Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 30South Africa
Gruma S.A.B De C.V. v Grupo Bimbo S.A.B De C.V. and Another (2023-133078) [2025] ZAGPPHC 30 (22 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 January 2025
Headnotes
in Victoria’s Secret[4] that it follows that the fact that a trade mark is registered and has been used, even extensively used by one person in a foreign country, does not in itself constitute a bar to its adoption and registration by some other person in South Africa.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Gruma S.A.B De C.V. v Grupo Bimbo S.A.B De C.V. and Another (2023-133078) [2025] ZAGPPHC 30 (22 January 2025)
Gruma S.A.B De C.V. v Grupo Bimbo S.A.B De C.V. and Another (2023-133078) [2025] ZAGPPHC 30 (22 January 2025)
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sino date 22 January 2025
FLYNOTES:
INTELLECTUAL – Trade mark –
Interested
person
–
Foreign
company seeking to object to trade mark application –
Competing producers of cracker snack foods – Direct
trade
competitors – Principle of territoriality applies –
Restricts legal operation and effect of trade mark
to registered
territory – Failed to establish that it has a definite,
genuine and present intention of becoming a trade
rival of
respondent in South Africa – Lacks necessary locus standi –
Application dismissed –
Trade Marks Act 194 of 1993
,
s 21.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 2023-133078
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
22 January 2025
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
GRUMA
S.A.B. DE C.V.
Applicant
and
GRUPO
BIMBO S.A.B. DE C.V.
First Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Gruma S.A.B. de C.V. (“Gruma”),
opposes the registration and seeks an order refusing trade mark
application
no. 2020/03197 CORN CRACKER SHAPE under class (“the
application”) 30 in the name of the first respondent, Grupo
Bimbo
S.A.B. de C.V. (“Grupo Bimbo”) on the grounds of
sections 9
,
10
(1),
10
(2)(a),
10
(2)(b),
10
(4),
10
(5) and/or 10(11) of
the Trade Marks Act 194 of 1993 (“the TMA”). Gruma
furthermore seeks that the court directs the
second respondent, the
Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (“the CIPC”),
to remove the application from
the register.
[2]
The CIPC waived the right to be joined in the
proceedings, abides by the court’s decision, consents to and
undertakes to give
effect to any order made by the court.
Locus standi
[3]
The first question to be considered is whether
Gruma established that it is an “interested person” to
object to the
trade mark application as required in section 21 of the
TMA.
Parties
[4]
Gruma is a company that exists under the laws of
Mexico. Gruma is the parent company of the Gruma Group of companies.
Azteca Milling
is a limited partnership under the laws of the State
of Texas, United States of America, and a member of the Gruma Group
of companies.
Azteca Milling manufactures and distributes flour and
other products made from corn, including corn-based snacks, such as
crackers.
[5]
Gruma claims to be one of the world’s
leading producers of corn-based foods (including tortillas, corn
crackers, corn flour,
and wheat flour). Gruma avers that, since 2021,
almost a quarter of all tortillas sold throughout the world are
produced by it
and members of the Gruma group of companies.
[6]
Grupo Bimbo is the trade mark applicant and cited
as the first respondent in these proceedings. Grupo Bimbo
manufactures and distributes
bakery products, including breads,
crackers, cookies, pies, pastries, and sweet rolls. Grupo Bimbo,
through its various divisions,
manufactures and distributes the
product Sanissimo Salmas Oven Baked Corn Crackers (“SSO-cracker”),
the product relevant
to the trade mark application.
Context
[7]
Gruma and Grupo Bimbo are direct trade
competitors. One of the products sold by Gruma, its Mission Planitas
product, is a product
with an almost identical cracker shape,
pattern, and ornamentation to that of Grupo Bimbo’s
SSO-cracker. Gruma alleged that
Grupo Bimbo is seeking to monopolise
the particular shape, pattern, and ornamentation of a product under
the trademark application
and that Gruma wishes to use the same
similar shape, pattern, and ornamentation.
[8]
Gruma pointed out that although Grupo Bimbo
succeeded in having a trade mark registered in Mexico, its
applications to register
similar trade marks in Spain, and Portugal
failed.
