Austria: Condoms and music

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Austria: Condoms and music

Sponsored by

sonn-400px.png

The case reported here concerns the application for registration of a word mark GROOVE in relation to "condoms" (class 10).

The Austrian Patent Office denied registration of the trade mark for descriptiveness. It found that the majority of the target public would consist of adults with an education in English language. These adults would know that GROOVE means "gutter, channel, furrow" in English. If condoms had grooves, this could have a stimulating effect, which consumers were also aware of. Another meaning coming from the field of music, where GROOVE is understood as a rhythmic element, was not in the foreground, especially since the first meaning of the word gave a meaningful connection to the relevant goods.

In its appeal, the applicant argued that the word GROOVE had received an entry in the German dictionary "Duden" as being attributed to (modern) musical jargon. Accordingly, the average consumer, being reasonably well informed and reasonably observant and circumspect, would mainly consider this meaning and not find any descriptive meaning in the mark GROOVE for the goods "condoms".

The Appeal Court followed this argumentation and allowed the appeal. It found that the term GROOVE is evidentially an Anglicism in German which has become so independent of its English ancestral form that it is attributed solely to (modern) musical jargon and essentially refers to music with rhythm and tempo. Other German loan words such as "groovy" and "grooven" would also refer to this understanding. In view of its independence in German, the word GROOVE would not, after its literal possible translation from English, be interpreted as "gutter, groove, furrow", but would be understood immediately and directly as a reference to the understanding of "music with the right rhythm and tempo". This being the basis for the prognosis of the understanding by the relevant consumers in relation to the specific scope of protection (namely, contraception), the Court of Appeal therefore did not see any obvious factual or meaningful connection between this scope of protection and the consumers' understanding of GROOVE. Starting from the abstract scope of protection, it was not possible without further thought operation to associate a sign which is musically connoted with contraceptive goods. It is not obvious to understand the GROOVE trade mark as information on the type of goods (condoms) marked with it, which is why the sign is not descriptive.

This decision acknowledges the fact that an English word which has been adopted into the German language and has received an entry in the German dictionary can lose its original literal meaning in the understanding of the Austrian public.

Andrea Brandstetter


SONN & PARTNER Patentanwälte

Riemergasse 14

A-1010 Vienna, Austria

Tel: +43 1 512 84 05

Fax: +43 1 512 98 05

office@sonn.at

www.sonn.at


more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Peter O’Sullivan, a former professional services executive, says he is looking forward to helping Pearce IP become the leading life sciences firm in Australia and New Zealand
Matteo Di Lernia, advocate at LCA Studio Legale, unpicks the CJEU’s ruling in M.M. Ristorazione v Villa Ramazzini, including its impact on litigation strategies
Leaders at IP boutique say the decision to pursue sponsorless partnership with the specialised investment arm of a private equity firm comes at a time of ‘profound transformation’ in the profession
Patrick Zhang, formerly of Atlassian and TiVo, will become Via’s vice president of licensing and commercial strategy, tasked with helping expand client partnerships and licensing deals
IP services firm says new platform will cut patent portfolio analysis from months to minutes and optimise monetisation efforts
New role for the High Court judge will leave a gap for an IP specialist judge at the first instance
Laura Achával, founder of Achával IP in Argentina, shares how an evolving vision led her to launch her own practice
Monetisation is standing at the forefront of patent development, and one firm says AI is increasingly being deployed
Data centres are being built across the US, prompting patent disputes, but Texas’s thriving tech industry and patent-ready courts make the state particularly ‘ripe’ for litigation
Carpmaels & Ransford is set to bolster its UK attorney team with the appointment of Simmons & Simmons’s head of IP in the UK
Gift this article