Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 568South Africa
Lee Riders Motorcycle Club v Jacobs and Another (027612) [2024] ZAGPPHC 568 (17 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lee Riders Motorcycle Club v Jacobs and Another (027612) [2024] ZAGPPHC 568 (17 May 2024)
Lee Riders Motorcycle Club v Jacobs and Another (027612) [2024] ZAGPPHC 568 (17 May 2024)
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FLYNOTES:
INTELLECTUAL – Trade mark –
Motorcycle
club
–
Voluntary
association the proprietor of "Lee Riders" word mark and
device mark – Former member applying to
register the mark –
Contending that non-profit company was proprietor – No bona
fide claim – Use of same
name and logo by two different
clubs in same recreational field would deceive and cause confusion
– Disgruntled members
who left club cannot claim
proprietorship in the trade marks –
Trade Marks Act 194 of
1993
,
ss 10(3)
,
10
(12),
10
(13) and
10
(16).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number: 027612
Date of hearing: 30
April 2024
Date delivered: 17 May
2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 17 MAY 2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter of:
LEE RIDERS MOTORCYCLE
CLUB
Applicant
and
NIGEL
JACOBS
First Respondent
REGISTRAR OF TRADE
MARKS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
The applicant alleges that it is the common law
proprietor of the "Lee Riders" word mark and the Lee Riders
device mark
in class 41, in respect of sporting and cultural
activities. The applicant is a voluntary association which was
established in
1984, and which aims to advance the interests of its
members, all of whom are motor cycle enthusiasts. The applicant (also
referred
to herein as "the club") says that it has used the
word mark widely since 1984, and the device marks since 2000, when
it
was modernized from its previous version.
[2]
The first respondent is an erstwhile member of the
applicant, having resigned in 2015, together with a number of other
members.
On 13 May 2015, having relinquished his membership of the
applicant, the first respondent filed a trade mark application in
respect
of the Lee Riders logo on 13 May 2015. The applicant applied
to register the trade mark on 20 November 2015. On 11 October 2019
the device mark was accepted for purposes of proceeding to
registration.
It was advertised for
purposes of opposition on 30 October 2019.
[3]
The three months' period for opposition to the
application provided for in section 21 of the Trade Marks Act, 194 of
1993 ("the
Act") expired on 30 January 2020. Applicant had
by then terminated the services of its erstwhile attorney, and the
deponent
personally applied for an extension of the opposition term.
The second respondent granted an extension until 30 April 2020. For
various reasons, including the Covid 19 shutdown, the applicant was
unable to file its opposition by 30 April 2020, and on 4 May
2020 the
applicant sought a further extension. The first respondent opposed
the application for a further extension, and consequently,
on
22 April 2021 the second respondent transferred the matter to this
Court in terms of the provisions of section 59 (2) of the
Trade Marks
Act, 194 of 1993 ("the Act").
[4]
The applicant now seeks an order granting an
extension of time to oppose the first respondent's trade mark
application. It also
seeks an order that the second respondent be
directed to refuse the first respondent's trade mark application,
alternatively, that
the second respondent be directed to withdraw the
acceptance of the trade mark application in terms of section 29 (1)
of the Act,
further alternatively, that the second respondent be
directed to cancel the trade mark application in terms of section 24
(1) of
the Act. In a further alternative to the above relief, the
applicant seeks an order that the second respondent be directed to
register
the trade mark application, and that the applicant be
granted leave to approach the Court on supplemented papers to seek
the cancellation
of the trade mark registration in first respondent's
name. The first respondent opposes the relief sought. The second
respondent
abides by the Court's finding.
[5]
It is
common cause that the applicant was established in 1984, and that its
first constitution was adopted in 1990. It has subsequently
been
updated from time to time. It is also not controversial that the
applicant has used the word mark "Lee Riders" since
inception, nor that it has used the device mark since 2000. The first
respondent
also
does not deny that the device mark that it seeks to register is to
all intents and purposes identical to the device mark that
the
applicant has used since 2000. The first respondent does not deny
that the applicant has established a reputation in respect
of the
trade mark that he now seeks to register. In
Reckitt
&
Colman
Products Ltd v Borden Inc and Others
[1]
the
test a to the proprietorship of a mark was formulated as follows:
"First, he must
establish a goodwill or reputation attached to the goods or services
which he supplies in the mind of the purchasing
public by association
with the identifying 'get-up' .... Such that the get-up is recognized
by the public as distinctive specifically
of the plaintiff’s
goods or services."
[6]
There is no real attack to the proposition that
the applicant has established a reputation in respect of the word and
device marks,
that its name and logo are identified with it,
and that it has been so for a number of years. The
first respondent's case is that it is in fact the Lee Riders NPC, a
non-profit
company that was established in 2015 that is the
proprietor of the marks. In order to examine this proposition, it is
necessary
to briefly set out the history of
the club.
