Why the Anti-Monopoly Law Can’t Cut Price of Infant Milk Formula in China?

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(By You Yunting) According to media reports, China’s National Development and Reform Commission (“NDRC”)’s anti-monopoly investigation into infant milk formula discovered that nine milk powder manufacturers, including Wyeth, announced one after another in early July that they would lower their prices, with an average discount of 11%. At the same time, Wyeth canceled its earlier decision to raise the price of Wyeth S-26 Progress GOLD product, a new product by 4 percent. Some consumers told reporters that salesclerks would first recommend Wyeth S-26 Progress GOLD product, and would only bring out the discounted, original milk formula when asked by the consumer with regards to the discount. The following points should be look at more carefully:

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Plaintiff First Wins Chinese Anti Monopoly Civil Case

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(By You Yunting) The fifth anniversary of enforcement of Chinese Anti Monopoly Law fell on August 1, 2008. Just on this day, Shanghai Higher People’s Courts first supported plaintiff’s claim in anti-monopoly civil case. The court determined that Johnson & Johnson Medical Co. Ltd constitutes a vertical monopoly for restricting on the minimum sales price and shall make civil compensation on plaintiff’s loss.   Past essays on this website have introduced the first instance judgment on this case made by Shanghai No.2 Intermediate Court; the summary of the judgment is as followed: Do All Minimum Price Limits Violate the Anti-trust Law in China?   The plaintiff, Beijing Rui Bang Yong He Science and Trading Co., Ltd. (the “plaintiff”) used to be the dealer of Johnson & Johnson Medical (Shanghai) Ltd. and Johnson & Johnson Medical (China) Ltd. (the “defendants”). Cooperation between the parties lasted for nearly fifteen years, and the distribution contract was renewed each year. On January 2, 2008, the defendants entered into a distribution contract with the plaintiff stipulating that the plaintiff could not sell the product below the price set by the defendants.   On July 1, 2008, the defendants sent a letter to the plaintiff, saying that they would deduct the RMB 20,000 yuan deposit paid by the plaintiff due to the plaintiff’s unlicensed markdown sale. In the meantime, the defendants ordered plaintiff to stop its lower priced sales and stated that the plaintiff’s product supply would be cancelled and that the plaintiff would no longer be the defendants’ dealer.   The plaintiff believed that the defendants’ limit on the minimum sales price has constituted the floor price setting as prohibited in Paragraph 2 of Article 14 in the Anti Monopoly Law, and thereby caused damages to the plaintiff. Basing on these, the plaintiff filed a lawsuit in the court, claiming the compensation.   After the hearing, the Shanghai No.1 Intermediate People’s Court held that the decision on the existence of monopoly agreements as regulated by Article 14 of the Anti Monopoly Law could not only consider whether the undertakings have concluded a monopoly agreement with their trading counterparts that would fix or limit sales prices, but also consider Paragraph 2 of Article 13. This means it is necessary to further check whether the agreement excludes or limits competition. Considering the evidence presented by the plaintiff could not prove the above issues, the court refused all the claims of the plaintiff.   Shanghai Higher Court held after the trial that Anti Monopoly Law shall be applied in the case, since the distribution contract between the plaintiff and the defendants containing clauses restricting the plaintiff to sell the product at a minimum price constitutes such effects of eliminating or restricting competition without clearly sufficient promotion for competition. For these reasons, the higher court determined the distribution contract constituted a monopoly agreement as regulated by Article 14 of the Anti Monopoly Law. Concerning the fact that the defendant took such actions that could be involved in the monopoly as provided in the Anti Monopoly Law, the court determined that those actions concluded a monopoly agreement prohibited by the Anti Monopoly Law and accordingly the defendant shall make compensation for loss to the plaintiff. On these grounds, the higher court reversed the original judgment and decided that the defendant shall make compensation in the amount of RMB 530, 000 yuan to the plaintiff in 10 days. In addition, the higher court refused the other claims made by the plaintiff.   Our lawyers have already obtained the second instance judgment. We would interpret it in the next week’s post.

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Why did Chinese Courts Reject Perfetti’s Counterclaim for Unfair Competition?

