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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Dearlove (t/a and Professionally Known As "Diddy") v Combs (t/a and Professionally Known As "Sean 'puffy' Combs", "Puffy" and "P.Diddy") [2007] EWHC 375 (Ch) (28 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/375.html Cite as: [2008] EMLR 2, [2007] EWHC 375 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Richard Dearlove (trading and professionally known as "Diddy") |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Sean Combs (trading and professionally known as "Sean 'Puffy' Combs", "Puffy" and "P.Diddy") |
Defendant |
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Paul Epstein QC (instructed by Calvert Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1 2 February 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
MrJustice Kitchin :
Introduction
"To the best of the Claimant's knowledge and belief, the Defendant registered, or caused to be registered, the domain name diddyonline.com on 2nd August 2005. Thereafter, the Defendant has advertised, or caused to be advertised, or otherwise promoted, within the content of a website located at www.diddyonline.com and within the content of a website maintained by the Defendant's record label Bad Boy Records (www.badboyonline.com) his products and services by or under the sign "Diddy". By way of example, the Defendant's website has featured such phrases as "Diddy On Line", "Diddy Guest Book", "Diddy 2-Way Blog", "Diddy TV", and "Diddy Style", together with a further new form of trading style, namely "Sean "Diddy" Combs" ."
"1. Mr Combs undertakes, whether acting by himself, his employees, his agents, or otherwise however, from doing the following acts or any of them within the United Kingdom, that is to say:
1.1 advertising, offering or providing, or causing/procuring others to advertise, offer or provide any goods and services not being the Claimant's goods and services as a remixer, producer, songwriter, recording artist and DJ under or with reference to the word "Diddy"; or
1.2 otherwise passing off or attempting to pass off and/or enabling and/or assisting and/or causing and/or procuring others to pass off or to attempt to pass off any goods and services not of the Claimants, as identified in 1.1, as the same as or for goods and services connected or associated with the Claimant.
2. For the avoidance of doubt, the Defendant's professional name "P Diddy" is not affected by this undertaking.
3. The Defendant undertakes to remove from the United Kingdom all materials or articles that are in the possession, custody, power or control of the Defendant, the use of which would contravene the foregoing undertaking."
The application
Legal principles
Summary judgment
i) it is for the applicant for summary judgment to demonstrate that the respondent has no real prospect of success in his claim or defence as the case may be;ii) a "real" prospect of success is one which is more than fanciful and merely arguable;
iii) if it is clear beyond question that the respondent will not be able at trial to establish the facts on which he relies then his prospects of success are not real; but
iv) the court is not entitled on an application for summary judgment to conduct a trial on documents without disclosure or cross-examination.
Internet use of trade marks
"Reliance is also placed on Internet use of 1-800 FLOWERS. This name (with the addition of Inc.) is used for a website. Mr Hobbs submitted that any use of a trade mark on any website, wherever the owner of the site was, was potentially a trade mark infringement anywhere in the world because website use is in an omnipresent cyberspace; that placing a trade mark on a website was "putting a tentacle" into the computer user's premises. I questioned this with an example: a fishmonger in Bootle who put his wares and prices on his own website, for instance, for local delivery can hardly be said to be trying to sell the fish to the whole world or even the whole country. And if any web surfer in some other country happens upon that website he will simply say "this is not for me" and move on. For trade mark laws to intrude where a website owner is not intending to address the world but only a local clientele and where anyone seeing the site would so understand him would be absurd. So I think that the mere fact that websites can be accessed anywhere in the world does not mean, for trade mark purposes, that the law should regard them as being used everywhere in the world. It all depends upon the circumstances, particularly the intention of the website owner and what the reader will understand if he accesses the site. In other fields of law, publication on a website may well amount to a universal publication, but I am not concerned with that."
"137. I would wish to approach these arguments, and particularly the last of them, with caution. There is something inherently unrealistic in saying that A "uses" his mark in the United Kingdom when all that he does is to place the mark on the Internet, from a location outside the United Kingdom, and simply wait in the hope that someone from the United Kingdom will download it and thereby create use on the part of A. By contrast, I can see that it might be more easily arguable that if A places on the Internet a mark that is confusingly similar to a mark protected in another jurisdiction, he may do so at his own peril that someone from that other jurisdiction may download it; though that approach conjured up in argument before us the potentially disturbing prospect that a shop in Arizona or Brazil that happens to bear the same name as a trademarked store in England or Australia will have to act with caution in answering telephone calls from those latter jurisdictions.
