Legal updates and opinions
News / News
SUPERMAC VS MCDONALDS – THE TRADE MARK BATTLE CONTINUES
By Donvay Wegierski, Director
The European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) has partially cancelled McDonald’s EU trade mark registration for MC. Favouring the non-use application brought by Irish fast food chain Supermac that McDonalds has since appealed comes just a few months after the EUIPO cancelled McDonald’s BIG MAC EU registration.
In terms of the EUIPO’s partial revocation of the trade mark MC, this registration remains valid in respect of certain goods including chicken nuggets and sandwiches while other goods and services have been removed from the registration, including restaurant services.
As we know a trade mark adds significant value to a business and as a result can be desired by others. Without a doubt, MC is fundamental to McDonalds though understandably sought after by others particularly those with the same namesake, in this case Supermac.
The general principle is that if a trade mark is not used for a certain period, a trade mark can be vulnerable to cancellation for non-use. It is necessary for an interested third party to formally file cancellation proceedings on the grounds of non-use and it is then left up to the trade mark owner to shift that onus by providing evidence that the mark has in fact been used.
Here, the EUIPO found that there was no evidence of use of the mark MC within the EU alone but instead that the mark MC serves as a prefix as it is combined with other elements including McFlurry and McNuggets and McChicken. These combination marks further confirm that MC pertains to a group or family of marks eminating from the McDonald’s name and that MC is not a distinctive mark on its own.
McDonalds may choose to appeal this ruling too but will need to demonstrate that the EUIPO’s findings were flawed.
IMPLICATIONS
- Enforcement: McDonalds can still use the mark MC but enforcing it against others for unauthorised use is confined to those goods and services for which the registration remains valid in the EU;
- Evidence of use: Both rulings adverse to McDonalds provide some guidance to brand holders as to the evidence of use required if defending a non-use cancellation action. The standard of proof is not excessively high but the evidence provided should be strong:
- Evidence of online use also requires visitor statistics;
- Evidence of use must show that the mark is used within the normal course of trade and genuine, that is the mark is used in relation to the goods and services for which the mark is registered in that territory in exchange for payment;
- Advertising material, affidavits and brochures also require proof of actual sales such as invoices; and
- Although considered, affidavits signed by employees are less persuasive than those from an unrelated source are.
- Distinctiveness: It is common to use a mark in combination with a range of products, which together, comprise a family of marks. Brand owners should ensure that this mark is also used alone to retain the distinctiveness of the mark; and
- Review and refile: Brand owners refile trade marks that are not in use, albeit defensively, protecting those trade marks that are vulnerable to cancellation for non-use.
Latest News
But first, there is a duty to exhaust internal remedies!
Before an aggrieved requester can approach a court for appropriate relief, following a decision of refusal for access to [...]
One database for all your identification information? Privacy considerations
The Department of Home Affairs (Home Affairs) recently published the Draft National Identification and Registration Bill (Draft Bill). The [...]
AI and protection of data in the mining industry
and Chiara Ferri, Candidate Attorney The mining industry in South Africa has embraced to digital transformation. Machine Learning, Big [...]
Think before issuing instructions to employees
In Association of Mineworkers and Construction workers Union obo Mkhonto & others [13 February 2023], the employees were charged [...]
Is a municipal by-law prohibiting transfer of property without a “SPLUMA Certificate” constitutional and valid?
In an unreported case[1] of the High Court of South Africa, Mpumalanga Division, Middelburg ("Court"), a number of owners [...]
(Insurance) fraud unravels all: The SCA confirms that fraud can lead to the forfeiture of a partly valid and partly fraudulent claim when a policy says so
In Discovery Insure Limited v Masindi the SCA considered whether the entirety of an insurance claim should be forfeited [...]

