November 20, 2011

Adv. Doron Neuman represents Toolbox Design. Their trademark application number 224994 was refused, and the applicant requested and was granted a hearing. the day before the hearing, it was noted that he had not paid the request fee and the staff of the patent office made efforts to reach him, apparently beyond that required of them. On the day of the hearing itself, the Patent Office managed to make contact with the legal representative who informed them that his client had decided to forfeit his right to the hearing. In view of the costs incurred in preparation, costs of NIS 800 were awarded to the State for wasting judgement time, unproductively used due to applicant’s behavior.

The Case: TM 224994 to Toolbox design, 7 November 2011, by Adjudicator Ms Y. S Caspi


Mylan and Sandoz Claim that their Generic Versions of Copaxone do not Infringe Teva’s Patents

September 8, 2011

Sometimes Israel’s Teva is wrongly considered as being only a generic drug player.

One of their patented pharmaceuticals is Copaxone, and Teva have filed suit against four companies – Novartis’ Sandoz unit, Mylan, Momenta Pharmaceuticals and India’s Natco Pharma – alleging infringement of patents for best-selling drug Copaxone.

The generics firms claim that Teva’s patent for Copaxone (glatiramer acetate) are invalid.

The US District Court for the Southern District of New York refused to issue a summary judgment in the case, requiring a trial to take place.

Meanwhile, some analysts suggest that the outcome of the court case could be unimportant because there are serious questions about the ability of the generics companies to prove that their products are equivalent to the branded Copaxone. Bioequivalence is difficult in this instance since Copaxone is a complicated molecule, with a poorly understood mechanism of action and no validated biomarkers for its efficacy.

In this regard, we note that Teva has repeatedly asked the US Food and Drug Administration (the FDA) to refuse to approve any abbreviated New Drug Application for a “purported generic version” of Copaxone, given the “inability to establish acceptable ‘sameness’ of the active ingredients” in the drug. To date, all the petitions have been rejected.

Consequently, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) may require a fairly extensive clinical trials programme for any generic version and the patent will anyway lapse in 2014.

A verdict in the case is not expected for several months.


Nurit Maoz, Head of Trademark Department at Israel Patent Authority, Found Dead

August 14, 2011

Nurit Maoz, 60, and her husband Noah Maoz, 64, were apparently murdered in their Jerusalem apartment on Shabbat. Their bodies were found by their son who alerted emergency services.

There is a gag order on the case.  Funeral details have not yet been announced.

Nurit was the head of the trademark division of the Israel Patent Authority. She was a consummate professional who, in recent years,  was responsible for many changes including the computerization of the trademark database thereby enabling searches based on graphical elements, the conversion of the department to a paperless environment and implementation of the Madrid Protocol.

She will be sorely missed by the Israel IP Community who are shocked by this development. Our condolences are extended to her family, friends and colleagues.


Wrangling over Procedure vs. Substance

August 9, 2011

When Israel trademark application number 218503 for Rodeo in Class 25 (apparel) filed by Weiss Brothers Manufacturing and Marketing LTD published, Wrangler Apparel Corp filed an opposition via Shlomo Cohen Law Offices.

The mark in question is pictured alongside.

An interim ruling by the Arbitrator of Intellectual Property, Yaara Shoshani Caspi, has now published. The ruling addresses the issue of whether, once the sides have agreed to a ruling based on the contents of the file, whether the opposer can file additional evidence.

Ms Caspi seems to accept the principle that in certain circumstances, the adjudicator can stray from the ordinances and allow additional evidence to be submitted, but in general, evidence should be submitted in one go, within the time limits. In this case, she noted that the issuance of the mark has been delayed by a couple of years due to the opposition proceeding, and the opposer has tried to submit additional evidence 7 months after the deadline for so doing.

Hinting at procrastination in bad faith, Ms Caspi ruled that there is an onus on the opposer to justify the deadlines and straying from procedure, which hasn’t been met. She considers the request merely an attempt to improve their case and refused to allow Wrangler to submit additional evidence, and has given them 30 days from the issuance of the ruling to submit their summary.

COMMENT

Since Aharon Barak’s presidency of the Israel Supreme Court, there has been a tendency to allow substantive issues to over-rule procedural ones, and one might have expected the evidence to have been allowed with costs awarded to the applicant to compensate for the deviation in procedure.

