and then decide how the notional consumer would describe such use".
Software for embedding in apparatus for television and radio reception
"computer software, including software for use in downloading, storing, reproducing and organising audio, video, still and moving images and data in compressed and uncompressed form"
"15. The parties take opposite positions in comparing these goods to the opponent's Databases. The opponent says that a database is a collection of data so the applicant's goods are identical to the opponent's Databases. The applicant, however, says that databases are simply a way of storing or organising data and that the opponent's argument is akin to saying that a warehouse is identical to whatever is stored within it. This may be true of Database programs but, as the applicant's written submissions say, databases are sets of data. Sets of data could be recorded electronically e.g. on a CD or memory stick. There does not seem to be any difference between sets of data (i.e. databases) and data recordings: the content of both is data. The applicant has defined its audio, video and still and moving images and text as being data and so must be taken as such. The applicant's goods Data recordings including audio, video, still and moving images and text in compressed and uncompressed form are identical to the opponent's Databases."
Apparatus for television and radio reception
"I will compare these goods to the opponent's telecommunications services. Mr Abrahams said at one point that "telecommunications means communicating by phone." It think that is too narrow a view of the term and that average consumers, as is borne out in the Ofcom report, would view telecommunications as more than just telephone use; it also covers (at least) the provision of Internet access (fixed line or mobile)."
"Conveyance over distance of speech, music and other sounds, visual images or signals by electric, magnetic or electro-magnetic means"
28. I will leave aside for the moment apparatus for broadcasting because the applicant has made the specific claim that broadcasting is separate to telecommunications services. Apparatus for telecommunications, data communications, satellitebroadcasting andtransmission, television and radiobroadcasting, transmission and reception, electronic messaging, access to interactive services and access to the internet are all telecommunications services. There is a high degree of complementarity between the apparatus and the service: without the apparatus, the service is unviable; without the service, the apparatus is redundant. Telecommunications service providers supply the apparatus with the service (e.g. modem, set-top box, mobile phone or dongle). There is therefore a two-way complementary relationship and a shared channel of trade. The purpose is the same: to enable transmission and reception/telecommunication to take place. The users are the same. There is a high degree of similarity between the opponent's telecommunications services and the applicant's Apparatus for telecommunications, data communications, satellite transmission, television and radio transmission and reception, electronic messaging, access to interactive services and access to the internet.
Similarity of marks
8. The leading authorities which guide me in relation to section 5(2)(b) of the Act are from the Court of Justice of the European Union ('CJEU'): Sabel BV v Puma AG [1998] RPC 199, Canon Kabushiki Kaisha v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc [1999] RPC 117, Lloyd Schuhfabrik Meyer & Co GmbH v Klijsen Handel B.V. [2000] FSR 77, Marca Mode CV v Adidas AG & Adidas Benelux BV [2000] ETMR 723, Medion AG v. Thomson Multimedia Sales Germany & Austria GmbH C-120/04 and Shaker di L. Laudato & C. Sas v Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market (Trade Marks and Designs) (OHIM) C-334/05 P (LIMONCELLO). It is clear from these cases that:
(a) the likelihood of confusion must be appreciated globally, taking account of all relevant factors; Sabel BV v Puma AG,
(b) the matter must be judged through the eyes of the average consumer for the goods/services in question; Sabel BV v Puma AG, who is deemed to be reasonably well informed and reasonably circumspect and observant - but who rarely has the chance to make direct comparisons between marks and must instead rely upon the imperfect picture of them he has kept in his mind; Lloyd Schuhfabrik Meyer & Co. GmbH v Klijsen Handel B.V.,
(c) the average consumer normally perceives a mark as a whole and does not proceed to analyse its various details; Sabel BV v Puma AG,
(d) the visual, aural and conceptual similarities of the marks must therefore be assessed by reference to the overall impressions created by the marks bearing in mind their distinctive and dominant components; Sabel BV v Puma AG,
e) assessment of the similarity between two marks means more than taking just one component of a composite trade mark and comparing it with another mark; the comparison must be made by examining each of the marks in question as a whole, which does not mean that the overall impression conveyed to the relevant public by a composite trade mark may not, in certain circumstances, be dominated by one or more of its components; Medion AG v. Thomson Multimedia Sales Germany & Austria GmbH
f) it is only when all other components of a complex mark are negligible that it is permissible to make the comparison on the basis of the dominant element; Shaker di L. Laudato & C. Sas v OHIM.
(g) a lesser degree of similarity between the marks may be offset by a greater degree of similarity between the goods, and vice versa; Canon Kabushiki Kaisha v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc,
(h) there is a greater likelihood of confusion where the earlier trade mark has a highly distinctive character, either per se or because of the use that has been made of it; Sabel BV v Puma AG,
(i) in determining whether similarity between the goods or services covered by two trade marks is sufficient to give rise to the likelihood of confusion, the distinctive character and reputation of the earlier mark must be taken into account; Canon Kabushiki Kaisha v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc,
(j) mere association, in the sense that the later mark brings the earlier mark to mind, is not sufficient for the purposes of Section 5(2); Sabel BV v Puma AG,
(k) further, the reputation of a mark does not give grounds for presuming a likelihood of confusion simply because of a likelihood of association in the strict sense; Marca Mode CV v Adidas AG and Adidas Benelux BV,
(l) but if the association between the marks causes the public to wrongly believe that the respective goods come from the same or economically linked undertakings, there is a likelihood of confusion within the meaning of the section; Canon Kabushiki Kaisha v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.
48. The authorities direct that, in making a comparison between the marks, I must have regard to each mark's visual, aural and conceptual characteristics. I have to decide which, if any, of their components I consider to be distinctive and dominant, without engaging in an artificial dissection of the marks, because the average consumer normally perceives a mark as a whole and does not analyse its details. Both marks consist of two-word phrases (conjoined words, in the applicant's case, about which I say more below) which it would be artificial to dissect: they 'hang together' as wholes. I consider the dominant and distinctive elements of the opponent's mark to be YOUR VIEW, as a whole; similarly, in the application, the dominant and distinctive element is YOUVIEW.
49. … The perception of the average consumer will be of a your view trade mark and a you view trade mark. The meaning and the words is what is going to be remembered; a view by the person being addressed (you/your). The trade marks are clearly orally highly similar and conceptually similar. The stylisation of the application is noted but it does not change the sense and the perception of the trade mark. The absence of the letter r in the application can easily fall victim to the missing letter effect, which is pertinent to trade mark law in relation to imperfect recollection. The trade marks are highly similar.
Conclusion