Date of
Judgment: December
20, 2011
Issuing
Authority: Supreme
Court
Level of
the Issuing Authority: Final Instance
Type of
Procedure: Judicial (Administrative)
Subject
Matter: Trademarks
Main
text of the judgment (decision):
1.The judgment in prior instance is
quashed.
2.The
appeal to the court of second instance filed by the appellee of final appeal is
dismissed.
3.The
appellee of final appeal shall bear the total court costs.
Reasons:
Concerning the reasons for acceptance of
final appeal argued by the appeal counsels AMINO Tomoyasu, et al. (except for
the reasons excluded)
1. In this case, the appellee of final appeal seeks revocation of the trial
decision rendered by the Japan Patent Office (JPO) to rescind the appellee's
trademark registration pertaining to the designated services in Class 35,
"advertising, business analysis and guidance, marketing research,
provision of information concerning sales of goods, business management of
hotels, publicity material rental" (hereinafter referred to as the
"Subject Services"), in response to the request for a trial for
rescission of the trademark registration pertaining to the Subject Services,
filed by the appellant of final appeal under Article 50, paragraph (1) of the
Trademark Act by reason of the non-use of the registered trademark.
The appellee insists that it has been using the registered trademark in
connection with the service of "provision of information concerning sales
of goods" among the Subject Services (this particular service shall
hereinafter be referred to as the "Designated Service").
2. The outline of the facts legally determined by the court of prior instance
is as follows.
(1) The appellee of final appeal is a stock company engaged in the business of
planning, production, sale, etc. of game software programs, and holds a
trademark right for the registered trademark, Registration No. 4548297, which
is composed as indicated in 1 of the list of trademark registrations attached
hereto, in connection with the designated services as indicated in 2 of said
list, which fall within Class 35 and Class 41 of Appended Table 1 of the Order
for Enforcement of the Trademark Act (prior to the revision by Cabinet Order
No. 265 of 2001; hereinafter referred to as the "Appended Table of the
Order") (the application for the trademark registration was filed on
January 22, 2001, and the establishment of the trademark right was registered
on March 1, 2002; this registered trademark and the relevant trademark
registration shall hereinafter be referred to as the "Trademark" and
"Trademark Registration," respectively).
(2) The appellee, in the course of presenting on its own website the game
software programs that it had developed independently, indicated the Trademark
on said website on the following occasions: (i) on October 12, 2004, when the
appellee indicated on said website the date of release, allowable number of
players, price, and other matters regarding the game software programs for
which the appellee participated in the development projects and which were put
on sale by Company A; and (ii) on January 23, 2005, when the appellee indicated
on said website the content, specification, price, date of release, method of
purchase, and other matters regarding the music CDs which contained the music
works used in the game software programs that the appellee had developed
independently and which were put on sale by Company B (hereinafter these goods
shall be referred to as the "Goods" and the appellee's acts of
indicating these goods with the Trademark shall be referred to as the
"Acts of Indication," respectively). Via the appellee's website,
users were able to access the websites of Company A and Company B that were the
sellers of the Goods and purchase the Goods on their websites.
(3) On March 15, 2007, the appellant filed a request for a trial under Article
50, paragraph (1) of the Trademark Act for rescission of the Trademark
Registration pertaining to the Subject Services, and the precautionary
registration of such filing was made on April 4, 2007.
In response to this request for a trial, the JPO carried out examination in
Trial for Rescission Case No. 2007-300303, and accordingly, on September 26,
2008, the JPO rendered a trial decision to rescind the Trademark Registration
pertaining to the Subject Services, on the grounds that there is no proof that
the Trademark had been used in Japan within three years prior to the date of
precautionary registration mentioned above in connection with any of the
Subject Services by any of the holders of the trademark right, of the exclusive
right to use, or of the non-exclusive right to use, and that the appellee has
not shown any just cause for such non-use (this trial decision shall be
referred to as the "Trial Decision").
3. In the prior instance, the appellee asserted the circumstances mentioned in
2(2) above as the proof of its use of the Trademark in connection with the
Designated Service. The court of prior instance upheld the appellee's claim for
revocation of the Trial Decision, determining that by performing the Acts of
Indication, the appellee can be found to have used the Trademark in connection
with the Designated Service in Japan within three years prior to the
precautionary registration, so there was an error in the Trial Decision which
concluded that there was no proof that the appellee had used the Trademark for
any of the Subject Services.
4. However, we cannot affirm the determination of the court of prior instance
mentioned above, on the following grounds.
(1) It is provided that an application for trademark registration shall be
filed for each trademark by designating goods or services in connection with
which the trademark is to be used, in accordance with the classes of goods or
services provided by the Order for Enforcement of the Trademark Act (Article 6,
paragraphs (1) and (2) of the Trademark Act). The Order for Enforcement of the
Trademark Act specifies such classes in accordance with the international
classification as defined in Article 1 of the Nice Agreement Concerning the
International Classification of Goods and Services for the Purposes of the
Registration of Marks, as revised at Stockholm on July 14, 1967, and at Geneva
on May 13, 1977, and amended on October 2, 1979 (hereinafter simply referred to
as the "international classification"). Said Order gives a heading to
each class as an indicator for understanding the content of the goods or
services in the relevant class (Article 1 and the Appended Table of said
Order), and the Ordinance for Enforcement of the Trademark Act specifies the
goods or services in each class by subdividing them within the class while
following the international classification (Article 1 of the Order for
Enforcement of the Trademark Act, Article 6 and the Appended Table of the
Ordinance for Enforcement of the Trademark Act). In addition, the JPO has
developed the Examination Guidelines for Similar Goods and Services as the
standards for determining the similarity of goods or services in the
examination process of applications for trademark registration, in which goods
or services which are similar to each other shall fall within the same group of
similar goods or services.
