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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 >> Pinterest Inc v Premium Interest Ltd & Anor [2015] EWHC 738 (Ch) (24 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/738.html Cite as: [2015] FSR 27, [2015] ECC 14, [2015] ETMR 30, [2015] EWHC 738 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NLL |
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B e f o r e :
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PINTEREST, INC. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) PREMIUM INTEREST LIMITED (2) ALEX HEARN |
Defendants |
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Michael Edenborough QC and Chris Aikens (instructed by Brandsmiths) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 16 March 2015
Further written submissions 16, 18 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Introduction
Factual background
The Defendants
The CTM applications
The OHIM oppositions
Correspondence in October to December 2012
"In any event, your threat to seek an injunction to restrain use of the Trade Mark is misplaced. Our clients have no intention to use the Trade Mark before the opposition period is concluded and registration granted. The appropriate forum for resolving the issues raised by your client is not a misconceived application for an interim injunction but instead within the formal CTM opposition proceedings."
"Our client has opposed your client's trade mark application. We acknowledge your confirmation that your client does not intend to use PINTEREST pending the outcome of those opposition proceedings. Your client is on notice of Pinterest's rights should it change its position or threaten to do so."
The Opposition Division decision
Correspondence in February and March 2014
"Pinterest could be forced to change its name in Europe after losing a trademark dispute with a rival startup.
Alex Hearn, founder of London-based social news aggregator Premium Interest, registered the 'Pinterest' trademark in January 2012, two years after the US picture sharing service launched. However, Pinterest had not formally entered the European market or even registered its name in the US.
Judges at the European Commission Office for Harmonisation of the Internal Market (OHIM), the EU's trademark office, ruled that Mr Hearn still holds the rights to the name after the website … failed to prove that it is well-known enough in the continent.
'Pinterest will have to change their name if they don't get a licence from him,' Adam Morallee, the lawyer who represented Premium Interest during the case, told TechCrunch."
These proceedings
The Board of Appeal decision
Pinterest's strike out/summary judgment application
The first issue
The second issue
"The argument as so put is much narrower than that dealt with by the judge. It is unnecessary to determine whether he correctly understood the submissions made to him at that stage. It is enough to record that Mr Silverleaf does not submit before us that a registered trade mark confers a statutory right to use the mark, which overrides other rights. He accepts, as the judge said, that the right acquired by registration is a negative right, that is, a right to prevent others infringing."
"We grant an injunction in general terms. The Defendants' trade mark registration is not a defence to the claim for passing off."
i) Dicta of Advocate General Jacobs in Case 2/00 Hölterhoff v Freiesleben [2002] ECR I-4210 at [33]-[34] and of the CJEU in Case C-376/11 Pie Optiek SPRL v Bureau Gevers SA [EU:C:2012:502], [2012] ETMR 46 at [47] referring to the right to use a trade mark.
ii) Article 9 of the Regulation and Article 17 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
iii) Commentaries from Bulgaria, Poland and Romania which suggest that a registered trade mark confers a positive right to use it as well as negative rights.
"Article 110
Prohibition of use of Community trade marks:
1. This Regulation shall, unless otherwise provided for, not affect the right existing under the laws of the Member States to invoke claims for infringement of earlier rights within the meaning of Article 8 or Article 53(2) in relation to the use of a later Community trade mark. Claims for infringement of earlier rights within the meaning of Article 8(2) and (4) may, however, no longer be invoked if the proprietor of the earlier right may no longer apply for a declaration that the Community trade mark is invalid in accordance with Article 54(2).
2. This Regulation shall, unless otherwise provided for, not affect the right to bring proceedings under the civil, administrative or criminal law of a Member State or under provisions of Community law for the purpose of prohibiting the use of a Community trade mark to the extent that the use of a national trade mark may be prohibited under the law of that Member State or under Community law.
Article 111
Prior rights applicable to particular localities
1. The proprietor of an earlier right which only applies to a particular locality may oppose the use of the Community trade mark in the territory where his right is protected in so far as the law of the Member State concerned so permits.
2. Paragraph 1 shall cease to apply if the proprietor of the earlier right has acquiesced in the use of the Community trade mark in the territory where his right is protected for a period of five successive years, being aware of such use, unless the Community trade mark was applied for in bad faith.
3. The proprietor of the Community trade mark shall not be entitled to oppose use of the right referred to in paragraph 1 even though that right may no longer be invoked against the Community trade mark."