As a self-confessed formalist (no doubt reflecting my education is England, and having studied engineering, physics and  Talmud before Israel Law) I am pleased that this request was rejected and that the rules and regulations are given due weight. Furthermore, it is possible, as Ms Caspi  suspects, that the opposer or his counsel are indeed guilty of time-wasting shenanigans. However, it is worth noting that the mark is somewhat reminiscent of Wrangler’s who promote rodeos, and in trademark issues, there is no such thing as closure. It does make sense viewing all the evidence and then ruling to avoid cancellation proceedings and parallel motions through the courts.

It is not impossible that the Wrangler or their counsel were simply disorganized and the evidence should be heard.

The moral of the story here is for opposers to ensure that they get their evidence together promptly and submit it all in good time.


Israel Supreme Court Rules that Rights Owners Should Bear the Costs of Destroying Infringing Goods Stopped by Customs Where Collecting from the Importer is not Possible

August 4, 2011

Back in January, I reported on a decision by Judge Abraham Yaakov of the Tel Aviv District Court, that ruled that the Israel Customs Authority was wrong to charge the rights owner for storage and / or destruction of imports that infringed copyright or trademarks in cases where the costs can’t be recouped from the defendant. See: http://blog.ipfactor.co.il/2011/01/12/levis-successfully-sues-counterfeit-jean-importer-into-israel-judge-slams-israel-customs-for-billing-levis-for-storage-and-disposal-of-the-jeans/

The Israel Supreme Court has now heard an appeal by the Customs Authority concerning a shipment of fake Christian Dior Couture shoes that were imported by a West Bank Arab that abandoned the shipment and proved impossible to collect from.

In accordance with Section 200A of the Customs Ordinance, which was legislated in 1999 to conform Israeli law with TRIPS, the Customs Authorities detained the shipment and notified Christian Dior, who initiated proceedings and provided bank guarantees of NIS 5000.

Dior claimed that the bank guarantees could only be used to compensate defendants in the event that the Court dismissed the charges of copyright or trademark infringement.  Customs claimed that the money could be used to cover costs of storage and destruction of the goods.

Judge Abraham Yaakov of the District Court (the same judge who ruled in the Levi’s case) ruled that the shipment was to be destroyed by the importer, which would bear the expenses. The District Court held that the Customs Authorities (i.e. the tax payers) should bear the costs of storing and destroying infringing goods should the importer default.

The Supreme Court reversed this judgement and ruled that the rights owners should bear the cost of storage and destruction of infringing goods where Customs cannot collect from the importer. The Court saw no justification to use public funds to cover the costs of protection of private property. It interpreted Section 200A of the Customs Ordinance, which complies with Section 53(1) of the TRIPS Agreement, as allowing the Customs Authorities to use the bank guarantee for that purpose. The decision was given by Judge Asher Gronis. Judge Elyakim Rubinstein concurred but also recommended that the government consider requesting further guarantees from importers to cover the IP rights owner’s expenses or used other means to facilitate collection such as withholding tax rebates.

The Case: 3960/10 Israel Customs Against Christian Dior Couture and Iyad Habas, before Judges Rubinstein, Arbel and Gronis.  June 20, 2011.

COMMENT

Although I enjoyed reading Judge Yaakov’s ruling, I think that the Supreme Court is correct to reverse it.


Madrid – One Year On.

July 17, 2011

The Israel Chapter of the AIPPI held a meeting to discuss the effects of Israel joining Madrid Protocol, one year on.

The event, held at the American Zionists House in the middle of Tel Aviv, attracted some 40 participants, mostly patent attorneys and lawyers.

The new Commissioner of Patents, Assa Kling, spoke briefly about his first six weeks in office. He informed us that there is a certain inertia in the civil service that contrasted with private practice. He explained that he was meeting all 170 or so Israel Patent and Trademark Office staff members individually at least for a few minutes. He thanked the various senior staff members for their help in easing him into the position, and thanked his predecessor, Dr Meir Noam for his support, pointing out that despite Dr Noam’s term of office formally finishing before Commissioner Kling’s term started, Dr Noam had voluntarily spent large amounts of time helping him get up to speed and easing him into the job.

Commissioner Kling looked somewhat uncomfortable as he spoke. It could have been nerves, but I suspect he was simply suffering from over-dress, as he wore a charcoal suit and tie, whilst the rest of us, were rather more informally dressed, with even the chairperson of  the Israel Branch of the AIPPI and thus host of the event, Adv. Tal Band, was wearing an open-necked short-sleeve shirt.

