Well-Known Trademarks and Their Protection

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By Caroline W. Muchiri
 
9/15/2024
 
Well Known Marks 
are those marks that are considered to
have gained  reputation through their use in the market.
As a result of this reputation, well known marks enjoy
some level of protection 
whether or not they are
registered.
 
Some well known marks are usually accompanied by
registration in the respective jurisdiction where protection
is being sought;
 
The question of ‘wellknownness’ of a mark usually arises
when there are disputes for instance upon registration of a
similar mark by a third party or infringement. It does not
arise when examining the mark as to its registrability.
 
9/15/2024
 
The question of whether a mark is well known
or not does not arise when the said mark is
being examined for it’s registrability;
This is usually a claim of protection of an
unregistered mark put forth by an owner of a
mark when opposing expunging the
registration of a similar or identical mark or
even in infringement proceedings;
 
9/15/2024
 
It can therefore be said that ‘wellknownness’
of a marks is a status conferred on an
unregistered mark by a competent authority
to afford it protection;
It revolves around the law of passing off
where a person is not allowed to ride on or
cash in on the goodwill of another;
 
9/15/2024
 
The law on well known trademarks is traced
back to the 
Paris Convention on Protection of
Industrial property
;
Article 6 
bis
 
provides for the protection of
well known marks by obligating the countries
of the Union to afford the highest level of
protection to well known marks either on
request of an interested party or through its
own legislation.
 
 
 
9/15/2024
 
The protection under article 6
bis
 is hinged on
the following requirements:-
The mark must be considered by a competent
authority of the country of registration or of use, to
be a well known mark;
The interested party must be a person entitled to
the benefits of the convention;
The mark must be used for similar goods.
 
9/15/2024
 
Before 2002, Kenya did not have provisions on
the protection of well known trademarks. The
operative law was derived from TRIPS;
In the matter of trademark applications number
43283—4 N’ ICE (word) in the name of Beta
Health Care International Limited and the
opposition thereto by Smithkline Beecham,
(1998)
, 
the registrar recognized that despite the
absence of laws in Kenya protecting well known
marks, the registrar had a duty to refuse the
registration of marks that are reasonably well
known and used in other countries. This is so,
even when the interested party does not have a
registered trademark.
 
9/15/2024
 
Based on this duty, the registrar refused to
register a mark which was identical to that of the
opponent and was covered the same goods even
when the opponent had not registered it’s mark
in Kenya;
In the registrar’s opinion, the applicant ought to
have known that about the opponent’s marks as
they were in the same market;
Protection afforded to well known marks
prevents people from ‘lifting’ marks in other
jurisdictions and seeking to register them where
the owner has not registered them;
 
9/15/2024
 
 
In 2002, the Parliament amended the
Trademarks Act by inserting 
Section 15A
which expressly 
recognises 
well known marks
in Kenya;
The section defines a well-known mark with
reference to the 
Paris Convention 
and the
WTO Agreement(TRIPS);
 
 
9/15/2024
 
The obligation to protect well known marks
was imposed on the member states of the
WTO and Kenya in compliance had to amend
its laws to comply;
 
Importantly, the insertion came immediately
after section 15 which prohibits the
registration of similar or identical marks to
those one that is already on the register;
 
9/15/2024
 
Section 15A defines a well known mark to
mean
 
“A mark which is well known in Kenya as
being the mark of a person who is either a
national of a convention country, is domiciled
there or has a real and effective industrial
commercial establishment there.”
Section 15A (4) expressly prohibit the
registration of a similar or identical mark to a
well known trademark;
 
9/15/2024
 
Section 15A (2) allows an owner of a well known
mark to obtain injunction to restrain the use and
registration of a similar mark subject to section
38B;
Under the Act there is no section 38B and it can
only be inferred that the Parliament meant
section 36B which is a statutory estoppel to
claimant;
Section 36B disentitles an owner of a registered
mark from relying on an earlier marks where he
has acquiesced to the use of a similar mark for a
period of five continuous years
 
9/15/2024
 
The Trademarks Act and the Paris Convention
however lack a criteria to be used when
determining whether a mark is a well known
mark or not;
In 1999, the General Assemblies of the Paris
Union and WIPO adopted some Joint
Recommendations concerning provisions on the
protection of well-known marks which provides a
guide as to the test to be administered to a mark
before the well known status can be conferred;
 
