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General Court: Kenzo v. Kenzo
In Cases T-322/13
and T-393/12, CTM applicant Mr Kenzo Tsujimoto (resident of Japan) applied for
the word mark KENZO for the following goods and services:
Class 33: Wine; alcoholic beverages of fruit;
western liquors (in general)
Class 35: ‘Marketing research on wine; providing
information on wine sales; wine advertising and publicity services;
import-export agencies for wine; retail services or wholesale services for
wine’;
Class
41: ‘Providing electronic publications on wine; providing electronic
publications on sommelier certification; publication of books on wine;
publication of books on sommelier certification; providing facilities for
educational training on wine; providing facilities for educational training on
sommelier certification’;
Class
43: ‘Providing foods and beverages; providing temporary accommodation’
KENZO (France) filed an opposition on the basis of earlier CTM KENZO registered for goods Classes 3, 18 and 25 on the grounds of article 8(5) CTMR.
According to the Board, the 3 cumulative conditions
for the application of Article 8(5) were met:
- The marks
at issue were identical.
- The opponent
filed sufficient amount of evidence to demonstrate the reputation of the
earlier mark
- It seemed
highly likely that the mark applied for, for the use of which no due cause had
been demonstrated, would ride on the coat-tails of the earlier trade mark with
a reputation in order to benefit from the power of attraction, the reputation
and the prestige of that mark and to exploit, without paying any financial
compensation, the marketing effort expended by the proprietor of the mark in
order to create and maintain the mark’s image.
In particular, regarding the nature of and
degree of closeness between the goods concerned, it was clear from the evidence
filed that the opponent largely placed
its products at the high end of the market, where the targeted consumer has a
more sophisticated taste than the average consumer, and that the goods covered
by the mark applied for included high-quality wines and cognac intended for
equally sophisticated consumers. Thus, the BoA rightly inferred from those
circumstances that it was highly possible
to establish a link between those goods, since they all projected images of
luxury, glamour, good taste, success, and social .
In
addition, the opponent produced evidence before the Board of Appeal that
advertisements for goods covered by the earlier trade mark had been published
in prestigious magazines (such as Vogue and Vanity
Fair) and that goods had been sold under the earlier trade mark in
prestigious shops (such as Harrods). Therefore, the BoA rightly found that the
trade mark in question had an ‘undisputable allure’, which could be transferred
to other luxury goods and, by extension, to the goods covered by the mark
applied for, such as cognac, champagne or wine, which can be of high quality.
The
Court therefore upheld the assessment that the
consumer would establish a link: services falling within the wine sector may,
like clothing, perfumes and cosmetics, be part of the luxury sector. In
addition, it is possible that proprietors of trade marks for cosmetics may also
be active in the alcoholic drinks sector. That is so, for example, in the case
of the proprietor of the trade mark DAVIDOFF, which uses that trade mark to
distribute not only gentlemen’s cosmetics but also cognac
The GC, like the BoA, therefore concluded that there
was a risk that the use of the mark applied for would take unfair advantage of
the reputation of the earlier trade mark for the purposes of Article 8(5).
Tags: General Court, kenzo, right to name, spirits, cosmetics, reputation, article 8(5),
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