[9]
In answer, Grupo Bimbo, among others, challenged
Gruma’s
locus standi
to
object to the trade mark application. Grupo Bimbo stated:
‘
I
note that the Deponent claims that the Applicant is already using an
“almost identical” shape, pattern, and ornamentation
in
respect of its crackers.
The Deponent is, however,
careful not to furnish any evidence that the Applicant actually
does
so in South Africa
and when such alleged use commenced in South
Africa. The Respondent denies that it does. Such alleged use
outside
of South Africa
is, I am advised irrelevant.’ [My emphasis]
[10]
In reply, Gruma contended that the question of
whether it is distributing its Mission Planitas product in South
Africa is irrelevant
for purposes of these opposition proceedings.
The opposition is not based on its prior rights or use of the product
in South Africa.
Gruma admits that it has not, thus far, distributed
its Mission Planitas product in South Africa and states that it did
not claim
in the founding papers that the product is available in
South Africa.
[11]
Gruma claims that it:
‘
has
a product in the market (not necessarily the South African market)
which has the identical shape, pattern and/or ornamentation
to the
offending application. The Opponent reasonably wishes to distribute
this product (bearing the identical shape, pattern and/or
ornamentation to the offending application) in South Africa in the
future.’
The parties’
contentions
[12]
Gruma
submits that the denial of it being an ‘interested person’
is devoid of all merit. Gruma contends that it is common
cause that
the parties are trade competitors and that it has used and wants to
use a product bearing a similar shape, pattern,
and ornamentation.
Gruma relies on
Novartis
AG v Cipla Medpro (Pty) Ltd
[1]
and
submits that it can be accepted, without dispute, that a trade rival
is an interested person as envisaged by the TMA.
[13]
Grupo
Bimbo relies on
Etraction
(Pty) Ltd v Tyrecor (Pty) Ltd
[2]
to
submit that a trade mark is a ‘purely territorial concept’.
Grupo Bimbo submits there is no evidence that the parties
are trade
competitors in South Africa. The fact that they may be competitors
elsewhere, Grupo Bimbo submits, is irrelevant for
these proceedings.
Discussion re: Gruma’s
locus standi
[14]
Grupo
Bimbo is correct in its submission that the principle of
territoriality applies in trade mark law. The principle restricts
the
legal operation and effect of a trade mark to the territory for which
it is to be registered.
[3]
The
Appellate Division, as it was known then, held in
Victoria’s
Secret
[4]
that
it follows that the fact that a trade mark is registered and has been
used, even extensively used by one person in a foreign
country, does
not in itself constitute a bar to its adoption and registration by
some other person in South Africa.
[15]
While
the mere fact that a trade mark is registered in a foreign
jurisdiction does not, without more, entitle its holder to similar
protection or registration in other jurisdictions, it does not
automatically exclude a person from a foreign jurisdiction from
asserting that it is an ‘interested person’ in terms of
the TMA. The question of whether a party is an ‘interested
person’ with the necessary standing to object against the
registration of a trade mark, is a question that can only be
determined
in the factual context of each individual matter.
[5]
[16]
An
applicant opposing the registration of a mark must first show that it
is an ‘interested person.’ It has long been
held that the
term ‘interested person’ is ‘a phrase of great
amplitude’ but that it has its limits.
[6]
An applicant must establish that it has a ‘genuine and
legitimate competitive interest in the trade to which the allegedly
offending mark relates, and hence in the outcome of the
proceedings’.
[7]
I agree
with the proposition that a person with a substantial, real, and
direct interest in the mark itself or in the subject matter
of an
opposition would qualify as an ‘interested person’.
[8]
An applicant must prove that on some or other ground(s) it has a
particular interest, a mere general interest will not do.
[9]
[17]
In
determining the issue, it is useful to have regard to principles that
were laid down in establishing the meaning of ‘any
person
aggrieved’ as it applied previously.
[10]
Webster and Page,
[11]
highlighted the following relevant principles extracted from case
law:
i.
Wherever a trader by means of his trade mark narrows the field into
which a competitor may
enter or may reasonably be expected to enter
in the future, the competitor is a person aggrieved;
ii.
A man in the same trade … and who desires to deal in the
article in question
is
prima facie
aggrieved;
iii.
