AG Wathelet: EUIPO must re-examine Kit Kat 4 fingers trade mark
According to Advocate General Wathelet, EUIPO must re-examine whether the three-dimensional shape of the ‘Kit Kat 4 fingers’ product may be maintained as an EU trade mark. He proposes that the appeals brought by Nestlé, EUIPO and Mondelez be dismissed and states that Nestle did not adduce sufficient evidence to show that its trade mark had acquired distinctive character.
In today’s Opinion, Advocate General Wathelet considers, first of all, that Mondelez’s appeal is manifestly inadmissible and must be dismissed.
The Advocate General points out that the statute of the Court of Justice provides that an appeal may be brought by “any party which has been unsuccessful, in whole or in part, in its submissions”. However, according to the case-law of the court, a party which had asked the General Court to annul an EU act is not considered to have been unsuccessful, even partially, in its submissions where the General Court granted the relief sought.
The Advocate General notes that, by its judgment, the General Court annulled the decision taken by EUIPO. As EUIPO explained at the hearing, that annulment implies that, in the absence of an appeal and given the reasoning and the operative part of the judgment of the General Court, EUIPO would have been obliged to declare the trade mark at issue invalid, since that declaration of invalidity was essentially the aim of Mondelez’s application to EUIPO.
Consequently, Mondelez cannot be considered to have been unsuccessful, in whole or in part, in its claims submitted before the General Court. Moreover, contrary to what is required by Article 169(1) of the Rules of Procedure of the court of Justice, Mondelez’s appeal does not seek to have set aside, in whole or in part, the operative part of the judgment under appeal, but to have set aside some of the grounds of that judgment.
Next, the Advocate General examines the appeals of Nestlé and EUIPO.
First, the Advocate General notes the case-law of the Court of Justice to the effect that it would be unreasonable to require proof of such acquisition for each individual member state. However, he observes that this does not imply that the party applying for registration of a trade mark can leave out entire regions and markets. The existence of the single market within the EU does not imply the non-existence of national or regional markets.
According to the Advocate General, account must be taken of the geographical size and the distribution of the regions in which acquired distinctive character has been positively established, in order to ensure that the evidence from which an extrapolation is made for the whole of the European Union relates to a quantitatively and geographically representative sample.
In that regard the Advocate General considers that evidence adduced for some national markets might suffice to cover other markets for which (quantitatively sufficient) evidence has not been adduced. That does not mean that the absence of evidence in relation to one member state alone would be sufficient to exclude the acquisition of distinctive character throughout the EU. However, a trade mark does not have a unitary character and cannot therefore be registered as an EU trade mark if the relevant public in part of the European Union does not perceive it as an indication of the commercial origin of the goods or services which it covers.
The Advocate General observes that in the present case, whilst Nestlé provided market research for the majority of the member states (apart from Luxembourg), it is clear from the General Court’s judgment that the information provided for Belgium, Ireland, Greece and Portugal was not sufficient to establish that the relevant public in those countries identified Nestlé as the commercial origin of the product covered by the trade mark at issue.
Furthermore, even though the General Court was, in principle, required to examine whether the acquisition of a distinctive character through use in those five member states could be extrapolated from the evidence provided for the other national or regional markets, the Advocate General notes that Nestlé confirmed, at the hearing, that it had not included in the case file evidence seeking to establish that the evidence provided for the Danish, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Netherlands, Austrian, Finnish, Swedish and UK markets also applied to the Belgian, Irish, Greek, Luxembourg and Portuguese markets or could act as a basis for extrapolating the acquisition, by the trade mark at issue, of distinctive character through use in those five countries. In the absence of such evidence, the Advocate General concludes that the General Court had to annul EUIPO’s decision, as it in fact did.
Accordingly, the Advocate General proposes that the court should dismiss the appeals brought by Nestlé and EUIPO.