9/15/2024
 
The recommendations are:-
a.
The degree of knowledge or recognition of the
mark in the relevant sector of the public.
The members of the 
‘relevant public’ 
must be
able to identify or associate the mark with the
proprietor.
They are deemed to have different levels of
cognizance and therefore the degree of
knowledge required varies from consumer to
consumer;
 
9/15/2024
 
For instance, smokers, beer drinkers, car dealers are
usually treated as consumers who are knowledgeable
as opposed to a ‘
Mama Mboga’. 
In the 
British
American Tobacco Kenya vs Cut Tobacco Kenya
Limited 
(2001) 
the judge stated as follows:- “None of
the members of the bench was a smoker but we now
understand that generally smokers stick to their own
brand of cigarettes just the way beer drinkers stick to
their own brand of beers.
 
9/15/2024
 
b. The duration of any promotion of the
mark in respect to the goods the mark
applies, including advertising or publicity
and presentation in fairs, exhibitions or
goods and or services of which the mark
applies;
Publicity good or bad creates or
increases the amount of goodwill
associated with a mark;
 
9/15/2024
 
c. The duration, extent and geographical area of
use of the mark.
The longer the duration, the larger the extent
and the bigger the geographical area of use
of the mark, the higher the chances that the
mark will be considered to be a well known
mark;
It is assumed that such use is evident that the
members of public have actual knowledge of
the mark in question and can easily associate
it with the proprietor
 
9/15/2024
 
d. The duration and geographical area of any
registrations and or any applications for
registration of the mark.
This serves to prove interest in protecting the
mark as well as recognition that other
competent authorities have recognized the
mark as a mark in their jurisdiction;
The applicant must have registered the mark
in its country of origin or where it has
established business
 
9/15/2024
 
e. The record of successful enforcement of rights in
the mark, in particular the extent to which the
mark has been recognized as a well known mark by
other competent authorities;
Although not a reason for refusal of protection of a
well known mark, a record of successful
enforcement of its rights is of very high persuasive
value to an applicant;
If there are no records, the standards are usually
higher as the applicant has to convince an
authority why it has to be the first to confer such
protection to him
 
9/15/2024
 
 
f. The value associated with the mark;
This refers to the commercial value of the
mark;
This can be proven by adducing records of
previous sales of the product where this
mark is used in various countries including
where the applicant is seeking protection if
any;
 
9/15/2024
 
The International Trademark Association
(INTA), has also developed some guidelines
on the test to be applied when determining
whether or not a mark is well known;
These guidelines are commonly referred to
INTA’s Resolution of Well Known Marks;
They fill in the gaps that were left by the
recommendations of the General Assembly as
they were developed by practitioners;
 
 
9/15/2024
 
INTA endorses the following criteria for
consideration before a mark can be said to be
a well known mark:-
a.
The amount of local or worldwide
recognition of the mark;
b.
The degree of inherent or acquired
distinctiveness of the mark;
 
 
 
9/15/2024
 
c. The local or worldwide duration of use and
advertising of the mark. This is of particular
importance as some applicants may begin a
fierce campaign shortly before or after filing
an application seeking protection as a well
known mark;
d. The local or worldwide commercial value
attributed to the mark;
e. The local or geographical scope of use and
advertising;
 
9/15/2024
 
f. The local or worldwide exclusivity of use and
registration attained by the mark with specific
regard to the presence or absence of identical
or similar third party marks validly registered
for or used on identical or similar goods or
services;
g. The local or worldwide quality image that
the mark has acquired;
 
 
9/15/2024
 
The INTA’s resolutions introduce two main
considerations to be had when determining
whether or not a mark is well known or not.
a.
There is reference to ‘Local’ meaning that a
mark can be claiming to be a well known mark
locally as opposed to internationally. For
instance “Kimbo” or “Treetops” could be
considered to be a well-known mark in Kenya
in 1990’s but the same could not be said
internationally;
 
9/15/2024
 
b. There is also reference to co-existence of
marks. Where a mark has coexisted with
another similar mark e.g. Panadol and
Sonadol in Kenya, neither of the owners can
claim to be entitled to protection of their
mark as a well known mark in another
jurisdiction as against one another or a
third party incorporating a similar mark like
‘Betadol’
 
9/15/2024
 
The test of well known marks has been applied in
Kenya in several matters including:-
Unilever Plc Vs Emami Limited
 on Fair & Lovely and
Fair & Handsome. In part of her decision and in ruling
that Fair and Lovely was not a well known mark in
Kenya  the registrar applied the above tests in the
following manner:-
 
There is no indication of whether the promotional
advertising materials in Exhibit SB6 were used in
order to determine their reach. Similarly, although
‘SB7” shows that Unilever marks are registered in
many countries worldwide this however does not
serve to show that the mark is consequently well
known in Kenya.
 
