Clark Equipment Co v
Registrar of Trade Marks [1964] HCA 55
HIGH
COURT OF AUSTRALIA
KITTO J
KITTO
J:
This is an appeal under s. 46 of the Trade
Marks Act 1955-1958 Cth to the
High Court as the Appeal Tribunal constituted by that Act from a refusal by the
Assistant Registrar of Trade Marks to accept an application for the
registration of a trade mark.
The application was for the registration of the
word Michigan as a trade mark in respect of tractor shovels,
front-end loaders, crawler-type and truck-mounted excavator cranes, power
shovels and cranes, bulldozers, tractor dozers, tractor scrapers, tractor
loggers, and accessories and attachments therefor. The application was made before
the commencement of the Trade Marks Act 1955 Cth. That Act came into force while the application
was still unaccepted, and thereupon the Assistant Registrar, at the appellant's
request and by authority of s. 5 (5) of the Act, treated the application as an
application for registration in Part B of the Register and dealt with it
accordingly. He refused the application because of the geographical
signification of the word.
The provisions of the Trade Marks Act 1955 upon
which the appeal depends are in ss. 25 and 26. The former section makes a trade
mark registrable in Part B of the Register if it is distinctive, or is not
distinctive but is capable of becoming distinctive, of goods in respect of
which the registration is sought and with which the applicant for registration
is or may be connected in the course of trade. Sub-section (1) of s. 26
provides that for the purposes of the Act a trade mark is not distinctive of
the goods of a person unless it is adapted to distinguish goods with which that
person is or may be connected in the course of trade from goods in respect of
which no such connexion exists. Then sub-s. (2) provides
that in determining whether a trade mark is distinctive, regard may be had to
the extent to which (a) the trade mark is inherently adapted so to
distinguish, and (b) by reason of the use of the trade mark or of any
other circumstances, the trade mark does so distinguish.
On the evidence before me I am satisfied that in
Australia the word Michigan has been extensively used by the
appellant for more than twenty years as a mark to distinguish its goods of the
description in respect of which registration is sought, and that its use of the
word for that purpose, in advertisements and upon its products themselves, has
resulted in a widespread recognition of the word, among persons concerned with
products of the kind, as distinguishing the appellant's goods from the goods of
other persons. But s. 26 makes it plain that that is not enough to entitle the
appellant to the registration it seeks. I need not dwell upon the point that
the word "registrable" in s. 25 (1) is appropriate to allow for, and
at least does not displace, the view often expressed or implied in judgments of
the courts that the Registrar has a discretion to refuse registration even
where the express requirements of the Act appear to be satisfied. I am
concerned more with the fact that s. 26, having in sub-s. (1) denied registrability unless the
mark is "adapted to distinguish" the applicant's goods, by sub-s. (2)
dissects the expression "adapted to distinguish" so as to show that
two inquiries are relevant—not only an inquiry concerning acquired
distinctiveness but an inquiry concerning the inherent fitness of the mark for
the purpose of distinguishing the applicant's goods from those of other
persons. It is undeniable that a mark which, considered by itself, would seem
unadapted to that purpose, because its natural signification is against a
notion that goods to which it is applied are the goods of the applicant and of
no one else, may yet come by actual use or by virtue of special circumstances
to be so closely associated with the applicant's goods in the minds of the
relevant public that its apparently disqualifying signification is effectually
obscured, and distinctiveness in fact is thus achieved. But although such a
measure of practical success with the mark may well provide a sufficient
foundation for a passing-off action, the Trade Marks Act does
not accept it as necessarily sufficient for the special protection which it
affords to registered trade marks. True, the Act does
not say that a mark which has any degree of natural unsuitability to
distinguish an applicant's goods shall be refused registration notwithstanding
that it has acquired a degree of distinctiveness in relation to his goods; but
it does require that if the mark is to any extent inherently unadapted for the
purpose that fact shall be weighed in the scales against the degree of acquired
distinctiveness in determining the ultimate question whether the mark is registrable
as being "adapted to distinguish" the applicant's goods.
That ultimate question must not be misunderstood.
