TRADE MARKS – appeal – where primary judge found that the respondent’s registered trade mark HENLEY was valid and infringed by the first appellant – whether primary judge erred in finding that HENLEY was capable of distinguishing the respondent’s services under s 41 of the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) (the Trade Marks Act) – where primary judge found that HENLEY was not inherently distinctive – where primary judge found that s 41(6) was satisfied – no error established in finding that s 41(6) was satisfied
TRADE MARKS – infringement – substantial identity –whether primary judge erred in finding that HENLEY CONSTRUCTIONS is substantially identical to the respondent’s registered composite mark comprising the words HENLEY and PROPERTIES with device elements – error established – appeal allowed in part
TRADE MARKS – infringement – deceptive similarity – whether primary judge erred in finding that certain marks used by the first respondent are deceptively similar to the respondent’s registered marks – no error established
TRADE MARKS – infringement – use as a trade mark – whether primary judge erred in finding that the first appellant had used certain signs as trade marks – whether primary judge failed to have regard to the setting in which each sign was used – no error established
TRADE MARKS – infringement – prior use defence – whether primary judge erred in finding that the first appellant had not established a defence under s 124 of the Trade Marks Act – where primary judge found that the respondent’s use of the infringed marks HENLEY COLLECTION, HENLEY RESERVE and HENLEY ESSENSE was use of HENLEY based on s 7(1) of the Trade Marks Act – where primary judge found that the first appellant had not used HENLEY CONSTRUCTIONS prior to the respondent’s first use of HENLEY – error established – appeal allowed in part
CONSUMER LAW – misleading and deceptive conduct – false or misleading representations – whether primary judge erred in finding that the first appellant had contravened the Australian Consumer Law and the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) – whether primary judge erred in finding that the respondent had a relevant reputation – whether primary judge erred in finding that the building and construction industry is a national industry – whether primary judge erred in finding that there to be evidence of consumer confusion – no error established
TRADE MARKS – relief – whether primary judge erred in directing the question of an account of profits be determined separately after all other relief – where trial set down on all issues – no error established
TRADE MARKS – cross appeal – whether primary judge erred in finding that the first appellant’s use of 1300HENLEY was not use as a trade mark – error established – cross-appeal allowed
COSTS – application for leave to appeal from costs judgment of primary judge – offer of compromise under r 25.14(3) of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) – where primary judge ordered that the appellants pay the respondent’s costs on an indemnity basis – whether primary judge erred in finding that the respondent obtained a judgment more favourable than its offer of compromise – application for leave to appeal dismissed
Related cases – trademark infringement
-
Medibank Private Limited v Australian Information Commissioner [2024] FCA 117
PRIVACY – investigation by Australian Information Commissioner – breach of Australian Privacy Principles – own initiative investigation under s 40(2) of Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) – representative complaint under ss 36 and 38 of the Act – injunction to restrain investigation under representative complaint – separate Federal Court representative proceeding dealing with overlapping issues –…
-
Native Extracts Pty Ltd v Plant Extracts Pty Ltd (No 2) [2024] FCA 106
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY – whether information about extraction machine was confidential information owned by company where second respondent was former director – where machine had been identified by directors as suitable for proposed business prior to incorporation of company – where second respondent was informed about machine by third party on unrestricted basis – where evidence…
-
Bolin Technology Co., Ltd v BirdDog Technology Ltd [2024] FCA 129
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – anti-anti-suit injunction – urgency – balance of convenience