Hence, it is appropriate to construe the meaning of the goods or services
specified in the Appended Table of the Ordinance for Enforcement of the
Trademark Act by taking into account factors such as (i) the heading given to
the relevant class in the Appended Table of the Order for Enforcement of the
Trademark Act, (ii) the content and nature of the goods or services specified
as falling within the relevant class in the Appended Table of the Ordinance for
Enforcement of the Trademark Act, (iii) the description of the goods or
services as indicated in the explanatory notes attached to the list of classes
which constitute part of the international classification, and (iv) the
standards for determining identicalness for each similar group under the
Examination Guidelines for Similar Good and Services.
(2) The Designated Service can be construed to refer to "provision of
information concerning sales of goods," specified in Class 35(iii) of the
Appended Table of the Ordinance for Enforcement of the Trademark Act which had
been in force at the time of the application for the Trademark Registration
(prior to the revision by Ordinance of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and
Industry No. 202 of 2001; hereinafter referred to as the "Appended Table
of the Ordinance"). Accordingly, from the viewpoint explained in (1)
above, we examine the meaning of the phrase "provision of information
concerning sales of goods," specified in Class 35(iii) of the Appended
Table of the Ordinance.
Class 35 of the Appended Table of the Order is under the heading of
"advertising, business management or administration, and office
functions." In light of the content and nature of the services specified
in Class 35 of the Appended Table of the Ordinance as falling within this class,
as well as the facts that [i] the explanatory notes attached to the list of
classes which constituted part of the international classification applicable
at the time of the application for the Trademark Registration (Seventh Edition
of the Nice Classification) provide that Class 35 includes "mainly
services rendered by persons or organizations principally with the object of
help in the working or management of a commercial undertaking, or help in the
management of the business affairs or commercial functions of an industrial or
commercial enterprise," and that [ii] in subclass (iii) among subclasses
of services (i) through (xi) included in Class 35 of the Appended Table of the
Ordinance, "provision of information on sales of goods" is listed
together with "business analysis and guidance," "marketing
research" and "business management of hotels," and is also
specified in the Examination Guidelines for Similar Goods and Services as
falling within the same group of similar goods or services, the phrase
"provision of information concerning sales of goods" can be regarded
as referring to a service characterized by the nature of helping a commercial
enterprise in its management or administration, as other services in the same
subclass, namely "business analysis and guidance," "marketing
research," and "business management of hotels" are regarded as
such. Also taking into consideration the wording of the phrase, it is
appropriate to construe that the phrase "provision of information
concerning sales of goods," specified in Class 35(iii) of the Appended
Table of the Ordinance, refers to the service of providing a commercial
enterprise with information for helping its management or administration.
Assuming so, an activity to provide a commercial enterprise with information
concerning the sales records of goods or information concerning statistical
analysis of sales of goods can be regarded as constituting this particular
service, and therefore an activity to present goods to consumers, the end users
of the goods, cannot be regarded as "provision of information concerning
sales of goods."
(3) The explanatory notes attached to the list of classes which constituted
part of the international classification applicable at the time of the
application for the Trademark Registration were revised by additionally
including in Class 35 such service as "bringing together, for the benefit
of others, of a variety of goods (excluding the transport thereof), enabling
customers to conveniently view and purchase those goods" (revision effective
as of January 1, 1997). Subsequently, under Act No. 55 of 2006, "retail
services and wholesale services, namely, the provision of benefits for
customers conducted in the course of retail and wholesale business" were
included in the scope of services in connection with which a trademark is to be
used (Article 2, paragraph (2) of the Trademark Act). Following this, Class 35
of the Appended Table of the Order for Enforcement of the Trademark Act has
been revised by including therein retail services and wholesale services,
namely, the provision of benefits for customers conducted in the course of
retail and wholesale business, and Class 35 of the Appended Table of the
Ordinance for Enforcement of the Trademark Act has also been revised so as to
recognize the services of making arrangements for the benefit of consumers, the
end users of goods, such as facilitating their choice of goods upon waiting on
them or by providing them with catalogues, as the services in connection with
which a trademark is to be used. However, these legal revisions had not yet
been made by the time of the application for the Trademark Registration, so
even in consideration of the abovementioned legislative developments, there is
no room to consider that at the time of the application for the Trademark
Registration, the service of making such arrangements for the benefit of
consumers was included in the scope of "provision of information
concerning sales of goods," which had been listed in Class 35(iii) of the
Appended Table of the Ordinance since before the abovementioned legal revisions
were made.
(4) Next, we look at the Acts of Indication. According to the facts mentioned
above, the Acts of Indication were nothing more than such acts wherein the
appellee, in the course of presenting on its website the game software programs
that it had developed, also presented to consumers on said website the Goods
that were sold by other companies. These kinds of acts cannot be regarded as
providing a commercial enterprise with information for helping its management
or administration. Consequently, the Acts of Indication cannot be the proof to
show that the appellee had used the Trademark in connection with the Designated
Service.
5. The determination of the court of prior instance contains violation of laws
and regulations that apparently affects the judgment in that it found an error
in the Trial Decision for reasons that go against this court's reasoning. The
appeal counsels' arguments are well-grounded, and the judgment in prior
instance should inevitably be quashed. Since there is no such proof that the
appellee or any holder of the exclusive or non-exclusive right to use had used
the Trademark in connection with any of the Subject Services, nor can we find
any just cause for their non-use of the Trademark, there is nothing illegal in
the Trial Decision that rescinded the Trademark Registration pertaining to the
Subject Services. Hence, the appellee's claim to seek the revocation of the
Trial Decision is groundless and therefore should be dismissed.
Therefore, the judgment has been rendered in the form of the main text by the
unanimous consent of the Justices.
(This translation is
provisional and subject to revision.)