Shenzhen Falaisheng Consulting Management Co., Ltd. v Guangdong Kuaike E-Commerce Co., Ltd
[2023] ATMO 148
•3 October 2023
TRADE MARKS ACT 1995
DECISION OF A DELEGATE OF THE REGISTRAR OF TRADE MARKS WITH REASONS
Re:Opposition by Shenzhen Falaisheng Consulting Management Co., Ltd. to registration of trade mark application 2073115 (35) – THE COLORIST (Fancy) – in the name of Guangdong Kuaike E-Commerce Co., Ltd.
Delegate:
Nicholas Smith
Representation:
Opponent: A.P.T. Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys
Applicant: Wrays Pty Ltd
Decision:
2023 ATMO 148
Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) - section 52 opposition: ss 41 and 59 considered – neither established – trade mark to proceed to registration
Background
This decision concerns an opposition brought by Shenzhen Falaisheng Consulting Management Co., Ltd. (‘Opponent’) to the registration of the trade mark which is the subject of the application detailed below in the name of Guangdong Kuaike E-Commerce Co., Ltd. (‘Applicant’):
Application Number:
2073115
Filing Date:[1]
3 March 2020
Services:
Class 35: Systemization of information into computer databases; Commercial administration of the licensing of the goods and services of others
(‘Applicant’s Services’)
Trade Mark:
(‘Trade Mark’)
[1] Also known in this decision as the ‘relevant date’. The application has a convention priority date of 17 September 2019
2. Unless otherwise indicated, any references to sections or regulations in this decision are references to sections or regulations of the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) (‘Act’) or the Trade Marks Regulations 1995 (Cth) (‘Regulations’), respectively.
3. Following the advertisement of the application’s acceptance for possible registration, the Opponent filed a Notice of Intention to Oppose the registration followed by a Statement of Grounds and Particulars on 2 November 2021 (‘SGP’). The SGP raised grounds of opposition under ss 41 and 59. The Applicant filed a Notice of Intention to Defend on 11 January 2022.
4. Neither Party filed any evidence or submissions in this matter. Once the time allowed for filing evidence had ended the parties were given an opportunity to request a hearing in this matter or a decision without hearing. The Applicant requested that the matter proceed to a decision without hearing and paid the appropriate fee. As a result, the matter has been allocated to a delegate of the Registrar for a decision based on the written record.
I am a delegate of the Registrar of Trade Marks and I am to decide the opposition as required by s 55 which provides that, unless the proceedings are discontinued, dismissed, or have lapsed under s 54A the Registrar must, at the end, decide:
(a)to refuse to register the trade mark; or
(b)to register the trade mark (with or without conditions or limitations) in respect of the goods and/or services then specified in the application;
having regard to the extent (if any) to which any ground on which the application was opposed has been established.
In doing so I take account of the written record comprised of the materials mentioned in the preceding paragraphs.
Grounds of Opposition, Onus and Standard of Proof
6. As indicated above, in the SGP the Opponent nominated grounds of opposition under ss 41 and 59. To successfully oppose the application the Opponent needs to establish one of the nominated grounds. As neither party has filed any evidence, I have no information about either party other than what is set out on the Register.
7. The onus of proof in an opposition rests upon the Opponent.[2] The relevant standard of proof is the ordinary civil standard based on the balance of probabilities.[3] The date at which the rights of the parties are to be determined is the relevant date.
8. As the Opponent has filed no evidence and provided no submissions, I have no hesitation deciding that the Opponent has not discharged the onus on it with respect to the ground of opposition under s 59 as it has provided no evidence or submissions to support the particulars set out in the SGP. It remains necessary to consider the ground of opposition under s 41.
Discussion
Section 41
[2] Food Channel Network Pty Ltd v Television Food Network GP [2010] FCAFC 58, [32] (Keane CJ, Stone and Jagot JJ).
[3] Following Pfizer Products Inc v Karam (2006) 70 IPR 599, [6]-[26] (Gyles J), and Telstra Corporation Limited v Phone Directories Company Pty Ltd [2015] FCAFC 156, [133] (Besanko, Jagot and Edelman JJ).
