Luuxemburg
October 21, 2004Source:
Court of Justice of the European
Union
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JUDGMENT OF
THE COURT (Second Chamber)
21 October 2004 (1)
(Appeal
– Community trade mark – Regulation (EC) No 40/94 –
Absolute ground for refusal – Distinctive character –
Colour per se – Orange colour)
In Case C-447/02 P,
APPEAL under Article 49
of the EC Statute of the Court of Justice,
lodged on 11 December
2002,
KWS Saat AG,
established in Einbeck (Germany), represented by
C. Rohnke, Rechtsanwalt, with an address for service in
Luxembourg,
appellant,
the other party to the
proceedings being:
Office for
Harmonisation in the Internal Market (Trade Marks and
Designs) (OHIM), represented by D. Schennen and
G. Schneider, acting as Agents,
defendant
at first instance,
THE
COURT (Second Chamber),
composed of:
C.W.A. Timmermans, President of the Chamber, C. Gulmann,
J.‑P. Puissochet, N. Colneric and J.N. Cunha Rodrigues
(Rapporteur), Judges,
Advocate General:
P. Léger,
Registrar: M. Múgica Arzamendi, Principal
Administrator,
having regard to the
written procedure and further to the hearing on 4 March
2004,
after hearing the
Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 19 May
2004,
gives the following
Judgment
- 1
- By its appeal, KWS Saat AG
(‘KWS’) seeks to have the judgment of the Court of First
Instance of the European Communities (Second Chamber) of
9 October 2002 in Case T-173/00 KWS Saat v OHIM (shade of
orange) [2002] ECR II‑3843 (‘the judgment under appeal’) set
aside in so far as that judgment did not uphold its
application for registration of the colour orange as a
Community trade mark for certain treatment installations for
seeds and for certain agricultural, horticultural and
forestry products.
The legal framework
- 2
- Article 7(1)(b) of Council
Regulation (EC) No 40/94 of 20 December 1993 on the
Community trade mark (OJ 1994 L 11, p. 1) provides:
‘The following shall not be
registered:
…
- (b)
- trade marks which are
devoid of any distinctive character;’.
- 3
- Article 7(3) of the
regulation provides:
‘Paragraph 1(b), (c) and
(d) shall not apply if the trade mark has become distinctive
in relation to the goods or services for which registration
is requested in consequence of the use which has been made
of it.’
- 4
- Article 73 of Regulation
No 40/94 provides:
‘Decisions of the Office
shall state the reasons on which they are based. They shall
be based only on reasons or evidence on which the parties
concerned have had an opportunity to present their
comments.’
- 5
- Article 74 of the
regulation provides:
‘1. In proceedings
before it the Office shall examine the facts of its own
motion; however, in proceedings relating to relative grounds
for refusal of registration, the Office shall be restricted
in this examination to the facts, evidence and arguments
provided by the parties and the relief sought.
2. The Office may
disregard facts or evidence which are not submitted in due
time by the parties concerned.’
The facts of the dispute
- 6
- KWS is a company which has
its registered office in Germany.
- 7
- On 17 March 1998 it filed
an application for a Community trade mark at the Office for
Harmonisation in the Internal Market (Trade Marks and
Designs) (OHIM) (‘the Office’) under Regulation No 40/94.
- 8
- The sign in respect of
which registration was sought was the colour orange per se
with standard reference HKS7.
- 9
- The goods and services in
respect of which registration of the sign was sought are in
Classes 7, 11, 31 and 42 of the Nice Agreement of 15 June
1957 concerning the International Classification of Goods
and Services for the Purposes of the Registration of Marks,
as revised and amended, and correspond to the following
descriptions:
-
-
- –
- ‘Treatment
installations for seeds, namely for the cleaning,
dressing, pilling, calibration, treatment with an active
agent, quality control and sifting of seeds’ (Class 7);
-
- –
- ‘Installations for
drying seeds’ (Class 11);
-
-
- –
- ‘Agricultural,
horticultural and forestry products’ (Class 31);
-
-
- –
- ‘Technical and
business consultancy in the area of plant cultivation,
in particular in the seed
sector’ (Class 42).
- 10
- By a decision of 25 March
1999, the examiner of the Office refused KWS’s application
on the ground that the mark applied for was not distinctive
within the meaning of Article 7(1)(b) of Regulation No
40/94.
