EU court dismisses
Nestle's Kit Kat trade mark
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[December 15, 2016]
By Julia Fioretti
BRUSSELS
(Reuters) - A European Union court has dismissed Nestle's attempt to
register the Kit Kat shape as a trade mark for its chocolate biscuit
bar, questioning whether consumers in all EU states would recognize the
snack's "distinctive character".
Rival Cadbury Schweppes - now owned by Mondelez International - asked
the EU to declare the Kit Kat trade mark invalid in 2007.
On Thursday the court annulled the initial trade mark registration,
meaning that the Kit Kat shape can for now be used freely.
The European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) will have to
re-examine whether the Kit Kat four fingers bar has acquired distinctive
character through its use within all EU member states, not just across
the EU generally, the General Court of the EU said in a statement.
The General Court, based in Luxembourg, is the second-highest in the EU.
On Thursday it annulled EUIPO's decision in 2006 to register the Kit Kat
as a trade mark in sweets, bakery products, biscuits, cakes and waffles.
If a trade mark is registered for a category of goods which also has
sub-categories, then it applies only to goods where it has been put to
use, the court said.
"The Court holds that none of the evidence taken into consideration by
EUIPO establishes use of the mark in respect of bakery products,
pastries, cakes and waffles," it said.
In addition, Nestle would have to prove that when it applied in 2002,
its Kit Kat had already gained distinctive character through use in all
15 of the states that had joined the bloc by then.
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A bag of KitKat chocolates at the headquarters of world food giant
Nestle in Vevey October 16, 2014. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
It was not enough for Nestle "to show that a significant proportion of
the relevant public throughout the EU, merging all the member states and
regions, perceives a mark as an indication of the commercial origin of
the goods designated by the mark," the Court said.
The Court said EUIPO had found that Kit Kat had acquired distinctive
character in 10 countries - Denmark, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, the
Netherlands, Austria, Finland, Sweden and the UK - but not in countries
including Belgium, Ireland, Greece and Portugal.
Nestle has the option of appealing against the decision before the EU's
highest court within two months.
(Reporting by Julia Fioretti; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)
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