9/15/2024
 
 
I find that there is no evidence of the extent of
geographical are of the use of the mark; the
duration of any promotion of the mark in respect
to the goods the mark applies, including
advertising or publicity and the presentation, at
fairs or exhibitions of goods which the mark
applies has also not been adduced by the
applicant. There is also no record of any
successful enforcement of rights in the mark in
particular the extent of which the mark was
recognized as a well known mark by the
competent authorities
’.
 
9/15/2024
 
Protection of well known marks is one of the
exceptions of territoriality of trademarks and is
applied sparingly;
Before a mark can be said to be well known, the
test must be applied unless it (the mark) has
been recognized as such by the same authority;
The test of well known mark is usually strict so
as to avoid abuse by proprietors of marks who
have not sought protection of their marks
through registration;
 
9/15/2024
 
It is also protection that is afforded to owners of a
mark who have not registered marks in some
jurisdictions by giving them a right to sue for
infringement as opposed to suing for passing off;
The right to sue for infringement is usually
dependent on registration of a mark which is being
infringed;
The issue of well ‘knownness’ of a mark does not
arise during its registration process but only where
an owner needs to assert his rights as against
another with a similar or identical mark;
A mark even when it is considered well known, it is
examined for registrability just as any ordinary mark;
 
9/15/2024
 
There are few marks that would qualify to be
protected as well known. They would include
Locally
-Jogoo for maize flour, Safaricom; Mpesa
 
Regionally
-Nakumatt for retail services; KCB for
banking services
 
Internationally
-Coke of Coca Cola,
 
The list in the test must be exhausted. It is a
question of fact and must it must be proven that
a mark passes all or majority of the requirements
 
9/15/2024
 
Any Questions
 
9/15/2024
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Well-known marks enjoy protection whether registered or not, with disputes arising in cases of similarity or infringement. The concept of well-knownness applies outside registrability, focusing on safeguarding unregistered marks from exploitation. The Paris Convention ensures high-level protection for well-known marks, with criteria such as recognition by a competent authority and usage for similar goods. Upholding the law of passing off, such marks prevent unauthorized use of another's reputation.

  • Trademarks
  • Protection
  • Well-Known Marks
  • Paris Convention
  • Passing Off

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  1. By Caroline W. Muchiri 9/15/2024

  2. Well have gained reputation through their use in the market. As a result of this reputation, well known marks enjoy some level of protection whether registered Well Known Known Marks Marks are those marks that are considered to whether or or not not they they are are registered. . Some well known marks are usually accompanied by registration in the respective jurisdiction where protection is being sought; The question of wellknownness of a mark usually arises when there are disputes for instance upon registration of a similar mark by a third party or infringement. It does not arise when examining the mark as to its registrability. 9/15/2024

  3. The question of whether a mark is well known or not does not arise when the said mark is being examined for it s registrability; This is usually a claim of protection of an unregistered mark put forth by an owner of a mark registration of a similar or identical mark or even in infringement proceedings; when opposing expunging the 9/15/2024

  4. It can therefore be said that wellknownness of a marks is a status conferred on an unregistered mark by a competent authority to afford it protection; It revolves around the law of passing off where a person is not allowed to ride on or cash in on the goodwill of another; 9/15/2024

  5. The law on well known trademarks is traced back to the Paris Industrial Article well known marks by obligating the countries of the Union to afford the highest level of protection to well known marks either on request of an interested party or through its own legislation. Paris Convention property; bis provides for the protection of Convention on on Protection Protection of of Industrial property Article 6 6 bis 9/15/2024

  6. The protection under article 6bis is hinged on the following requirements:- The mark must be considered by a competent authority of the country of registration or of use, to be a well known mark; The interested party must be a person entitled to the benefits of the convention; The mark must be used for similar goods. 9/15/2024

