France: Adding figurative elements avoids confusion with prior marks

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

France: Adding figurative elements avoids confusion with prior marks

When conducting a trade mark availability search, we often recommend adding visual elements in order to avoid a possible likelihood of confusion with prior trade marks.

A recent judgment by the court of Appeal of Paris (Guy F et CIMAX Sarl v Groupe Industrie Services Info (GISI) Sasu – November 27 2015) seems to confirm this recommendation.

Guy, the owner of the French word mark Smart Industries, registered in 2012 with respect to classes 16, 35, 38 and 41, gave an exclusive license to CIMAX. In 2014, CIMAX used the trade mark to designate the organisation of professional exhibitions dedicated to smart industry. A third party GISI applied for and started to use a French word and design Smart Industry Summit in classes 35, 38 and 41. Guy and CIMAX considered this application and use as an infringement and started proceedings against GISI.

The debate was about first the distinctiveness of the denomination Smart Industries and second the likelihood of confusion between the compared trade marks.

Where the Court of First Instance considered that there was no infringement, the Court of Appeal ruled that the expression Smart industries was distinctive per se as it was not exclusively the designation of the designated goods and services, especially in relation to the organisation of exhibitions dealing with the innovation flowing from connected goods.

This ruling meant the Court now had to decide about the possible cancellation of the trade mark. It stated that the expression Smart Industries in 2012 wasn't commonly used in the professional language as a term for the smart industry. Consequently as the prior trade mark was considered to be distinctive, the judges had to find possible infringement.

The second application retrieved the prior trade mark, adding the descriptive term Summit only with a small figurative element consisting in the representation of an arch circling the words. Despite the identity and similarity of the compared services, the judges ruled that there was no likelihood of confusion although the signs are aurally and conceptually similar. However, few small visual differences were sufficient to consider the trade marks to actually be different. As a result , the second application was deemed not to infringe the prior trade mark.

To conclude, adding even the smallest figurative element to a distinctive prior trade mark can avoid a finding of likelihood of confusion.

Beacco

Marine Beacco


Gevers & Ores41, avenue de FriedlandParis 75008, FranceTel: +33 1 45 00 48 48Fax: +33 1 40 67 95 67paris@gevers.euwww.gevers.eu

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

New awards, including US ‘Firm of the Year’ and Latin America ‘Firm to Watch’, are among more than 90 prizes that will recognise firms and practitioners
DWF helped client Dairy UK secure a major victory at the UK Supreme Court
Hepworth Browne led Emotional Perception AI to victory at the UK Supreme Court, which rejected a previous appellate decision that said an AI network was not patentable
James Hill, general counsel at Norwich City FC, reveals how he balances fan engagement with brand enforcement, and when he calls on IP firms for advice
In the second of a two-part article, Gabrielle Faure-André and Stéphanie Garçon at Santarelli unpick EPO, UPC and French case law to assess the importance of clinical development timelines in inventive step analyses
Public figures are turning to trademark protection to combat the threat of AI deepfakes and are monetising their brand through licensing deals, a trend that law firms are keen to capitalise on
News of Avanci Video signing its first video licence and a win for patent innovators in Australia were also among the top talking points
Tom Melsheimer, part of a nine-partner team to join King & Spalding from Winston & Strawn, says the move reflects Texas’s appeal as a venue for high-stakes patent litigation
AI patents and dairy trademarks are at the centre of two judgments to be handed down next week
Jennifer Che explains how taking on the managing director role at her firm has offered a new perspective, and why Hong Kong is seeing a life sciences boom
Gift this article