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Bulletins Story:
KNIGHT'S MYTH OF GOODWILL BUSTED BY COURT: KNIGHT v
DISCOVERY COMMUNICATIONS
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Date:
01.06.2007
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The claimant (Andrew Knight) in this passing off action created
a series of books, television pilots and television programme
proposals relating to the investigation of myths by reference to
the term “mythbusters”. He claimed that by virtue of these
activities he had established goodwill in the term “mythbusters”
when used in relation to books and television programmes concerning
the investigation of myths.
The first three defendants were production companies who had
produced a series called “Mythbusters”, which the claimant asserted
covered the same or similar ground to his own work. The fourth
defendant was Discovery Channel, the broadcaster and distributor of
those programmes. The defendants contended that “mythbusters” was
merely a descriptive name that was therefore incapable of
generating the necessary goodwill for a passing off claim.
As Mr Justice Richards observed in his judgment handed down on
24 May, the claimant’s books and television appearances and the
defendants’ programmes were “not strikingly similar”. The
claimant’s books were aimed at an age range of 8-12, whereas the
defendants' programmes were primarily aimed at the “dads and
lads” market. As the judge observed: “to the extent that the
claimant’s books and the defendants’ programmes have a common
theme, it is that suggested by the title: each investigates
improbable events or stories in an entertaining way.”
In rejecting the claim, the judge found that a mark such as
“mythbusters” that was descriptive would only be protected if it
could be shown to have acquired a secondary meaning, and thereby to
have become distinctive of the claimant’s activities. The judge
found that the term was descriptive to the extent that it informed
the reader/viewer that the book/programme was about people who
investigated and debunked “myths”. However, that did not mean that
goodwill could not attach to it. It was not a word that would be
used in ordinary speech to describe a book, person or activity but
had been adopted as a descriptive title for a series and was
therefore capable of generating goodwill for the purposes of a
passing off claim.
The judge also found that even a modest reputation could be
sufficient for a passing off claim, but at some point a reputation
might exist amongst such a small group of individuals that it would
cease to count. The minimum degree of goodwill acquired for a
passing off claim was a matter of fact and degree and a passing off
claim could not be sustained to protect goodwill which was
trivial.
In this case, although the claimant had shown that he had
initially established goodwill in the term “mythbusters” to
describe the investigation of myths for children of primary school
age on a minor scale, that reputation had significantly diminished
by the time that the defendants’ activities began, and by that
stage it was insufficient for the purposes of a passing off claim.
The judge also found that the claimant had failed to establish any
actual loss or real likelihood of loss.
The judge was critical of some of the claimant’s evidence. In
particular the judge found that some of the figures provided by the
claimant for sales of its books were “inflated”. The judge also
observed that it was clear from the evidence that the term
“mythbusters” had “been used in a wide variety of contexts,
including some which pre-dated its use by the [claimant], for
example an article published ... in 1985. Other examples
include an NHS website, a mental health users group, a survey on
the BBC Radio 1 website, the Sustainable Office Forum and a golf
magazine.”
This weak and speculative claim, advanced on a Conditional Fee
Arrangement with considerable legal resources on both sides,
culminated in a High Court trial lasting nearly two weeks in
February this year. The investment of such resources indicates the
value of the goodwill in catchy terms that identify a popular TV
series or brand.
Jonathan Coad
Film
& TV /Publishing / Advertising &
Marketing
See also:
A&E Television Networks v Channel 4
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