Background
The case concerns a dispute of the domain name "philipscis.com". The plaintiff is an individual, Haixin Jiang ("Jiang"), from Shanghai, PRC and the defendant is Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. ("Philips"), the Dutch consumer electronics company. Jiang sought to set aside a decision by the World Intellectual Property Organisation ("WIPO") to transfer the disputed domain name to Philips, which was made on 19 September 2002.
Philips owns a number of registrations for the trademark PHILIPS in China and has registered the domain name
The WIPO panel found that i) the disputed name was confusingly similar to Philip's registered trademark; ii) Jiang had no legitimate reason to register a domain name containing the marks PHILIPS; and iii) Jiang had registered the domain name in bad faith. As a result, the WIPO panel ordered the transfer of the disputed domain name to Philips.
Jiang's arguments
Jiang put forward the following arguments before the Shanghai Court:
- The domain name was not identical or confusingly similar to Philips';
- Jiang had legitimate interests in the disputed domain name, Jiang contended that the disputed domain name was composed of:
- 'philip'- his English name;
- 'sc'- standing for Shanghai, China; and
- 'is'- standing for internet system/server.
- Jiang did not register the disputed domain name in bad faith;
- Philips had the intention of infringing the domain name deliberately;
- The panellist in the WIPO was from Singapore. Jiang alleged the expert might have been biased or erred in his decision.
- the mark "PHILIPS" is a legitimate and valid trade mark;
- the disputed domain name was confusingly similar to Philips' registered trade mark which was sufficient to give rise to confusion amongst the public;
- Jiang had no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the domain name; and
- Jiang had registered the disputed domain name in bad faith, with the intent of creating confusion and attracting Internet users to his website so as to gain a commercial benefit.
Jiang asked the court to set aside or suspend the execution of the WIPO decision and make an order that he was the legitimate owner of the disputed domain name.
Findings
The Second Shanghai Intermediate People's Court handed down its decision on 24 December 2003 and concurred with WIPO that:
Conclusion
The court dismissed Jiang's application and upheld WIPO's decision. Philips was awarded costs in the amount of RMB1,000. The significance of this case is that it was the first Internet domain name dispute involving a .com domain name accepted by the Second Shanghai Intermediate People's Court.
A full text of the decision may be obtained from:
http://www.shezfy.com/flws/wenshu/2002沪二中民五知初214.doc
Gabriela Kennedy and Paloma Wang
The authors are Partner and Trainee Solicitor respectively working in the TMT Group of Lovells, Hong Kong.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.