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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Healey Sports Cars Switzerland Ltd v Jensen Cars Ltd [2014] EWHC 24 (Pat) (24 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2014/24.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 24 (Pat), [2014] Bus LR D3 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
The Rolls Building Fetter Lane EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a deputy judge of the Chancery Division)
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Healey Sports Cars Switzerland Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Jensen Cars Limited |
Respondent |
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Simon Malynicz (instructed by Taylor Wessing LLP) for the respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Henry Carr QC :
Introduction
"They were the rivals of the E-Type Jaguars and Aston Martins of the day. The original JENSON INTERCEPTOR car may itself have been mechanically unreliable and perhaps was difficult to drive, but its shape and Italian styling was described as 'glorious'."
The approach of the appellate court in trade mark appeals
"11. ….Such appeals are not by way of a rehearing but are a review. The principles were set out by Robert Walker LJ in Bessant and others v South Cone Inc [2003] RPC 5, at paragraphs 17 to 30. Robert Walker LJ said at [28]:
"The appellate court should in my view show real reluctance, but not the very highest degree of reluctance, to interfere in the absence of a distinct and material error of principle."
12. At paragraph 29, Robert Walker LJ said this:
"The appellate court should not treat a judgement or a written decision as containing an of error principle simply because of its belief that the judgement or decision could have been better expressed."
13. In that case the High Court judge had reversed the decision of a Hearing Officer. The Court of Appeal held that he had been wrong to do so. Robert Walker LJ in dismissing the appeal said this:
"I consider that the Hearing Officer did not err in principle, nor was he clearly wrong."
14. I conclude that, unless I am satisfied that the Hearing Officer made an error of principle, I should be reluctant to interfere. I should interfere if I consider that his decision is clearly wrong, for example if I consider that he has drawn inferences which cannot properly be drawn, or has otherwise reached an unreasonable conclusion. I should not interfere if his decision is one which he was properly entitled to reach on the material before him."
"43.... Although this is not virgin territory, the present case illustrates the need to reinforce what has been said on other occasions. The court should always bear in mind the remarks of Baroness Hale of Richmond in AH (Sudan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] UKHL 49, [2008] 1 AC 678 at para 30:
"This is an expert Tribunal charged with administering a complex area of law in challenging circumstances... [T]he ordinary courts should approach appeals from them with an appropriate degree of caution; it is probable that in understanding and applying the law in their specialised field the Tribunal will have got it right.. .They and they alone are judges of the facts...Their decisions should be respected unless it is quite clear that they have misdirected themselves in law. Appellate courts should not rush to find such misdirections simply because they might have reached a different conclusion on the facts or expressed themselves differently."
44 Those general observations were made in a case where the Court of Appeal had allowed an appeal against a decision of the AIT [Asylum and Immigration Tribunal]. The role of the court is to correct errors of law. Examples of such errors include misinterpreting the ECHR; misdirecting themselves by propounding the wrong test on some legal question such as the burden or standard of proof; procedural impropriety such as a breach of the rules of natural justice; and the familiar errors of omitting a relevant factor or taking into account an irrelevant factor or reaching a conclusion on the facts which is irrational.
45 But the court should not be astute to characterise as an error of law what, in truth, is no more than a disagreement with the AIT's assessment of the facts. Moreover, where a relevant point is not expressly mentioned by the tribunal, the court should be slow to infer that it has not been taken into account."
Alleged errors of law or principle in the present case
Evidence in the present case
"I find that the narrative statements of facts in this case are of very little evidential value. Accordingly, except where the statements have persuasive documentary support, I will not be able to give the narrative evidence much weight. The burden of showing what use was made of the marks in the relevant 5 year periods falls on Healey. Therefore the unsatisfactory nature of the evidence has more potential to disadvantage Healey than JCL."
The requirement for genuine use
"(1) Genuine use means actual use of the mark by the proprietor or a third party with authority to use the mark: Ansul, [35] and [37].
(2) The use must be more than merely 'token', which means in this context that it must not serve solely to preserve the rights conferred by the registration: Ansul, [36].
(3) The use must be consistent with the essential function of a trade mark, which is to guarantee the identity of the origin of the goods or services to the consumer or end-user by enabling him, without any possibility of confusion, to distinguish the goods or services from others which have another origin: Ansul, [36]; Sunrider, [70]; Silberquelle, [17].
(4) The use must be by way of real commercial exploitation of the mark on the market for the relevant goods or services, i.e. exploitation that is aimed at maintaining or creating an outlet for the goods or services or a share in that market: Ansul, [37]-[38]; Silberquelle, [18].
(a) Example that meets this criterion: preparations to put goods or services on the market, such as advertising campaigns: Ansul, [37].
(b)Examples that do not meet this criterion: (i) internal use by the proprietor: Ansul, [37]; (ii) the distribution of promotional items as a reward for the purchase of other goods and to encourage the sale of the latter: Silberquelle, [20]-[21].
(5) All the relevant facts and circumstances must be taken into account in determining whether there is real commercial exploitation of the mark, including in particular, the nature of the goods or services at issue, the characteristics of the market concerned, the scale and frequency of use of the mark, whether the mark is used for the purpose of marketing all the goods and services covered by the mark or just some of them, and the evidence that the proprietor is able to provide: Ansul, [38] and [39]; La Mer, [22]-[23]; Sunrider, [70]-[71].
(6) Use of the mark need not always be quantitatively significant for it to be deemed genuine. There is no de minimis rule. Even minimal use may qualify as genuine use if it is the sort of use that is appropriate in the economic sector concerned for preserving or creating market share for the relevant goods or services. For example, use of the mark by a single client which imports the relevant goods can be sufficient to demonstrate that such use is genuine, if it appears that the import operation has a genuine commercial justification for the proprietor: Ansul, [39]; La Mer, [21], [24] and [25]; Sunrider, [72]"
"Use of the mark must therefore relate to goods or services already marketed or about to be marketed and for which preparations by the undertaking to secure customers are under way, particularly in the form of advertising campaigns."
The first alleged error – the uses relied upon by Healey
"....while the Directive makes the classification of use of the trade mark as genuine use consequential only on consideration of the circumstances which pertain in respect of the relevant period and which predate the filing of the application for revocation, it does not preclude, in assessing the genuineness of use during the relevant period, account being taken, where appropriate, of any circumstances subsequent to that filing. It is for the national court to determine whether such circumstances confirm that the use of the mark during the relevant period was genuine or whether, conversely, they reflect an intention on the part of the proprietor to defeat that claim."
The Second alleged error – internal inconsistency
"Further, leaving to one side Mr McDonald's evidence that the meeting between Mr Hearley and Mr Cardiff was the trigger for Healey's use of the Jensen and Interceptor marks on the website and in the press release, the very proximity between these uses and Healey's application to invalidate JCL's UK registration of Jensen on the basis of earlier mark IR 078, after 5 years without any relevant external use of that Jensen mark, calls into question whether the uses in question were really advertisements intended to create a market for the goods amongst potential customers for motor cars." (emphasis added).