It is not whether the mark will be adapted to distinguish the registered
owner's goods if it be registered and other persons consequently find
themselves precluded from using it. The question is whether the mark,
considered quite apart from the effects of registration, is such that by its
use the applicant is likely to attain his object of thereby distinguishing his
goods from the goods of others. In Registrar of Trade Marks v. W. &
G. Du Cros Ltd.[1] Lord Parker of Waddington, having
remarked upon the difficulty of finding the right criterion by which to
determine whether a proposed mark is or is not "adapted to
distinguish" the applicant's goods, defined the crucial question
practically as I have stated it, and added two sentences which have often been
quoted but to which it is well to return for an understanding of the problem in
a case such as the present. His Lordship said: "The applicant's chance of
success in this respect [i.e. in distinguishing his goods by means of the mark,
apart from the effects of registration] must, I think, largely depend upon
whether other traders are likely, in the ordinary course of their businesses
and without any improper motive, to desire to use the same mark, or some mark
nearly resembling it, upon or in connexion with their own goods. It is apparent
from the history of trade marks in this country that both the Legislature and
the Courts have always shown a natural disinclination to allow any person to
obtain by registration under the Trade Marks Acts a monopoly
in what others may legitimately desire to use." The interests of strangers
and of the public are thus bound up with the whole question, as Hamilton L.J.
pointed out in the case of R. J. Lea, Ltd.;[2] but to say this is not to treat the question as
depending upon some vague notion of public policy: it is to insist that the
question whether a mark is adapted to distinguish be tested by reference to the
likelihood that other persons, trading in goods of the relevant kind and being
actuated only by proper motives—in the exercise, that is to say, of the common
right of the public to make honest use of words forming part of the common
heritage, for the sake of the signification which they ordinarily possess—will
think of the word and want to use it in connexion with similar goods in any
manner which would infringe a registered trade mark granted in respect of it.
The fact that this is the test is the basic reason
for the frequent refusal, exemplified in this Court by the case of Thomson v.
B. Seppelt & Sons Ltd.,[3] to register as a trade mark a word of prima facie
geographical signification. It is well settled that a geographical name, when
used as a trade mark for a particular category of goods, may be saved by the
nature of the goods or by some other circumstance from carrying its prima facie
geographical signification, and that for that reason it may be held to be
adapted to distinguish the applicant's goods. Where that is so it is because to
an honest competitor the idea of using that name in relation to such goods or
in such circumstances would simply not occur: see per Lord Simonds in
the Yorkshire Copper Works Case.[4] This is the case, for example, where the word as
applied to the relevant goods is in effect a fancy name, such as "North
Pole" in connexion with bananas: A. Bailey & Co. Ltd. v. Clark, Son
& Morland Ltd. (the Glastonbury Case[5]) (see also the Livron
Case[6]), or where by reason of user or other circumstances
it has come to possess, when used in respect of the relevant goods, a
distinctiveness in fact which eclipses its primary signification. Cf. in the
case of a descriptive word: Dunlop Rubber Co.'s Application.[7] But the probability that some competitor, without
impropriety, may want to use the name of a place on his goods must ordinarily
increase in proportion to the likelihood that goods of the relevant kind will
in fact emanate from that place. A descriptive word is in like case: the more
apt a word is to describe the goods, the less inherently apt it is to
distinguish them as the goods of a particular manufacturer. This may seem at
first blush a paradox, as Lord Simonds and Lord Asquith suggested
in the Yorkshire Copper Works Case,[8] but surely not when Lord Parker's exposition
of the subject is borne in mind.
The consequence is that the name of a place or of
an area, whether it be a district or a county, a state or a country, can hardly
ever be adapted to distinguish one person's goods from the goods of others when
used simpliciter or with no addition save a description or
designation of the goods, if goods of the kind are produced at the place or in
the area or if it is reasonable to suppose that such goods may in the future be
produced there. In such a case, the name is plainly not inherently, i.e. in its
own nature, adapted to distinguish the applicant's goods; there is necessarily
great difficulty in proving that by reason of use or other circumstances it
does in fact distinguish his goods; and even where that difficulty is overcome
there remains the virtual if not complete impossibility of satisfying the
Registrar or the Court that the effect of granting registration will not be to
deny the word to a person who is likely to want to use it, legitimately, in
connexion with his goods for the sake of the geographical reference which it is
inherently adapted to make. The leading authorities on the subject include the
Yorkshire Copper Works Case[9] (the judgment of Lord Evershed in
that case when it was in the Court of Appeal[10] contains a valuable discussion of the topic), the
Glastonbury Case[11] and the Liverpool Electric Cable Co. Case.[12] These cases show, as the Registrar said in the Dan
River Case[13] in a decision which was endorsed by Lloyd-Jacob J.,
that there is a category of words which are so adapted for descriptive purposes
that no amount of acquired distinctiveness can justify their registration, and
that among such words are the names of large and important industrial towns or
districts, and also of smaller towns or districts if they are a seat of
manufacture of the goods for which registration is sought.
