Sunday Times

Have a break, court tells Kit Kat litigants

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● A long-running legal battle between global chocolate giants over the shape of Kit Kat finger wafers was sent back to the EU’s trademark office this week after judges dismissed appeals by both companies.

The ruling by the European Court of Justice means the EU Intellectu­al Property Office must review a 2012 decision to uphold Swiss-based Nestlé’s trademark on the shape of the four-finger chocolate-covered wafer biscuit over objections raised by Mondelez of the US.

The Luxembourg court found that Nestlé had failed to show that consumers in enough EU countries recognised the shape as distinctiv­e, but also dismissed an appeal by Mondelez against some of the grounds for an EU lower court ruling in 2016 that had found the Intellectu­al Property Office was wrong to reject the US firm’s complaint.

The outcome leaves open that the trademark agency could, while respecting the judges’ ruling, take account of other evidence — such as new proof the shape is distinctiv­e to people in more countries — and might preserve protection for Kit Kat’s shape.

The brand name “Kit Kat” is not at issue in the case.

Proceeding­s have been followed closely by trademark lawyers, who see implicatio­ns for brands operating across the EU single market, where there are varying histories in national markets.

The case has also at times featured in Britain’s Brexit debate, with some supporters of cutting ties with the EU suggesting that EU courts have failed to defend a muchloved British treat first marketed by Rowntree’s, which was bought by the Swiss in 1988.

In 2015, the Brexit-supporting Daily Express newspaper headlined a story on an earlier ruling with “End of the Kit Kat?”.

It said an EU “diktat” might “spell the end of” the wafer bars as the “market could now be flooded with copycat confection­ery”.

The case has also been mirrored by a dispute between the two multinatio­nals in the British courts, where Nestlé objected to a trademark for the purple colour used by Cadbury, which was bought by the Americans in 2010, to wrap its Dairy Milk chocolate bars.

 ??  ?? Nestlé and Mondelez are back to square one in their battle over the shape of Kit Kat chocolate wafers.
Nestlé and Mondelez are back to square one in their battle over the shape of Kit Kat chocolate wafers.

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