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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Kitfix Swallow Group Ltd v Great Gizmos Ltd [2007] EWHC 2668 (Ch) (22 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/2668.html Cite as: [2008] Bus LR 465, [2007] EWHC 2668 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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KITFIX SWALLOW GROUP LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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GREAT GIZMOS LIMITED |
Defendant/ Applicant |
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MR. N. SAUNDERS (instructed by Messrs. Bird & Bird) for the Defendant.
Hearing date: 5th November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Factual background
"Reference is made to the Office's communication of 19/10/2007. Indeed it was an error to grant the suspension request as the request for invalidity is based on Art.7 of the CTM regulation and the Office is not bound to await the outcome of pending decision on similar cases at national level.
Thus the proceedings have to be resumed…."
It is not known what it was that prompted the change of mind. In particular, it is not known whether or not it was prompted by a communication from 4M. If it was, then that communication was not shared with Kitfix. The solicitors for Kitfix have written challenging that decision and inviting reconsideration. By the time of the hearing before me, no response had been received.
The application before me
i) The mark is said to be, putting it at its lowest, highly questionable.ii) Once the trade mark issues are disposed of, and in particular the acquired distinctiveness point, there will be little left in the passing off claim. Thus the disposal of the trade mark matters in OHIM will in substance dispose of the real issues in this action.
iii) OHIM proceedings are much cheaper. The defendant estimates that its costs of defending these proceedings will be over £200,000. Of course, the defendant is not involved at all in the OHIM proceedings, so to that extent the present proceedings are obviously more expensive for Great Gizmos itself. However, Great Gizmos acknowledges that the real comparison is between the costs of resolving the issue in OHIM (which will be 4M's costs) and the costs here. In OHIM, Great Gizmos estimates that 4M's costs will be in the region of £5,000. I confess to finding this somewhat implausible, and on analysis I think it turned out that that was merely an estimate of the first round of costs in making the application. There could be significant costs in dealing with Kitfix's case in answer. However, it was nevertheless common ground that the proceedings in OHIM will be very much cheaper than the costs in this jurisdiction, not least because the procedure is a paper-based procedure without the disclosure that takes place in English proceedings.
iv) Great Gizmos says that it is unjust that a small company who is merely a distributor should be obliged to run such large costs risks, particularly when it is prepared to undertake (as it undertook before me) not to sell any more products pending a final determination of the matter in OHIM. It is, as I understand it, part of Great Gizmos' case that the manufacturer is a rather more appropriate person to challenge the mark in proceedings.
v) Apart from the passing off claim, there is nothing in issue in the English proceedings which is not also in issue in OHIM. The OHIM proceedings will therefore decide everything relevant to the English revocation proceedings so far as trade marks are concerned.
vi) Both proceedings are at a relatively early stage; it was said that arguably OHIM's are ahead of the UK national proceedings, but that does not matter very much. The difference in time between the respective decision dates in both sets of proceedings is not very great.
vii) There is a risk of inconsistent decisions if the English proceedings are stayed and the OHIM proceedings continue.
viii) There is no prejudice in terms of trading because Great Gizmos has given its undertaking not to trade while the OHIM proceedings are extant. At the hearing, this was clarified so as to ensure that it persisted through any appeals from OHIM.
ix) The provisions of article 100(2) of the Regulation point towards a stay in these circumstances.
x) The patent law cases, which are said to demonstrate a presumption of a stay in favour of the European Patent Office are relied on by analogy.
The decision – should there be a stay?
"2. The Office, when hearing an application for revocation or for a declaration of invalidity shall, unless there are special grounds for continuing the hearing, of its own motion after hearing the parties or at the request of one of the parties and after hearing the other parties, stay the proceedings where the validity of the Community trade mark is already in issue on account of a counterclaim before a community trade mark court. However, if one of the parties to the proceedings before the community trade mark court so requests, the court may, after hearing the other parties to these proceedings, stay the proceedings. The Office shall in this instance continue the proceedings before it."
