Showing posts with label advertising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advertising. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 March 2016

The Spanish Supreme Court applies CJEU doctrine in respect of use of third parties’ trademarks as search engine keywords

Judgment 105/2016, rendered by the Civil Chamber of the Spanish Supreme Court on 29 February, establishes the criteria pursuant to which the use of a third-party trademark as a search engine keyword must be examined in order to determine whether it infringes the trademark holder’s exclusive rights.     

To that end, the Supreme Court has followed in the footsteps of Alicante Court of Appeal and applied the doctrine established by the Court of Justice of the European Union in its judgments of 23 March 2010 (joined cases C-236/08 -Google France v Louis Vuitton-, C-237/08 -Google France v Viaticum- and C-238/08 - Google France v Centre National de Recherche en Relations Humaines), 12 July 2011 (C-324/09, L'Oréal SA v eBay International AG) and 22 September 2011 (C-323/09, Interflora Inc. v Marks & Spencer plc).

According to that doctrine, the use of third parties’ trademarks as keywords in principle infringes the trademark holder’s rights.  Nevertheless, since exclusive trademark rights are not absolute, under certain circumstances such use will not be considered as infringing.  Those circumstances are as follows: 

i) where the use of the trademark is not liable to affect the ‘product origin indicating’, advertising or investment functions of the trademark; and 
ii) where it is clear to the average Internet user that the goods or services advertised do not come from the trademark holder or from an undertaking economically connected to it.              

Friday, 4 March 2016

Unauthorized use of a trademark in advertisements published on the Internet without the consent of the advertiser

The Court of Justice of the European Union has just delivered a judgment (case C-179/15) in response to a request for a preliminary ruling submitted by the Fővárosi Törvényszék (Budapest Municipal Court, Hungary) in relation to the interesting question of the interpretation to be given to Article 5(1)(a) and (b) of the First Council Directive in a case where unauthorized use is made of a mark in an advertisement published on the Internet without the consent of the advertiser or which remains there despite the efforts of the latter to have it removed.


The background

The parties to the main proceedings out of which the question arose are a motor vehicle manufacturer and a Hungarian company engaged in the retailing of motor vehicles and their parts and in the repair and servicing of such vehicles.

In 2007 the two had entered into an after-sales service agreement under which the Hungarian company was entitled to describe itself as an authorized dealer of the motor vehicle brand. The agreement expired in March 2012.

While the agreement was in force, the Hungarian company ordered from an online advertising services provider the publication on the website www.telefonkonyv.hu of an advertisement in which the company was presented as an authorized dealer. The publication was to cover the years 2011 to 2012 only.

Following the expiry of the agreement, the Hungarian company tried to  remove from the Internet any advertisement in which it was presented as an authorized dealer of the brand to which the contract related. To that effect it contacted the provider it had engaged and also wrote to various operators of other websites on which advertisements, describing it as an authorized dealer, had appeared. However, those requests went unheeded.

In view of the ongoing use of its trademark, the motor vehicle manufacturer brought a legal action seeking: (i) a declaration that the Hungarian company had infringed the trademark through those advertisements; (ii) that the Hungarian company be ordered to remove those advertisements, to refrain from any further infringement and to publish a corrigendum in the national and regional press.

In its defence the Hungarian company argued that the only advertisement it had placed on the Internet was the one published on the website www.telefonkonyv.hu and that the others had been published without its consent. In this regard it submitted an expert report showing that the advertisements had been reproduced by certain providers of Internet advertising services without its knowledge or consent and that this is in fact a common commercial practice in which some operators engage. 

In these circumstances the Budapest Municipal Court stayed the proceedings in order to refer the following question to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
“Must Article 5(1)(b) of [Directive 89/104] be interpreted as meaning that the trade mark proprietor is entitled to prevent a third party named in an advertisement on the internet from making use, for services of that third party identical to the goods or services for which the trade mark is registered, of a sign likely to be confused with the trade mark, in such a way that the public might be given the mistaken impression that there is an official commercial relationship between the undertaking of that third party and the trade mark proprietor, even though the advertisement was not placed on the internet by the person featuring in it or on his behalf, or it is possible to access that advertisement on the internet despite the fact that the person named in it took all reasonable steps to have it removed, but did not succeed in doing so?”