| TRADEMARKS LICENSES
Unlike patent licences, there are no regulations for
trade-mark licences.
The Directive on harmonizing national legislations establishes that
a trade-mark may be the object of a licence for all, or part, of the
territory of the member state. Licences can also be exclusive or non-exclusive.
The Commission has also made a distinction between the absolute
and relative territorial protection enjoyed by the licensee.
Absolute protection allows the licensee, in his territory and in
any case whatsoever, to prevent the sale of trade-mark products
arriving from the licensor or other licensees. With this protection
the licensee can prevent the entrance of goods not only when the
other parties intend to export them on their own initiative, but
also when the products have been requested by clients in the same
territory, or constitute parallel imports.
As in all other fields, the Commission has condemned absolute protection.
In fact, parallel imports can never be prevented, and the Commission
has not only confirmed this principle but has not hesitated to inflict
penalties on companies which, by contractual stratagems, had tried
to prevent such imports (Theal/Watts, GADI, 1976, No 890).
The Commission has looked more kindly on licences which included
only a relative protection.
In this type of licence there is only an assurance that both the
licensor and the other licensees will abstain from an active sales
policy in the territory reserved for third parties, particularly
from setting up branches and from specific advertising directed
at the territory. No undertaking to refuse any requests for supplies
arriving from the territory reserved for third parties is imposed
(Campari, GADI, 1978, No 1124).
The Commission believes that the prohibition, imposed on the licensee,
from handling products in competition with those covered by the
trade-mark licence, comes within the prohibition of Art. 85. However,
the Commission believed that it was worth exempting, observing that
this prohibition can contribute to improve the distribution of products
under licence, preventing a waste of effort in sales, encouraging
the creation of stocks and shortening delivery times.
Such a prohibition is not admissible for patent licences and know-how
licences.
Even if the Commission has not made a formal pronunciation, it
seems that any clause which limits the autonomy of the licensee
in establishing his prices is quite inadmissible (Art. 85 of the
EEC Treaty).
The Commission has admitted that the licensee may be prohibited
from assigning the rights granted to him. One of the main prohibitions
is that sub-licences may not be granted (Campari, GADI, 1978, No
1124).
In trade-mark licences it is normal for the licensor to establish
minimum quality specifications and to check that these specifications
are respected.
In fact, it is commonly held that this verification by the licensor
of the product obtained by the licensee and marked with the licensed
trade-mark is an essential element of the licensing agreement, and
that in the absence of such an element the agreement is void.
For other details which an agreement for a trade-mark licence may
include, please refer to the Regulation on patents and know-how
and to the sentences given by the Commission. The main ones are
as follows:
- Hag, GADI, 1974, No 667;
- Fruit of the Loom, GADI, 1985, No 1953;
- EMI Records, GADI, 1983, No 1667;
- Campari, GADI, 1978, No 1124.
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