The first sentence of that paragraph has direct application to the present case. There is a counterclaim before the English community trade mark court raising the issue of the validity of the mark. That means that the OHIM proceedings should be stayed unless there are "special grounds" for continuing them. In these circumstances there is therefore a strong presumption in favour of the national court. That is not necessarily an end of the matter. It remains open to one of the parties to the national court proceedings to persuade the national court to stay those proceedings, and if that happens then the OHIM proceedings will revive. However, it is plain that the approach to the national court cannot conceivably be based on a presumption in favour that the OHIM proceedings should continue. If anything, the presumption would be the other way, but I do not think that the answer to this case lies in presumptions.
Argument and decision
i) A decision in this jurisdiction is likely to precede OHIM proceedings by between three and six months. While in many proceedings, and certain other circumstances, this might not be a very large time difference, nevertheless in a modern commercial context it is of some real significance. The claimant started its proceedings in this jurisdiction, as it was entitled to do, and ought to be allowed to have the benefit of such timing where it is available to it.ii) The timing point gains a greater significance when one considers appeals. An appeal lies of right from the decision of OHIM; it lies only with leave in this jurisdiction. Furthermore, there are, at least in theory, two further lines of appeal after the first line of appeal to the Board of Appeals – the Court of First Instance and the ECJ. The last of these appeals might be rather more fanciful than the preceding one, but overall the prospect of appeals is greater, and the prospect of delay arising out of such appeals is very much greater than the prospect arising out of English proceedings, where permission might not be given. Accordingly, in addition to the first decision being reached three to six months before the OHIM decision, the prospect of ultimate finality, taking into account appeals, is very significantly earlier in this jurisdiction than in Europe. I was provided with some figures for the timing of the potential chain of appeals in Europe, but they were not formally in evidence and were not agreed by Kitfix. In those circumstances I do not actually rely on those figures. All I will say is that if they are right they demonstrate that finality in Europe might not be reached for several years. That will be unlikely to be the case in this jurisdiction.
iii) It seems to me that there is still a question mark over the viability of the OHIM proceedings. I have referred above to the circumstances in which OHIM came to stay, and then not to stay, its proceedings. The position remains uncertain and OHIM's present expression of reasoning seems unsatisfactory. It is therefore not a case in which it can plainly be seen that OHIM is seised of proceedings which it is fully entitled to, and intends to, proceed with. What I am being invited to do is to stay the English proceedings in the light of a decision of OHIM, which prima facie has some unsatisfactory aspects, to continue its own. That would be less than satisfactory.
iv) This is not a case in which the claimant has deliberately sought out an advantage in attacking a minnow and allowing the shark to swim free. The manufacturer is not in this jurisdiction, so it is hard to see who else the claimant can have sensibly sued here other then the English distributor.
v) The passing off claim remains live, and even though the trade mark proceedings may be resolved in a way which makes the passing off claim unnecessary or unviable, it remains a separate claim which Kitfix is entitled to maintain. I would remark that Mr Edenborough said as much, although he indicated he did not place great weight on this factor.
vi) I give some weight to the fact that it took the manufacturer seven or eight months after the dispute arose in order to commence its own proceedings in OHIM. I did not receive any evidence as to the communications with the manufacturer, but it seems to me to be unlikely that it was not told about the trade mark dispute shortly after it arose. To allow proceedings to continue for seven or eight months and then apply in OHIM is not wholly satisfactory. Of course, that is not the responsibility of Great Gizmos – the application at OHIM is the manufacturer's, not the defendant's. Nevertheless, for well over the first half of this year this matter proceeded on the basis that the issues would be decided in this jurisdiction, and I think that the claimant is entitled to rely on that factor and to rely on the delay in starting proceedings in Europe.
Postscript
"This suspension takes effect as from 15/10/2007 and will last until the final outcome of the national procedure before High Court of Justice, Chancery Division Intellectual rights.
Consequently our notification of 26/10/2007 is deemed to be invalid. Please excuse any inconvenience."
It therefore appears that my misgivings about OHIM's original decision to remove the stay were well founded. Since the OHIM proceedings are now stayed, it is obvious that that state of affairs does not affect the decision to which I have come in this case save to make it even clearer that there should not be a stay in this jurisdiction.