Case Law[2023] ZASCA 70South Africa
ICollege (Pty) Ltd v Xpertease Skills Development and Mentoring CC and Another (106/2022) [2023] ZASCA 70 (24 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Trade mark – interdict to restrain infringement – use of mark closely resembling registered trade mark – both marks visually and phonetically identical – likelihood of deception or confusion within meaning of s 34(1)(a) of the Trade Marks Act 194 of 1993 – requisites for interdict established.
Judgment
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## ICollege (Pty) Ltd v Xpertease Skills Development and Mentoring CC and Another (106/2022) [2023] ZASCA 70 (24 May 2023)
ICollege (Pty) Ltd v Xpertease Skills Development and Mentoring CC and Another (106/2022) [2023] ZASCA 70 (24 May 2023)
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# THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF
# SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT
SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT
Case
no: 106/2022
# Reportable
Reportable
In
the matter between:
# ICOLLEGE
(PTY) LTD
ICOLLEGE
(PTY) LTD
# APPELLANT
APPELLANT
and
XPERTEASE
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
AND
MENTORING CC
FIRST
RESPONDENT
ZA
CENTRAL REGISTRY NPC
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
ICollege (Pty) Ltd v Xpertease
Skills Development and Mentoring CC and Another
(Case
no 106/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 70
(24 May 2023)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS,
MABINDLA-BOQWANA
and
MATOJANE
JJA
and OLSEN and UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
17
March 2023
Delivered:
24 May 2023
Summary:
Trade mark – interdict to restrain
infringement – use of mark closely resembling registered trade
mark – both
marks visually and phonetically identical –
likelihood of deception or confusion within meaning of
s 34(1)
(a)
of the
Trade Marks Act 194 of 1993
–
requisites for interdict established.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria (Basson J, sitting as court of first instance):
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The
order of the high court is set aside and replaced
with the following
order:
‘
1
The
first respondent is interdicted and restrained from infringing the
applicant’s registered iCOLLEGE trade marks by using
the
iCOLLEGE mark and/or any mark, trading style, trading name, get up
and/or dress that is confusingly and/or deceptively similar
to the
applicant’s registered iCOLLEGE trade marks.
2
The
first respondent is ordered within 14 days of the granting of this
order to instruct the second respondent to transfer ownership
of the
domain name icollege.co.za to the applicant, failing which the second
respondent is ordered to transfer ownership of the
domain name
icollege.co.za to the applicant within 14 days thereafter.
3
An
enquiry into the damages suffered by the applicant as a result of the
first respondent’s unlawful conduct is ordered to
be convened.
4
The
first respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs.’
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Schippers
and Matojane JJA (Mabindla-Boqwana JA and Olsen and Unterhalter AJJA
concurring)
[1]
The
appellant is a private Further Education and Training College
registered with the Department of Higher Education and Training.
It
provides skills-based training in international courses, and courses
accredited by the national Sector Education Training Authority.
The
appellant offers education and training at its 17 campuses
nationwide, and online at its e-learning centre.
[2]
The
appellant is the proprietor of two trade mark registrations in class
41, which it utilises in the course of trade. A striking
and dominant
feature of both marks is the word ‘iCOLLEGE’. The first
trade mark was registered on 27 August 2015 under
application number
2013/32192 in respect of, inter alia
,
education and training services.
The second mark was registered on 24 June 2019
under application number 2018/02190. These two trade marks, shown in
paragraph 9
below, are identical, save that the latter mark is a
colour version of the earlier mark and covers a wider specification
of services
in class 41. The appellant is also the registered
proprietor of the domain name ‘icollegeint.co.za’.
