Legal updates and opinions
News / News
IP & LEGACY
By Donvay Wegierski, Director
NELSON MANDELA INTERNATIONAL DAY
18 July is Nelson Mandela International Day in remembrance and in honour of Nelson Mandela, celebrated each year on his birthday. Madiba’s legacy is vigorously safeguarded and fundamental is the intellectual property residing in Nelson Mandela’s image, name and quotations, owned and protected by the Nelson Mandela Foundation. Trade mark registrations include NELSON MANDELA, 46664, NELSON MANDELA INTERNATIONAL DAY and images of Nelson Mandela covering a wide range of goods and services with any unauthorised use thereof likely to be an infringement. [1]Guidelines produced by the Nelson Mandela Foundation are intended to protect the repute associated with Nelson Mandela’s image and brand name, strongly discouraging the unauthorised use of Nelson Mandela’s name and his legacy for commercial exploitation.
PERSONAL NAMES
The immense value and repute associated with public figures cannot be underestimated and all necessary steps should be taken to ensure that all potential intellectual property be protected at the outset.
One might ask why formal intellectual property protection is in any event necessary when a brand is one’s name (also referred to as an eponymous brand). Names, afterall, give a personal touch, connecting the consumer with that individual’s style and personality.
The risk, however, lies when the control of that business changes and the result commercialises this intellectual property. Founders of personal name labels, predominantly in the fashion and luxury goods industry, have lost the right to trade under their own names. These include Jo Malone who, consequent to business buy-outs, could no longer use her name for perfumes and so switched to “Jo Loves”. The late Kate Spade, who sold her handbag business in 2007 and renounced her right to use her personal name commercially, and Paulo Gucci, former chief designer of Gucci, who under court order was only able to use his name placed after a different brand name, provided too that it was smaller than that brand name. There is much written about Karen Millen, UK fashion designer, who lost all title to her name and battled her rights for future expansion when she sold her majority share in Karen Millen Holdings Ltd.


All terms of an agreement will always require careful consideration, and perhaps all too often the long-term consequences and commercial realities associated with intellectual property rights are not thoroughly considered. Trade mark registrations for logos, names (including nick names) and new brands provide statutory protection against unauthorised use and can be licensed for royalties. Copyright subsists in a work provided that work is original and in a material form. In South Africa, although there is no registration process for copyright, the nuances, intricacies and exceptions thereof should not be overlooked.
It goes without saying that as with Mandela’s legacy, intellectual property and the rights that vest therein can be forever, provided they are safe guarded.
[1] https://www.mandeladay.com/pages/terms-and-conditions.
Latest News
Contracts of temporary employment services employees
National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa obo Nkala and others v Durpo Workforce Solutions [2016] 3 BALR 229 (MEIBC) ISSUE [...]
SCA judgments: Capstone & Kluh
In our November 2014 edition of Legalwerks, we discussed the decisions of the Full Bench of the High Court of [...]
Property buyers may be liable for historical debt
In a recent judgement handed down by the Supreme Court of Appeal, the court ruled that a hypothec created by [...]
Remuneration of employees in different provinces
Duma v Minister of Correctional Services & others ISSUE Whether the failure to pay an employee in one [...]
Non-striking employees not to be locked out: limitations of the employer’s right to lock out
Transport and Allied Workers Union of South Africa v PUTCO Limited [2016] ZACC On 8 March 2016, in the [...]
Criminalisation of cartels: a potential cure with side effects
Competition authorities particularly in the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia have enacted and entrenched criminal penalties for cartel behaviour. [...]