- 11
- On 21 May 1999 KWS filed
an appeal with the Office against that decision.
- 12
- By a decision of 19 April
2000 (Case R 282/1999-2) (‘the contested decision’), which
was served on KWS on 28 June 2000, the Second Board of
Appeal of the Office dismissed the appeal. It took the view
essentially that the mark claimed was devoid of any
distinctive character within the meaning of Article 7(1)(b)
of Regulation No 40/94.
- 13
- Paragraphs 17 and 18 of
the contested decision provide as follows:
- ‘17.
- … It is clear from
research carried out by the Board of Appeal that the
colour indicated in the application is in no way
original or even unusual within the sector in question.
- 18.
- It has for some time
now been normal procedure for seed
producers to dye their seeds with colorants. That
procedure was established in order to indicate that the
seeds have been treated (for example, with pesticides,
fungicides or herbicides). The result has been that
there are even undertakings which manufacture colorants
for seeds. One manufacturer thus advertises its products
in the following terms:
-
- “… Colorants
identify treated seeds, as well as transgenic seeds
… Seed colorants
identify treated seed,
reducing mishandling of seed
treated with active ingredients such as fungicide or
insecticide. With the help of
seed colorants and coatings, producers will
feel confident that their seed
investment is safe …”
-
-
http://www.bucolor.com/seeds/colorants.htm’.
The judgment under appeal
- 14
- By application lodged at
the Registry of the Court of First Instance on 28 June 2000,
KWS sought annulment of the contested decision on the basis
of two pleas in law alleging breach of Article 7(1)(b) of
Regulation No 40/94 and breach of Articles 73 and 74 of that
regulation.
- 15
- By the judgment under
appeal, the Court of First Instance upheld in part the
application brought by KWS.
- 16
- With regard to the plea in
law alleging breach of Article 7(1)(b) of Regulation
No 40/94, the Court of First Instance held, in paragraph 33
of the judgment under appeal, that, with regard to
agricultural, horticultural and forestry products in Class
31, and in particular seeds:
‘… the use of colours,
including the shade of orange claimed or very similar
shades, for those goods is not rare. The sign applied for
will therefore not enable the relevant public immediately
and with certitude to distinguish the applicant’s goods from
those of other undertakings which are coloured other shades
of orange.’
- 17
- With regard to treatment
installations in Classes 7 and 11, the Court of First
Instance ruled as follows in paragraph 40 of the judgment
under appeal:
‘… the Board of Appeal
rightly stated, at paragraph 21 of the contested decision,
that it is not rare to come across machines in that or a
similar colour. It must be held that, being commonplace, the
colour orange will not enable the relevant public to
distinguish immediately and with certainty the applicant’s
installations from machines in similar shades of orange with
a different commercial origin. Rather, it will perceive the
colour claimed as merely an element of the finish of the
goods in question.’
- 18
- By contrast, with regard
to services in Class 42, the Court of First Instance
concluded in paragraph 46 of its judgment that:
‘… the sign composed of the
shade of orange per se is capable of enabling the relevant
public to distinguish the services concerned from those of a
different commercial origin when they come to make a choice
on the occasion of a subsequent purchase.’
- 19
- The Court of First
Instance accordingly upheld the plea in law alleging breach
of Article 7(1)(b) of Regulation No 40/94 with regard to
services in Class 42. It rejected that plea in law with
regard to agricultural, horticultural and forestry products
in Class 31 and to treatment installations in Classes 7 and
11.
- 20
- With regard to the plea in
law alleging breach of Articles 73 and 74 of Regulation
No 40/94, the Court of First Instance took the view, so far
as Article 73 was concerned, that the Board of Appeal had
complied with its obligation to state the reasons on which
its decision was based.
- 21
- In this connection, it
ruled, in paragraph 56 of the judgment under appeal, that
KWS had had the information necessary to comprehend the
contested decision and to challenge its legality before the
Community Courts.
- 22
- The Court of First
Instance also held, in paragraph 59 of the judgment under
appeal, that the Board of Appeal had not infringed Article
73 of Regulation No 40/94 by not communicating to KWS the
evidence used purely for the purposes of drawing up and
justifying the contested decision, on the basis of grounds
and reasoning with which KWS was already acquainted.
