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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 130
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## 3rd Level Marketing and Media Group (Pty) Ltd v South African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd (47204/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 130; [2022] HIPR 187 (GP) (2 March 2022)
3rd Level Marketing and Media Group (Pty) Ltd v South African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd (47204/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 130; [2022] HIPR 187 (GP) (2 March 2022)
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sino date 2 March 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 47204/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
02/03/2022
In
the matter between:
3
RD
LEVEL MARKETING AND
MEDIA
APPLICANT
GROUP
(PTY) LTD
AND
SOUTHAFRICAN
BROADCASTING
RESPONDENT
CORPORATION
LTD
JUDGMENT
This Judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ and
or parties representatives by email and by
being uploaded to
CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed on February
2022.
BAQWA
J:
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant seeks the removal of the
Trademarks in terms of section 27(1), to
10 (3)
and 10 (7) of the Trademarks Act,194 of 1993 (“The Act”).
[2]
The applicant has counched the relief
sought in the following terms
2.1
Removal of the Tshivenda Music Awards trademark in classes 9 and 41;
2.2
Removal of TSHIMA trademark in class 9, 25, 38, and 41;
2.3
Costs of the application;
[3]
The applicant launched this application at
the Tribunal of the Registrar of Trade
Marks on 6
March 2020 for
inter alia,
the rectification of the Register of Trade
Marks,
by way of expungement of the registrations of the mark in the classes
mentioned above.
[4]
The Registrar referred the application to
the High Court for hearing in terms of
the
provisions of section 59 of the of the Act.
[5]
Section 27 (1) of the Act provides:
“
Subject
to the provisions of section 70 (2), a registered Trademark may, on
application to the court, or, at the option of the applicant
and
subject to the provisions of section 59 and in the prescribed manner,
to the registrar by any interested person, be removed
from the
register in respect of which it is registered, on the ground either.
a)
that the Trademark was registered without any bona fide
intention of the applicant for registration that it should be used in
relation
to those goods or services by him or any person permitted to
use the trademark as contemplated by section 38, and that there has
in fact been no bona fide use of the trademark in relation to those
goods or services by any proprietor thereof or any person so
permitted for the time being up to the date three months before the
date of the application”.
[6]
Section 10 (3), 10 (4) and 10 (7) provides
as follows:
“
The
following marks shall not be registered as trademarks or, if
registered, shall, subject to the provisions of section 3 and 7,
be
liable to be removed from the register:
(3)
a trademark in relation to which the applicant for registration has
no bona fide claim to proprietorship;
(4)
a mark in relation to which the applicant for registration has no
bona fide intention of using it as a trademark, either himself
or
through any person permitted or to be permitted by him to use the
mark as contemplated by section 38;
(7)
a mark the application for registration of which was made mala fide”.
[7]
Section 38(1 and (2) of the Act provide:
“
Where
a registered trademark is used by a person other than the proprietor
thereof with the licence of the proprietor, such use
shall be deemed
to be permitted use for the purpose of subsection (2).
(2)
The permitted use of a trademark referred to in subsection (1) shall
be deemed to be used by the proprietor and shall
not be deemed to be
used by a person other than the proprietor for the purposes of
section 27 or for any other purpose for which
such use is material
under this Act or at Common Law”.
B.
BACKGROUND
[8]
The background to this application is a
contested terrain as the parties are not in
agreement
regarding the events proceeding the application for registration.
[9]
In its founding affidavit the applicant
states that prior to February 2012, it noticed
that
there were no awards for Vhavenda people and Tshivenda music.
[10]
The applicant goes on to state that during
or about February 2012, the applicant
met with
the respondent’s Group Executive Mr Lesley Ntloko, and the
respondent’s General Manager of Public Broadcasting
Stations
Portfolio, Mr Zolisile Mapipa, “
to
negotiate with the SABC to have the Awards broadcasted and advertised
on any of the SABC’s broadcasting platforms in order
for
The Awards to gain exposure, support and airtime”. The
exact date of the meeting and the detail of what was discussed
is not
clear
.