  7. Before 2002, Kenya did not have provisions on the protection of well known trademarks. The operative law was derived from TRIPS; In 43283 Health opposition ( (1998 absence of laws in Kenya protecting well known marks, the registrar had a duty to refuse the registration of marks that are reasonably well known and used in other countries. This is so, even when the interested party does not have a registered trademark. In the 43283 Health Care opposition thereto 1998) ), , the registrar recognized that despite the the matter 4 4 N matter of N ICE Care International thereto by of trademark ICE (word) International Limited by Smithkline trademark applications (word) in Smithkline Beecham, applications number in the Limited and number of Beta and the Beecham, the name name of Beta the 9/15/2024

  8. Based on this duty, the registrar refused to register a mark which was identical to that of the opponent and was covered the same goods even when the opponent had not registered it s mark in Kenya; In the registrar s opinion, the applicant ought to have known that about the opponent s marks as they were in the same market; Protection afforded to well known marks prevents people from lifting marks in other jurisdictions and seeking to register them where the owner has not registered them; 9/15/2024

  9. In 2002, the Parliament amended the Trademarks Act by inserting Section which expressly recognises well known marks in Kenya; The section defines a well-known mark with reference to the Paris WTO Section 15 15A A Paris Convention Convention and the WTO Agreement(TRIPS) Agreement(TRIPS); ; 9/15/2024

  10. The obligation to protect well known marks was imposed on the member states of the WTO and Kenya in compliance had to amend its laws to comply; Importantly, the insertion came immediately after registration of similar or identical marks to those one that is already on the register; section 15 which prohibits the 9/15/2024

  11. Section 15A defines a well known mark to mean A mark which is well known in Kenya as being the mark of a person who is either a national of a convention country, is domiciled there or has a real and effective industrial commercial establishment there. Section 15A (4) expressly prohibit the registration of a similar or identical mark to a well known trademark; 9/15/2024

  12. Section 15A (2) allows an owner of a well known mark to obtain injunction to restrain the use and registration of a similar mark subject to section 38B; Under the Act there is no section 38B and it can only be inferred that the Parliament meant section 36B which is a statutory estoppel to claimant; Section 36B disentitles an owner of a registered mark from relying on an earlier marks where he has acquiesced to the use of a similar mark for a period of five continuous years 9/15/2024

  13. The Trademarks Act and the Paris Convention however lack a criteria to be used when determining whether a mark is a well known mark or not; In 1999, the General Assemblies of the Paris Union Recommendations concerning provisions on the protection of well-known marks which provides a guide as to the test to be administered to a mark before the well known status can be conferred; and WIPO adopted some Joint 9/15/2024

  14. The recommendations are:- a. The degree of knowledge or recognition of the mark in the relevant sector of the public. The members of the relevantpublic must be able to identify or associate the mark with the proprietor. They are deemed to have different levels of cognizance knowledge required varies from consumer to consumer; and therefore the degree of 9/15/2024

  15. For instance, smokers, beer drinkers, car dealers are usually treated as consumers who are knowledgeable as opposed to a Mama Mboga . In the British American Limited the members of the bench was a smoker but we now understand that generally smokers stick to their own brand of cigarettes just the way beer drinkers stick to their own brand of beers. British Kenya American Tobacco Limited ( (2001 Tobacco Kenya 2001) ) the judge stated as follows:- None of Kenya vs vs Cut Cut Tobacco Tobacco Kenya 9/15/2024

  16. b. The duration of any promotion of the mark in respect to the goods the mark applies, including advertising or publicity and presentation in fairs, exhibitions or goods and or services of which the mark applies; Publicity good or bad creates or increases the amount of goodwill associated with a mark; 9/15/2024

  17. c. The duration, extent and geographical area of use of the mark. The longer the duration, the larger the extent and the bigger the geographical area of use of the mark, the higher the chances that the mark will be considered to be a well known mark; It is assumed that such use is evident that the members of public have actual knowledge of the mark in question and can easily associate it with the proprietor 9/15/2024

  18. d. The duration and geographical area of any registrations and or any applications for registration of the mark. This serves to prove interest in protecting the mark as well as recognition that other competent authorities have recognized the mark as a mark in their jurisdiction; The applicant must have registered the mark in its country of origin or where it has established business 9/15/2024

