CASE-LAW OF THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES (*)
Judgment of the Court
of 14 September 1999
in Case C-375/97 (reference for a preliminary ruling from the Tribunal de
Commerce de Tournai (Belgium)) : General Motors Corporation v Yplon SA
(Directive 89/104/EEC -- Trade marks -- Protection -- Non-similar
products or services -- Trade marks having a reputation)
(Language of the case: French)
- By judgment of 30 October 1997, received at the Court on 3 November 1997,
the Tribunal de Commerce (Commercial Court), Tournai, referred to the Court for
a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty (now Article 234 EC) a
question on the interpretation of Article 5(2) of the First Council Directive
(89/104/EEC) of 21 December 1988 to approximate the laws of the Member States
relating to trade marks (OJ 1989 L 40, p. 1, hereinafter `the
Directive').
- The question has been raised in proceedings between General Motors
Corporation (hereinafter `General Motors'), established in Detroit, United
States of America, and Yplon SA (hereinafter `Yplon'), established at
Estaimpuis, Belgium, concerning the use of the mark `Chevy'.
Community
law
- Article 1 of the Directive, entitled `Scope', provides:
`This Directive shall apply to every trade mark in respect of goods or services
which is the subject of registration or of an application in a Member State
for registration as an individual trade mark, a collective mark or a guarantee
or certification mark, or which is the subject of a registration or an application
for registration in the Benelux Trade Mark Office or of an international registration
having effect in a Member State.'
- Article 5(1) and (2), of the Directive, entitled `Rights conferred by a
trade mark', provides:
`1. The registered trade mark shall confer on the proprietor exclusive rights
therein. The proprietor shall be entitled to prevent all third parties not
having his consent from using in the course of trade:
(a) any sign which is identical with the trade mark in relation to goods or
services which are identical with those for which the trade mark is registered;
(b) any sign where, because of its identity with, or similarity to, the trade
mark and the identity or similarity of the goods or services covered by the
trade mark and the sign, there exists a likelihood of confusion on the part
of the public, which includes the likelihood of association between the sign
and the trade mark.
2. Any Member State may also provide that the proprietor shall be entitled
to prevent all third parties not having his consent from using in the course
of trade any sign which is identical with, or similar to, the trade mark in
relation to goods or services which are not similar to those for which the
trade mark is registered, where the latter has a reputation in the Member
State and where use of that sign without due cause takes unfair advantage
of, or is detrimental to, the distinctive character or the repute of the trade
mark.'
The Benelux
legislation
- Article 13(A)(1)(c) of the Uniform Benelux Law on Trade Marks (hereinafter
`the Uniform Benelux Law'), which transposed into Benelux law Article 5(2)
of the Directive, provides:
`Without prejudice to any application of the ordinary law governing civil
liability, the exclusive rights in a trade mark shall entitle the proprietor
to oppose:
...
(c) any use, in the course of trade and without due cause, of a trade mark
which has a reputation in the Benelux countries or of a similar sign for goods
which are not similar to those for which the trade mark is registered, where
use of that sign would take unfair advantage of, or would be detrimental to,
the distinctive character or the repute of the trade mark;
...'
- That provision, which took effect on 1 January 1996, replaced, as from
that date, the old Article 13(A)(2) of the Uniform Benelux Law, under which
the exclusive rights in the trade mark allowed the proprietor to oppose `any
other use [use other than that described in paragraph 1(1), namely use for
an identical or similar product] of the trade mark or a similar sign in the
course of trade and without due cause which would be liable to be detrimental
to the owner of the trade mark'.
The dispute in the main proceedings
- General Motors is the proprietor of the Benelux trade mark `Chevy',
which was registered on 18 October 1971 at the Benelux Trade Mark Office for
Class 4, 7, 9, 11 and 12 products, and in particular for motor vehicles. That
registration asserts the rights acquired under an earlier Belgian registration
on 1 September 1961 and earlier use in the Netherlands in 1961 and in Luxembourg
in 1962. Nowadays, the mark `Chevy' is used more specifically in Belgium to
designate vans and similar vehicles.
- Yplon is also the proprietor of the Benelux trade mark `Chevy',
registered at the Benelux Trade Mark Office on 30 March 1988 for Class 3 products
and then on 10 July 1991 for Class 1, 3 and 5 products. Is uses those trade
marks for detergents and various cleaning products. It is also the proprietor
of the trade mark `Chevy' in other countries, including several Member States.
- On 28 December 1995 General Motors applied to the Tribunal de Commerce,
Tournai, for an injunction restraining Yplon from using the sign `Chevy' to
designate detergents or cleaning products on the ground that such use entails
dilution of its own trade mark and thus damages its advertising function.