[3]
The
first respondent, Xpertease Skills Development and Mentoring CC (the
respondent), was incorrectly cited in the header to the
founding
papers as ‘Xcellence Skills Development CC’. Nothing
however turns on this, as the respondent did not take
issue with the
incorrect citation. The respondent also uses a
trade
mark,
the
dominant
element
of
which
is
the
word
‘iCollege’,
as
is evidenced by the depiction of its mark in
paragraph 9 below. The respondent’s mark is also accompanied in
use with the
words ‘ONLINE LEARNING’. The respondent uses
this mark in the course of trading, which is also the provision of
education
and training services. The respondent describes itself as
an internet- based business (hence the letter, ‘i’)
providing
specialised professional education (represented by the
word, ‘College’). It does not offer classroom-based
tuition
nor locally accredited qualifications. It provides e-learning
courses to consumers worldwide, and sells e-learning products and
courses to prepare customers for international and vendor-specific
information technology certification.
[4]
In
2019, the appellant applied to the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria (the high court), inter alia, for an order in
terms
of ss 34(1)
(a)
and
(c)
of the Trade Marks Act 194 of 1993 (the Act),
to interdict the first respondent from infringing the appellant’s
rights acquired
through the registration of its trade marks; and from
passing off its services as being those of the appellant. The second
respondent
did not participate in those proceedings, nor in this
appeal. The high court dismissed the application with costs. The
appeal is
with the leave of this Court.
[5]
We
were informed by counsel for the appellant that it did not persist
with the relief sought on the grounds of s 34(1)
(c)
of the Act and passing-off. Thus, the
only
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
appellant
met
the
requisites
of s 34(1)
(a)
of
the Act, for the grant of an interdict to prevent infringing use of
its trade marks by the respondent. Section 34(1)
(a)
provides:
‘
(1)
The rights acquired by registration of a trade
mark shall be infringed by –
(a)
the
unauthorized use in the course of trade in relation to goods or
services in respect of which the trade mark is registered, of
an
identical mark or of a mark so nearly resembling it as to be likely
to deceive or cause confusion; . . .’
[6]
The
respondent did not dispute that the appellant had not authorised it
to use the appellant’s trade mark. It is common ground
that the
respondent uses its iCollege trade mark in the course of trade, and
in relation to the identical services in respect of
which the
appellant’s iCOLLEGE trade mark is registered, namely
‘education and training services’. So, the only
issue for
decision by the high court was whether the respondent’s
iCollege trade mark was ‘a mark so nearly resembling’
the
appellant’s iCOLLEGE trade mark ‘as to be likely to
deceive or cause confusion’.
[7]
The
appellant claimed that the respondent’s use of its iCollege
mark is identical to the appellant’s registered trade
mark,
with the result that a substantial number of persons will be deceived
or confused into believing that there is a material
link in trade
between the respondent’s education and training services and
those offered under the appellant’s iCOLLEGE
trade mark. The
respondent contended that the marks in question are inherently
different. The answering affidavit reproduces a
passage from
PPI
Makelaars
,
[1]
and states that the services which the respondent offers ‘are
ephemeral; they are often concerned with the provision of
trade-marked products of third parties and they are not offered side
by side enabling customers to make instant comparisons, making
quality control difficult’. The answering affidavit further
states that trade marks relating to resources such as education
services are indefinite as opposed to trade marks covering goods.
[8]
In
Plascon-Evans
,
[2]
Corbett JA said that the determination of the question whether a mark
is identical, or so nearly resembles a registered mark as
to be
likely to deceive or cause confusion, involves:
‘
. . . essentially
a comparison between the marks used by the defendant and the
registered mark and, having regard to the similarities
and
differences in the two marks, an assessment of the impact which the
defendant’s mark would make upon the average type
of customer
who would be likely to purchase the kind of goods to which the marks
are applied. This notional customer must be conceived
of as a person
of average intelligence, having proper eyesight and buying with
ordinary caution. The comparison must be made with
reference to the
sense, sound and appearance of the marks. The marks must be viewed as
they would be encountered in the marketplace
and against the
background of relevant surrounding circumstances. The marks must not
only be considered side by side, but also
separately. It must be
borne in mind that the ordinary purchaser may encounter goods,
bearing the defendant’s mark, with
an imperfect recollection of
the registered mark and due allowance must be made for this. If each
of the marks contains a main
or dominant feature or idea the likely
impact made by this on the mind of the customer must be taken into
account. As it has been
put, marks are remembered rather by general
impressions or by some significant or striking feature than by a
photographic recollection
of the whole. And finally consideration
must be given to the manner in which the marks are likely to be
employed as, for example,
the use of name marks in conjunction with a
generic description of the goods.’
