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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 >> Boxing Brands Ltd v Sports Direct International Plc & Ors [2014] EWHC 91 (Ch) (28 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/91.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 91 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
COMMUNITY TRADE MARK COURT
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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BOXING BRANDS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SPORTS DIRECT INTERNATIONAL PLC (2) QUEENSBERRY BOXING IP LIMITED (3) SPORTSDIRECT.COM RETAIL LIMITED (4) LILLYWHITES LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Roger Wyand QC and Andrew Norris (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 25th November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Birss :
UK registered trade mark 2,486,784 for QUEENSBERRY,
UK registered trade mark 2,499,451 for QUEENSBERRY,
Community trade mark 7,376,395 for QUEENSBERRY,
UK registered trade mark 2,493,623 for QUEENSBERRY RULES,
UK registered trade mark 2,499,454 for QUEENSBERRY RULES.
The further hearing
Average consumer
The word QUEENSBERRY
Double identity
What goods were the defendants going to sell?
QUEENSBERRY RULES and the defendants' own QUEENSBERRY BOXING device mark
The defendants' device
Detailed comparison of the defendants' goods and marks
Head guard (item 1)
a) with similar goods with an identical mark, i.e. the word QUEENSBERRY albeit not used directly fixed to the goods; andb) with similar goods and comparing the device to the word mark.
Boxing gloves, jab pads and bag gloves (items 2, 3, 4 (pads), 6 (training gloves), 7 (bag gloves), 13 (wider range of gloves and pads)
Groin protector (item 5)
Punch bag (item 8, 17 (wider range) 18 (punch bag utilities))
Corner pads and boxing rings (items 9, 15)
Hand wrap (item 10, 23 (hand wrap gloves))
Boxing specific bags (item 11)
General sports/kit bags (item 12)
Shields protectors (item 14)
Gym fitness training equipment (item 16)
Water bottles (item 19)
Tote buckets (item 20)
Training towels (item 21)
First aid kits (item 22)
Summary
a) Head guard (item 1)b) Boxing gloves, jab pads and bag gloves (items 2, 3, 4 (pads), 6 (training gloves), 7 (bag gloves), 13 (wider range of gloves and pads)
c) Groin protector (item 5)
d) Hand wrap (item 10, 23 (hand wrap gloves))
e) Boxing specific bags (item 11)
f) General sports/kit bags (item 12)
g) Shields protectors (item 14)
h) Water bottles (item 19)
i) Training towels (item 21)
j) First aid kits (item 22)
- I find that the following items would have infringed one of the claimant's marks but only in a respect in which I have found that mark to be invalid. Thus on my findings they would not infringe. They were:
a) Punch bag (item 8, 17 (wider range) 18 (punch bag utilities))b) Corner pads and boxing rings (items 9, 15)
c) Gym fitness training equipment (item 16)
d) Tote buckets (item 20)
Should I order an enquiry on the cross-undertaking?
- I have found that seven kinds of items from the defendants' original list of goods would not infringe the claimant's trade mark rights as I have determined them to be in the combination of the main judgment and this judgment.
- Of these seven items only punch bags and corner pads are items the defendants contend, based on part A of the Re-Amended Schedule, that they had actually ordered prior to the interim injunction being imposed. The defendants had also ordered head guards, boxing gloves in different colours, pads, groin protectors, bag gloves and hand wraps. However all these items would infringe.
- Based on parts B and C of the Re-Amended Schedule (part B), the defendants also intended to order six kinds of further items but of these six only boxing rings and gym fitness equipment have been found not to infringe. The other four items (boxing specific bags, general sports/kit bags, shields/protectors and hand wrap gloves) would have infringed.
- The other three items from the group of seven kinds of goods found not to infringe valid rights were in the defendants' original Schedule but were not listed in the Re-amended Schedule at all. I infer the defendants did not intend to order those during the period covered by the interim injunction.
- The court has a discretion whether to order an inquiry on a cross-undertaking.
- I am not prepared to order such an inquiry in the present circumstances. As I have said already I am not satisfied the defendants ever really intended to launch a boxing equipment range as a free standing product range. Still, if I had found that all or substantially all of the defendants' boxing equipment range would not have infringed any of BBL's rights, I might have directed an inquiry to take place albeit with misgivings about its proportionality.
- However the conclusion I have reached is that goods such as boxing gloves and bags, which the defendants had actually ordered before the injunction or intended to order, would have infringed. I am quite satisfied that the defendants had no intention, before I discharged the interim injunction in July 2013, of launching a range consisting only of the rather narrow group of goods which I have found do not infringe a valid trade mark. Since they were not going to sell those goods on their own, they have suffered no real loss at all caused by the interim injunction. An inquiry would be costly and not worth the candle.
- Even if it were to be the case that following my main judgment, the defendants would like to sell the narrow range of goods I have found do not infringe, that would be a new idea and is no justification for an inquiry.
What final relief should I order?
- The specification of the 395 mark will need to be amended to reflect this judgment. The declaration I made in July 2013 concerning the 395 mark will need to be set aside and replaced with a declaration referring to the correct specification.
- I have held that the 784 and 395 marks would be infringed by the acts the defendants intended to carry out. I will order an injunction in general terms restraining infringement of those marks (Specsavers v Asda [2012] EWCA Civ 494). In the light of my judgments each side knows where they stand in relation to those injunctions.
- I will not order an injunction on the 451 mark because I have found no infringement of it in its valid form.
Conclusion
- Most of the kinds of goods the defendants' intended to sell would have or did infringe valid trade mark rights held by the claimant but some did not. I will order suitable injunctions and declarations. I will not order an inquiry on the cross-undertaking.