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04 Oct 2022
BY Ilse du Plessis

Trade marks – product shapes and slogans

We’ll be discussing two recent EU trade mark decisions: one deals with a product shape mark, the other with a slogan. EU decisions are, of course, influential in South Africa. Both decisions were discussed in the IPKat blog, a great source of IP material.

Product shapes – a case for a tablet (as in an iPad, not an aspirin)

Tablets like the iPad are big business and so, it seems, are the cases that we like to store our precious devices in.

The trade mark application

In 2019, Samsonite filed an EU application to register a 3D trade mark comprising the shape/appearance of a tablet case.

Image source : The IPKat

The application was filed in class 9, the class that covers all manner of things including laptops, tablets and smartphones.  

The European Union Intellectual Property Office (“EUIPO”) examination division rejected the application, saying that the mark  was devoid of distinctive character. It said that the mark did not depart sufficiently and significantly from the norms and customs of the sector. Further, the most important elements of the mark were functional and necessary to obtain a technical result.

The appeal

Samsonite took the matter on appeal. The board of appeal stated that it is well established that the average consumer normally perceives a mark as a whole, and does not engage in an analysis of the various details. According to the board, the evidence made it clear that the cases used for securing tablets often have decorative elements such as ears, eyes and handles/supports or stands that resemble legs.  And why might that be? It’s simple: children are significant users of tablets!

The board looked at the market and noted that the following two existing products were particularly relevant:

Image source : The IPKat

According to the board, both products, involve quirky and eccentric designswhich feature the use of a cartoon-like figure that has arms and legs. The board said that consumers are accustomed to seeing products of this nature. It made the point that such features have the function of allowing children to hold the device and/or enabling the device to stand freely. It pointed out that there are various registered designs that are similar.

The board concluded that the public would not perceive the mark that Samsonite had filed as a badge of origin. It made the point that, taken as a whole, the mark would not “depart significantly from the norm”.  It would, said the board, simply be regarded as a variant.

Going back a bit

We discuss product shape trade marks quite often. Readers of our articles will know that the picture is far from clear. We’ve seen that the shape of the Kit Kat chocolate bar was held to be a valid trade mark in South Africa, yet rejected by the EU’s highest court. We’ve seen that the shape of the Coca-Cola bottle was refused in the EU, and the shape of the Land Rover Defender was refused in the UK. More recently, we’ve seen that the shape of the Gibson guitar was successfully registered in the USA.

Slogans – Take 5

EUIPO’s board of appeal has recently ruled on an application to register the trade mark Take 5 in class 32 for non-alcoholic drinks. But let’s start at the beginning.

The examiner

The examiner refused the application on the basis that the public would perceive the slogan as a promotional laudatory slogan intended to persuade customers to buy five units. According to the examiner, the mark would not be perceived as an indicator of commercial origin.

The appeal

The board of appeal said that EUIPO works from the starting point that slogans are generally not regarded as indicators of origin, in other words they are not regarded as trade marks. It referred to an EUIPO report, which identifies non-exhaustive factors that might determine the distinctiveness of slogans. Amongst the factors:

  • The mark has a number of meanings;
  • There is a play on words;
  • The mark introduces conceptual intrigue or surprise, making it imaginative, surprising or unexpected;
  • The mark has particular originality or resonance;
  • The mark has unusual syntactic structures or linguistic and stylistic devices such as alliteration, metaphors, rhymes.

 In other words, slogans need to be a bit special.

Some previous cases

The board  mentioned slogan marks that have been accepted. Pretty good ones like “Wet dust can’t fly”, “Love to Lounge, and “It’s like milk but made for humans.”

The board’s finding

The board of appeal dismissed the appeal, saying that the slogan was not distinctive.  According to the board, the relevant parties here are both consumers of non-alcoholic drinks and English speakers. It said this: “The public will understand that the expression is an invitation to potential customers to take or buy products in a quantity of five. The invitation conveyed could also refer to a variety of five different types or flavours sold in one pack. Such invitations to take or buy are commonplace.”

If English-speakers are indeed the relevant market, should there not have been consideration of the fact that for many people the expression Take 5 is likely to mean “have a rest”. Rather than hey greedy guts, take five items”.

Some final words

Shapes and slogans can function as trade marks and they can, in some cases, be legally protected.

Ilse du Plessis

Executive | IP

iduplessis@ENSafrica.com

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