[11]
Subsequent to this meeting, the applicant
was introduced to the Marketing
Manager of
Phalaphala FM radio station with whom he met to pitch the
‘
Tshivenda
Music Awards’ concept.
[12]
Subsequently, the applicant continues to
say, in August 2012, the applicant and
respondent
entered into a trade exchange agreement.
[13]
The applicant alleges that the terms of the
agreement were that the applicant
would provide
the station with Marketing rights, branding rights, public relations
services and media services to the value of R880 000
and, in
exchange, the respondent and the station would provide the applicant
with airtime to the value of R100 000 which would
be used
exclusively to promote the Station’s involvement with the
Awards.
[14]
The applicant states, further, that it
wanted to broadcast and gain media
coverage of
the Awards.
[15]
The Awards were held on 17 November 2012.
[16]
The applicant also states that in addition
to referring to the event as Tshivenda
Music
Awards it also used the abbreviation “TSHIMA” in
reference to the same event.
[17]
The applicant also contends that prior to
its meetings with executives at the
SABC and
representatives of the Station, the respondent was not using the
trademarks and only came to know about the Awards after
its presentation to them.
[18]
Responding to the background as set out by
the applicant, the respondent,
which is the South
African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd which operates 19
radio
stations and five television channels which provide broadcasting
services to the South African Society as part of its mandate,
the
respondent states that it regularly hosts awards shows, which awards
shows are broadcast via its
television and radio
channels.
[19]
The respondent protects the intellectual
property associated with these awards
shows by
registering the relevant trade marks for the relevant goods and
services. It currently has 15 trademark registrations relating
to
awards shows in addition to the registrations in issue. The
respondent’s earliest current Trade Mark registration is for
the mark, SABC PEOPLES CHOICE ADVERTISING AWARDS, registered in class
35 on 18 March 2004.
[20]
During 2011 the Station noticed that many
Tshivenda –language musicians were
not
enjoying the same exposure and success as other musicians in the
broader South Africa music industry. The respondent identified
that the majority of Tshivenda-language musicians were not recognised
by the South African Music Awards as they were either not
effectively
managed and were not being signed by record music labels. The
Station then proposed hosting an awards event for
the
Tshivenda-language music and the respondent states that this is
referred to
and confirmed in the Strategic
Implementation Plan for 2012, a document
created
on 16 February 2011 and completed on 10 November 2011 (“The
Strategic Plan”). The plan proposed a budget for
the Awards of R150 000 and
funding by means
of trade exchange agreements. The plan also indicates that
the
station intended to host the Awards in November and made numerous
references to the Tshivenda Music Awards.
[21]
Respondent states that during or around
November 2011, after completion of
the plan but
prior to any meeting with the applicant, the station originated the
trade mark TSHIMA.
C.
OBJECTION IN LIMINE
[22]
At the commencement of these proceedings
the parties addressed me regarding
the
objection
in limine
raised by the respondent, namely,
the applicant does not have the requisite
locus
standi
to bring the
application.
[23]
It is legally required for an applicant to
establish that it is an “interested person”
for
rectification of the Trade Mark registered under section 24,26, and
27 of the
Act.
[24]
The phrase “interested person”
replaces what was previously referred to as “any
person
aggrieved” in the previous Act, the Trade Marks Act 62 of 1963
(“The 1963 Act”).
[25]
In
Ritz
Hotel Ltd v Charles of the Ritz and Another
[1]
(“Ritz
Hotel”) persons
interested
were described as
25.1
All persons who are in same way or other substantially interested in
having the mark removed from the register; including all
persons who
would be substantially damaged if the marked remained, and all trade
rivals over whom an advantage was gained by a
rival trader who was
getting the benefit of a registered trade mark to which he was not
entitled.
[2]
25.2
All persons who have a genuine and legitimate competitive interest in
the trade to which the offending market relates. Danco
Clothing Pty
Ltd v Nu-Care marketing Sales and Promotions Pty Ltd and Another
[3]
(“ Danco Clothing.”) A trading interest which consists
not of an actual trade but a genuine intention to trade, is
sufficient to establish that a trader is interested.
