This article was originally published by IPKat and is republished under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial Licence (CC BY-NC).
In FanFirm Pty Limited v Fanatics, LLC [2024] FCA 764, Justice Rofe of the Federal Court of Australia considered a number of interrelated trade mark issues, including trade mark infringement, honest concurrent use defences, defences to infringement based on registered trade mark rights, and what happens when the registered trade marks on which infringement proceedings and defences to infringement are based are cancelled.
Key takeaways
- Honest concurrent use requires formal evidence that the later applicant held an honest belief that adopting its mark would not lead to consumer confusion or deception.
- The defence to infringement that a person (including a company) is using its own name in good faith as a trade mark is limited to word marks. The defence does not extend to stylised marks nor does it extend to any use(s) other than the alleged infringer’s full corporate name, less any corporate indicia (such as LLC, Pty or Ltd).
- Cancellation of a registered trade mark is not retrospective and takes effect from the date of the Court’s judgement. Where a defendant relies on a trade mark registration as a defence to infringement, the defendant remains protected against infringement until the registration is cancelled by the Court.
Background
- Trade mark infringement;
- Rectification of the Register through cancellation of Fanatics’ trade mark registrations;
- Misleading and deceptive conduct in breach of the Australian Consumer Law; and
- Passing off,
Trade mark infringement – who infringed whom?
- It was using its corporate name in good faith;
- It was an honest concurrent user of the mark and, on that basis, would be entitled to registration of the mark if Fanatics’ applied to register it; and
- It was exercising its right to use a mark as registered by virtue of its registrations for FANATICS and the FANATICS flag mark.
- The corporate name defence is only effective where the mark being used consists of the corporate name of the infringer minus any corporate indicia (Pty Ltd, LLC, etc) therefore it only applies to word mark use and was not relevant to use of the infringing FANATICS flag mark (which was stylised); and
- Fanatics was not an honest concurrent user because it was aware of FanFirm’s marks (and had opposed one) at the time it chose to adopt the FANATICS name and mark yet had chosen not to adduce any evidence in these proceedings that Fanatics – at the time of adoption – was of the honest belief that no confusion would arise from its adoption and use of the FANATICS flag mark. Justice Rofe found that Fanatics’ failure to adduce such evidence led to the conclusion that the mark was not honestly adopted. FanFirm was also able to demonstrate that it would be able to successfully oppose registration of any application(s) filed by Fanatics to enable this defence.
Rectification of the Register through cancellation of Fanatics’ registrations
Misleading and deceptive conduct and passing off
- Specifically identify the contravening conduct;
- Identify that the conduct took place “in the course of trade”;
- Establish what meaning the conduct conveyed to consumers; and
- Determine that the conduct was misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive.
Conclusion
About Pearce IP
Pearce IP is a boutique firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers, patent attorneys and trade mark attorneys to the life sciences industries (in particular, pharmaceutical, biopharmaceutical, biotech, ag-tech and food tech). Pearce IP is the 2021 ‘Intellectual Property Team of the Year’ (Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards) and was shortlisted for the same award in 2022. Pearce IP is ranked in IAM Patent 1000 and Managing IP (MIP) IP Stars, in Australasian Lawyer 5 Star Awards as a ‘5 Star’ firm, and the Legal 500 APAC Guide for Intellectual Property.
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Executive, Lawyer & Trade Mark Attorney (Head of Trade Marks)
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