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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Procurator Fiscal, Glasgow v. Gallacher [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_19 (13 March 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_19.html
Cite as: 2007 SCCR 152, 2007 GWD 10-197, 2007 JC 125, [2007] HCJAC 19, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_19

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Johnston

Lord Penrose

2007 HCJAC19

XJ568/06

 

.

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD MACFADYEN

 

in

 

STATED CASE

 

in causa

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, Glasgow

APPELLANT;

 

against

 

JOSEPH GALLACHER

RESPONDENT.

 

 

Act: Di Rollo Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent.

Alt: Mitchell; Fitzpatrick & Co.

 

13 March 2007

Introduction

[1] The respondent, Joseph Gallacher, was charged at the instance of the appellant on a summary complaint with two charges alleging that he contravened section 92(1)(c) of the Trade Marks Act 1994 (the 1994 Act). After trial, he was acquitted of both charges. On the application of the appellant, the sheriff has stated a case for the opinion of this court.

The legislation

[2] Section 92 of the 1994 Act provides inter alia as follows:

 

"(1)

A person commits an offence who with a view to gain for himself or another, or with intent to cause loss to another, and without the consent of the proprietor ―

 

 

(a)

applies to goods or their packaging a sign identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, a registered trade mark, or

 

 

(b)

sells or lets for hire, offers or exposes for sale or hire or distributes goods which bear, or the packaging of which bears, such a sign, or

 

 

(c)

has in his possession, custody or control in the course of a business any such goods with a view to the doing of anything, by himself or another, which would be an offence under paragraph (b).

 

...

 

 

 

(4)

A person does not commit an offence under this section unless ―

 

 

(a)

the goods are goods in respect of which the trade mark is registered, or

 

 

(b)

the trade mark has a reputation in the United Kingdom and the use of the sign takes or would take unfair advantage of, or is or would be detrimental to, the distinctive character or the repute of the trade mark.

 

(5)

It is a defence for a person charged with an offence under this section to show that he believed on reasonable grounds that the use of the sign in the manner in which it was used, or was to be used, was not an infringement of the registered trade mark."

The facts

[3] As appears from findings in fact 16 to 18 in the stated case, Rangers Football Club plc (Rangers) are the proprietors of inter alia the two registered trade marks shown in Crown productions 1 and 2. The mark shown in production 1 is the word "Rangers". The mark shown in production 2 is a monogram of the letters "RFC".

[4] Findings in fact 1 to 8 may be summarised as follows. The respondent is a street trader who, since 1974, has traded in football-related items. These items are sold before, during and after football matches involving inter alios Rangers. On 9 December 2003, prior to a match between Rangers and Panathanaikos, the respondent's estate car was parked on spare ground at the corner of Copland Road and Mafeking Street, Glasgow. Although the findings in fact do not expressly say so, that location is close to Ibrox stadium, where the match was to take place. The respondent was approached by police officers and trading standards officers undertaking an "anti-counterfeiting" operation. With his consent, his car was searched. In it were found various bags and boxes containing hats and scarves bearing the word "Rangers" or the "RFC" monogram or both. The hats and scarves were seized.

[5] Finding 9 records that, of the 334 hats referred to in charge 1, 216 had applied to them signs identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, the registered trade mark shown in production 1; 113 had applied to them signs identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, the registered trade mark shown in production 2; and five had applied to them signs identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, both of the registered trade marks. Finding 10 records correspondingly that of the 139 scarves referred to in charge 2, 24 had applied to them signs identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, the registered trade mark shown in production 1, and 115 had applied to them signs identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, both marks.

[6] In Finding 20, the sheriff held that the trade marks, when applied to the hats and scarves, would be purchased and worn as badges of support, loyalty and affiliation to Rangers. In Finding 21, he held that the acts and conduct of the respondent did not amount to trade mark use. In Finding 22, he held that, in any event, the respondent was using the marks as an indication concerning the characteristics of the goods, to the effect that the owner, wearer or carrier of the hats or scarves was or would be regarded as a supporter of Rangers.

