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TRADEMARK & DESIGN | ||||||||||||
Design Infringement Recognized Despite Dissimilar Details | ||||||||||||
The Seoul Central District Court recently found infringement in a design infringement litigation involving cutting board cases (Case No. 2013gahap511881, decided on July 8, 2014), determining that minor differences between the registered and infringing designs did not outweigh the similarity of the designs, and granting an injunction as well as KRW 60 million (approximately USD 60,000) in damages to the plaintiff. | ||||||||||||
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Naturnic Co., Ltd. is a Korean kitchenware company that created the cutting board case on the left side of the above table, which it registered as a design with the Korean Intellectual Property Office and subsequently began selling in November 2011. A competitor, Olio Co., Ltd., began selling a similar product (on the right side of the above table) in July 2012. Naturnic then filed a lawsuit against Olio seeking injunctive relief and damages.
The court first noted that even old or functionally-driven design elements, such as the rectangular shape of the cutting board case and the opening at one end for inserting cutting boards, should be considered in a similarity determination as long as they produce an aesthetic impression on the consumer. The court then compared the two designs at issue and noted that they had (i) the same measurements and rectangular shape, (ii) similar openings on the right side, (iii) similar "window" portions in the front with rounded edges ( ![]() ![]() On the other hand, the court discounted several design differences between the two cases. For example, although the court acknowledged that the bottom edges of the "windows" in the two cases were curved differently ( ![]() ![]() The court also rejected Olio's validity challenge to Naturnic's registered design over a prior art cutting board case design ![]() The court's holding expands the potential scope of similarity between two designs by focusing on the overall aesthetic impressions given by the registered design and the accused design. This should allow more protection for design owners against imitation products which incorporate minor differences into their designs while clearly trading off the design of the original product. |
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