138. However that may be, the very idea of "use" within a certain area would seem to require some active step in that area on the part of the user that goes beyond providing facilities that enable others to bring the mark into the area. Of course, if persons in the United Kingdom seek the mark on the Internet in response to direct encouragement or advertisement by the owner of the mark, the position may be different; but in such a case the advertisement or encouragement in itself is likely to suffice to establish the necessary use. Those considerations are in my view borne out by the observations in this court in Reuter v Mulhens [1954] Ch. 50. The envelopes on the outside of which the allegedly infringing mark was placed as advertising matter were sent by post into the United Kingdom by the defendants. It is trite law that the Post Office is the agent of the sender of a letter to carry it, and thus it was the defendants who were to be taken to have delivered the letter to the recipients and to have displayed the mark to them within this jurisdiction. No such simple analysis is available to establish use by the applicant within the jurisdiction if he confines himself to the Internet."
"21. Here the point about the locality of the trade is even clearer. The defendants' website opening page has a picture of a piece of furniture with the words "Crate & Barrel" above. The text says: "An emporium of furnishings and accessories on four floors. We offer a wide range of services including, wedding lists, consultation and furnishings". There follow many picture of items. Only two (the "hurricane lamp" and the "beaded coasters") are said to be within the specification. I will assume that is so, though the point is not entirely beyond argument. The fact that there are only two items out of many - items which could easily be removed shows the triviality of the complaint.
22. Now a person who visited that website would see "ie". That would be so, either in the original address of the website, "crateandbarrel-ie.com" or the current form, "createandbarrel.ie." The reference to four floors is plainly a reference to a shop. So what would the visitor understand? Fairly obviously that this is advertising a shop and its wares. If he knew "ie" meant Ireland, he would know the shop was in Ireland: otherwise he would not. There is no reason why anyone in this country should regard the site as directed at him. So far as one can tell, no one has.
23. Now almost any search on the net almost always throws up a host of irrelevant "hits". You expect a lot of irrelevant "hits". You expect a lot of irrelevant sites, moreover you expect a lot of those sites to be foreign. Of course you can go direct to a desired site. To do that, however, you must type in the exact address. Obviously that must be known in advance. Thus in this case you could get to the defendants' site either by deliberately going there using the address, or by a search. You could use "Crate" and "Barrel" linked Booleanly. One could even use just one of these words, though the result then would throw up many more irrelevant results.
24. Whether one gets there by a search or by direct use of the address, is it rational to say that the defendants are using the words "Crate & Barrel" in the United Kingdom in the course of trade in goods? If it is, it must follow that the defendants are using the words in every other country of the world.
25. Miss Vitoria says that the Internet is accessible to the whole world. So it follows that any user will regard any website as being "for him" absent a reason to doubt the same. She accepted that my Bootle fishmonger example in 800 FLOWERS is that sort of case but no more. I think it is not as simple as that. In 800 FLOWERS I rejected the suggestion that the website owner should be regarded as putting a tentacle onto the user's screen. Mr Miller here used another analogy. He said using the Internet was more like the user focusing a super-telescope into the site concerned; he asked me to imagine such a telescope set up on the Welsh hills overlooking the Irish Sea. I think Mr Miller's analogy is apt in this case. Via the web you can look into the defendant's shop in Dublin. Indeed the very language and the Internet conveys the idea of the user going to the site "visit" is the word. Other cases would be different a well-known example, for instance, is Amazon.com. Based in the U.S. it has actively gone out to seek world-wide trade, not just by use of the name on the Internet but by advertising its business here, and offering and operating a real service of supply of books to this country. These defendants have done none of that."
Alleged breach of the Agreement by MySpace and YouTube web-pages and www.badboyonline.com website
Advertising in the UK under the name "Diddy"
Are the sites under the control of Mr Combs?
"Managing Member. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, SC BB [BBR] shall be the managing Member of the Company. The managing Member of the Company shall, subject to the provisions of this Agreement, have authority for the management and control of the business and affairs of the Company."
Clause 5(b):
"Company and each Person authorized by Company shall have the perpetual right, without cost or any other liability to you [a company controlled by Mr Combs] or any other Person, to use and to authorize other Persons to use the names (including any professional names heretofore or hereafter adopted), and any likenesses, whether or not current (including photographs, portraits, caricatures and stills from any Artwork or Video made hereunder) and biographical material of or relating to Artist [Mr Combs], to any producer and to any other Person performing services in connection with Recordings hereunder, on and in the packaging of Records, and for purposes of advertising, promotion and trade and in connection with the marketing and exploitation of such Recordings and Records and general goodwill advertising (i.e., advertising designed to create goodwill and prestige for Company and its Principal Licensees and not for the purpose of selling any specific product or service), without payment of additional compensation to you, Artist or any other Person, in accordance with paragraph 6(a) below ...."
Clause 6(a):
"During the Term, with respect to Phono Records manufactured for sale in the United States, all photographs, portraits, caricatures and other likenesses of Artist (including any stills from any Artwork or Videos hereunder), biographical material concerning Artist and other major marketing materials which Company uses or authorizes others to use for the purposes herein stated shall be subject to your approval. ..
