Section 122(1)(a) defence
97 The defence in s 122(1)(a)(i) was considered in Optical 88 Limited v Optical 88 Pty Limited [2011] FCAFC 130; (2011) 197 FCR 67. At [61] the Full Federal Court stated:
The defence in s 122(1)(a)(i) of the Trade Marks Act must be construed in the context of the statute as a whole. It is true that s 17 defines a trade mark as a "sign" used to distinguish the goods and services of one person in the course of trade from the goods and services of others. Section 120, moreover, defines infringement as occurring when a person uses "as a trade mark a sign that is substantially identical with, or deceptively similar to" a registered trade mark. In other words, infringement occurs when a person uses a sign to distinguish that person's goods and services in the course of trade from the goods and services of others and the sign is substantially identical with, or deceptively similar to, a registered trade mark. The defence in s 122(1)(a)(i) is that, "in spite of section 120", a person does not infringe a registered trade mark when the person uses in good faith the person's own name. In other words, when a person uses a sign to distinguish that person's goods and services in the course of trade from the goods and services of others, and the sign is substantially identical with or deceptively similar to a registered trade mark, such use will not constitute infringement if it is a use in good faith of the person's name. Construed in context, as the primary judge said at [164], "the defence bites when the use of the person's name is the reason for the finding of infringement". Consideration of earlier decisions confirms this approach.
The requirement that the use be "in good faith" is a requirement of honest use. Honest use is not proven merely by showing that such use was not fraudulent. "Good faith" requires an honest belief that no confusion would arise by reference to the earlier trade mark's reputation, and the absence of an intention to take advantage of the reputation acquired by another trader. The defence is not available in cases "where the respondent is engaging in sharp conduct with an eye on wrongly diverting business": Australian Postal Corporation v Digital Post Australia Pty Ltd [2013] FCAFC 153; (2013) 308 ALR 1 at [74].
98 For the following reasons, I do not accept Insight Radiology's defence based on s 122(1)(a)(i) of the Trade Marks Act.
99 As at the priority date of the ICI trade marks (10 October 2012), the name of the respondent company was AKP Radiology Consultants Pty Ltd, not Insight Radiology Pty Ltd (as it is now known). The company did not change its name until 17 June 2013. It follows that until the change of name, Insight Radiology was not the company's name.
100 Insight Radiology argued nonetheless that a "name" within the meaning of that term in s 122(1)(a)(i) includes a business name under which goods or services are sold by an entity, regardless of its real name. In support Insight Radiology cited Shanahan's Australian Law of Trade Marks and Passing Off 5th ed at [85.1810]. At p 618, the learned authors stated that "the word 'name' presumably does not extend to a mere surname or business name unless it is by that name that the person is known in the trade". Insight Radiology argued that the registration of the business name "Insight Radiology" on 13 July 2011 which, it was said, was "plainly held on trust by Mr Pham for Insight Radiology as it was the entity trading under that name", is sufficient to constitute "use of the person's name" under s 122(1)(a)(i). It was submitted further that "if there were any doubt", by February 2012 (and it was said well before any knowledge of Insight Clinical Imaging) the registered business names "Insight Radiology Leeton", "Insight Radiology Devonport", and "Insight Radiology Griffith" were owned by Insight Radiology in the respective States. I do not accept those submissions which are unsupported by the evidence. First of all, Mr Pham admitted in cross-examination that Insight Radiology was not trading under any of the business names owned by it. Secondly, there was no evidentiary foundation beyond Mr Pham's mere assertion in cross-examination that the company has traded under the business name "Insight Radiology". Mr Pham did not give that evidence in chief and no other evidence in chief was led to show that the company in fact has traded under that business name. In the complete absence of corroborating evidence to show that that the company has traded under that business name, I do not accept Mr Pham's mere assertion as cogent evidence establishing that fact. For this submission to be successful, Insight Radiology had to produce cogent evidence that showed that it is a fact that the company has traded under that business name.
101 Insight Clinical Imaging conceded that the company has used "Insight Radiology" as the corporate name since 17 June 2013 but contended that such use has not been in good faith. It was contended that the Court should find on the evidence that Mrs Pham must have had knowledge of Insight Clinical Imaging's business through Google searches that she conducted before the IR composite mark was designed and that the adoption of Insight Radiology as the corporate name, which happened very shortly after Mr Pham received the letter from Insight Clinical Imaging's lawyers putting him on notice of possible infringement of Insight Clinical Imaging's trade marks, was done to manufacture a defence to the anticipated trade marks infringement claim.
