UNFAIR COMPETITION PREVENTION LAW CASE:
[Closely related companies considered one
entity and therefore entitled to use the same mark in
their respective company names.]
(Korean Supreme Court rendered January 28,
2016; Case No. 2014 DA 24440)
1. Facts
In 1959, Mr. Kim Soo-keon
established a coal briquette-manufacturing corporation called DAESUNG Briquette
Co., Ltd. Over the years the company
grew into a conglomerate known as “DAESUNG Group” whose businesses included a range
of gas and energy services and products. The companies in the conglomerate were
closely related. For example, employees
working for the conglomerate businesses were all recruited through DAESUNG
Group and said employees were frequently exchanged between the subsidiary
companies.
Mr. Kim Soo-keon died
in February 2001. On June 30, 2001, the
companies in the DAESUNG Group were divided between Mr. KIm’s three sons with
the intent of giving each son full financial control over his group of
companies. Despite this fact, the Korean
government deemed the companies to be one entity pursuant to the Monopoly
Regulation and Fair Trade Act (the “Monopoly Regulation Act”). In addition, after the division, the sons continued
to use the DAESUNG mark within each of their respective set of companies.
After the division
of the DAESUNG Group, the oldest son, Mr. Kim Yong-dae, owned the following
companies (hereinafter ‘Plaintiffs’):
DAESUNG Industrial Co., Ltd., DAESUNG
Industrial Gas Co., Ltd., DAESUNG Celtics Co., Ltd., and DAESUNG Measuring Co.,
Ltd. On October 1, 2009, the youngest
son, Mr. Kim Yong-hoon, established DAESUNG Holdings Co., Ltd. (written in
Korean characters, hereinafter ‘Defendant’). In the following year on October 4, 2010, he expanded
the name to include DAESUNG Holdings Co., Ltd., written in English.
The Plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against the Defendant with
the Seoul Central District Court seeking for claims that the Defendant should
not use the trade name and should compensate the damages they suffered, on
November 21, 2012.
2. Seoul
Central District Court Case No. 2012 GAHAP 98305
The
Plaintiffs alleged that the Defendant did not have the right to use the marks “DAESUNG”
and “Holdings” in his company name for the following reasons. First, the Plaintiffs claimed that the mark “DAESUNG”
was well known as being associated with its companies. And second, the word “Holdings” gives the
impression that the Defendant’s company was the parent company and that all
other company’s bearing the name “DAESUNG” were subordinate to the Defendant’s
company. The Plaintiffs claimed that this
violated Article 2(1) of the Unfair Competition Prevention and Trade Secret
Protection Act (the “Unfair Competition
Prevention Act”) which states: “Acts of unfair competition means any of the following
acts (ii) an act of causing confusion with another person's commercial
facilities or activities by using signs identical or similar to another
person's name, trade name, emblem or any other sign widely known in the
Republic of Korea as an indication of commerce.”
In
the lawsuit the Plaintiffs claimed that the use of the marks “DAESUNG” and
“Holdings” by the Defendant was detrimental to its companies. The Plaintiffs claimed damages in the amount of approximately US$ 50,000 for each of its four companies. The Plaintiffs also petitioned the court for a
cease and desist order in relation to these marks.
Seoul Central District Court’s Decision:
In
a written decision dated June 21, 2013, the Seoul Central District Court rejected
the Plaintiffs’ argument. The Court held
that the DAESUNG mark was well-known in
Korea as a result of the success of the DEASUNG Group. Both the Plaintiffs and the Defendant
benefited from the fame of the DAESUNG name.
The Court determined that it must examine the names of the Plaintiffs
and the company owned by the Defendant in their entirety, particularly in light
of the Korean government’s decision to deem them one entity under the Monopoly
Regulation Act. The Court held that there was no evidence to
suggest that the DAESUNG mark was well-known only in relation to the
Plaintiffs. And further the Court stated
that the Plaintiffs and the company owned by the Defendant were not similar in
terms of sound, appearance and meaning.
3. Appeal by the
Plaintiff to Seoul High Court
Seoul High Court’s Decision
The Plaintiffs appealed the Seoul Central
District Court decision to the Seoul High Court on July 26, 2013 (Case No. 2013 NA 44845). The Seoul High Court rejected the appeal and
upheld the lower court’s decision specifically agreeing that:
-
the
Plaintiffs cannot claim ownership of the DAESUNG mark as it is not well-known
only in relation to the Plaintiffs,
-
the
Plaintiffs and the Defendant companies all fall under the same group according
to the government’s decision pursuant to the Monopoly Regulation Act, and
-
the
parties have been disputing the right to use this mark in other court cases.
The
Seoul High Court concluded that the act of the Defendant using the mark does
not fall under Article 2(1)(ii) of the Unfair Competition Prevention Act and since the companies
belong to the same group then consumers and traders recognize that these
companies are closely related and therefore there is no confusion.
4. Appeal by
the Plaintiffs to the Korean Supreme Court
The Plaintiffs filed a further appeal with the
Supreme Court on April 1, 2014. The
Supreme Court rejected the Plaintiffs’ appeal in a decision dated January 28,
2016 (Case No. 2014 DA 24440). The legal
principle and decision from the Supreme Court are as follows:
Legal Principle:
In determining whether Article 2(1)(ii) of the Unfair
Competition Prevention Act applies, the Court examined the following issues:
(i) when dealing with companies in the same industry, the appearance, sound,
and meaning of the company names must be considered objectively, independently
and in their entirety, and (ii) given the circumstances, whether general
consumers would be confused or misled as to the source of the business.
Decision:
The decision of the Supreme Court stated
that:
-
There was no evidence that it was solely the activities of the
Plaintiffs that made the DAESUNG mark famous,
-
There was no evidence that the Plaintiffs alone inherited the right to
use the DAESUNG mark,
-
The Defendant did not obtain illegal profits and did not receive a “free
ride” on the reputation of the Plaintiff, and
-
When comparing the Defendant company names with the Plaintiffs names,
the Court determined that based on the appearance, sound and meaning of the
respective names, that consumers would not be confused by the source of the
business.
Accordingly, the act of the Defendant using
the “DAESUNG” and “Holdings” marks do not constitute a violation of the Unfair
Competition Act, Article 2(1)(ii).
5. Comments
In our opinion, the
Plaintiffs were unsuccessful for two reasons.
First, after the June 30, 2001 division of the DAESUNG Group between the
sons, the Defendant was permitted to use the DAESUNG mark in his company name. We believe that the Plaintiffs would have had
a much more compelling case and they sought to prohibit the Defendant from
using the DAESUNG mark as soon as the parent company was divided. And second, the fact that the Korean
government had deemed that the companies belonging to the Defendant and the
Plaintiffs were in fact one entity under the Monopoly Regulation made it
impossible for the Plaintiffs to later argue otherwise. The Plaintiffs should have appealed this government
decision immediately and fought to have the companies deemed independent of one
another.
Copyright ⓒ BOOK CHON, 2016