[4]
[26]
There is an intense contestation between
the applicant and the respondent
regarding the
attendance of meetings and why certain things were done. For
example, the applicant states that the respondent
fails to
provide any justifiable reasons why Phalaphala FM having been
established in 1965 only noticed in 2011 “that many
Tshivenda
language musicians were not enjoying the same exposure and success”.
The applicant contends that the respondent
provides no details as to
why and exactly when there was a sudden realisation after so many
years that this was the case.
[27]
The respondent on the other hand finds it
strange that the applicant noticed the
absence of
awards for Vhavenda people and Tshivenda music as this did not fall
within its business.
[28]
In the founding affidavit the
applicant avers that it creates and implements
marketing
strategies for its own clients and provides planning,
conceptualisation and implementation of events. This, according
to
the respondent, was the service that the applicant provided to others
which made no reference to the music industry.
D.
ANALYSIS
[29]
In determining the issue of
locus
standi
of the applicant, I have had to
keep in
mind the grounds on which the applicant
bases its claim. The first one of those grounds is that the applicant
was the first to conceptualise
the “Tshivenda Music Awards”
and that a presentation was made in this regard to the respondent’s
officials.The
second ground is that the trademark as currently
registered constitutes a bar to the applicant’s attempt to
register its
own trademarks.Thirdly, the applicant claims that it has
been using the marks since 2012 without any licence from the
respondent.
Fourthly, the “Tshivenda Music Awards” and
the “TSHIMA” trademarks are incorrectly on the register
of trademarks.Lastly
the applicant is a potential rival of the
respondent.
[30]
It is trite that in motion proceedings an
applicant must make its case in its
founding
affidavit.
Ipso facto
,
it must simultaneously establish its
locus
standi
in the founding papers. What this
means in this case is that an applicant
must
specifically challenge each class of registration such as class 41,
class 9 et cetera. The applicant in this case fails to
do so.
[31]
If any class had been dealt with regarding
the different classes of
registration in
the founding papers, the applicant could potentially have established
locus standi.
Counsel
for the applicant tried to establish the challenge through
submissions from the bar regarding the classes sought to be
challenged. Such submissions cannot be used as a substitute for what
ought
to have been deposed to in the founding
affidavit.
[32]
The applicant also claims to be a potential
rival of the respondent in that it has
previously
used the marks without the permission of the respondent. Mere use is
not sufficient. An applicant must demonstrate through
evidence that
it had established a reputation such that members of the public view
those marks as emanating from the applicant.
The applicant does not
present such evidence.
[33]
The weakest link in the application and
which in my view is the most fatal to
applicant’s
potential to establish
locus standis
is
its failure to apply to register a trade mark. If it had done so, the
respondent would have been compelled to raise an objection
to the
application, and such application and opposition by the respondent
would have unequivocally established the applicant’s
locus
standi.
[34]
Significantly, despite the applicant’s
avowed interest and use of the marks, it has
failed
to formally challenge the respondent’s registered trade mark
from the year 2012 to date.
E.
CONCLUSION
[35]
Even though the applicant refers to
certain trade mark applications which it
claims
to have filed, no copies of much applications are attached and no
marks are identified as being the subject of such applications.
[36]
Absent the facts on which the applicant
relies on to establish its status as an
“
interested
person” in relation to any goods and services for which the
trademarks have been registered, the applicant
lacks the
necessary
locus standi in iudicio.
[37]
In the result I make the following
order:
The application is dismissed with costs
which costs shall include the costs of counsel.
__________________
SELBY
BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: February 2022
Date
of judgment: February 2022
Appearance
On
behalf of the Applicants
Adv X Hilita
Instructed
by
Phukubje Pierce Masithela Attorneys
Tel: 084 975 9908 / 011
290 4000
Email:
hilita@counsel.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents
Adv F Southwood SC
Instructed
by
Norton Rose Fulbright Attorneys
Tel: 082 940 1467
Email:
southwood@counsel.co.za
[1]
1988 (3) SA 290 (A).
[2]
Ritz Hotel at 308 A-B.
[3]
1991 (4) SA 850 (A).
[4]
See Ritz Hotel Supra 309 A.
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