From swinging 60s to swing-tags: genuine use of the TOMMY NUTTER mark
"Rebel" alludes to the supply by Crombie of cloth to the Confederate Army in the US Civil Law |
Crombie (founded 1805: patrons included King George VI, Sir Winston Churchill, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Cary Grant) appealed, arguing that it had shown genuine use of the registration in question and also maintaining that it would be able to prevent Nutter using the TOMMY NUTTER mark through the law of passing off -- but to no avail. According to Asplin J:
* It was settled law that it was necessary to take into account all the relevant facts and circumstances in determining whether there was a real commercial exploitation of a mark. For the purposes of the law of passing off, it was necessary for the goodwill or reputation to attach to the goods or services supplied by the claimant in the minds of the purchasing public as a result of the brand name under which the goods were offered to the public, so that the brand name was recognised by the public as distinctive specifically of the claimant’s goods and none other. Further, the use of the brand name had to a material misrepresentation if the use of the later mark were to fall foul of the earlier one.
* On the facts, Allan James's approach with regard to the relevant background had not been wrong in principle; nor had his conclusions been wrong in law or fact. There was no evidence that a substantial proportion of the relevant public would be deceived or that any misrepresentation by Nutter would be material in respect of the use of the mark it had applied for. Accordingly Allan James was right to reject Crombie's opposition.
* Allan James had had been right to revoke Crombie's trade mark for lack of genuine use of the mark in the UK in respect of the goods for which it was registered in the five years following the date of registration.
Says the Kat, it's worth taking a look at the evidence of use offered by Crombie. This consisted of the following:
- the sale of 46 waistcoats
- the sale of 21 suits
- oral use of the mark as part of the sale process and at a handful of events
- publicity surrounding the possible sale of the brand prior to the date on which the application to revoke was made.
Such use as there was, commented Allan James, “reeked of tokenism” and would not pass muster as a credible basis for a “passing-off” claim, either. The “bad faith” claim also fell away.
Sir Winston Churchill: wore Crombie but wasn't a nutter ... |
Finally, the Hearing Officer was correct in concluding that the public relations efforts to promote the fact that the mark was available for purchase or licence was not used to create or maintain a market for the relevant goods.
No cat imagery. If you search 'cat' plus 'nutter', the search engine assumes you mean 'neuter' |
Katfriend Aaron Wood (Swindell & Pearson Ltd), who acted for Nutter, adds that this case demonstrates the difficulty in succeeding where an appeal is by way of review of the hearing officer's decision and not a retrial. In particular, evidence filed at first instance must be “best” evidence and must stand up to scrutiny, and one must be prepared for witnesses to be called and cross-examined. In this case the sales figures were exhibited by Crombie’s solicitors (despite the fact that Crombie provided five witness statements from employees regarding other elements); the subsequent exposure of errors in those sales figures appears to have been damaging, as was the exposure of exaggeration in another witness and an admission from the witness giving evidence on the tags that she was only involved in garment design and could not confirm whether the tag was used in the relevant period. It may also have been unhelpful that Crombie’s main witness sought leave to introduce fresh evidence on appeal -- this being a witness statement correcting an earlier witness statement in light of numerous errors and inaccuracies exposed in cross-examination.
Merpel hears distant rumblings of a rumour that there may just be an appeal ...