Commissioner Kling was followed by Head of Trademark Dept. Ms Nurit Maoz who provided some valuable statistics regarding incoming trademark filings. It seems that there are more marks being filed in more classes as a result of Israel’s accession to the Madrid Protocol, with an increase of 22% from 7845 to 10,029  over the period 1 September 2010 to 30 June 2011, as compared to the same period a year earlier. This represents lots of protection for applicants and filing fees for the government. However, with multi-class filings now allowed, there has been a drop in the number of separate applications filed from 7845 to 6054 – i.e. 23%.

Furthermore, over this period, some 30% of applications being filed are filed directly under Madrid, and this has risen to about 50% in recent months, so the past few months have seen a steep drop in filings via local patent attorneys.

Not all is gloom and doom for the practitioners though. A number of applications have been rejected on substantive grounds and responding to office actions requires local representation. There is a lag between filing and examination, with the first Madrid filings having been made 9 months ago, and the first office actions issuing six months later. It seems therefore, as predicted, that though there is less bread and butter trademark filing work, this is partially offset by a slight increase in prosecution, and eventually there is likely to be more trademark litigation and enforcement in Israel, as there are more marks in more classes leading to increased potential for conflict.

A practitioner from a firm having both local and US presence and who thus had more experience of trademark filing and prosecution around the world under Madrid gave us the benefit of her insight. I shan’t publish her name and photo though as she illustrated her talk with stock cartoons downloaded over the Internet that apparently hadn’t been paid for. It seems that though experienced in trademarks, her knowledge of copyright issues is somewhat lacking. Her talk was entertaining though, not only due to the cartoons.


Dr Edgar Luzzatto 1914-2011

June 29, 2011

Dr Edgar Luzzatto, a third generation patent attorney, passes away at 97.
Our condolences are extended to son, Kfir (Riccardo), senior partner of Luzzatto et Luzzatto.

Edgar joined the Italian firm Luzzatto et Luzzatto to work with his father Enrico and his brother, for a brief period before World War II. He left Italy for the USA where he served in the United States Army in the years 1941-1946, fighting in the Pacific Ocean theater.
He practiced in the USA as a registered patent agent, and after a few
years returned to Italy where he worked as a consultant to foreign and local industry.

In 1976 he started a practice as a registered patent attorney in Israel, which was to become Luzzatto & Luzzatto. Dr Edgar Luzzatto left the partnership in 2000 and continued as a consultant until
2004, where he retired aged 90.

The Luzzatto family are descended from an aristocratic Italian family of that included many eminent rabbis. Indeed, at the IP in Jewish Law Conference I organized on Sunday, Professor Gershon Bacon reproduced and referred to the Rabbinic Approval of a songbook published in Italy in 1623, where, amongst other Rabbinic signatories, was Simcha Luzzatto, an early rabbinic forbear. This type of ban against copying predates the first copyright law, the Statute of Anne, by 86 years!


Israel Patent Office Closed for Pesach

April 18, 2011

The Israel Patent Office is closed for Pesach. It will reopen on 29th April 2011. All deadlines in the interim are postponed until it reopens.

Israeli applicants wishing to file a PCT application with the Israel Patent Office after Pesach, claiming priority from a US provisional application, with a due date whilst the Israel Patent Office is closed should be aware that in such circumstances, the USPTO will not recognize priority from the provisional application.

In such circumstances, it is advisable to file in the US under the Paris Convention or to file the PCT in Geneva within 12 months of priority.

Wishing all our readers a Happy Pesach or Easter as applicable.


Conference on Intellectual Property in Jewish Law

April 14, 2011

         

 

Are Delighted to Invite you to Participate in a

Conference on Intellectual Property in Jewish Law

JMB, Factor & Co. and Yad HaRav Herzogare delighted to invite you to a full day Conference on IP in Jewish Law, to be held on Sunday 26, June 2011 (24 Sivan 5771)

at the Yeshurun Center, 44 King George Street, Jerusalem.

