
 |
Bulletins Story:
BUBBLES CASE DISMISSED: O2 v HUTCHISON 3G
|
Date:
06.04.2006
|

O2 has lost its trade mark claim against Hutchison 3G concerning
the use of bubble imagery in comparative advertising.
After the use of competitors’ trade marks in comparative
advertising was liberalised across Europe in 1994 there were a
series of claims in which the limits of the new regime were tested
by trade mark owners. Most of these cases turned on the accuracy or
otherwise of price comparisons. To avoid infringing a rival’s
registered trade mark an advertiser had to show, under Section
10(6) of the Trade Marks Act 1994, that its use of the mark was “in
accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial
matters.” Judges adopted a liberal approach: the public expected a
certain amount of hyperbole in advertising so you could use your
competitor’s trade mark so long as your ad wasn’t “significantly
misleading”.
O2’s claim against H3G was unusual because its complaints (at
least by the time the case came to trial) related solely to the
manner in which H3G had used its trade marked bubble imagery. This
was a case not about claims but about branding.
The Facts
O2, now owned by Telefonica, started life as BT Cellnet. Having
demerged from BT in 2001 it traded briefly as mmO2 before launching
as O2 in 2002. O2 invested heavily in advertising, spending £320
million in the UK alone between May 2002 and August 2004. There
were also high profile sponsorship deals with the likes of Arsenal
FC, the England Rugby team and Big Brother.
Much of O2’s advertising has used images of bubbles and eleven
depictions of bubbles have been registered as trade marks. The four
registered bubble marks involved in this case can be seen by
clicking here.
The Superbrand organisation awarded O2 “Business Superbrand” and
“Cool Brand” status, commenting that “the visually striking oxygen
bubbles in blue water image ... has become its trademark
symbol”. A judges’ citation in the IPA Effectiveness Awards in
November 2004 said that O2’s “level of cut-through has undoubtedly
been driven by the consistent and instantly recognisable use of
blue and bubbles across all O2 activity.”
The bubbles were therefore a jealously guarded asset. O2’s
marketing department would like to have suppressed the use of
bubbles in marketing by almost anyone other than Aero (the
chocolate bar) and a few other product categories such as fizzy
drinks. Threats had been made or complaints issued by O2 in respect
of the use of bubbles by advertisers as varied as Nationwide, Oral
B and Davidoff.
H3G, one of the first 3G operators, operates under the brand
name “3”. In March 2004 it launched its own pre-pay service under
the name “ThreePay”. There were four serious players in the
pay-as-you-go market at the time: Vodafone, Orange, O2 and
T-Mobile. H3G needed to make a splash and its agency WCRS came up
with a “robust but fair” campaign idea involving price comparisons
between 3 and the major existing players. Included in this campaign
was a 20 second TV commercial featuring animated bubbles (to
symbolise O2), an animated “3” and a voiceover comparing O2’s
pay-as-you-go pricing unfavourably with 3’s.
The campaign (including ads targeting other operators such as
Orange) was highly successful, winning a Marketing Society award in
the New Brand category. H3G’s market share rose during 2004 from 5
to 25 per cent and by December 2004 it had 2.5 million subscribers.
H3G’s use of its competitors’ trade marks, including not only O2’s
bubbles but also a spinning orange square (Orange), a pink triangle
(T-Mobile) and abstract shapes resembling inverted commas
(Vodafone), had paid off.
The Proceedings
In August 2004 O2 applied to the court for an interim
injunction. Mr Justice Pumfrey rejected O2’s claims regarding the
text of the commercial. He considered H3G’s use of bubbles to be
“gratuitous”, but declined to grant an injunction pending trial as
the disruption to H3G’s campaign would have been disproportionate
to the damage their use of bubbles was doing to O2. In December
2004 an application by O2 to refer various issues to the European
Court of Justice was also refused. The case proceeded to a five day
trial in the High Court. Judgment confirming the validity of O2’s
trade mark registrations but dismissing its infringement claims was
handed down by Mr Justice Lewison on 23 March 2006.
Conclusions
To simplify a detailed judgment extending to 52 pages H3G’s
defence succeeded because the advertisement complied with the
Comparative Advertising Directive checklist (set out in full at the
end of this bulletin). The main points of interest were as
follows:
1. The defence to a trade mark infringement claim for
comparative advertising under Section 10(6) of the Trade Marks Act
is the same as the defence under the Comparative Advertising
Directive, ie the checklist.
2. A trade mark can be infringed even if it is used by
someone else, as in this case, in relation to the genuine goods or
services in respect of which it is registered. (As another example,
a trade mark owner can complain if someone lawfully selling his
goods advertises them in an inappropriate manner.)
3. Advertisements can use imagery which is similar but not
identical to a competitor’s registered trade mark. The judge
recognised that a TV commercial needs to have visual impact in
order to be effective and accepted that, within the limits of the
Comparative Advertising Directive, advertisers must be free to
choose what visual imagery to present. Furthermore, in line with
previous decisions, “a certain degree of robustness” is to be
expected in comparative advertising – particularly where a new
entrant to a market takes on a powerful established incumbent.
Comparative advertising is an aggressive form of marketing. To
include a competitor’s trade marked visual imagery may well, as in
this case, be perceived by that competitor as “brand sabotage”.
Such advertising should be carefully vetted to ensure that it
complies with all legal requirements. There is no comparative
advertising defence, for example, to a copyright infringement
claim. But this case shows that the legal environment for
comparative advertising remains basically friendly.
Charles Swan
Advertising & Marketing
THE COMPARATIVE ADVERTISING DIRECTIVE
“CHECKLIST”
The conditions a comparative advertisement must satisfy in order
to be lawful:
(a) it is not misleading [an advertisement is misleading if
it is deceptive and because of its deceptive nature it is likely to
affect people's economic behaviour or injure a competitor]
(b) it compares goods or services meeting the same needs or
intended for the same purpose
(c) it objectively compares one or more material, relevant,
verifiable and representative features of those goods and services,
which may include price
(d) it does not create confusion in the market place
between the advertiser and a competitor or between the advertiser's
trade marks, trade names, other distinguishing marks, goods or
services and those of a competitor
(e) it does not discredit or denigrate the trade marks,
trade names, other distinguishing marks, goods, services,
activities, or circumstances of a competitor
(f) for products with designation of origin [ie specific
products referred to in a 1992 EEC Regulation], it relates in each
case to products with the same designation
(g) it does not take unfair advantage of the reputation of
a trade mark, trade name or other distinguishing marks of a
competitor or of the designation of origin of competing
products
(h) it does not present goods or services as imitations or
replicas of goods or services bearing a protected trade mark or
trade name
e-bulletins are for general guidance only. Legal advice should
be sought before taking action in relation to specific matters.
Where reference is made to Court decisions facts referred to are
those reported as found by the Court. Please note that past
bulletins included in the Archive have not been updated by any
subsequent changes in statute or case law.
<< back to ebulletins
|