- 23
- So far as Article 74 of
Regulation No 40/94 is concerned, the Court of First
Instance expressed the view, in the following terms, that
the Board of Appeal had complied with its obligation to
examine the facts of its own motion pursuant to that
article:
- ‘60
- … the Board of Appeal
did consider and make use of a number of pertinent facts
in assessing the sign’s distinctive character in
relation to the various goods and services referred to
in the trade mark application. In that connection, the
Office’s earlier analogous decisions or the examples
taken from the internet are not a substitute for the
reasoning in the contested decision nor do they
constitute new evidence not examined by the Office of
its own motion, but they are additional factors put
forward by the Office in its pleadings to enable the
legal basis of the contested decision to be reviewed.’
- 24
- In those circumstances,
the Court of First Instance dismissed in its entirety the
plea in law alleging breach of Articles 73 and 74 of
Regulation No 40/94.
- 25
- The Court of First
Instance ultimately annulled the contested decision in
regard to services in Class 42, dismissed the remainder of
the action and ordered KWS to bear its own costs and to pay
two thirds of the costs incurred by the Office.
The forms of order sought by the parties
- 26
- KWS claims that the Court
should:
-
-
- –
- set aside the judgment
under appeal in so far as it dismisses KWS’s
application;
-
-
- –
- annul the contested
decision in so far as it has not already been annulled
by the judgment under appeal;
-
-
- –
- order the Office to
pay the costs.
- 27
- The Office contends that
the Court should:
-
-
- –
- dismiss the appeal;
-
-
- –
- order KWS to pay the
costs.
The appeal
- 28
- The Office submits as
follows in its reply: ‘it would also have been necessary to
refuse registration of the colour mark in question for the
services claimed by the appellant and relating to
consultancy in the area of plant cultivation. The Office is
not challenging the judgment of the Court of First Instance
in itself. That, however, need not prevent the Court of
Justice from delivering a different ruling in regard to the
protection of colour marks lacking contours, or even not
upholding the reasoning of the judgment under appeal.’
- 29
- It follows from those
submissions that the Office has expressly refrained from
bringing a cross-appeal seeking annulment of the judgment
under appeal to the extent to which that judgment relates to
the services in Class 42, even though it has doubts as to
the soundness of the decision of the Court of First Instance
in that regard.
- 30
- The appeal brought before
the Court, and consequently the present judgment, are
therefore limited to the application for registration of a
trade mark in respect of the goods in Classes 7, 11 and 31.
- 31
- KWS puts forward four
grounds in support of the appeal, as thus defined. The first
ground alleges breach of Article 74(1) of Regulation
No 40/94, providing for an examination of the facts by the
Office of its own motion, the second alleges infringement of
the right to a fair hearing, the third alleges breach of the
obligation to state reasons, and the fourth alleges
misconstruction of Article 7(1)(b) of Regulation No 40/94
with regard to the requirement of distinctive character.
The first ground of appeal
- 32
- By its first ground of
appeal, KWS argues that, by limiting itself to stating, at
paragraph 60 of the judgment under appeal, that the Board of
Appeal did ‘consider and make use of a number of pertinent
facts’, the Court of First Instance failed to take account
of the requirement laid down in Article 74(1) of Regulation
No 40/94, which provides that ‘the Office shall examine the
facts of its own motion’. The Court of First Instance thus
lost sight of the fact that it was necessary not only to
determine whether facts had been examined but also for it to
be satisfied that that examination had been sufficiently
detailed. According to KWS, the examination carried out by
the Office should have been sufficiently detailed to allow
it to establish with certainty that there were grounds for
refusal within the terms of Article 7 of that regulation.
- 33
- Before it delivered its
decision, KWS argues, the Office did not examine ‘a number
of … facts’ but rather ‘one single fact’. In paragraph 17 of
the contested decision, the Board of Appeal referred to its
‘research’. As the sole result of that research, it
referred, in paragraph 18 of that decision, to the internet
site ‘www.bucolor.com’. That site is not sufficient to
constitute grounds for its refusal, being the site of a
single manufacturer. It does not suffice to establish a
general usage, and is, moreover, the site of an American
undertaking. The usages of the American market do not, in
principle, constitute evidence of current usages within the
territory of the Community. Finally, the front page of the
site is written in English. It is for that reason not
accessible to the relevant public within the Community.