Section 41 provides:
41 – Trade Mark not distinguishing applicant’s goods or services
(1)An application for the registration of a trade mark must be rejected if the trade mark is not capable of distinguishing the applicant’s goods or services in respect of which the trade mark is sought to be registered (the designated goods or services) from the goods or services of other persons.
Note: For goods of a person and services of a person see section 6.
(2)A trade mark is taken not to be capable of distinguishing the designated goods or services from the goods or services of other persons only if either subsection (3) or (4) applies to the trade mark.
(3)This subsection applies to a trade mark if:
(a)the trade mark is not to any extent inherently adapted to distinguish the designated goods or services from the goods or services of other persons; and
(b)the applicant has not used the trade mark before the filing date in respect of the application to such an extent that the trade mark does in fact distinguish the designated goods or services as being those of the applicant.
(4)This subsection applies to a trade mark if:
(a)the trade mark is, to some extent, but not sufficiently, inherently adapted to distinguish the designated goods or services from the goods or services of other persons; and
(b)the trade mark does not and will not distinguish the designated goods or services as being those of the applicant having regard to the combined effect of the following:
(i)the extent to which the trade mark is inherently adapted to distinguish the goods or services from the goods or services of other persons;
(ii)the use, or intended use, of the trade mark by the applicant;
(iii)any other circumstances.
Note 1:Trade marks that are not inherently adapted to distinguish goods or services are mostly trade marks that consist wholly of a sign that is ordinarily used to indicate:
(a)the kind, quality, quantity, intended purpose, value, geographical origin, or some other characteristic, of goods or services; or
(b)the time of production of goods or of the rendering of services.
Note 2: For goods of a person and services of a person see section 6.
Note 3: Use of a trade mark by a predecessor in title of an applicant and an authorised use of a trade mark by another person are each taken to be use of the trade mark by the applicant (see subsections (5) and 7(3) and section 8).
(5)For the purposes of this section, the use of a trade mark by a predecessor in title of an applicant for the registration of the trade mark is taken to be a use of the trade mark by the applicant.
Note 1: For applicant and predecessor in title see section 6.
Note 2: If a predecessor in title had authorised another person to use the trade mark, any authorised use of the trade mark by the other person is taken to be a use of the trade mark by the predecessor in title (see subsection 7(3) and section 8).
10. With respect to s 41 it is appropriate to discuss the ‘presumption of registrability’. As was explained by the Hearing Officer in Unilever plc v Beiersdorf AG with respect to s 33:
Section 33 of the Act states that the Registrar must accept an application unless satisfied that it has not been made in accordance with the Act, (which is not relevant here), or that there are grounds under the Act for rejecting it. In this regard s 33 embodies what is often referred to as a ‘presumption of registrability.’ As was explained in Blount Inc v Registrar of Trade Marks[4] (‘Oregon’), however, prior to the [Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Raising the Bar) Act 2012 (“the Amending Act”)] ss 41(5) and (6) as they then were, (which essentially correspond to current ss 41(4) and (3) respectively), effectively shifted the onus onto an applicant. Section 41 was thus amended to address that inconsistency, with the Explanatory Memorandum to the Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Raising the Bar) Bill 2011 (‘the EM’) stating at page 146:
[4] (1998) 40 IPR 498, 505 (Branson J).
The changes are intended to clarify that the presumption of registrability, as provided for in section 33, does apply to section 41. … The intention is that, if the Registrar is equally unsure of whether the mark is or is not capable of distinguishing, that doubt should be resolved in the applicant’s favour.
The Amending Act was not however intended to alter the relevant standard for registrability. In this regard the EM goes on to state (also at page 146):
Note that while the amendment [to s 41] ensures that the onus rests with the Registrar during examination, it is not intended to require that the trade mark should clearly not be registered. Rather, as with other grounds it is intended that the delegate need only be satisfied that a ground exists on the balance of probabilities.
The amendments are not meant to alter the key concepts of “inherently adapted to distinguish”, “capable of distinguishing” and “does or will distinguish”. The judicial tests for these terms are settled and the amendments are not intended to change the legal concept of a trade mark distinguishing the applicant’s goods or services from others.