The principles to which I have referred appear to
me to conclude the present case against the appellant. Michigan is the name of
a State of the United States of America. The appellant produces there goods of
the kind for which it uses the name as its mark in Australia as well as in
America. It is true that there is no evidence before me that any other
manufacturer produces similar goods in Michigan at present, but it is a matter
of common knowledge, of which I take judicial notice, that in the State there
are important manufacturing centres, and it is well within the bounds of reason
to suppose that persons other than the appellant may in the future produce there goods similar to some or all of the goods comprised
in the category for which the appellant now seeks trade mark registration.
There are only two circumstances which may be considered as tending to diminish
the normal likelihood that another manufacturer of (for example) power cranes
in Michigan, sending his goods to Australia, may fairly wish to use the word
Michigan in respect of them in this country in a manner which a trade mark
registration would prevent. One circumstance I have mentioned already: it is
that the word has at present a reputation here as referring specifically to the
appellant's goods. The other I have not mentioned: it is that in the United
States the appellant has obtained registration of the word Michigan as
a trade mark in respect of such goods as those described in its present
application. No evidence has been tendered as to the effect of trade mark
registration according to United States law, but I shall assume for the
purposes of the case that apart from the appellant no manufacturer of the
relevant goods, not even a Michigan manufacturer, is free to use the word
Michigan in the manner of a trade mark for his goods in the United States. The
appellant submits that for that reason no such manufacturer will be very likely
to want the word for use in Australia in any manner which would infringe a
registered trade mark consisting of the word, especially if he knows, as he
almost certainly will, of the distinctiveness the word has come to have in this
country. But even allowing for the cumulative effect of these considerations it
seems to me impossible to conclude that there is no likelihood of other
traders, in the ordinary course of their businesses and without any desire to
get for themselves a benefit from the appellant's reputation, wishing in
advertisements and otherwise to describe (e.g.) their power cranes from
Michigan as Michigan power cranes. They may well wish by such means to take
legitimate advantage of a reputation which they believe or hope that the State
of Michigan possesses among Australians for the quality of its manufacturing
products, and it would be contrary to fundamental principle to grant a
registration which would have the effect of denying them the right to do so by
using the name of the State. It is no answer to say that if registration be
granted such a manufacturer may nevertheless describe his goods as "made
in Michigan" or in some other ways indicate that Michigan is their place
of origin. He is not to be excluded by the registration of a trade mark from
any use of the word Michigan that he may fairly want to make in the course of
his business.
For these reasons I am of opinion that Michigan is
not adapted, and is not capable of becoming adapted, to distinguish goods of
the relevant kinds with which the appellant is or may be connected in the
course of trade from goods in respect of which no such connexion subsists, and
is therefore not registrable in Part B as being or as capable of becoming
distinctive of goods in respect of which registration is sought and with which
the appellant is or may be connected in the course of trade.
Accordingly, I hold that the Assistant Registrar
was right in refusing to accept the application in this case, and I dismiss the
appeal.
[1]
[1913] A.C. 624, at pp. 634, 635.
[2]
[1913] 1 Ch. 446, at p. 463; (1913) 30 R.P.C. 216, at p. 227.
[3]
(1925) 37 C.L.R. 305.
[4]
(1953) 71 R.P.C. 150, at p. 154.
[5]
[1938] A.C. 557, at p. 562; (1938) 55 R.P.C. 253, at p. 257.
[6]
(1937) 54 R.P.C. 327, at p. 339.
[7]
(1942) 59 R.P.C. 134.
[8]
(1954) 71 R.P.C. 150, at pp. 154, 156.
[9]
(1954) 71 R.P.C. 150.
[10]
(1953) 70 R.P.C. 1.
[11]
[1938] A.C. 557; (1938) 55 R.P.C. 253.
[12]
(1929) 46 R.P.C. 99.
[13]
[1962] R.P.C. 157, at p. 160.