[9]
A
side-by-side comparison of the respondent’s iCollege mark with
that of the appellant’s iCOLLEGE trade mark reveals
that the
marks of both parties contain an identical dominant feature in
relation to sound and appearance – the word ‘iCOLLEGE’:
(the
appellant’s registered marks)
(the
respondent’s mark)
Whether
this word element is clearly pronounced or carelessly spoken, the
marks sound no different from one another. In the marketplace,
the
notional user of education and training services will encounter the
appearance of a preeminent identical word element in both
marks,
namely iCOLLEGE, regardless of whether or not there is an imperfect
recollection of the registered mark.
[10]
In
Century
City
Apartments
,
[3]
this
Court
approved
the
test
stated
in
Compass
Publishing BV
,
[4]
for
confusing similarity:
‘
The
likelihood of confusion must be appreciated globally, taking account
of all relevant factors. It must be judged through the
eyes of the
average consumer of the goods or services in question. That customer
is to be taken to be reasonably well informed
and reasonably
circumspect and observant, but he may have to rely upon an imperfect
picture or recollection of the marks. The court
should factor in the
recognition that the average consumer normally perceives a mark as a
whole and does not analyse its various
details. The visual, aural and
conceptual similarities of the marks must be assessed by reference to
the overall impressions created
by the marks bearing in mind their
distinctive and dominant components. Furthermore, if the association
between the marks causes
the public to wrongly believe that the
respective goods come from the same or economically linked
undertakings, there is a likelihood
of confusion.’
[11]
Applied
to the present case, the marks are visually and aurally, confusingly
similar. The fact that save for the letter ‘C’,
the
remaining letters in the respondent’s mark are in lowercase, in
a different font, or accompanied by the words ‘ONLINE
LEARNING’, does not detract from this. On an overall viewing of
the basic features of the marks, the main idea or general
impression
conveyed is the education services offered by iCOLLEGE – the
clearly noticeable and dominant feature of both marks.
This
impression is buttressed by the logos accompanying the dominant word
element in both marks – a graduation cap. The phrase
‘ONLINE
LEARNING’ envisages education, and on the overall impression
conveyed by the mark, is a strong indicator of
an association between
the respondent’s education services and those of the appellant.
In this regard, the high court failed
to consider the marks as
wholes, rather than the exact details of each.
[5]
It compared only the pictures in the marks.
[12]
It
follows that the submission on behalf of the respondent that the
difference between the logos used by the parties is what catches
the
eye first, not the word component, is unsound. Rather, it is the
dominant or central element of the marks in issue, namely
the word
iCOLLEGE, that is likely to make an impact on the mind of the
consumer.
[6]
This feature alone,
renders the marks phonetically and conceptually, confusingly similar
on at least two levels of comparison:
sound and appearance. And
similarity on any one of these levels is sufficient.
[7]
The high court disregarded this principle: it recognised ‘the
obvious similarity between the two marks with reference to
the words,
iCollege and iCOLLEGE’, but then concluded that ‘there is
no visual or conceptual similarity between the
pictures accompanying
the written words’.
[13]
The
high court also overlooked the fact that the greater the similarity
between the respective services of the parties, the lesser
the degree
of resemblance required before it can be said that there is a
likelihood of deception or confusion in the use of the
offending
mark.
[8]
The respondent sought
to make something of the proposition that its services are
exclusively online and that it does not offer
locally accredited
qualifications. However, s 34(1)
(a)
of the
Act does
not
require
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
nature
and
scope
of
the
respondent’s services, or its training methods, are identical
to the services covered by the trade mark registration.
And the test
approved in
Century
City Apartments
,
[9]
which applies equally in relation to both goods and services,
provides a complete answer to the argument that there is no
likelihood
of deception or confusion because the services are not
offered side by side. As observed by Webster and Page, there is no
reason
to suggest a more lenient test for service marks.
