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Germany: The colour blue
The German Federal Supreme Court (BGH) yesterday gave its ruling on an invalidity action brought against a blue colour mark of German beauty care giant Beiersdorf. Beiersdorf uses its blue colour (Pantone 280 C, to be precise) for its well-known NIVEA skin-care products, on packaging and in advertising. The mark had been registered in 2007 on the basis of acquired distinctiveness.
The claimant, another beauty care company, applied for cancellation of the mark for lack of inherent and acquired distinctiveness. Inter alia, the claimant maintained that Beiersdorf only ever used its blue colour in combination with white and with the well-known house mark NIVEA. Consumers would not perceive said use as trademark use of the colour blue per se.
The German PTO and Federal Patent Court (BPatG) in the previous instances had granted the cancellation request. They thought that the survey evidence submitted by Beiersdorf did not demonstrate a sufficiently high recognition of the blue colour in relation to the relevant body care and skin care products. The Patent Court held that a recognition value of less than 55% was not sufficient and thought that in this particular case, where the validity of a monochrome colour mark was at stake, a recognition of 75% or more of the relevant public was called for.
The Supreme Court disagreed. It held that a recognition value of 50% or more can be sufficient for acquired distinctiveness, even where a monochrome colour mark is concerned. The court therefore remanded the case to the Patent Court for retrial. In doing so, the Supreme Court gave guidance on the survey evidence presented so far, which it found lacking in two respects: First of all, the survey participants should have been presented with a sample showing only the blue colour in question and not, as was the case, a blue card framed in white. This white frame was particularly problematic since the NIVEA trade dress typically consists of the combination of white elements and writing on a blue background. The court's second objection concerned the relevant goods. The colour mark claims protection for "body care and skin care products", and the survey had made reference to these product groups. However, the court thought it necessary that a new survey be conducted which differentiates more closely between the individual types of products that fall under these two categories. The market perception may very well vary between, say, a moisturizing body cream and a facial cleanser.
German trademark lawyers are awaiting the results of the new survey and the following decision of the Patent Court with keen interest and we will keep you posted. The BGH last dealt with the scope of protection of colour marks in a trademark infringement case regarding the colour yellow (Langenscheidt vs. Rosetta Stone). Your author reported for Marques Class 46 on 19 September 2014 here.
Case Reference: BGH, I ZB 65/13: Nivea Blau, decision of 9 July 2015 (previous instance: BPatG, 24 W (pat) 75/10, decision of 13 March 2013).
The BGH's German language press release is available here.
Posted by: Anthonia Ghalamkarizadeh @ 07.49Tags: blue, BGH, German Federal Supreme Court, Nivea, Beiersdorf, colour mark,



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