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(By You Yunting) Perfetti Van Melle Confectionery (China) Co., Ltd. (“Perfetti”) has a well-known candy named Alpenliebe, whose slogan is “浓浓奶香情 Nong Nong Nai Xiang Qing”. “浓浓 Nong Nong” refers to a strong scent, while “浓浓奶香情 Nong Nong Nai Xiang Qing” in English refers to a “strong milk taste,” i.e., the candy is notable for its rather strong milky flavor. A Zhejiang-based company owned the “浓浓 Nong Nong” trademark under the classification for candies, and filed a lawsuit accusing Perfetti of infringement and unfair competition for its use of that slogan. In today’s post, we will introduce relevant legislation on substantiality and procedure in this particular case.

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Fair Use of a Registered Trademark does not Constitute Infringement

Abstract: fair use of a registered trademark does not constitute infringement, but users shall both have no intent to infringe and accord with the objective facts. The court facing those cases shall apply  Trademark Law to consider the original intention of Trademark Law instead of applying a rigid formula to determine that the infringement shall rely on “whether the results cause confusion”.

(By Luo Yanjie) Generally speaking, using a registered trademark without permission constitutes trademark infringement. However, a few exceptions to the general rule still exist. For example, in today’s post a typical case will be introduced.

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“Passive use” is not equivalent to “Prior use” under Article 31 of the Trademark law

(By Luo Yanjie) Pursuant to Article 31 of the Trademark Law: anyone applying for trademark registration may not damage the existing rights of others obtained by priority, neither may it register, in advance, a trademark that has been used by others and has become influential. In practice, consumers apply a “name” to a product, which can then be considered a kind of “trademark” for the product itself. Is such passive use attributable to prior use? In regard to this legal issue, there are no actual legal provisions speaking to it in Mainland China. However, the answer in today’s post appears to be a resounding no.

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Trademark “Zhuomuniao”: Cancelled for Squatting Though It Has Been Put into Use

(By Luo Yanjie) Abstract: when applying for a trademark, the trademark office will judge the similarity of the submitted trademark based on the International Classification of the Trademark Registration for Product and Service (the “Classification”), but the court does not use this only standard. Even if the court finds that the later trademark application to be similar with the earlier applications, and the trademark office approves the later applied trademark’s application, the earlier trademark holder shall have no right to demand the later user for any damages.

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Whether Patented Products’ Profit Influences the duty to Reward Inventors?

Abstract:

Other local laws and regulations cannot be used in legal judgments. Furthermore, enterprises shall award to the employee proper remuneration regardless of profitability.

(By Luo Yanjie) Patent carries huge value to enterprises; key patents can be especially valuable, because they are often only gained after a great deal of expense. Because of this, according to relevant provisions in the Patent Law, the right to apply for a patent belongs to an entity for any invention-creation, either made by a person in the course of executing tasks of the entity he belongs to, or made by him by primarily utilizing material and technical means belonging to the entity. Inventors having rights over inventions is well accepted, but a difficult position for the inventor to be in; often, we find the laws to be inadequate to properly serve and protect the interests of the inventor-creator. In today’s post, we will introduce to you a case touching upon this legal issue.

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A Trademark Infringement Dispute Caused by Recycled Budweiser Bottles

(By You Yunting)To save costs, Chinese beer manufacturers have been using recycled bottle to refill beer, and while most large-scale beer manufacturers will engrave their trademarks into their glass bottles, as well as recycle their own bottles. However, for small-scale beer manufacturers, such practices are impractical, and when small beer manufacturers use other larger manufacturer’s bottles with their trademarks, all the ingredients for trademark infringement are present. In today’s post, we will introduce to you two cases heard by two different courts concerning the same issue. 

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Why Wallet and Clothes in Different Trademark Classes Would be Taken by China Court as Similar Products?

(By Luo Yanjie) When registering trademark in China, the applicant shall first determine the classification of the trademark to be registered. Class 18 of the Classification of Goods and Services include goods such as leather and artificial leather, goods made from these materials and not included in other classes, cases, travelling bags, and umbrellas. Goods under Class 25 includes clothing, footwear, and headgear. Looking at it closely,  Class 18 is classified by its physical attribute, while Class 25 is classified by the purpose of the goods. Would the two Classes constitute similar goods for any particular product? In today’s post, a specific case would be introduced to analyze this question.