[7]
The club was established in 1984 by approximately
10 members. There is some disagreement as to the author of the first
constitution,
but nothing turns on this issue. There is also
disagreement as to the designer of the logo, but again, this is not a
live issue.
The fact is that the name was adopted, and the logo was
designed,
for use by the applicant.
[8]
During 2015 the first respondent and three other
persons resigned as members of the club. The first respondent then
registered a
new entity, the Lee Riders NPC, as a non-profit company
("the NPC"). On 13 May 2015 the first respondent applied to
the
second respondent for the registration of the device mark in his
own name. He says that he did so because it
was
convenient, and it had been so agreed with the members of the NPC,
but that
"it
would
be registered
as
the
trade mark of the LEE Riders MCC
as a
Non-profit Company".
[9]
The first respondent contends that the members who
left the club are the proprietors
of the
trade marks. That cannot be correct.
There
is no dispute that the applicant still exists as a voluntary
association. The association has separate legal standing from
its
members. It has at all times been the proprietor
of
the trade marks, and there can be no basis in law whereby the
disgruntled members who, having left the club, can claim
proprietorship
in the trade marks.
[10]
It is,
in
any
event, not disputed that the first respondent personally has no claim
to the trade marks. The application for the registration
of the trade
marks in his name is thus struck by the provisions of section 10 (3)
of the Act, as being marks in respect of which
the first respondent
has no bona fide claim to proprietorship. That is really the end of
the case. However, even if there were
some way by which the NPC were
able to obtain registration of the trade marks through the first
respondent (which there is not),
section 10 (3) is fatal to its
application for registration. The NPC is an entity separate from its
members, and it is also a different
entity to the applicant. It has
no claim to proprietorship in the trade marks.
[11]
The
applicant also relies on the provisions of section 10 (7) of the Act,
alleging that the application for registration was made
mala fide.
Wiechers
[2]
defines 'mala fides'
as having knowledge of the result of a proposed action, and knowing
that its result would be unacceptable
to another, with knowledge,
directly or indirectly, that the results would not be in accordance
with the law. The phrase has also
been used adverbially to mean
''fraudulent" or "malicious". It may be that the first
respondent and his cohorts
were ill advised in the matter, and that
they truly believed that they could appropriate the trade marks for
the NPC. On that basis
I would hesitate to describe their actions as
having
been motivated by mala fides.
[12]
However, the applicant's reliance on section 10
(12) and 10 (13)
of the Act is, in my view
correct. It provides that a trade mark that is inherently deceptive,
or where its use may be likely to
deceive or cause confusion, may not
be registered. There can be no doubt that the use of the same name
and logo by two different
clubs in the same recreational field would
deceive and cause confusion. Also, in my view, the applicant's
reliance on section 10
(16) is correct. It prohibits the registration
of a mark that is the subject of an earlier application,
if
the registration of that mark is contrary to the existing rights of a
person making a later application for that mark.
[13]
The
applicant's
opposition
to
the
application
was
not
unduly delayed. It
sought, and was granted an extension to 30 April 2020, which was a
period at the height
of
the Covid 19 pandemic,
when
most
of the world's commerce and administration was shut down. The
application for a further extension came four days after the
last day
for opposition, and seems to me to have been justified.
[14]
Therefore, I intend granting the main order
sought. The applicant's legal representatives have acted pro bono,
and only seek an
order for payment of disbursements.
[15]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
[15.1] The applicant's
extension application is granted;
[15.2]
The
Registrar of Trade
Marks is directed to refuse trade mark
application no. 2015/12300 Lee Riders Logo in class 41 in the name of
Nigel Jacobs in terms
of section 21, read with sections 10 (3), 10
(4), 10 (12), 10 (13) and 10 (16) if
the
Trade Marks Act,
1993.
[15.3] The respondent
shall pay the disbursements incurred by the applicant's legal
representatives in respect of the extension
application and this
application.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE
OF
THE
HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR
THE
APPLICANT:
Adv.
R
M
Robinson
SC
Adv.
F W Landman
ATTORNEY
FOR
THE
APPLICANT:
Adams
& Adams
COUNSEL
FOR
THE
FIRST
RESPONDENT:
Adv.
M
Thorne
ATTORNEY
FOR FIRST RESPONDENT:
Dixie-September
Attorneys
DATE
HEARD:
30
April 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
17
May 2024
[1]
[1990] UKHL 12
;
[1990]
RPC 341
(HL);
[1990] 1 ALL ER 873
at 880
[2]
Wiechers
M, Administratiefreg, Butterworths, Durban 1973 p 265
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