Its action is based, as regards the period prior to 1 January 1996, on the
old Article 13(A)(2) of the Uniform Benelux Law and, as from 1 January 1996,
on the new Article 13(A)(1)(c) of that Law. It maintains in this regard that
its mark `Chevy' is a trade mark of repute within the meaning of the latter
provision.
- Yplon is defending the action on the ground, in particular, that
General Motors has not shown that its trade mark has a `reputation' in the
Benelux countries within the meaning of the new Article 13(A)(1)(c) of the
Uniform Benelux Law.
- The Tribunal de Commerce took the view that determination of the
case required clarification of the concept of a trade mark having a reputation
and of the question whether the reputation must exist throughout the Benelux
countries or whether it is sufficient for it to exist in part of that territory
and decided to stay proceedings and refer the following question to the Court
for a preliminary ruling:
`On reading Article 13(A)(1)(c) of the Uniform Benelux Law introduced pursuant
to the amending protocol in force since 1 January 1996, what is the proper
construction of the term "repute of the trade mark" and may it also be said
that such "repute" applies throughout the Benelux countries or to part thereof?'
The question referred for a preliminary ruling
- By its question the national court is essentially asking the Court of Justice
to explain the meaning of the expression `has a reputation' which is used,
in Article 5(2) of the Directive, to specify the first of the two conditions
which a registered trade mark must satisfy in order to enjoy protection extending
to non-similar goods or services and to say whether that condition must be
satisfied throughout the Benelux countries or whether it is sufficient for
it to be satisfied in part of that territory.
- General Motors contends that, in order to have a reputation within the
meaning of Article 5(2) of the Directive, the earlier trade mark must be known
by the public concerned, but not to the extent of being `well-known' within
the meaning of Article 6 bis of the Paris Convention for the Protection
of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883 (hereinafter `the Paris Convention'),
which is a term to which express reference is made, albeit in a different
context, in Article 4(2)(d) of the Directive. General Motors further considers
that it is sufficient for the trade mark concerned to have a reputation in
a substantial part of the territory of a Member State, which may cover a community
or a region of that State.
- Yplon, on the other hand, contends that a trade mark registered in respect
of a product or service intended for the public at large has a reputation
within the meaning of Article 5(2) of the Directive when it is known by a
wide section of that public. The principle of speciality can be departed from
only for trade marks which can be associated spontaneously with a particular
product or service. The reputation of the trade mark in question should exist
throughout the territory of a Member Start or, in the case of the Benelux
countries, throughout one of those countries.
- The Belgian Government argues that `trade mark having a reputation' should
be construed flexibly and that there is a difference of degree between a mark
with a reputation and a well-known mark. The degree to which a trade mark
is well known cannot be evaluated in the abstract by, for example, setting
a percentage. A reputation in any single one of the three Benelux countries
applies throughout the Benelux territory.
- The French Government submits that the Court should reply that a trade
mark`s reputation within the meaning of Article 5(2) of the Directive cannot
be defined precisely. It is a question of assessing case by case whether the
earlier trade mark is known by a wide section of the public concerned by the
products covered by the two marks and whether the earlier mark is of sufficient
repute that the public associates it with the later contested mark. Once it
is established that the earlier mark does have a reputation, the strength
of that reputation then determines the extent of the protection afforded by
Article 5(2) of the Directive. Territorially, a reputation in a single Benelux
country is sufficient.
- The Netherlands Government submits that it is sufficient for the trade
mark to have a reputation with the public at which it is aimed. The degree
of knowledge required cannot be indicated in abstract terms. It has to be
ascertained whether, in view of all the circumstances, the earlier mark has
a reputation which may be harmed if it is used for non-similar products. The
mark does not have to be known throughout a Member State or, in the case of
Benelux trade marks, throughout the Benelux territory.
- The United Kingdom Government submits that the decisive question is whether
use is made without due cause of the later mark and whether this allows unfair
advantage to be taken of, or detriment to be caused to, the distinctive character
or the repute of the earlier trade mark. The answer to that question depends
on an overall assessment of all the relevant factors and, in particular, of
the distinctive character inherent in the mark, the extent of the repute which
it has gained, the degree of similarity between the two marks and the extent
of the differences between the products or services covered. Protection should
be afforded to all trade marks which have acquired a reputation and qualificative
criteria should then be applied to limit the protection to marks whose reputation
justifies it, protection being granted only where clear evidence of actual
harm is adduced. In law, it is not necessary for the reputation to extend
throughout the territory of a Member State. However, in practice, proof of
actual damage could not be adduced in the case of a trade mark whose reputation
is limited to a part of a Member State.
- In the Commission`s submission, `a trade mark with a reputation' should
be understood as meaning a trade mark having a reputation with the public
concerned. This is something which is clearly distinguished from a `well-known'
mark referred to in Article 6 bis of the Paris Convention. It is sufficient
for the mark to have a reputation in a substantial part of the Benelux territory
and marks having a reputation in a region merit as much protection as marks
having a reputation throughout the Benelux territory.