Branson J’s analysis at 504 in Oregon of the operation of s 41 as it stood prior to the Amending Act, as paraphrased below, also remains apt in relation to the amended section:
Having taken [the extent of inherent adaptation] into account, it is theoretically open to [me] to conclude:
(a) that the [Trade Mark] is inherently adapted to distinguish the [Applicant’s Services] from the goods or services of other persons and capable, on that basis alone, of so distinguishing the [Applicant’s Services]; [that is, neither s 41(3) nor s 41(4) applies] or
(b) that the [Trade Mark] is not to any extent inherently adapted to distinguish the [Applicant’s Services] from the goods or services of other persons; [that is, s 41(3) applies] or
(c) that the [Trade Mark] is to some extent inherently adapted to distinguish the [Claimed Goods] from the goods or services of other persons, but there is uncertainty, on that basis alone, that the trade mark is actually capable of so distinguishing the [Applicant’s Services]. [that is, s 41(4) applies][5]
[5] [2017] ATMO 25, [38]-[40] (Hearing Officer Kirov).
11. In the present case the Applicant has provided no evidence of use of the Trade Mark. As such the ground for refusal under s 41 will apply if the Trade Mark is to some extent, but not sufficiently, inherently adapted to distinguish the Applicant’s Services from the services of other persons, being the test in s 41(4). It is not necessary to conclude that the Trade Mark is not to any extent inherently adapted to distinguish, being the test in s 41(3).
12. In Accor Australia & New Zealand Hospitality Pty Ltd v Liv Pty Ltd, the Full Court summarised the principles in respect of s 41 as follows:
(1) In deciding whether or not a trade mark is capable of distinguishing the designated services from the service of others, the first question is the extent to which the trade mark is inherently adapted to distinguish the designated services from those of others: s 41(2) and (3).
(2) In determining whether a trade mark is inherently adapted to distinguish the services of a trader, the answer largely depends upon whether other traders are likely, in the ordinary course of their businesses and without any improper motive, to desire to use the same mark, or some mark nearly resembling it, upon or in connection with their goods: Clark Equipment Co v Registrar of Trade Marks (“Clark Equipment”) [1964] HCA 55; (1964) 111 CLR 511 per Kitto J at 514.
(3) The question of whether a trade mark is adapted to distinguish the services of the applicant is to be tested by reference to the likelihood that other persons, trading in goods of the relevant kind and being actuated only by proper motives (in the exercise of the common right of the public to make honest use of words forming part of the common heritage for the sake of the signification which the words ordinarily possess) will think of the word and want to use it in connection with similar goods in any manner which would infringe the trade mark once registered: Clark Equipment at 514.
(4) Directly descriptive words, like geographical names, are not prima facie suitable for the grant of a monopoly conferred by registration of a trade mark because use of them, as trade marks, will “rarely eclipse” their “primary” (that is, their ordinary) signification. Such words (or a word) are unlikely to be inherently, that is to say, “in [their] own nature”, adapted to distinguish the applicant’s goods. Traders may legitimately want to use such words in connection with their goods or services “because of the reference they are ‘inherently adapted to make’ to those goods”: Cantarella Bros Pty Limited v Modena Trading Pty Limited (“Cantarella”) [2014] HCA 48; (2014) 254 CLR 337 at [57] per French CJ, Hayne, Crennan and Kiefel JJ.
(5) The principles derived from the observations of Kitto J in Clark Equipment apply with as much force to directly descriptive words as they do to words which are, according to their ordinary signification, geographical names: Cantarella at [57].
(6) In determining whether a word is (or words are) inherently adapted to distinguish the goods or services of an applicant, the question is to be examined from the point of view of the “possible impairment” of the rights of “honest traders” and from the “point of view of the public”: Cantarella at [59].
(7) In determining whether a word contains (or words contain) a “direct reference” to the relevant goods or services (and thus prima facie not registrable as a trade mark) or whether the word (or words) makes a “covert and skilful allusion” to the relevant goods or services (and thus prima facie registrable as a trade mark), the “ordinary signification” of the word or words to persons who will purchase, consume or trade in the goods or services, must be considered: Cantarella at [59].
