As Chinese companies continue to grow and expand overseas, there has been a growing appetite to protect their brands. Over the years China has steadily climbed up the rankings of the number of EUTM applications originating from a given country, and in 2019 it came third with over 15,000 applications. As of July 2020 it was second only to Germany 1. A significant number of those applications are for or contain Chinese characters. As a rough measure, using the relevant Vienna code, there are currently nearly 13,000 EUTMs (live and dead) containing Chinese or Japanese characters . An important question for owners is: how are such marks viewed and protected at the EUIPO?
As a starting point, the EUIPO considers ‘letters from non-EU alphabets’ as figurative marks. In fact, the Chinese mark
This has very important implications for how a Chinese character mark would be assessed in any contentious proceedings before the EUIPO. In particular, figurative marks generally have a limited scope of protection and their analysis would predominantly focus on their visual impression. The characterisation of Chinese characters as figurative marks largely reflects the fact that Chinese writing is considered illegible to the general public in the EU and therefore it is not possible to conduct a phonetic or conceptual assessment. The full repercussions of this and the difficulties it poses to owners of Chinese character marks can be seen in the recent cases between the Inner Mongolia Yili Industrial Group Co., Ltd (‘Inner Mongolia Yili’) and the individual Wen Li.
In 2018 Wen Li filed an EUTM application for the mark
Having failed in its opposition, Inner Mongolia Yili turned to the prospect of an application for a declaration of invalidity of the now registered
Inner Mongolia Yili’s travails neatly illustrate the relatively narrow scope of protection afforded to Chinese character marks at the EUIPO. It would not seem to require much effort on the part of an unscrupulous third party to create a mark deemed sufficiently dissimilar; the addition of other elements, such as Latin character words or even additional Chinese characters, could be enough. Invalidation on the basis of bad faith is always a possibility but it is a ground that is very much dependent on the specific facts and circumstances of a given case, so that success is never assured and a large amount of time and effort is needed in preparing the evidence and arguments to mount the best possible case.
Obtaining an EUTM registration for Chinese character marks may still have some benefits, in serving as a deterrence and as a safeguard against third parties using or registering the same or a very similar mark. Nevertheless, owners need to be aware of the limitations. It is possible the position could evolve in the longer term: the EUIPO stance is based on the fact that the Chinese community is not considered a substantial part of the EU relevant public and EU consumers cannot read or understand Chinese characters. This could slowly change over time as the EU Chinese population grows and Chinese is increasingly taught at schools. In the meantime owners should be prepared to consider all options when enforcing their rights and to keep in mind the possibility of bad faith as a ground of invalidity.
1 EUIPO Statistics in European Union Trade Marks: 1996-01 to 2020-07 Evolution, sections 2.4-2.5
2 EUIPO Trade mark and Design Guidelines, Part B Examination 4 Case R 2395/2016-4 Inner Mongolia Yili Industrial Group Co., Ltd. v Wen Li