Legal Insight
August 2024
Thanasis Ioannou, LL.M.
Summary: Registering a trademark, whether at the national or EU level, is a legitimate and commercially beneficial practice for businesses. It protects a company’s investments in continuously improving the quality of its products or services and creates a clear association in consumers’ minds between the products and services offered under the specific trademark and the business responsible for their production and offering. However, in certain cases, this initially legitimate business practice can, under specific surrounding circumstances, devolve into an act that contravenes the honesty and good morals of business transactions. When bad faith is present, both the registration and the maintenance of such a trademark in the register are intolerable, as they do not serve the purposes of trademark law but rather undermine the interests of third-party competitors or even the competitive process itself in a specific sector. The goal of this article is to delineate the concept of bad faith trademark filing, to outline the main indicators of bad faith as highlighted by case law, and to present the legal consequences that accompany the finding of bad faith by either the relevant intellectual property authority or the competent civil court at the time of the trademark application. At the end, there will be a mention of the legal remedies available when one’s interests are affected by the bad faith filing of a national or EU trademark.
1. Introduction
Bad faith is an autonomous concept of EU law that must be interpreted uniformly across the European Union. In light of the complete absence of a legislative definition of bad faith either in the national trademark law (Law 4679/2020) or in the EU Trademark Regulation (2017/1001), the interpretative approach to the concept by both EU and national courts becomes invaluable for both lawyers handling trademark cases and entrepreneurs monitoring the market and ensuring the protection of their business interests against unfair practices by their competitors. Advocate General Sharpston, in her opinion in the Lindt Goldhase case, attempted to define the bad faith filing of a trademark as a practice that deviates from the commonly accepted principles of honest and ethical behavior within the context of business transactions. This deviation from the standard of honest transactional behavior is expressed as an abuse of trademark law and the institution of trademark filing, as while the bad-faith applicant appears to be engaging in a seemingly legitimate and lawful trademark registration, the purposes pursued through it do not align with the fundamental principles governing trademark law.
2. Crucial Time for Establishing Bad Faith
The crucial time when bad faith must be present in order for the relevant absolute ground of invalidity to apply and lead either to the rejection of the trademark application or to the annulment and cancellation of the registered trademark is the time of filing the trademark application. However, evidence that relates either to the time preceding the filing or the time following it may also be relevant to the judgment of whether the trademark was filed in bad faith. Specifically, the prior registration of an identical trademark in an EU Member State, at the EUIPO, or in a third country generally supports a finding of bad faith. Conversely, the use of the trademark by the applicant after its filing will generally suffice to exclude the applicant’s bad faith at the time of filing.
3. Indicators and Counterindicators of Bad Faith
The CJEU, in the “STYLO&KOTON” case, ruled that the absolute ground of invalidity due to bad faith filing is established when “converging indications show that the holder of an EU trademark filed the trademark application not with the intention to participate in fair competition, but to undermine the interests of third-party competitors in a way that does not comply with honesty in transactions, or to acquire an exclusive right for purposes that do not fall within the functions of the trademark and, in particular, its fundamental function of origin.” Therefore, determining the bad faith of the trademark holder at the time of filing requires a comprehensive assessment of all relevant factors of the specific case. In this context, EU case law has developed a non-exhaustive list of indicators and counterindicators of bad faith.
The main indicators of bad faith are:
On the contrary, the main counterindicators of bad faith are:
4. Procedural Issues
Under national trademark law, bad faith filing constitutes an absolute ground of invalidity that either prevents the registration of a sign in the trademark register or leads to the annulment and cancellation of a registered trademark from that register. Therefore, bad faith filing can support an absolute ground of invalidity in both an opposition against a trademark application, filed within three months from the publication of the decision accepting the trademark application on the website of the Ministry of Development and Investments, and an application for the cancellation of a registered trademark, which is indeed without a deadline and cannot be countered by the defense of acquiescence, which we discussed in a previous article. However, the scope of bad faith filing as an absolute ground of invalidity is not limited to proceedings before the Industrial Property Organization, as a defendant in a trademark infringement lawsuit or the respondent to a request for interim measures seeking the temporary prohibition of the use of the trademark in question can, in defense, file a counterclaim or counterapplication for the invalidity of the trademark respectively, arguing that the plaintiff's or applicant's trademark is invalid because it was filed in bad faith. If the counterclaim for invalidity is upheld, the lawsuit will be dismissed, while after the finality of the relevant decision, the trademark will be subject to cancellation from the trademark register.
At this point, it is worth noting that the burden of invoking and proving the facts from which it can be reliably inferred that the applicant acted in bad faith at the time of filing the trademark lies with the party filing the opposition, the applicant for cancellation, and the counterclaimant filing a counterclaim for invalidity in a trademark infringement lawsuit, respectively. This means that the applicant's good faith is initially presumed. However, when the objective circumstances of the case are sufficient to overturn the presumption of good faith, the applicant or holder of the contested registered trademark must argue and prove that their trademark filing served a legitimate business logic to avoid the rejection of their trademark application or the cancellation of their registered trademark.
Regarding the extent of the rejection of the trademark application or the cancellation of the registered trademark in the event that the competent intellectual property authority or the competent civil courts find that the holder filed the contested trademark in bad faith, this may cover either all the goods and services for which the applicant seeks or has achieved (in the case of a registered trademark) the registration of the trademark or only some of them. Thus, if, for example, bad faith lies in the attempt to create the impression in the consumer public that the applicant is in any way associated with the holder of the earlier identical trademark, the rejection of the application or the cancellation of the trademark will generally be total. However, if bad faith manifests itself as a lack of intent to use the trademark for only some of the goods or services for which registration is sought or has been achieved, the rejection of the application or the cancellation of the trademark will be partial and will be limited to those goods and services for which there is no intent of actual use of the trademark.
5. In Lieu of a Conclusion
The preceding analysis demonstrates that the establishment of bad faith filing as an absolute ground of invalidity is vital for the elimination of distortions and phenomena of circumvention of trademark law to the benefit of the applicant’s competitors and the overall proper functioning of competition in the market. Moreover, bad faith filing indirectly affects other institutions of trademark law, such as the weakening due to acquiescence and the cancellation due to non-use of the trademark. Specifically, the provision of Article 12 of Law 4679, which indirectly establishes a five-year extinguishment period for filing remedies against a later trademark that infringes an earlier trademark or distinctive sign of the substantive system, does not apply when the filing of the later trademark was done in bad faith. Furthermore, given the legal provision of a five-year grace period for the commencement of actual use of the trademark after its registration, invoking bad faith filing is the only means of canceling and removing the trademark before the expiration of this five-year period when the applicant filed the trademark solely to exclude their competitors from using identical or similar trademarks for identical or related products, without any intention of actual use of the trademark.