[7] The events giving rise to the complaint which is the subject of this appeal were not the first time that the respondent had been charged with contraventions of section 92(1)(c) of the 1994 Act in similar circumstances. As is recorded in Findings 11 to 14, the 334 hats referred to in charge 1 were originally seized from the respondent in December 1999. A number of the scarves referred to in charge 2 were likewise seized from the respondent in December 1999. In that connection the respondent was charged with contraventions of section 92(1)(c). In April 2003, he was acquitted of those charges. Following his acquittal, the hats and scarves were returned to him by the Trading Standards Department.

Submissions - the elements of the offence

[8] The Advocate depute submitted that, for the Crown to prove the respondent's guilt of an offence under section 92(1)(c) it was necessary for it to establish five facts beyond reasonable doubt. These were:

(1) that the conduct libelled was carried out without the consent of the proprietor of the trade mark in question;

(2) that the conduct was carried out either with a view to gain or with intent to cause loss to another;

(3) that the goods were goods in respect of which the trade mark was registered;

(4) that the conduct involved the use of a sign in respect of the goods which was identical to, or likely to be mistaken for, the registered trade mark; and

(5) that the respondent had the goods in his possession, custody or control in the course of a business with a view to their being sold, let for hire, offered or exposed for sale or hire or distributed.

In addition, if the section 92(5) defence was put in issue, the court required to consider on the balance of probabilities whether it had been made out.

[9] The Advocate depute submitted that each of the five necessary facts had been proved, and that accordingly, the section 92(5) defence having been rejected, the respondent should have been convicted. We did not understand Miss Mitchell, for the respondent, to dispute that the facts identified by the Advocate depute had been proved, and it is therefore unnecessary for us to discuss them individually in any detail. Miss Mitchell's contention, rather, was that there was an additional requirement, namely that the Crown must prove that the use made by the respondent of the marks was "trade mark use", and that in the circumstances of this case the sheriff had been right, in finding in fact 21, to hold that the acts and conduct of the respondent did not amount to such use.

 

[10] The Advocate depute submitted that in reaching the conclusion he did on this issue the sheriff misunderstood the effect of the decisions in Arsenal Football Club plc v Reed [2003] EWCA Civ 696, [2003] 3 All ER 865, and Regina v Johnstone [2003] UKHL 28, [2003] 1 WLR 1736. Johnstone had nothing to do with the circumstances of this case. It was concerned with cases where the word or words comprising the trade mark could be applied as pure description of the goods or some property of the goods. It involved the identification by name of the performer of the music on a compact disk. The marks on the goods which the respondent was charged with possessing had no such descriptive character. Properly understood, Arsenal demonstrated that in circumstances such as those of the present case the application of a sign identical to the trade mark to goods in order to sell them was incontrovertibly trade mark use.

[11] Initially, Miss Mitchell sought to argue that the Crown had failed to establish that the name "Rangers" and the monogram had been applied to the hats and scarves as trade marks, and that accordingly the Crown case was incomplete. She referred in particular to Johnstone, paragraphs 13 and 27. She came to accept, however, that the respondent's use of the signs could not be said to be descriptive in the sense discussed in Johnstone. In the end, therefore she accepted that, subject only to the question raised by the section 92(5) defence, the respondent should have been convicted.

Discussion - the elements of the offence

[12] In these circumstances, therefore, we need only make limited comments on the issue of trade mark use. In the first place, in finding in fact 20, the sheriff held that: "The aforementioned Rangers trade marks, when applied to the hats and scarves, would be purchased and worn as badges of support, loyalty or affiliation to Rangers Football Club". As was pointed out by the European Court of Justice in Arsenal [2003] All ER (EC) 1 at 31-32 (paragraphs 62 and 63), however, that consideration is immaterial to the question of infringement.

[13] Secondly, as Johnstone demonstrates, there will be no infringement if words constituting a trade mark are applied to goods not as a trade mark, but as a description of some property or quality of the goods. As Lord Nicholls of Birkinhead said by way of illustration in Johnston at paragraph 27,

"The registration of the word 'Alabaster' as a trade mark would not preclude others from stating that their product was 'made from alabaster'."

But the application of the word "Rangers" or the monogram to the hats and scarves which the respondent proposed to sell was in no way descriptive of any inherent quality or property of the garments. This is simply not a descriptive use case. In finding in fact 22 the sheriff found that "The respondent was, in any event, using the registered trade marks ... as an indication concerning the characteristics of the goods, to the effect that the owner, wearer or carrier of the hats or scarves in question was or would be regarded as a supporter of Rangers Football Club". We simply do not understand that finding. We fail to see how that inference as to the affiliation of the ultimate user, sound though it may be, can be regarded as relating to an indication of a characteristic of the goods in the sense discussed in Johnstone.

[14] In the result, we are of opinion that the conclusion justified by the sheriff's findings of primary fact was that the respondent was guilty of contraventions of section 92(1)(c). As the European Court of Justice held in Arsenal (EC) (paragraph 51), the exclusive right acquired by the trade mark proprietor may be exercised where a third party's use of the sign affects or is liable to affect the essential function of the trade mark, namely of guaranteeing to consumers the origin of the goods. In the absence of a legitimate descriptive use of the sign, the inference that the respondent's use of it in the present case was liable to affect that guarantee is in our view inescapable. We therefore answer questions (a) and (b) in the stated case in the affirmative.

The section 92(5) defence

[15] In anticipation of our reaching that conclusion, Miss Mitchell sought to fall back on the section 92(5) defence. The question whether, in the event of there being a prima facie infringement, that defence has been made out is not sharply focused in the stated case. The sheriff rejected the defence (paragraph (43) of his Note), but his views on that matter were obiter. The Advocate depute submitted that it was not open to Miss Mitchell to re-open the issue, but did not suggest that he was unprepared to deal with the point. In these circumstances we did not consider that it would have been fair to the respondent to deny him the opportunity of arguing section 92(5), when we were minded, but for that consideration, to find against him.

[16] It is to be noted at the outset that there is nothing in the stated case to suggest that the sheriff did not believe the respondent's evidence to the effect that he believed that his use of the signs was not an infringement of the trade marks. The live issue was whether that belief was held "on reasonable grounds".

[17] As the sheriff recorded in finding in fact 11, the respondent was acquitted after trial in April 2003 of contraventions of section 92(1)(c). As is recorded in findings in fact 12 and 14, these charges related in part to the same goods as are the subject matter of the present charges. Findings in fact 13 and 14 narrate that following the respondent's acquittal in April 2003, the hats and scarves were returned to him by the Trading Standards Department in July 2003. In paragraph (8) of his Note the sheriff records that there was evidence of a newspaper article which appeared in the Glasgow Evening Times of 17 September 2003 in which the head of the Trading Standards Department was quoted as using the word "muddied" to describe the then current position so far as taking proceedings against counterfeiters was concerned. The article related to the refusal of the Trading Standards Department to seize counterfeit goods in the run up to a Champions League match between Rangers and Manchester United. In evidence, a Trading Standards Officer endorsed the view that as at 17 September 2003 the law was "complex, muddied and unsettled". Alastair Campbell, the head of "Brand Protection" at Rangers gave evidence of having had a conversation with the respondent at the Scottish Cup Final in 2003 in the course of which, he said, he had mentioned the Court of Appeal decision in Arsenal and had advised the respondent that Rangers adhered to the view that his goods were counterfeit (Note, paragraph 11). Evidence was also given about a letter sent by Rangers to street traders on 4 August 2003 advising them of the Arsenal decision and Rangers' attitude (Note, paragraph (11)). Mr Campbell said that that letter was sent to the respondent (Note, paragraph (12)).

[18] The sheriff was not prepared to hold that the conversation alleged to have taken place on cup final day had taken place, or that the letter of 4 August 2003 had been received by the respondent. It would not be appropriate for us to differ from the sheriff on his assessment of the acceptability of that evidence. The factors that are left are (a) the acquittal in April 2003, (b) the return of the goods by the Trading Standards Department in July 2003, and (c) the attitude to the enforcement of the legislation publicly expressed by officers of the Trading Standards Department. Taken together, they amount, in our view to reasonable grounds for the respondent's belief that his use of the signs did not infringe the trade marks. The sheriff (Note, paragraphs (15) and (43)) accepted that reasonable ground for belief could not be founded on error of law. Even if that is correct (as to which we reserve our opinion), it does not preclude the section 92(5) defence in the present case, because the considerations which we have set out in paragraph [17] above are matters of fact. The respondent is therefore in our opinion entitled to be acquitted.

Result

[19] As we have already indicated, we answer questions (a) and (b) of the stated case in the affirmative. That done, however, we find the section 92(5) defence established, and refuse the appeal.


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