102 Insight Radiology's case was that Mr Pham chose and adopted the Radiology marks in good faith without any knowledge of Insight Clinical Imaging, and the corporate name was subsequently changed in line with the use of the name in the marks and the business name registrations that already existed and not for any improper purpose. It was contended that the fact that the change occurred after Insight Radiology had become aware of Insight Clinical Imaging does not impugn the good faith adoption of the name.
103 It was Mr Pham's evidence that the first he knew about Insight Clinical Imaging was on 13 May 2013 when he received the letter from Insight Clinical Imaging's lawyers putting him on notice that Insight Clinical Imaging was the proprietor of registered trade marks 1517779 (ICI composite mark) and 1517780 (ICI word mark) and that Insight Clinical Imaging had been trading under the name Insight Clinical Imaging since August 2008.
104 Mrs Pham also gave evidence. Mrs Pham was not a director of Insight Radiology but she described herself as the company's business manager. It was her evidence that she came up with the name "Insight Radiology". She undertook various searches to ascertain the ability to use the name, but those searches did not bring up Insight Clinical Imaging. She deposed that the first time she became aware of Insight Clinical Imaging was on or about 20 December 2012 when she received a letter from IP Australia advising that Insight Clinical Imaging's trade marks had been accepted for registration on the basis of s 44(4) of the Trade Marks Act, and the first time that she saw Insight Clinical Imaging's website was on 13 May 2013 following receipt of the letter from Insight Clinical Imaging's lawyers. She further deposed that when she received the letter from IP Australia in December 2012 she "did not think very much of the letter" and it did not occur to her that the registration could be opposed. She deposed that she made no enquiries about Insight Clinical Imaging or its activities at the time as she did not think that it could affect Insight Radiology's trade mark or that Insight Radiology could affect Insight Clinical Imaging's trade marks and "because [she] did not think much of the letter, [she] did not tell [Mr Pham] about the letter or show it to him".
105 Mrs Pham swore three affidavits deposing to the searches she conducted. In her first affidavit, Mrs Pham deposed that she could not recall the exact date, but sometime in 2008 she conducted:
(a) an online search of the New South Wales business names register for "Insight Radiology" and did not find any registrations;
(b) an online search of ASIC company names for "Insight Radiology" and did not find any registrations; and
(c) an online search of the IP Australia trade marks database for the marks containing the words "Insight" and "Radiology" and did not find any "refused, lapsed, pending or registered trade marks containing 'Insight' and 'Radiology'".
106 She further deposed that in or around July 2011, before Mr Pham applied to register the business name "Insight Radiology" she again conducted online searches of the New South Wales business names register, the ASIC company names register and the IP Australia trade marks register and her search did not find "any registered New South Wales business names, registered company names or refused, lapsed, pending or registered trade marks for 'Insight Radiology'".
107 In her second affidavit which she swore on 14 May 2015 Mrs Pham corrected her evidence about the searches that she had conducted. She deposed that whilst she could not recall the exact date, it was "likely that it was sometime in 2009 (and not 2008)" that she conducted an online search of the IP Australia trade marks database "for pending or registered marks" containing the words "Insight Radiology", "Insight Diagnostic" and "Insight Imaging" but her search did not find any "pending or registered" marks containing those words. She also referred to her earlier evidence that she had conducted an online search of the IP Australia trade marks register again in or around July 2011 before Mr Pham applied to register the name "Insight Radiology" and deposed that she wished "to clarify" that she had conducted an online search for "pending or registered" marks containing the words "Insight Radiology", "Insight Diagnostic" or "Insight Imaging" but her search did not find any "pending or registered" marks containing those words.
108 In her third affidavit which she swore on 13 August 2015, she again corrected her evidence and deposed that in addition to the searches that she had carried out in 2009 and 2011 "at about the same times" she had also conducted searches on the Google search engine, confined to Australia, for the terms "Insight Radiology", "Insight Diagnostic" and "Insight Imaging". She deposed she conducted those Google searches to determine if there were any radiology companies in Australia using those names. She deposed that she also conducted the Google searches in 2011, just before Mr Pham applied to register the business name "Insight Radiology". She deposed that the results of the Google searches did not reveal any radiology services that used the name "Insight Radiology", or "Insight Diagnostic" or "Insight Imaging" or any other name with the word "Insight" in it, including "Insight Clinical Imaging".
