
 |
Bulletins Story:
NO PASSING OFF PROTECTION FOR DESCRIPTIVE PROGRAMME TITLE:
A&E TELEVISION NETWORKS v CHANNEL 4
|
Date:
10.04.2006
|

The High Court has today handed down judgment rejecting a
passing off claim against Channel 4 by US programme producer
A&E Television Networks. The claim related to a TV programme
Channel 4 plans to broadcast with a name similar to a series
entitled Intervention broadcast by A&E in the USA.
Channel 4 can lawfully broadcast in the UK its own programme on a
similar subject, Intervention: We're coming to get
you.
In order to succeed in a passing off claim a claimant has to show
(1) goodwill or reputation in the UK in
connection with the name or branding of his own goods or services,
(2) a misrepresentation by the defendant to the claimant's
customers to the effect that they are acquiring the goods or
services of the claimant and (3) damage to the
claimant.
The main point in this case was the fact that the titles of both
programmes were descriptive of the programme itself - as programme
titles often are. Both programmes were about a specific
psychotherapeutic technique known as "intervention", in which
people suffering from addictions or compulsive behaviour disorders
are treated by a professional "interventionist" who arranges a
surprise confrontation between the patient and his or her family
and/or friends.
As His Honour Judge Fysh QC put it, "the law of passing off will
not countenance the unfair monopolisation of descriptive words or
terms". If a trader chooses a descriptive term to identify his
business or products, he has to accept a lower degree of legal
protection for the name than he would get with a more distinctive
name. He has to accept that there may be a degree of confusion in
the market, and he has to accept that other traders can use very
similar names.
This principle is a long established canon of passing off law.
In two of the leading cases on descriptive names:
1. Office Cleaning Services Ltd failed to stop
another company from using the name Office Cleaning
Association.
2. McCain's Oven Chips couldn't stop its
competitors Country Fair Oven Chips and Birds Eye Oven
Chips.
To allow such claims would, as one judge put it, be to turn
parts of the English language into "commercial no-go areas" or, as
Channel 4's counsel in this case Daniel Alexander QC put it, to
"privatise" the way people speak.
As the judge made clear, this was a case about titles, not
programme formats. A&E didn't object to the structure of
Channel 4's proposed programme, which was different from theirs,
what they objected to was its title.
There was some evidence of confusion in the relevant market, a
very small group of highly sophisticated people, namely the TV
executives responsible for licensing programmes and formats for the
UK. An A&E executive gave evidence of a sales meeting with
someone from IWC, a major British TV production company, who
spontaneously congratulated her on the sale of A&E's
Intervention format to Betty TV Ltd (the second defendant,
an independent production company working with Channel 4 on its
programme). However, A&E's choice of such a descriptive title
for its programme meant that it had to live with a certain degree
of confusion. The judge accepted Channel 4's evidence that even
where confusion arose, in the small world of TV licensing "a few
telephone calls would be likely soon to establish the facts."
The judge concluded that this was a case about competition not
passing off, and dismissed the passing off claim. The message is
clear: if you give your TV programme (or any other product) a
descriptive name, you can't expect the same legal protection as you
would with a more distinctive name.
Channel 4 and Betty TV were represented in these proceedings by
Swan Turton's litigation team headed by Jonathan Coad. For more
information about our media litigation services, please contact
Jonathan Coad.
Charles Swan
Film & TV / Advertising & Marketing
e-bulletins are for general guidance only.
Legal advice should be sought before taking action in relation to
specific matters. Where reference is made to Court decisions facts
referred to are those reported as found by the Court. Please note
that past bulletins included in the Archive have not been updated
by any subsequent changes in statute or case
law.
<< back to ebulletins
|