Business Day

At the ‘Crax’ of dispute between National Brands, Cape Cookies

• The AVI subsidiary hopes the SCA will overturn a high court ruling about the registrati­on of Snackcrax

- Kabelo Khumalo Companies Editor khumalok@businessli­ve.co.za

National Brands, a subsidiary of JSE-listed consumer goods group AVI, will lock horns in the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in May with Cape Cookies in a trademark dispute.

National Brands hopes the SCA will overturn the decision of the high court that ruled it failed to advance sufficient grounds to bar Cape Cookies from registerin­g its Snackcrax trademark.

The class at issue covers flour and preparatio­ns made from cereals, bread, pastry and confection­ery, among other things.

National Brands argues that it has establishe­d a protectabl­e reputation in its Salticrax, Vitasnack and Snacktime trademarks. It says that Cape Cookies’ Snackcrax trademark is confusingl­y similar to these trademarks.

National Brands will argue before five justices at the SCA that the inclusion of “Crax” in the trademark applicatio­n renders it confusingl­y or deceptivel­y similar to its registered Salticrax trademark.

National Brands has held the Salticrax trademark regarding “salt flavoured biscuits” since August 1 1951.

The company also contends that as its Salticrax trademark has a significan­t reputation and accompanyi­ng goodwill in the SA market, it has earned exclusivit­y in the “Crax” portion of the mark in SA regarding savoury biscuits.

National Brands contends that Cape Cookies’ Snackcrax trademark amalgamate­s the “Snack” element of its Snacktime trademark and the “Crax” element of its Salticrax trademark, and that this was “deliberate­ly done to imitate the product so as to obtain an unfair advantage in the market place by deceiving or confusing consumers”.

National Brands also argues that Cape Cookies’ intention of using the Snackcrax mark only regarding savoury biscuits, as opposed to all of the goods covered by the trademark applicatio­n to the entire category of goods listed in the class, means that Cape Cookies adopted the Snackcrax mark to take advantage of the reputation in National Brands’ trademarks and unfairly compete with it.

CONFUSING

In its defence, Cape Cookies contends that National Brands’ trade reputation resides in its Bakers trademark, which identifies the origin of the goods and that their registered marks at issue (Salticrax and Snackcrax) are product names or mere descriptor­s and not true trademarks worthy of protection.

In an attempt to prove that the Cape Cookies brands are confusing to consumers, National Brands pointed to an article by Wendy Knowler, a consumer journalist, who claimed that “as imitations go, Cape Cookies’ Snackcrax version of Baker’s Salticrax is among the most blatant I’ve ever seen”.

The high court in Pretoria in December 2021 rejected the arguments advanced by National Brands.

“In my view, National Brands has failed to establish that the prospectiv­e trade ‘is inherently deceptive or the use of which would be likely to deceive or cause confusion’. I am not persuaded

AS IMITATIONS GO, CAPE COOKIES’ SNACKCRAX VERSION

that the common Crax element is sufficient to deceive or confuse the hypothetic­al reasonable consumer as to the origin of the savoury biscuit considered for purchase,” the judgment reads.

“Nor do I find that the packaging, visual or aural characteri­stics of the two marks or their presentati­on are likely to deceive or confuse. The prominence and difference­s in colour, design and size between the Bakers logo and that of Cape Cookies also safeguard against confusion between the Salticrax and Snackcrax marks when the products are viewed in their entirety,” it reads.

It is this judgment that National Brands hopes the SCA will overturn.

AVI is home to an extensive portfolio of more than 53 brands; 33 owned brands and more than 20 internatio­nal brands under licence.

The Biscuit and Snack sector of AVI is also referred to as Snackworks.

Cape Cookies, which employs more than 350 people, was establishe­d in 1992. Its products are sold in all five major retail chains in SA as well as in 23 other countries including China, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Costa Rica and Saudi Arabia.

Meanwhile, the SCA is expected to soon rule on the trademark dispute between Colgate-Palmolive SA and Bliss Brands. Colgate has accused Bliss Brands of deploying a Stalingrad legal strategy to continue profiting from packaging similar to that of its soap brand Protex, despite the Advertisin­g Regulatory Board having ruled that it should stop doing so.

In a case that is likely to determine the jurisdicti­on that the Advertisin­g Regulatory Board has over non-members, Bliss Brands asked the Constituti­onal Court to set aside the finding

OF BAKER’S SALTICRAX IS AMONG

of the SCA that the advertisin­g board serves a vital public purpose by maintainin­g ethical standards industry. in the advertisin­g

 ?? /123RF/jackf ?? Savoury: AVI subsidiary National Brands contends that it has earned exclusivit­y in the “Crax” portion of the mark in SA regarding savoury biscuits.
/123RF/jackf Savoury: AVI subsidiary National Brands contends that it has earned exclusivit­y in the “Crax” portion of the mark in SA regarding savoury biscuits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa