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United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office Decisions >> FROM THE MAKERS OF BIOTEX BLACK KEEPS DARK COLOURS STRONGER FOR LONGER (Trade Mark: Opposition) [2004] UKIntelP o04304 (12 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIntelP/2004/o04304.html Cite as: [2004] UKIntelP o04304, [2004] UKIntelP o4304 |
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For the whole decision click here: o04304
Result
Section 3(1)(a) - Opposition dismissed
Section 3(1)(b) - Opposition succeeded
Section 3(1)(c) - No formal finding
Section 3(1)(d) - No formal finding
Section 3(3)(b) - Opposition successful
Points Of Interest
Summary
The application specified "detergents; biological laundry detergents; detergents for commercial, domestic and laundry use". Under Section 3(3)(b) the opponents alleged that as the specification covered all types of detergents and was not restricted to being for use only in relation to black or dark colours this could lead to deception of customers. Consumers might also believe it contained some form of dye. Registration would thus be contrary to Section 3(3)(b).
The Hearing Officer addressed this aspect first, though he saw no basis for the second part of the allegation. He noted that there was a dearth of case law in relation to Section 3(3)(b), and he reviewed such guidance as existed. In conclusion he noted the discrepancy between the claim incorporated in the mark and the absence of any such limitation in the specification. The applicants could have used Article 13 of the Directive to limit the specification but they had not done so. The mark was deceptive in relation to the totality of the specification and the opposition under Section 3(3)(b) succeeded accordingly.
In case he should be found wrong in this; the Hearing Officer went on to consider the remaining grounds. The objection under Section 3(1)(a) was dismissed.
The written matter in the mark included the words "from the makers of Biotex". The Hearing Officer found that even in normal and fair use the ‘Biotex’ element could appear on a different plane; effectively invisible to the customer. The rest of the mark was hopeless. The opposition under Section 3(1)(b) therefore succeeded. The Hearing Officer went on to find that registration of the mark would hinder competition. He did not go on to consider the remaining grounds.