Home
| Databases
| WorldLII
| Search
| Feedback
University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 8 February 2013
Zombie Marks? Ceased Registrations, Failed Applications and Citation Objections Under Section 44 of the Trade Marks Act
Michael Handler, University of New South
Wales
Robert Burrell, University of Western
Australia
This paper is available for download at Available at
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2212099
Citation
This paper is to be published at (2013) 23(4) Australian
Intellectual Property Journal. This paper may also be referenced as [2013]
UNSWLRS 6.
Abstract
An applicant for registration of a trade mark facing
an objection under s 44 of the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) based on the existence
of a conflicting earlier mark has a number of options available to it in order
to overcome such an objection.
One such option is to bring proceedings to have
the conflicting mark removed from the Register on the grounds of non-use. If the
non-use proceedings are successful, the Trade Marks Office’s longstanding
practice has been to consider that the objection
no longer exists and to accept
the applicant’s application or, if s 44 is being raised as an opposition
ground, to allow it to proceed to registration. The outcome of litigation
between Chia Khim Lee
Food Industries Pte Ltd and Red Bull GmbH currently
working its way through the Federal Court has the potential to disrupt the above
practice. One of the issues the Court will confront at trial is whether a mark
that has been removed from the Register on the grounds
of non-use, and whose
registration has therefore ceased, nonetheless remains a conflicting mark for
the purposes of s 44 if it was on the Register at the applicant’s priority
date. In interlocutory proceedings between the parties, the Court has
suggested
that there are ‘clear, unqualified and authoritative general
statements’ that support this interpretation.
In this article we argue
that this interpretation of s 44 should be rejected, and that the Office’s
current practice is consistent with the Act and case law, and represents sound
policy.
In doing so we seek to show that the alternative interpretation has
consequences that go well beyond those immediately at issue in
the case. It
would mean that marks whose registrations have ceased, or applications that have
lapsed or been rejected, after a later
applicant’s filing date would also
need to be considered as ‘earlier’ marks for the purposes of s 44.
This would lead to absurd results and would significantly disadvantage
applicants, with the corresponding benefits unjustifiably
flowing to parties
whose registrations have ceased or whose applications never progressed to
registration. We also argue that while
a specific amendment to the Act might be
thought desirable to deal with the particular issue raised in the litigation, we
believe
that this would need to be thought through carefully. We conclude by
suggesting that if legislative intervention is to occur a better
approach would
be for Parliament to clarify a number of larger, more fundamental issues with
the Act, such as the effect of ‘cessation’
of registration
generally, and the relevant date at which various grounds of rejection and
opposition ought to be assessed by tribunals.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/UNSWLRS/2013/6.html