.
Promptly following the execution of this agreement, you shall furnish Company with a reasonable number of photographs of Artists and biographical material concerning Artist. All photographs and biographical material concerning Artist furnished by you to Company or used in connection with any Catalog Record shall be deemed approved by you. ..
.
Company will instruct its Principal Licensees, outside the United States to comply with the foregoing provisions of this paragraph 6(a): provided that Company shall in no event be liable or in breach of this agreement for any such Principal Licensee's failure to comply with such instruction. You shall cooperate with Company's efforts to promote throughout the Territory any Records released hereunder. Without limiting the foregoing, you shall cause Artist to be available (at Company's non-recoupable expense), at Company's reasonable request: to appear for photography, poster and cover art and the like, under the direction of Company or its designees; to appear for interviews anywhere in the Territory with representatives of the communications media, including representatives of the domestic and international press and Company's publicity personnel; to appear for in-store promotional events; to make personal appearances anywhere in the Territory on radio and television and elsewhere and to record taped interviews, spot announcements, trailers and electrical transcriptions; and to perform for the purpose of recording for promotional purposes by means of film, videotape or other audiovisual media performances of Compositions embodied on Masters, provided Videos produced pursuant to paragraph 18 shall be subject to the terms of such paragraph. You shall also cause Artist to be available upon Company's reasonable request to appear for exclusive on-camera interviews, so-called online "chats," webcasts and other promotional activities. .."
"Finally, the Defendant [Mr Combs] has no possession, custody, control or power over these websites and Warner Music was under no obligation to make any amendments. They are marketing tools used internationally to promote the Defendant and his professional services and goods. While Warner Music have made attempts to comply with the Defendant's requests, I understand Warner Music feel under no obligation to put into motion any act which might cause a negative effect upon the business as a whole. This confirms the position that the Operating Agreement limits the Defendant's control and power over his own interests."
Lyrics on the Press Play album
"As my, Daytons spin lowrider sittin low
Hittin corners so hard you can taste my rims
Hard top six-four, I'm Diddy no tint
I can't hide in New York City
I'm 'bout it in the South, sleep good in the West
Know a chick from Watts with Bad Boy tatted on her breast
I done been there and did it (I done been there and did it)
Ten years without getting sweat inside my Yankee fitted"
Later it continues:
"Nine-Six Big showed me what to do
But deep in my heart, this is "No Way Out II" (let's rock)
I spend absurd money, private bird money
That Bill Gates, Donald Trump, Bloomberg money (you know what it is)".
"I can't hear you!
I like it when you say my name
(The Fu-The Fu-The-Future-ture-ture-ture-ture ")
Y'all gon' love me
Feelin it's about to get ugly
Inject this dose of the future
Tap them veins, grab hold, let me shoot ya
Mainline this new Diddy heroin
The Afro-American dream is too evident
The potential to be the first black President
iTunes, download me in every resident
Early, I skip break-fast
Nigga be on his grind like he need new brake pads
We in the hood like black soap and dollar vans
My CD's in 3-D, holograms
The future, y'all need to holla man
The live show's a hard act to follow man
Bronze my likeness, y'all need to follow him
From now to 3000, I'll be a problem man
The future"
"Easy now I'm seein 'em, mind where you patrol
Fall back young 'un, play your lane like a goal
When his majesty speaks, speech defy gravity
Bluetooth nigga but I don't have any cavities
Diddy got it wrapped like cocoons
Pop shit like needles through balloons"
"I'm from the city where nothing pretty
And everybody know
i spit a flow to get up with diddy
and now we finna blow...
its shawnna twist and diddy with timb on the track
you know its gotta be tint with 20's on the lac
i see em lookin at me like whats up
but i was hit low in the cut"
"Decimal doctor, multiply to get richer,
I'm a entrepreneur, I'm
the heart of the city,
I'm a part of the sewers,
I'm the honourable diddy,
I taste the dirt in my
sweat, that's from the
Harlem struggle,
All in my swagger that's the reason why I got my hustle,
I got the highest stature, Miami diamond flasher,
I got you caught in the most flyest and stylish rapture"
And a little later:
"The Cartier consigieres be near me,
Canary yellow cuts in my pinky yearly,
Liz Taylor tried to joke me
Coz I keep it green like the other side of bill hicks be
When he gets mean,
Think fast before I blast hoes,
Like Grassino,
Went from scraggly old clothes to the illest fashion,
And realest rappin',
Pablo bath on the scene, won't go back to no green,
Strictly paper cruising through the strip in Vegas,
Two of New York's biggest niggaz,
Y'all used to hate us, but now you love us,
Nas and Diddy, power hustlers."
Conclusion