1 novembre 2019
The CJEU has ruled that a defendant who targets customers in an EU Member State when advertising and offering infringing products for sale online can be sued in the competent courts of that Member State for infringement of EU trade marks.
Following this ruling, a trade mark owner may choose to sue a defendant for advertising and offering products online that infringe an EU trade mark in either:
Although this may seem like an intuitive result, it was previously unclear whether the 2009 CTM Regulation (and equivalent provisions in the 2017 EUTM Regulation) conferred jurisdiction on the courts of:
The CJEU has ruled in favour of the former.
The case arose out of proceedings before the English courts against Spanish-domiciled company Heritage Audio, which advertised and offered infringing goods for sale on a website targeted at customers in the UK.
The claimants brought proceedings in the Intellectual Property and Enterprise Court (IPEC) for infringement of UK trade marks and passing off and for infringement of an EU trade mark.
While Hacon J determined that the IPEC had jurisdiction to hear the claims for infringement of national rights (the UK being the "place where the harmful event occurred" under Article 7 of the Recast Brussels Regulation), he found that it did not have jurisdiction to hear the claim for EU trade mark infringement.
Jurisdiction in relation to infringement of EU trade marks is governed not by the Recast Brussels Regulation but by the CTM Regulation and EUTM Regulation (as applicable, depending on when the infringements occurred).
These Regulations provide that claims for infringement shall be brought in the courts of the Member State in which the defendant is domiciled or, if not domiciled in any Member State, has an establishment (Article 97(1) CTM Regulation/ Article 125(1) EUTM Regulation), and "may also be brought in the courts of the Member State in which the act of infringement has been committed or threatened" (Article 97(5) CTM Regulation/ Article 125(5) EUTM Regulation).
The CJEU held that the "Member State in which the act of infringement has been committed" is, in circumstances where infringement occurs by advertising and offering to sell online, the Member State to which the relevant advertising and offers for sale are targeted. The CJEU based its decision on the following factors:
Case Ref: C – 172/18
Louise Popple, Adam Rendle and Xuyang Zhu analyse the copyright elements of the decision in Getty Images v Stability AI.
par plusieurs auteurs