Russia: Jackpot for trade mark plaintiff
Managing IP is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

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

Russia: Jackpot for trade mark plaintiff

Sometimes it is difficult to predict which is more lucrative – to toil over a trade mark and produce goods or do nothing but sue infringers. A CJSC Renna Holdin obtained trade mark registration number 421859 for a figurative trade mark with the word element "moo cow from Korenovka" (pictured; Korenovka is the name of a village).

cow.jpg

Later on, the owner of the trademark initiated a court action against Kuban Korovka Ltd (moo cow from Kuban – again the name of a region in Russia). The claim was routine: to stop unlawful use of the designation confusingly similar to the registered trade mark, destroy the counterfeit products and award compensation to the plaintiff (compensation is an alternative to damages and needs no evidence to prove damage).

The commercial court did not grant the claims of the plaintiff. The judgment was appealed but without success. The judgment was further appealed to a higher court which cancelled the previous judgments and the case was sent down to the first instance court for re-examination. The first instance court examined the case from the beginning and allowed the plaintiff's claims.

The respondent appealed to the appeal court though without success. The respondent then appealed the judgment at the IP Court. The respondent argued that the owner of the trade mark did not produce the products marked by the controversial trade mark.

The IP Court stated that the courts of lower instances correctly inferred that infringement of rights for the trade mark took place. The respondent indeed produced dairy products and marked them with the plaintiff's trade mark. The compensation claimed by the plaintiff was double the cost of the infringing products.

The respondent argued that his designation was not confusingly similar. However the court did not accept his position all the more because earlier the respondent had tried to register his designation but his trade mark application was rejected by the patent office. The IP court noted that during previous hearings at lower courts those courts repeatedly asked the respondent to provide information on the quantity of the products produced under the controversial trade mark but the respondent avoided providing that information.

Following requests by the plaintiff the court of first instance sought a large amount of evidence from the distributors of the respondent, including from the companies which manufactured packages of dairy products. The court calculated the quantity of the products sold by the respondent and found that the plaintiff correctly calculated the amounts and doubled them as allowed by the law. The court also noted that it could not diminish the amount of claimed compensation because this was the result of accurate calculation (unlike the case where the plaintiff could simply claim compensation without explaining why in which case the court could moderate it at its discretion).

The result was that the court awarded compensation to the plaintiff of more than Rb114 million ($2 million) and this, after the value of the Ruble shrank twofold (!) against the dollar otherwise the compensation would be some $3.5 million. The compensation is indeed unusually high for the Russian courts but certainly very much educational for future infringers.

Biriulin-Vladimir

Vladimir Biriulin


Gorodissky & PartnersRussia 129010, MoscowB. Spasskaya Str25, stroenie 3Tel: +7 495 937 6116 / 6109Fax: +7 495 937 6104 / 6123pat@gorodissky.ru www.gorodissky.com 

more from across site and ros bottom lb

More from across our site

High-earning businesses place most value on the depth of the external legal teams advising them, according to a survey of nearly 29,000 in-house counsel
Kilpatrick Townsend was recognised as Americas firm of the year, while patent powerhouse James Haley won a lifetime achievement award
Partners at Foley Hoag and Kilburn & Strode explore how US and UK courts have addressed questions of AI and inventorship
In-house lawyers have considerable influence over law firms’ actions, so they must use that power to push their external advisers to adopt sustainable practices
We provide a rundown of Managing IP’s news and analysis from the week, and review what’s been happening elsewhere in IP
Counsel say they’re advising clients to keep a close eye on confidentiality agreements after the FTC voted to ban non-competes
Data from Managing IP+’s Talent Tracker shows US firms making major swoops for IP teams, while South Korea has also been a buoyant market
The finalists for the 13th annual awards have been announced
Counsel reveal how a proposal to create separate briefings for discretionary denials at the USPTO could affect their PTAB strategies
The UK Supreme Court rejected the firm’s appeal against an earlier ruling because it did not raise an arguable point of law
Gift this article