Lawyers for litigation

Henley Constructions Pty Ltd v Henley Arch Pty Ltd [2023] FCAFC 62

Henley Constructions Pty Ltd v Henley Arch Pty Ltd [2023] FCAFC 62

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 MARKSinfringement – 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 MARKSinfringement – 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

  • Deakin University v Macreadie [2026] FCA 481

    CONSUMER LAW – application for permanent injunctions pursuant to s 232 of the Australian Consumer Law restraining the respondents from representing that the second respondent is the owner of the relevant intellectual property and trade marks of the Blue Carbon Lab – application for mandatory injunction requiring the second respondent to change its name –…

  • New Aim Pty Ltd v Leung [2026] FCAFC 49

    CONTRACT – confidentiality – where the first respondent was employed by the appellant – where the employment contract contained a clause providing that the first respondent shall not misuse confidential information of the appellant – where the contract did not contain a definition of confidential information – where the contractual obligation was equivalent to an…

  • v2food Pty Ltd v Provectus Algae Pty Ltd [2026] FCA 436

    PATENTS – appeal under s 60(4) of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) – where opponent has filed submitting notice and Commissioner of Patents is not taking active part in proceedings – where there is no evidence to support grounds of opposition before the Court – whether opposition should be dismissed – whether patent should proceed…


Posted

in

Send this to a friend