[10]
[14]
Whilst
the marks in issue are not identical, ie ‘the same in all
respects’,
[11]
even
though they are very similar, as stated in Webster and Page,
[12]
‘the likelihood that the court will then find that the marks
are indeed likely to cause confusion or deception is great’.
Thus, in
Century
City Apartments
,
[13]
this Court found that the marks CENTURY CITY and CENTURY CITY
APARTMENTS are not identical, but held that despite the addition
of
the word ‘apartments’, the name CENTURY CITY APARTMENTS
was confusingly similar to CENTURY CITY. This,
a
fortiori
,
is such a case, when regard is had to the dominant feature of the
marks in issue – the word, ‘iCOLLEGE’, which
is not
commonly used.
[15]
In
its judgment the high court did not deal with the fact that the trade
marks in question were phonetically identical. However,
in the
judgment refusing leave to appeal, the court said: ‘although
the word “iCollege” both in respect of spelling
and
phonetics are the same,
they
are not distinctive in respect of the products to which they
pertain
’.
[14]
In the main judgment, the court analysed the education and training
services rendered by both parties. It referred to their target
markets; methods of teaching; the specific courses and academic
services offered; and the fact
that
the
appellant’s
courses
are
accredited
in
terms
of
the
National
Qualification Framework, while the respondent’s qualifications
are accredited by third party vendors such as Microsoft.
The court
concluded:
‘
. . . [W]hilst
both the applicant and the respondent use their trade marks in
respect of “education and training services”
(in respect
of which the applicant registered its trade mark), the
educational/academic products and services presented by the
applicant
and the respondent are not identical, nor is the training vehicle by
which the different educational services are offered
the same.’
[16]
The
high court’s further inquiry into the specific nature, ambit
and teaching methods in relation to the services rendered
by the
appellant and the respondent, was both impermissible and irrelevant.
The court disregarded the notional use test, which
required it to
postulate the notional use to which the appellant is entitled to put
its iCOLLEGE trade mark – online education
and training
services – included in the full range of permissible fair use
in respect of which it is registered.
[15]
[17]
The
purpose of a trade mark registration is to protect the mark as a
badge of origin. Section 34(1)
(a)
of the
Act governs primary trade mark infringement and confers on the
proprietor an exclusionary right to prevent others from using
the
mark without its consent.
[16]
As stated, the respondent has no such consent and is using its mark
in respect of identical services in the class in which the
appellant’s trade mark has been registered – education
and training. The appellant established that the use of the
respondent’s mark was such that it will cause consumers to
wrongly believe that there is a material link in trade between
the
respondent’s
education
services
and
the
appellant.
[17]
This
constitutes
primary
trade
mark
infringement
within
the
meaning
of
s
34(1)
(a)
of
the
Act,
which
entitled the appellant to an interdict.
[18]
Finally,
the respondent’s argument that the appellant is not entitled to
an interdict for trade mark infringement because
the word ‘COLLEGE’
has been disclaimed, can be dealt with briefly. It was argued that
because of the disclaimer, what
remains in the appellant’s mark
is the logo and the letter ‘i’, which cannot form the
subject of protection.
The argument is unsustainable.
[19]
The
appellant’s trade mark as a whole had the necessary attributes
that qualified it for registration. If a trade mark as
a whole is
capable of distinguishing, it matters not that the prominent part of
that mark is an element which is being disclaimed.
[18]
As is evident from the trade mark information sheet annexed to the
founding affidavit, the appellant was granted rights in the
specific
representation of the mark depicted in its application for
registration, namely iCOLLEGE. Upon registration, the appellant
was
granted a limited monopoly to that mark to ensure that it fulfils its
function as a badge of origin.
[19]
Whilst a trade mark proprietor cannot bring a claim for infringement
in respect of the use of a disclaimed feature, where that
feature
forms part of a composite mark, the court is entitled to take the
disclaimed feature into account in deciding whether the
infringing
mark, as a whole, so nearly resembles the registered mark, as to be
likely to deceive or cause confusion.