  19. e. The record of successful enforcement of rights in the mark, in particular the extent to which the mark has been recognized as a well known mark by other competent authorities; Although not a reason for refusal of protection of a well enforcement of its rights is of very high persuasive value to an applicant; If there are no records, the standards are usually higher as the applicant has to convince an authority why it has to be the first to confer such protection to him known mark, a record of successful 9/15/2024

  20. f. The value associated with the mark; This refers to the commercial value of the mark; This can be proven by adducing records of previous sales of the product where this mark is used in various countries including where the applicant is seeking protection if any; 9/15/2024

  21. The International Trademark Association (INTA), has also developed some guidelines on the test to be applied when determining whether or not a mark is well known; These guidelines are commonly referred to INTA s Resolution of Well Known Marks; They fill in the gaps that were left by the recommendations of the General Assembly as they were developed by practitioners; 9/15/2024

  22. INTA endorses the following criteria for consideration before a mark can be said to be a well known mark:- a. The amount of local or worldwide recognition of the mark; b. The degree of inherent or acquired distinctiveness of the mark; 9/15/2024

  23. c. The local or worldwide duration of use and advertising of the mark. This is of particular importance as some applicants may begin a fierce campaign shortly before or after filing an application seeking protection as a well known mark; d. The local or worldwide commercial value attributed to the mark; e. The local or geographical scope of use and advertising; 9/15/2024

  24. f. The local or worldwide exclusivity of use and registration attained by the mark with specific regard to the presence or absence of identical or similar third party marks validly registered for or used on identical or similar goods or services; g. The local or worldwide quality image that the mark has acquired; 9/15/2024

  25. The INTAs resolutions introduce two main considerations to be had when determining whether or not a mark is well known or not. a. There is reference to Local meaning that a mark can be claiming to be a well known mark locally as opposed to internationally. For instance Kimbo or Treetops could be considered to be a well-known mark in Kenya in 1990 s but the same could not be said internationally; 9/15/2024

  26. b. There is also reference to co-existence of marks. Where a mark has coexisted with another similar mark e.g. Panadol and Sonadol in Kenya, neither of the owners can claim to be entitled to protection of their mark as a well known mark in another jurisdiction as against one another or a third party incorporating a similar mark like Betadol 9/15/2024

  27. The test of well known marks has been applied in Kenya in several matters including:- Unilever Fair & Handsome. In part of her decision and in ruling that Fair and Lovely was not a well known mark in Kenya the registrar applied the above tests in the following manner:- There is no indication of whether the promotional advertising materials in Exhibit SB6 were used in order to determine their reach. Similarly, although SB7 shows that Unilever marks are registered in many countries worldwide this however does not serve to show that the mark is consequently well known in Kenya. Unilever Plc Plc Vs Vs Emami Emami Limited Limited on Fair & Lovely and 9/15/2024

  28. I find that there is no evidence of the extent of geographical are of the use of the mark; the duration of any promotion of the mark in respect to the goods the mark applies, including advertising or publicity and the presentation, at fairs or exhibitions of goods which the mark applies has also not been adduced by the applicant. There is also no record of any successful enforcement of rights in the mark in particular the extent of which the mark was recognized as a well known mark by the competent authorities . 9/15/2024

  29. Protection of well known marks is one of the exceptions of territoriality of trademarks and is applied sparingly; Before a mark can be said to be well known, the test must be applied unless it (the mark) has been recognized as such by the same authority; The test of well known mark is usually strict so as to avoid abuse by proprietors of marks who have not sought protection of their marks through registration; 9/15/2024

  30. It is also protection that is afforded to owners of a mark who have not registered marks in some jurisdictions by giving them a right to sue for infringement as opposed to suing for passing off; The right to sue for infringement is usually dependent on registration of a mark which is being infringed; The issue of well knownness of a mark does not arise during its registration process but only where an owner needs to assert his rights as against another with a similar or identical mark; A mark even when it is considered well known, it is examined for registrability just as any ordinary mark; 9/15/2024

  31. There are few marks that would qualify to be protected as well known. They would include Locally Regionally banking services Internationally The list in the test must be exhausted. It is a question of fact and must it must be proven that a mark passes all or majority of the requirements Locally-Jogoo for maize flour, Safaricom; Mpesa Regionally-Nakumatt for retail services; KCB for Internationally-Coke of Coca Cola, 9/15/2024

  32. Any Questions 9/15/2024

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