TENTATIVE PROGRAM

Words of Welcome

Rabbi Prof. Abraham Sternberg 

My Grandfather Rabbi Yitzchak Issac Herzog’s Legacy

MK Isaac Herzog

The Halachic Basis of Intellectual Property in Jewish Law

Rabbi and Rabbinic Court Judge Zalman Nechemia Goldberg and

Former President of Supreme Rabbinic Court Rabbi Judge Shlomo Dzaichowski

Jurisprudence – IP in Jewish Law

Prof. Yechiel Kaplan, Haifa University

Bans and Approvals for Books – A Rabbinic Approach to Balancing Between Author and Publisher’s Rights and the Common Good

Rabbi Prof. Nahum Rakover, former Deputy Attorney General of the State of Israel and Director Jewish Legal Heritage Center

Halachic Obligation on the Individual to Recognize Secular IP Laws

Rabbi Yisrael Rosen, Director, The Zomet Institute

Historical Development of IP in Jewish Law

Rabbi Prof. Gershon Bacon, Bar-Ilan University 

An Overview of Recent Patent, Trademark and Copyright Issues of Interest to Jewish Law

Adv. Aharon Factor and Dr. Michael Factor, JMB, Factor & Co. 

The Influence of Secular Law on IP in Halacha

Prof. David Nimmer, UCLA

Copyright in Jewish Law from Maimonides to Microsoft

Prof. Neil Netanel, UCLA

Trade Secrets in Jewish Law

Prof. Jeremy Phillips, Center for Intellectual Property, QMW, University of London

COMPARATIVE APPROACH FROM OTHER MONETHEISTIC RELIGIONS

IP in Islamic Law

Prof. Amir Khoury, Tel Aviv University

IP in Christian Law

Dr. Roman Cholij, Trademark Attorney

 To register: seminars@israel-patents.co.il


Ripping Off Rings – Another confused decision by the Israel Court

March 29, 2011

H Stern's ring

H. Stern, a Brazilian jewelry manufacturer with many retail outlets in Israel and an international presence sells a finger ring. The ring is a flat gold band with a diamond encrusted oblong section and the rest of the band being polished to a mirror finish. The band is also decorated with a pentagram or Seal of Solomon on the shiny part on each side of the diamond oblong. 5 pointed stars are also engraved on the inside of the band. The ring is known as the Juliana model.

Aryeh Pozylov, through various companies including Orneal LTD, Nitfaz (a pun on nitfas, i.e. snapped up) and Pozylov Diamonds marketed a somewhat similar but substantially cheaper ring which has Star of David (Magen David, or Hexagram) decorations.  The pentagram is a registered trademark for H. Stern, chosen since Stern means a star.

Stern sued Pozylov invoking a number of causes of action including:

  •  trademark infringement
  • well-known mark infringement
  • passing off
  • copyright infringement
  • unjust enrichment
  • dilution
  •  stealing reputation and confusing the consumer

The Ruling

As to trademark infringement, Judge Pilpel ruled that the pentagram and the hexagram are arguably confusingly similar to look at, but for jewelry, the purchaser is particularly careful. She went on to rule that this is not all that relevant since according to Judge Gronish in the Taam Teva decision, when applying the so-called triple test, the appearance of the mark is of less importance than the sound of the mark when considering the “sight and sound test”, and pentagram sounds different from Magen David, therefore there is no likelihood of confusion(!)

Although the products under consideration are rings in both cases, since H. Stern does not sell via third parties, there is no real likelihood of confusion. Finally, Judge Drora Pilpel applied the fourth part of the triple test, the so-called ‘clear thinking test’, and decided that even though the sound of the mark was different (the ringing of the ring?), since the conceptual idea between Stern’s mark was to imply the maker, using a star (Stern being German for Star) as a maker’s mark, whereas the defendant’s Star of David implies made in Israel, there was no likelihood of confusion.

As to whether the trademark of the pentagram was well-known, Judge Pilpel related to the issue at some length, which is surprising, since she has already decided that there is no trademark infringement. Nevertheless, she decided that it wasn’t, despite the complainants remonstrations to the contrary.

The judge acknowledged that the plaintiff had a reputation for the Juliana design and that it was associated with them to some extent, but did not think that the public would be confused as to the source of the goods since H. Stern only sells rings in their own shops.

The defendant argued that copyright could not be applied since the ring could and should have been protected as a design. The judge dismissed this in a strange line of reasoning that I had difficulty following. Essentially, she argued that this was true of mass-produced machine manufactured objects but not of hand-made goods, and although clothing could and should be protected as designs and were not protected by copyright, jewelry could be.  She went on to rule that the combination of the shiny band, diamond encrusted oblong and stars were protected by copyright(!)

