Africa: Analysing Kenyan judgments concerning counterfeiting and common law rights

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

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

Africa: Analysing Kenyan judgments concerning counterfeiting and common law rights

counterfeit-africa-final.jpg

A recent court case, Republic v Anti Counterfeit Agency and Caroline Mangala t/a Hair Works Salon (20 November 2019), involved an application to quash a seizure of allegedly counterfeit beauty products. Kenya is one of the few countries in Africa to have specific anti-counterfeiting legislation, the Anti-Counterfeit Act. One thing this legislation does is create a dedicated enforcement body known as the Anti-Counterfeit Authority (formerly the Anti-Counterfeit Agency), and it was this body that conducted the seizure. The person from whom the goods were seized claimed that the raid had been unfair and illegal.

The judgment suggests that there might be a degree of misunderstanding in the local business community about counterfeiting. The applicant claimed that before the raid, she had submitted samples of her products (identical to the ones that had been seized) to the Kenya Bureau of Standards, which had certified that they complied with the necessary standards. However, as the judge pointed out, this was irrelevant because standards and counterfeiting are very different issues – goods can be substandard but not counterfeit, or counterfeit but not substandard.

The applicant further claimed that the raid had been illegal because the trademark in issue had not been registered. However, the judge held that trademark registration is not a requirement. This is because the legislation talks of 'intellectual property rights', and in Kenya the ability to sue for passing off is an intellectual property right.

Another recent case, Thima Coffee Machinery Limited v Gulf Africa Machinery Kenya Limited

(30 October 2019), involved a request for an interim injunction pending the finalisation of full court proceedings, and it also dealt with common law rights. The request was based on the fact that the applicant had used a trademark 'Thima' in relation to the sale and lease of farm machinery for 23 year and indeed registered it as a business name and later as a company name (although never as a trademark).The respondent had much later adopted the same name for a similar business, and in fact registered it as a trademark.

The court granted an interim injunction prohibiting the respondent from selling goods under the name Thima or a confusingly similar name on the basis that there was a prima facie case. The judge referred to the concept of goodwill and said this: 'The investment that the applicant has put in its business over the many years may be eroded irreparably in the event that the orders of injunction sought are not granted.'

Kenya is a hotspot for counterfeiting. Fortunately, however, it has dedicated anti-counterfeiting legislation, a dedicated anti-counterfeiting enforcement body and a reasonably good court system.

Chris Walters

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Leaders at the newly merged firm Jones Maxwell Smith & Davis reveal their plan to take on bigger firms while attracting more clients and talent
Charles Achkar, who will bring a team of two with him, said he was excited about joining ‘one of the few strong IP boutiques’
Andy Lee, head of IP at Brandsmiths and winner of the Soft IP Practitioner of the Year award, tells us why 2024 was a seminal year and why clients value brave advice
The deal to acquire MIP's parent company is expected to complete by the end of May 2025
Jinwon Chun discusses the need for vigilance, his love for iced coffee, and preparing for INTA
Karl Barnfather’s new patent practice will focus on protecting and enforcing tech innovations in the electronics, AI, and software industries
Partner Ranjini Acharya explains how her Federal Circuit debut resulted in her convincing the court to rule that machine learning technology was not patent-eligible
Paul Hastings and Smart & Biggar also won multiple awards, while Baker McKenzie picked up a significant prize
Burford Capital study finds that in-house lawyers have become more likely to monetise patents, but that their IP portfolios are still underutilised
Robert Reading and Faidon Zisis at Clarivate unpick some of the data surrounding music-related trademarks
Gift this article