- 34
- By this first ground of
appeal, KWS is in essence seeking to cast doubt on the
appraisal of the facts made first by the Board of Appeal and
subsequently by the Court of First Instance.
- 35
- It follows from Article
225 EC and from Article 58 of the Statute of the Court of
Justice that an appeal may be based only on grounds relating
to breaches of rules of law, to the exclusion of any
appraisal of the facts.
- 36
- It follows that the first
ground of appeal is inadmissible.
The second ground of appeal
- 37
- By its second ground of
appeal, KWS alleges that its right to a fair hearing was
infringed in the proceedings before the Board of Appeal and
in the proceedings before the Court of First Instance. This
second ground of appeal thus consists of two limbs.
The first limb of the
second ground of appeal
- 38
- By the first limb of the
second ground of appeal, KWS submits that, with regard to
the facts, the Office based the contested decision on a
single document, that is to say, the internet address
mentioned at paragraph 18 of the contested decision and
reproduced in paragraph 13 of the present judgment. The
Office mentioned that reference to KWS for the first time in
the contested decision, that is to say, at the conclusion of
the proceedings conducted before it. The Office thus
infringed KWS’s right to a fair hearing.
- 39
- Instead of noting that
infringement, the Court of First Instance examined solely
the question whether the documents were indispensable for
understanding the contested decision. The Court of First
Instance also erred in ruling, in paragraph 58 of the
judgment under appeal, that ‘the applicant was essentially
aware of the arguments and facts which were going to be
examined by the Board of Appeal for the purposes of
determining whether to set aside or uphold the examiner’s
decision, and did therefore have an opportunity to state its
views’.
- 40
- KWS further submits that
this breach of its right to a fair hearing by the Board of
Appeal deprived it of the option, during the proceedings
before that board, of restricting the list of goods for
which registration of the mark was being sought and thereby
ensuring that its application would be granted.
- 41
- According to the second
sentence of Article 73 of Regulation No 40/94, decisions of
the Office may be based only on reasons or evidence on which
the parties concerned have had an opportunity to present
their comments.
- 42
- In accordance with that
provision, a Board of Appeal of the Office may base its
decision only on matters of fact or of law on which the
parties have been able to set out their views.
- 43
- Consequently, in the case
in which the Board of Appeal assembles of its own motion
facts intended to serve as a basis for its decision, it is
under an obligation to notify the parties of those facts in
order that the parties may submit their views thereon.
- 44
- In the present case, it is
clear from the documents on the case-file that the Board of
Appeal did not forward to KWS either the result of its
research or the contents of the internet site mentioned in
paragraphs 17 and 18 respectively of the contested decision.
- 45
- The Board of Appeal
thereby infringed the second sentence of Article 73 of
Regulation No 40/94.
- 46
- In this regard, the Court
of First Instance erred in law in ruling, at paragraph 59 of
the judgment under appeal, that the Board of Appeal had not
infringed Article 73 of Regulation No 40/94.
- 47
- It is, however, necessary
to point out that, in paragraphs 14 to 16 of the contested
decision, the Board of Appeal, adopting the decision of the
examiner, took the view that the colour in question did not
have a distinctive character for the goods in question. A
colour, in itself, does not in principle have a distinctive
character, unless it has acquired such a character in
consequence of use, and the colour orange is a very common
colour for those goods. Furthermore, the appellant’s
competitors might also have an interest in using that
colour.
- 48
- Those grounds, on which
KWS could have set out its position, were sufficient to
justify dismissal of the application by the Board of Appeal.
- 49
- The finding in paragraph
17 of the contested decision and resulting from the research
of the Board of Appeal, to the effect that the colour in
respect of which registration was sought was in no way
unusual within the trade sector in question, merely confirms
grounds which were already sufficient to justify that
decision. Likewise, the finding contained in paragraph 18 of
the contested decision and illustrated by an extract from an
internet site, stating that producers colour their seeds to
indicate that they have been treated, is merely confirmatory
in character.
- 50
- It follows that the
illegality which vitiates paragraphs 17 and 18 of the
contested decision in regard to the second sentence of
Article 73 of Regulation No 40/94 cannot result in the
annulment of that decision.