[20]
[20]
In
the result, the following order is made:
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The
order of the high court is set aside and replaced
with the following
order:
‘
1
The first respondent is interdicted and
restrained from infringing the applicant’s registered iCOLLEGE
trade marks by using
the iCOLLEGE mark and/or any mark, trading
style, trading name, get up and/or dress that is confusingly and/or
deceptively similar
to the applicant’s registered iCOLLEGE
trade marks.
2
The
first respondent is ordered within 14 days of the granting of this
order to instruct the second respondent to transfer ownership
of the
domain name icollege.co.za to the applicant, failing which the second
respondent is ordered to transfer ownership of the
domain name
icollege.co.za to the applicant within 14 days thereafter.
3
An
enquiry into the damages suffered by the applicant as a result of the
first respondent’s unlawful conduct is ordered to
be convened.
4
The
first respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs.’
A
SCHIPPERS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
K
E MATOJANE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
Instructed
by:
Kisch
Africa Inc, Johannesburg
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the first respondent:
D
Harms SC
Instructed
by:
Nixon
& Collins Attorneys,
Pretoria
Hill
McHardy & Herbst Inc,
Bloemfontein
[1]
PPI
Makelaars and Another v Professional Provident Society of South
Africa
[1997]
4 All SA 444
(SCA);
1998 (1) SA 595
(SCA) at 603E.
[2]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984]
2 All SA 366
(A);
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 640I-641D.
[3]
Century
City
Apartments
Property
Services
CC
and
Another
v
Century
City
Property
Owners’
Association
[2009]
ZASCA 157
;
2010 (3) SA 1
(SCA);
[2010] 2 All SA 409
(SCA) para 13.
[4]
Compass
Publishing BV v Compass Logistics Ltd
[2004]
EWHC 520
(Ch) paras 24-25.
[5]
Adidas
Sportschuhfabriken Adi Dassler KG v Harry Walt & Co (Pty) Ltd
1976
(1) 530 (T) at 536A.
[6]
Cowbell
AG v ICS Holdings Ltd
[2001]
4 All SA 242
(A);
2001 (3) SA 941
(SCA) para 14;
Mettenheimer
and Another v Zonquasdrif Vineyards CC and Others
[2013]
ZASCA 152
;
[2014] 1 All SA 645
(SCA);
2014 (2) SA 204
(SCA) para 12.
[7]
Plascon-Evans
fn 2
above at 640G-I.
[8]
Mettenheimer
fn 6
above para 11, approving
New
Media Publishing (Pty) Ltd v Eating Out Web Services CC
[2005] ZAWCHC 20
;
2005
(5) SA 388
(C) at 394C-F.
[9]
Century
City Apartments Property Services
fn
3 above para 13.
[10]
Webster and Page
South
African Law of Trade Marks
para
12.8.3.
[11]
LTJ
Diffusion SA v Sadas Vertbaudet SA
[2003]
ETMR 83
(European Trade Marks Reports) par 50, approved in
Century
City Apartments Property Services
fn
3 above para 12.
[12]
Webster and Page
South
African Law of Trade Marks
para
12.8.1B.
[13]
Century
City Apartments Property Services
fn
3 above para 13.
[14]
Emphasis added.
[15]
Plascon-Evans
fn 2
above at 641G-642A;
Lucky
Star Ltd v Lucky Brands (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2016]
ZASCA 77
;
2017 (2) SA 588
(SCA) paras 8-9.
[16]
Verimark
(Pty) Ltd v Bayerische Motoren Werke AktienGesellschaft; Bayerische
Motoren Werke AktienGesellschaft v Verimark (Pty)
Ltd
[2007]
ZASCA 53
;
2007 (6) SA 263
(SCA) para 5;
Federation
Cynologique and R (British American Tobacco UK Ltd) v Secretary of
State for Health
[2016]
EWCA Civ 1182
;
[2018] QB 149
paras 46-49.
[17]
Verimark
fn 16
above para 5.
[18]
Webster and Page
South
African Law of Trade Marks
para
9.16.
[19]
Verimark
fn 16
above para 6.
[20]
Webster and Page
South
African Law of Trade Marks
para
9.19.
sino noindex
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