(8) Where the question is whether there are other traders who may legitimately want to use or apply a word or words in connection with their goods or services (other than a geographical name or a surname), the test refers to the “legitimate desire of other traders to use a word which is directly descriptive in respect of the same or similar goods”: Cantarella at [59].
(9) Consistent with the proposition at (7), the test described at (8) does not encompass the desire of other traders to use a word or words which in relation to the goods or services are “allusive or metaphorical”: Cantarella at [59].
(10) In determining whether a trade mark is inherently adapted to distinguish the designated goods or services for the purposes of s 41(3), the ordinary signification of the word or words are to be considered from the perspective of “any person in Australia concerned with the goods or services to which the trade mark is to be applied”: Cantarella at [70].
(11) Consideration of the “ordinary signification” of any word or words said to constitute a trade mark is “crucial”: Cantarella at [71]. That is so whether the word (or words) is said not to be registrable because: it is not an invented word and has direct reference to the character or quality of the goods or services; or, the word is laudatory; or, the word is a geographical name; or, the word has either lost its distinctiveness or it never had the requisite distinctiveness from the outset: Cantarella at [71].
(12) The process of reasoning in addressing s 41(3) of the Act involves first identifying the “ordinary signification” of the word in question and then undertaking an enquiry into whether other traders might legitimately need to use the word in respect of their goods: Cantarella at [71]. If a word contains an allusive reference to goods or services it is, prima facie, qualified for the grant of a monopoly as a trade mark under the Act. If, on the other hand, the word is understood, by the target audience, as having a directly descriptive meaning in relation to relevant goods or services then, prima facie, the proprietor is not entitled to a monopoly in respect of the word. As a general proposition, a word or words which are prima facie entitled to a monopoly secured by registration as a trade mark under the Act, according to this method, are inherently adapted to distinguish: Cantarella at [71].[6]
[6] [2017] FCAFC 56, [236] (Greenwood, Besanko and Katzmann JJ).
13. The Opponent particularises the s 41 ground as follows:
The trademark is of the Applicant is “the colorist”. According to Collins online dictionary, “A colorist is someone such as an artist or a fashion designer who uses colors in an interesting and original way” or “a hairdresser who specializes in coloring people's hair”. ( A colorist is someone who is knowledgeable in the area or in a special or skilful way. In relation to the services the Applicant applied-for in Class 35, “the colorist” is merely describing the characteristics of the services claimed. The Applicant’s trade mark indicates the services are in relation to the field of colour or colorist, or have been made by a colorist.
14. I accept the statement in the particulars that the Trade Mark has an ordinary signification, meaning an artist or fashion designer who uses colours in an interesting and original way. In the context of the Applicant’s Services, being ‘Systemization of information into computer databases; Commercial administration of the licensing of the goods and services of others’, I do not consider the Trade Mark to be descriptive or allusive in the slightest. It has no direct meaning in relation to the Applicant’s Services nor is there any prospect apparent to me that other traders in the Applicant’s Services would legitimately need to use the word in respect of their services. I am satisfied that the Trade Mark is inherently adapted to distinguish the Applicant’s Services from the goods or services of other persons.
I find that the Opponent has failed to establish the ground of opposition under s 41.
Decision and Costs
The Opponent has failed to establish any of the grounds of opposition it nominated in the SGP. Trade mark application number 2073115 may proceed to registration not less than one month from the date of this decision. If the Registrar is served with a notice of appeal before that time, I direct that registration shall not occur until either the appeal is withdrawn or discontinued. Otherwise, the disposition of the application should be in accordance with the Court’s order or direction.
The Applicant has sought an award of costs in its favour. I see no reason to depart from the general rule that costs follow the event. I accordingly award costs against the Opponent under s 221 in the relevant amounts under Schedule 8 of the Regulations.
Nicholas Smith
Hearing Officer
Delegate of the Registrar of Trade Marks
3 October 2023
Key Legal Topics
Areas of Law
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Intellectual Property
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Statutory Interpretation
Legal Concepts
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Appeal
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Costs
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Statutory Construction
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