- 51
- There are accordingly no
grounds for setting aside the judgment under appeal in that
regard, notwithstanding the error of law vitiating paragraph
59 thereof (see, in this connection, Joined Cases C-74/00 P
and C-75/00 P Falck and Acciaierie di Bolzano v Commission
[2002] ECR I‑7869, paragraph 122; Case C-93/02 P Biret
International v Council [2003] ECR I‑10497, paragraph 60;
and Case C-94/02 P Biret et Cie v Council [2003] ECR
I‑10565, paragraph 63).
- 52
- That conclusion is not
altered by the argument that KWS was deprived of the option,
at the time of the proceedings before the Board of Appeal,
of restricting the list of goods in respect of which
registration of the mark was sought. KWS could at any time
have requested the Office to restrict the list of goods and
services, pursuant to Article 44 of Regulation No 40/94 and
Rule 13 of Commission Regulation (EC) No 2868/95 of
13 December 1995 implementing Regulation No 40/94 (OJ 1995 L
303, p. 1). The fact that, throughout the entire proceedings
before the Office, KWS did not submit any such request must
be attributed to KWS’s own choice and not to any failure on
the part of the Board of Appeal to allow KWS to set out its
views on the internet site referred to in the contested
decision. Further, there is nothing on the case-file to
justify the assumption that a restriction of the list of the
goods in question would have resulted in registration of the
mark requested.
- 53
- It follows that the first
limb of the second ground of appeal must be rejected as
being inoperative.
The second limb of the
second ground of appeal
- 54
- By the second limb of the
second ground of appeal, KWS submits that the Court of First
Instance failed to take account of its arguments relating to
the abovementioned internet site. The Court of First
Instance, it claims, itself infringed KWS’s right to a fair
hearing. KWS was thus deprived of the option, at the time of
the proceedings before the Court of First Instance, of
restricting the list of the goods for which registration of
the mark was requested, in a situation in which that
restriction would probably have made such registration
possible.
- 55
- In paragraph 49 of the
judgment under appeal, the Court of First Instance expressly
summarised the argument of KWS that it was deprived of its
right to be heard. That summary mentions in particular KWS’s
allegation that the documents on which the Office based
itself for the purpose of taking its decision were not
communicated to it.
- 56
- In paragraphs 58 and 59 of
the judgment under appeal, the Court of First Instance ruled
on that argument and provided express reasons for its
position. Even if, as has been established in paragraph 46
of the present judgment, its legal analysis was incorrect,
it is clear from that reasoning that the Court of First
Instance heard in full the assertions made by KWS.
- 57
- It follows that the Court
of First Instance did not infringe the right of KWS to put
its case during the judicial proceedings.
- 58
- The fact that the Court of
First Instance did not infringe KWS’s right to put its case
undermines entirely the argument that such an infringement
had the result of depriving KWS of the option, at the time
of the proceedings before the Court of First Instance, of
restricting the list of the goods in respect of which
registration of the mark was sought. In any event, the Court
of First Instance acted correctly in law in ruling, in
paragraph 14 of the judgment under appeal, that the
application made by KWS during the hearing before the Court
of First Instance to have the list of goods restricted was
inadmissible. An application of that kind does not
correspond to the rules laid down in Regulations Nos 40/94
and 2868/95 and would be liable to change the subject-matter
of the proceedings, contrary to Article 135(4) of the Rules
of Procedure of the Court of First Instance.
- 59
- The second limb of the
second ground of appeal must therefore be rejected as being
unfounded.
- 60
- The second ground of
appeal must accordingly be rejected in its entirety.
The third ground of appeal
- 61
- By its third ground of
appeal, KWS alleges breach, by the Court of First Instance
in the judgment under appeal and by the Board of Appeal in
the contested decision, of the obligation to state reasons.
This ground of appeal thus consists of two limbs.
The first limb of the
third ground of appeal
- 62
- By the first limb of the
third ground of appeal, KWS submits that the Court of First
Instance erred in law in ruling, in the judgment under
appeal, that the contested decision was adequately reasoned.
The Court of First Instance, it claims, significantly
underestimated the requirement that reasons be stated.
- 63
- The first sentence of
Article 73 of Regulation No 40/94 provides that ‘[d]ecisions
of the Office shall state the reasons on which they are
based’.
- 64
- The obligation to state
reasons, as thus laid down, has the same scope as that which
derives from Article 253 EC.