"Arguments of the parties
54. According to Rivella International, the fact that the use of the mark in respect of which registration is sought may be prohibited in Germany by virtue of the 1892 Convention could affect the unitary character of the Community trade mark. Although Rivella International concedes that there are exceptions to the principle of the uniqueness of a Community trade mark, such exceptions must be expressly provided for by Regulation No 207/2009, as can be seen from recital 3 to that regulation.
55. Citing Articles 111 and 165 of Regulation No 207/2009, OHIM emphasises that the principle of the unitary character of a Community trade mark is not absolute.
Findings of the Court
56. It should be borne in mind that provision is made in Regulation No 207/2009 for exceptions to the principle of the unitary character of a trade mark.
57. In particular, Article 111(1) of that regulation allows the proprietor of an earlier right which only applies to a particular locality to oppose the use of a Community trade mark in the territory where his right is protected, in so far as the legislation of the Member State concerned so permits.
58. Accordingly, the General Court was right to find, in paragraph 36 of the judgment under appeal, that the principle of the unitary character of a trade mark is not absolute."
The Defendants' application for a stay
"4.3 One of the reasons for Pinterest commencing the current proceedings in the UK is to confirm the status of its rights in the PINTEREST mark and whether these rights will be affected by Premium Interest's proposed use of the PINTEREST mark. We need to obtain a ruling to confirm whether or not, in the event that the Community Trade Mark is registered, Pinterest will still be able to protect its brand by preventing Premium Interest from using PINTEREST mark in the UK.
4.4 A delay to these proceedings will impact our ability to develop the brand in the UK. Pinterest needs to be certain as to its ability to invest in the development of the PINTEREST brand in the UK and whether the actions of Premium Interest are likely to impact upon that."
He goes on to say that this is particularly significant because the UK is Pinterest's second largest market.
"1. The discretion, which is very wide indeed, should be exercised to achieve the balance of justice between the parties having regard to all the relevant circumstances of the particular case.
2. The discretion is of the Patents Court, not of the Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal would not be justified in interfering with a first instance decision that accords with legal principle and has been reached by taking into account all the relevant, and only the relevant, circumstances.
3. Although neither the EPC nor the 1977 Act contains express provisions relating to automatic or discretionary stay of proceedings in national courts, they provide the context and condition the exercise of the discretion.
4. It should thus be remembered that the possibility of concurrent proceedings contesting the validity of a patent granted by the EPO is inherent in the system established by the EPC. It should also be remembered that national courts exercise exclusive jurisdiction on infringement issues.
5. If there are no other factors, a stay of the national proceedings is the default option. There is no purpose in pursuing two sets of proceedings simply because the Convention allows for it.
6. It is for the party resisting the grant of the stay to show why it should not be granted. Ultimately it is a question of where the balance of justice lies.
7. One important factor affecting the exercise of the discretion is the extent to which refusal of a stay will irrevocably deprive a party of any part of the benefit which the concurrent jurisdiction of the EPO and the national court is intended to confer. Thus, if allowing the national court to proceed might allow the patentee to obtain monetary compensation which is not repayable if the patent is subsequently revoked, this would be a weighty factor in favour of the grant of a stay. It may, however, be possible to mitigate the effect of this factor by the offer of suitable undertakings to repay.
8. The Patents Court judge is entitled to refuse a stay of the national proceedings where the evidence is that some commercial certainty would be achieved at a considerably earlier date in the case of the UK proceedings than in the EPO. It is true that it will not be possible to attain certainty everywhere until the EPO proceedings are finally resolved, but some certainty, sooner rather than later, and somewhere, such as in the UK, rather than nowhere, is, in general, preferable to continuing uncertainty everywhere.
9. It is permissible to take account of the fact that resolution of the national proceedings, whilst not finally resolving everything, may, by deciding some important issues, promote settlement.
10. An important factor affecting the discretion will be the length of time that it will take for the respective proceedings in the national court and in the EPO to reach a conclusion. This is not an independent factor, but needs to be considered in conjunction with the prejudice which any party will suffer from the delay, and lack of certainty, and what the national proceedings can achieve in terms of certainty.
11. The public interest in dispelling the uncertainty surrounding the validity of monopoly rights conferred by the grant of a patent is also a factor to be considered.
12. In weighing the balance it is material to take into account the risk of wasted costs, but this factor will normally be outweighed by commercial factors concerned with early resolution.
13. The hearing of an application for a stay is not to become a mini-trial of the various factors affecting its grant or refusal. The parties' assertions need to be examined critically, but at a relatively high level of generality"