A trading interest, which consists not of an actual trade but a
genuine intention to trade,
is sufficient to establish that a trader
is aggrieved.
[18]
In casu
, Gruma
competes with Grupo Bimbo in several jurisdictions, but not in
South-Africa. Its trading interest in this matter thus consists
not
of actual trade, but an alleged intention to trade its product in
South Africa. I am alive to Gruma’s contention that
it does not
oppose the registration of the mark on the basis of prior rights or
use. However, Gruma will only have standing in
these proceedings as
an ‘interested person’ if it succeeds in making out a
case that it has a substantial interest
in the mark.
[19]
An interest in a matter that renders a party an
interested person can be established in different ways depending on
the facts of
the particular matter.
In
casu
reliance is placed on the parties
being trade rivals, and the possible effect that the registration of
the trade mark might have
on Gruma if it decides in future to expand
its business to South Africa.
[20]
While the parties might be trade rivals in other
jurisdictions, Gruma is, at most, a potential trade rival of Grupo
Bimbo in South
Africa. It is, however, not sufficient to regard
oneself theoretically as a potential trade rival. To have standing on
the basis
that it is a potential trade rival, Gruma must establish at
least a reasonable possibility that it is a potential trade rival in
the sense of:
‘
having
at the time of registration some definite and present intention to
deal in certain goods or description of goods, and not
a mere general
intention of extending his business at some future time to anything
which he may think desirable.’
[12]
[21]
Gruma did not explain why it had not extended its
business to South Africa to date. Neither did it provide a proposed
timeline for
any foreseen or planned entry into the South African
market. Gruma made a bold averment in its replying affidavit but did
not substantiate
it with facts. The remark made in passing in the
replying affidavit that Gruma reasonably wishes to distribute its
product in South
Africa in the future, is not sufficient to establish
that a reasonable possibility existed that Gruma had and has the
intention
of expanding its business to South Africa in the foreseen
future.
[22]
No
facts or detailed information was provided underpinning this general
and vague belated statement of intent. Gruma failed to establish
that
it has a definite, genuine, and present intention of becoming a trade
rival of Grupo Bimbo in South Africa. In this regard,
Gruma’s
position is distinguishable from the applicant in
Danco
Clothing (Pty) Ltd,
[13]
and
the application stands to be dismissed on the basis that Gruma lacks
the necessary
locus
standi
.
Costs
[23]
As for costs, the general principle is that costs
follow success. Having considered the complexity of the issues, it is
justified
that costs be costs on Scale B.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The applicant’s opposition is dismissed with costs on scale
B.
E van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For the applicant:
Adv. P. Cirone
Instructed by:
Spoor & Fisher
For the respondent:
Adv. K Iles
Instructed by:
Hahn & Hahn
Date of the
hearing:
18 November 2024
Date of judgment:
22 January 2025
[1]
2016
JDR 0930 (GP) at para [32].
[2]
2015
BIP 253 (SCA) at para [16]. See also
P
Lorillard Co v Rembrandt Tobacco Co (Overseas) Ltd
1967
(4) SA 353
(T) at 365G-H.
[3]
Victoria’s
Secrets Inc v Edgars Stores Ltd
1994
(3) SA 739 (A).
[4]
Supra.
[5]
See
Nieuwoudt
v The Master
1988
(4) SA 513 (A) 522D
[6]
Ex
Parte Stubbs: In re Wit Extensions Ltd
1982
(1) SA 526
(W) 529H.
[7]
Danco
Clothing (Pty) Ltd v Nu-Care Marketing and Sales Promotions (Pty)
and Another
[1991] ZASCA 121
;
1991
(4) SA 850
(AD) 855C.
[8]
Webster and Page
South
African Law of Trade Marks’
[Issue
19] 2-14.
[9]
Danico
Clothing (Pty) Ltd
,
supra.
[10]
South
African Football Association v Stanton Woodrush (Pty) Ltd
2002
(2) SA 236 (T) 239.
[11]
Webster
and Page, supra,
13-6.
[12]
J
Batt and Company
[1898]
15 RPC 534
(CA) at 538, cited with approval in
Ritz
Hotel
Ltd
v Charles of the Ritz Ltd and
Another
1988 (3) SA 290
(A) at 310C.
[13]
Supra.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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