- 65
- It is settled case-law
that the statement of reasons required by Article 253 EC
must disclose in a clear and unequivocal manner the
reasoning followed by the institution which adopted the
measure in question in such a way as to enable the persons
concerned to ascertain the reasons for the measure and to
enable the competent Community Court to exercise its power
of review. It is not necessary for the reasoning to go into
all the relevant facts and points of law, since the question
whether the statement of reasons meets the requirements of
Article 253 EC must be assessed with regard not only to its
wording but also to its context and to all the legal rules
governing the matter in question (see, in this connection,
Case C-367/95 P Commission v Sytraval and Brink’s France
[1998] ECR I‑1719, paragraph 63, and Case C-265/97 P VBA v
Florimex and Others [2000] ECR I‑2061, paragraph 93).
- 66
- In the present case, the
Board of Appeal rejected the application for registration on
the ground that the mark in respect of which registration
was being sought did not have a distinctive character within
the terms of Article 7(1)(b) of Regulation No 40/94.
- 67
- The Board of Appeal
provided a full and precise statement of reasons for that
appraisal in paragraphs 14 to 25 of the contested decision.
- 68
- It first stated, on the
one hand, that a colour does not in itself have a
distinctive character, unless it can be demonstrated that it
has acquired such a character by use and, on the other, that
colours must remain available to all undertakings. According
to the Board of Appeal, it is therefore only under certain
circumstances that a colour will in itself be recognised as
having a distinctive character per se, on condition that the
colour in question is one that is entirely unusual in regard
to the goods or services concerned. The Board of Appeal then
went on to set out, in detail, the reasons why the colour
orange is not unusual in regard to the goods to which the
application for registration related. It added that it was
not bound by the decisions on trade marks by the competent
German authorities, which were cited by KWS. The Board of
Appeal concluded by pointing out that KWS had not contended
that the colour in issue had acquired a distinctive
character in consequence of use under Article 7(3) of
Regulation No 40/94.
- 69
- There can be no doubt that
such a statement of reasons satisfies the requirement laid
down by the first sentence of Article 73 of Regulation
No 40/94. The Court of First Instance therefore did not err
in law in ruling that KWS had had at its disposal the
material necessary to enable it to understand the contested
decision and to challenge its legality before the Community
Courts.
- 70
- The first limb of the
third ground of appeal must accordingly be rejected as being
unfounded.
The second limb of the
third ground of appeal
- 71
- By the second limb of the
third ground of appeal, KWS submits that the Court of First
Instance breached its duty to state reasons by merely
ruling, at paragraph 56 of the judgment under appeal, that
the contested decision ‘enables the applicant to take
cognisance of the reasons why its application for
registration was refused’.
- 72
- A reading of paragraph 56
of the judgment under appeal makes it clear that this
paragraph summarises the elements of the contested decision
which the Court of First Instance considered to be crucial
and sets out the reasons why it took the view that those
elements were sufficient. It was at the conclusion of that
summary and exposition that the Court of First Instance
held, in the final sentence of paragraph 56, that KWS had
had all the information necessary to comprehend the
contested decision and to challenge its legality before the
Community Courts.
- 73
- It follows that this
paragraph of the judgment under appeal is adequately
reasoned.
- 74
- The second limb of the
third ground of appeal is therefore unfounded.
- 75
- The third ground of appeal
must accordingly be rejected in its entirety.
The fourth ground of appeal
- 76
- By its fourth ground of
appeal, KWS submits that the distinctive character of trade
marks consisting of one colour must be assessed according to
the same principles as the distinctive character of other
types of trade marks, in particular word and figurative
marks, and that more stringent requirements must not be
imposed. It is largely irrelevant whether there are, for the
goods and services requested, other colours serving to
indicate certain characteristics. By contrast, it is
necessary to examine whether the colour requested in the
specific case is perceived by the public as indicating
certain characteristics. In the case where several producers
use different colours to indicate particular
characteristics, the public will at the same time see in
those colours information pertaining to the producer. The
existence of a distinctive character would then have to be
acknowledged. In the present case, the colour orange is not
regarded by the relevant sector as indicating
characteristics for the goods and services in question and a
use for decorative or functional purposes is out of the
question. The distinctive character of the mark must for
those reasons be recognised.