- The Court observes that the first condition for the wider protection provided
for in Article 5(2) of the Directive is expressed by the words `er renommeret'
in the Danish version of that provision; `bekannt ist' in the German version;
`/áßñåé ödeg.ìçò'
in the Greek version; `goce de renombre' in the Spanish version; `jouit d`une
renommée' in the French version; `gode di notorietà' in the
Italian version; `bekend is' in the Dutch version; `goze de prestigio' in
the Portuguese version; `laajalti tunnettu' in the Finnish version; `är
känt' in the Swedish version; and by the words `has a reputation' in
the English version.
- The German, Dutch and Swedish versions use words signifying that the trade
mark must be `known' without indicating the extent of knowledge required,
whereas the other language versions use the term `reputation' or expressions
implying, like that term, at a quantitative level a certain degree of knowledge
amongst the public.
- That nuance, which does not entail any real contradiction, is due to the
greater neutrality of the terms used in the German, Dutch and Swedish versions.
Despite that nuance, it cannot be denied that, in the context of a uniform
interpretation of Community law, a knowledge threshold requirement emerges
from a comparison of all the language versions of the Directive.
- Such a requirement is also indicated by the general scheme and purpose
of the Directive. In so far as Article 5(2) of the Directive, unlike Article
5(1), protects trade marks registered for non-similar products or services,
its first condition implies a certain degree of knowledge of the earlier trade
mark among the public. It is only where there is a sufficient degree of knowledge
of that mark that the public, when confronted by the later trade mark, may
possibly make an association between the two trade marks, even when used for
non-similar products or services, and that the earlier trade mark may consequently
be damaged.
- The public amongst which the earlier trade mark must have acquired a reputation
is that concerned by that trade mark, that is to say, depending on the product
or service marketed, either the public at large or a more specialised public,
for example traders in a specific sector.
- It cannot be inferred from either the letter or the spirit of Article 5(2)
of the Directive that the trade mark must be known by a given percentage of
the public so defined.
- The degree of knowledge required must be considered to be reached when
the earlier mark is known by a significant part of the public concerned by
the products or services covered by that trade mark.
- In examining whether this condition is fulfilled, the national court must
take into consideration all the relevant facts of the case, in particular
the market share held by the trade mark, the intensity, geographical extent
and duration of its use, and the size of the investment made by the undertaking
in promoting it.
- Territorially, the condition is fulfilled when, in the terms of Article
5(2) of the Directive, the trade mark has a reputation `in the Member State'.
In the absence of any definition of the Community provision in this respect,
a trade mark cannot be required to have a reputation `throughout' the territory
of the Member State. It is sufficient for it to exist in a substantial part
of it.
- As far as trade marks registered at the Benelux Trade Mark Office are concerned,
the Benelux territory must be treated like the territory of a Member State,
since Article 1 of the Directive regards Benelux trade marks as trade marks
registered in a Member State. Article 5(2) must therefore be understood as
meaning a reputation acquired `in' the Benelux territory. For the same reasons
as those relating to the condition as to the existence of a reputation in
a Member State, a Benelux trade mark cannot therefore be required to have
a reputation throughout the Benelux territory. It is sufficient for a Benelux
trade mark to have a reputation in a substantial part of the Benelux territory,
which part may consist of a part of one of the Benelux countries.
- If, at the end of its examination, the national court decides that the
condition as to the existence of a reputation is fulfilled, as regards both
the public concerned and the territory in question, it must then go on to
examine the second condition laid down in Article 5(2) of the Directive, which
is that the earlier trade mark must be detrimentally affected without due
cause. Here it should be observed that the stronger the earlier mark`s distinctive
character and reputation the easier it will be to accept that detriment has
been caused to it.
- The answer to be given to the question referred must therefore be that
Article 5(2) of the Directive is to be interpreted as meaning that, in order
to enjoy protection extending to non-similar products or services, a registered
trade mark must be known by a significant part of the public concerned by
the products or services which it covers. In the Benelux territory, it is
sufficient for the registered trade mark to be known by a significant part
of the public concerned in a substantial part of that territory, which part
may consist of a part of one of the countries composing that territory.
- (...) Costs
OPERATIVE PART:
Article 5(2) of the First Council Directive (89/104/EEC) of 21 December 1988
to approximate the laws of the Member States relating to trade marks is to be
interpreted as meaning that, in order to enjoy protection extending to
non-similar products or services, a registered trade mark must be known by a
significant part of the public concerned by the products or services which it
covers. In the Benelux territory, it is sufficient for the registered trade
mark to be known by a significant part of the public concerned in a substantial
part of that territory, which part may consist of a part of one of the
countries composing that territory.
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