 Having recognized copyright in the combination of the three design elements, the judge went on to rule that the fact that one ring had hexagrams and the other pentagrams were not significant enough to alter the fact that the defendants ring was a blatant copy.

Since she had found copyright infringement, the judge considered the question of unjust enrichment irrelevant.

As to dilution and stealing reputation, the court threw this out for lack of proof of damage to H. Stern.

In conclusion, the judge found statutory damages of NIS 20,000 under the Copyright Ordinance of 1911 that was in force when the case was filed, and in the alternative, found that the plaintiff would be entitled to profits made by the defendant from the infringing rings. The judge also awarded NIS 40,000 costs.

Finally, the judge ordered the unsold stock of rings and the molds to be destroyed and for the defendant to cease advertising or selling these rings.

T.A.  1253/05 H. Stern Brazil and H. Stern Israel vs. Ornil and Pozylov, 13 March 2011 by Judge Drora Pilpel

Comments

Had the plaintiff filed a design registration they could have got an injunction and enforced their rights more simply and quickly.

The honorable judge apparently has little idea of how to apply the so-called triple test. The test of the sound and appearance of a trademark has relevance for a word mark, where goods are chosen by sound. The fact that Pentagram and Magen David sound different is totally irrelevant. The only question is whether the pentagram is recognizable as a trademark when applied to the ring, and whether the hexagram is confusingly similar. If the mark is seen as part of the design or the two marks are considered as distinctive in context, then there is no trademark infringement. If, however, the marks are confusingly similar, then there is trademark infringement. The fact that the word hexagram has two identical syllables as pentagram is totally irrelevant.

I suppose it would be churlish to point out that neither of Stern’s registered trademarks is actually for a single pentagram.

Stern’s Israel trademark registration number 170325 is for a five pointed star, not for a pentagram at all. The stars on the inside of the band are a registered trademark, the pentagram on the outside with a diamond in it, is not.

Does Stern use the pentagram on all their jewelry? Is the symbol widely used by them on the reverse of pendants, bracelets and rings? If so, it may fairly be considered as an unregistered trademark. Otherwise, it would probably be considered a design feature by the purchaser or the receiver of the gift. Only if it can fairly be considered as being a trademark at all, is the issue of whether the hexagram mark is confusingly similar.

In this regard, the hallmark for Britannia grade silver (95.84%) is a leopard head or a lion head erased, or, since 1999, with the number 958. The UK sterling silver hallmark is a lion passant. Sterling silver in Israel is indicated by the number 925, and Russian Silver by the number 880. These numbers and hallmarks are indicative of the relevant degree of similarity for trademarks in this field. I am not a judge. The right honorable Ms Pilpel is. She should, however, apply her judgment to relevant issues.

As to the issue of Stern only selling via their retail outlets, the point has some relevance, but would the receiver of a gift know where it was bought? Is jewelry never sold second-hand? The clear thinking test was anything but.

The judge really meant to say was that the purchaser would consider the Magen David a design element, not an indication of the source fo the goods. Therefore there was no trademark infringement.

No design was registered, and therefore there was no infringement.

As to copyright, in Israel although the design law which dates back to the British Mandate is sorely in need of revising, there are no unregistered design rights. Any mass-produced article is protectable as a registered design and is protectable for up to 15 years. By allowing copyright protection for such goods, presumably for life of the creator + 50 years, why would anyone register designs?

Since H Stern’s ring was designed for mass production, there is no copyright. That said, having wrongly established copyright the judge was correct in seeing it infringed by the defendant’s ring.

I am also unimpressed with the judge seeing copyright in the combination of three design elements, since H. Stern had argued that the pentagram was a trademark and not a design element. This should have estoppeled them from claiming it was part of the design, and with just the polished band and diamond oblong bit, Stern’s ring would not be sufficiently distinctive to attain copyright protection even if copyright applied, which in this case, under Israeli law, should not.  

It is a shame that the judge found it superfluous to rule on unjust enrichment because one assumes that the finding of copyright infringement would not stand up in court. Following the high court ruling in the A.Sh.I.R. case which is good legal precedent (even if arguably a poor decision), there are grounds to apply the Law of Unjust Enrichment where designs were not registered, if there is evidence of bad faith. In this case, I am not sure that there are grounds,  since I see this as an unregistered design in the public domain, nevertheless, think the judge could have been more thorough.


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