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How to Judge the Validity of Trademark Transfer without Inner Approval of the Company in China

(By Albert Chen) Abstract:

When a company’s trademark agent transfers a trademark without approval, a judgement of the validity of said transfer requires not only a consideration of the company approval, but also a determination of the third party good faith in the transfer. When a condition is not fulfilled the transfer will invariably be considered invalid.

Case Introduction:

In 2001, Leidi (China) Co., Ltd. (“Company L”) was granted the exclusive right in the use of the trademark “雷迪” (read as “Leidi” in Chinese). In November of 2002, Wu, as the executive director of Leidi China, transferred the trademark to the Hua Qu Duo Investment Company (“Company H”). The State Trademark Office made an announcement regarding the transfer in October 2003. Subsequently, Company H licensed the trademark to the Shanghai-based Leidi Mechanics Co., Ltd. (“Company S,” which had no affiliation with Company L).

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Is RSS Output in Websites Kinda Fair Use in the Copyright Law?

 (By You Yunting) A user on Zhihu.com asked some question about RSS

  1. Is it kinda fair use of RSS?
  2. Is it kinda fair use to transfer the excerpt context RSS to the full text RSS?
  3. Is it kinda fair use of Flipboard and similar applications’ excerpt context which do not use RSS?

In terms of the first question: ,Is it kinda fair use of RSS?

If a website supports full content RSS output, then it is actually the using on the license of the copyright holder instead of the fair use. While, where a website only supports excerpt context RSS and if a third party scraps the content into a full context RSS, it is infringing as it has used the content without any license.

Let’s first check the definition of RSS. We could find a clear definition in Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rss.): If a website placed the RSS file on its page, user could use a RSS feed to read the latest contents if he cannot open the content page. Based on the said character of RSS, in author’s opinion, RSS actually is a form of authorization from the site owners. If the website provides RSS file, it licenses users to read the content without visiting its website. According to the Copyright Law, Fair use means that under the specific circumstance we can use the content without the copyright’s holder’s permit and with payment of remuneration. The transliteration of a published work into Braiile and into minority nationality languages and free performance of a published work belong to fair use.

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Would Those First Users Involved in OEM Constitute Trademark Infringement?

(By Albert Chen) The author once introduced readers to different judicial opinions adopted in the Shanghai and Guangzhou courts over whether trademark infringement could be caused by an OEM. According to a ruling handed down by the Fujian Higher People’s Court in 2012, which came to the attention of the author recently, the judge confirmed that an OEM could lead to trademark infringement, but decide at the same time that no liability shall be taken by the first user of the mark, for no confusion would be made. As for that point, the author certainly has a different opinion.

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Could User Information Be Considered Trade Secret in China?

Abstract: trade secret must have three basic features: confidentiality, practicability, and security. Therefore, whether user information in a website could be considered as trade secret or not, it shall also be judged based on these three basic features.

(By Luo Yanjie) User information is very important to a website daily operation. To judge it from the legal protection perspective, it is generally protected as a trade secret. The case introduced in this article is a typical dispute on whether the user information could be considered a trade secret, and thereby could infringement be decided.

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Is an “A+B” Combined Trademark Substantially Similar to a Separate “B” Trademark?

(By Luo Yanjie) The Taiwan-based Yilan Food Industry Co., Ltd. (“Yilan”) is a well-known food manufacturing company, and owns the registered trademark “旺旺” (read as “Wang Wang” in Chinese) in several classes. Alibaba (China) Co., Ltd. (“Alibaba”) is a renowned e-commerce company based in Mainland China; it owns and maintains a subsidiary that develops and promotes its instant messaging software called “淘宝旺旺” (read literally as “Tao Bao Wang Wang” in Chinese). When Alibaba attempted to register the trademark for its software application, Yilan immediately filed a protest against it. In today’s post, we will concentrate primarily on this case. The main issue surrounding the case is relatively simple: a trademark can be considered a type of rare “resource” for its owner to make use of, and if in this case the trademark “旺旺” is already owned and registered by another entity, does it seem reasonable that a subsequent registrant simply attaches the prefix “淘宝” to it to avoid inevitable issues surrounding confusion as a result of the similarity of the two?

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