- 77
- In the judgment under
appeal, KWS continues, the Court of First Instance committed
the following errors of appraisal. First, it applied a more
stringent criterion for colour trade marks than for other
marks. Second, it erred in regard to the criterion of
distinctive character, which is solely the capacity to
indicate commercial origin. Finally, it substituted its own
appraisal for that of the relevant sector.
- 78
- So far as concerns the
criteria governing appraisal of the distinctive character of
the different categories of trade marks, the Court of First
Instance correctly stated, in paragraph 29 of the judgment
under appeal, that Article 7(1)(b) of Regulation No 40/94
does not draw any distinction between different types of
sign. However, the Court of First Instance also correctly
pointed out that the relevant public’s perception is not
necessarily the same in the case of a sign composed of a
colour per se as it is in the case of a word or figurative
mark, where the sign is independent of the appearance of the
goods which it identifies. While the public is accustomed to
perceiving word or figurative marks immediately as signs
identifying the commercial origin of the goods, the same
does not necessarily hold true where the sign forms part of
the external appearance of the goods (see, with regard to
the identical provisions of Article 3(1)(b) of First Council
Directive 89/104/EEC of 21 December 1988 to approximate the
laws of the Member States relating to trade marks (OJ 1989
L 40, p. 1), Case C-104/01 Libertel [2003] ECR I‑3793,
paragraph 65).
- 79
- In that context, a colour
per se may acquire, for the goods or services in respect of
which registration is sought, a distinctive character in
consequence of the use which has been made of it, by virtue
of Article 7(3) of Regulation No 40/94. By contrast, in the
case of a colour per se, distinctiveness without any prior
use is inconceivable save in exceptional circumstances, and
particularly where the number of goods or services for which
the mark is claimed is very restricted and the relevant
market very specific (see, in regard to the identical
provisions of Article 3(1)(b) and (3) of Directive 89/104,
Libertel, cited above, paragraphs 66 and 67).
- 80
- With regard to the
treatment installations in Classes 7 and 11, the Court of
First Instance stated, in paragraphs 39 and 40 of the
judgment under appeal, that KWS had not pleaded any factors
on the basis of which it was possible to create a category
of goods for which certain colours were not commonly used
and that it was not rare to come across machines that have
the colour applied for or a similar colour.
- 81
- With regard to
agricultural, horticultural and forestry products in Class
31, the Court of First Instance found, in paragraph 33 of
the judgment under appeal, that the use of colours for those
goods, including the shade of orange claimed or very similar
shades, is not rare.
- 82
- It follows that the Court
of First Instance did not apply a more stringent criterion
for colour trade marks than for other marks and that, in
taking the view that the mark in question did not have any
distinctive character in regard to the goods for which its
registration was being sought, the Court of First Instance
did not err in law in relation to Article 7(1)(b) of
Regulation No 40/94.
- 83
- To that extent, the fourth
ground of appeal must be rejected as being unfounded.
- 84
- With regard to the
question of the accuracy of the findings of the Court of
First Instance in regard to the perception which the
relevant public has of the use of the colours on the goods
in question, it must be pointed out that this involves
appraisals that are factual in nature.
- 85
- It follows from Article
225 EC and from Article 58 of the Statute of the Court of
Justice that an appeal may be based only on grounds relating
to breaches of rules of law, to the exclusion of any
appraisal of the facts.
- 86
- It follows that, in so far
as it brings into question the findings of the Court of
First Instance concerning the perception of the relevant
public, the fourth ground of appeal is inadmissible.
- 87
- The fourth ground of
appeal must accordingly be rejected in its entirety.
- 88
- As none of the grounds of
appeal raised by KWS has been upheld, the appeal must be
dismissed.
Costs
- 89
- Under Article 69(2) of the
Rules of Procedure, which is applicable to appeals by virtue
of Article 118 thereof, the unsuccessful party is to be
ordered to pay the costs if they have been applied for in
the successful party’s pleadings. As the Office has applied
for costs to be awarded against KWS, and as the latter has
been unsuccessful in its submissions, KWS must be ordered to
bear the costs.
On those grounds, the Court (Second Chamber) hereby:
-
-
- 1.
- dismisses the appeal;
-
-
- 2.
- orders KWS Saat AG to
pay the costs.
Signatures.
-
1 –
- Language of the case:
German.
Link to
judgment in German |