109 Mrs Pham was cross-examined at length on her evidence about the searches she had conducted and changed her evidence yet again. First she stated that she had also conducted the business name search and the ASIC company names database in 2009, not in 2008. When challenged as to why she changed her evidence about the extent of the searches she had conducted on the IP Australia database, it was apparent that when Mrs Pham did her first affidavit, she had no recollection of the actual searches that she had done and realised from re-conducting the search in 2015 that if she had clicked on "all" that there was another trade mark there which she had not seen when she did her searches. When pressed as to when she became aware that her first affidavit was incorrect she stated that she could not recall but it was around the time she did the second affidavit. When asked what prompted her to make the second affidavit she stated:
Because I knew that here was another mark when you go down the others. When I did those searches again, I saw that there was a previous mark registration for - it was Insight Imaging, Insight Radiology on the one line. So that never showed up in the first search.
When asked what prompted her to re-do the search she replied:
To be honest, I don't know. It was just me being curious as to exactly how the database worked, and then I've realised there was a dropdown box, so I then started proceeding through those and seeing what was in there.
When asked what prompted her to recall that in addition to searching "Insight Radiology" she also searched "Insight Diagnostic" and "Insight Imaging" she stated that:
We used to be Leeton Diagnostic Imaging, so that was always something that I would search, because I was familiar with those terms.
When asked what prompted her to remember that she had also done Google searches (some seven months after her first affidavit) she replied:
Because that was one of the first searches I did to see-they were just all done together so I could gather as much information as I could.
When it was put to Mrs Pham that had she done those Google searches she would have come up with Insight Clinical Imaging's website, she denied that she had seen it.
110 Mrs Pham's evidence was shown not to be reliable because her recollection of the searches she conducted was shown to be poor and based in part upon reconstruction.
111 According to expert evidence led by Insight Clinical Imaging, Insight Clinical Imaging's website would have appeared on the first page of Google search results from a Google search of "Insight Imaging" or "Insight Radiology" at the time. Insight Radiology argued that the opinion of the expert that a search with those terms would show up as a first page result was speculative as the expert did not know the algorithms used by Google in setting out results from a search, and the expert accepted in cross-examination that one factor that affects the ranking of the search results is the location of the person searching so that it was quite possible that a user in Western Australia would see a different set of search results to a user making exactly the same search at the same time but from Victoria. It was submitted that the expert's asserted certainty that Mrs Pham's Google searches (in Leeton) would show the Insight Clinical Imaging website (in Perth) on a first page of search results should accordingly be given little or no weight. I disagree. The expert opinion is cogent probative evidence that Insight Clinical Imaging's website would have appeared on the first page of Google search results, and that evidence is not disproved by Mrs Pham's evidence as she had no clear recollection of what she had searched. In addition when pressed in cross-examination, Mrs Pham agreed that it was possible that she may have clicked on more pages than just the first page results. Given Mrs Pham's testimony that her purpose in conducting the Google searches was to determine if there were any radiology companies in Australia using the names "Insight Diagnostic", "Insight Imaging" or "Insight Radiology", it is a reasonable inference that had Mrs Pham done a proper and diligent search to ascertain whether the name "Insight Radiology" was available for use, she would have viewed Insight Clinical Imaging's website at the time had she conducted the searches. Moreover, the evidence about Insight Clinical Imaging's website established that had Mrs Pham searched the website at the time, the website would have shown the ICI trade marks and their use in connection with promoting Insight Clinical Imaging's radiology services business.
112 Mrs Pham was certainly put on notice by late December 2012, when she read the letter addressed to Mr Pham from IP Australia advising of the registration of Insight Clinical Imaging's two marks in class 44 radiology services pursuant to s 44(4) of the Trade Marks Act. Mrs Pham gave evidence that she did not tell Mr Pham about that letter. Mr Pham's evidence also was that he first learnt of Insight Clinical Imaging and its two marks when he received the letter of demand from Insight Clinical Imaging's lawyers in May 2013. That letter was received before Mr Pham changed the company name, so that whether or not they are to be believed about when Mr Pham first knew about Insight Clinical Imaging, he undoubtedly knew about Insight Clinical Imaging and of the potential for confusion of the trade marks before he changed the company's name.
113 There was no evidence as to the reason why the company changed its name to Insight Radiology Pty Ltd when it did, and without such evidence the inference is readily drawn that the name change was precipitated by that letter. Mr Pham did not explain his reason for, or timing of, the name change in his evidence and it is left to inference as to why he effected the name change when he did. The evidence points strongly against a finding that Mr Pham was acting in good faith in effecting the name change. It is telling that the company had used the Radiology marks since as far back as at least March 2012, and opened three new clinics in the meantime, without any apparent need to have the company name brought into line with the business name registrations or the Insight Radiology brand. It is also telling that the name change was made in the face of the claim, and with the knowledge, that the company's use of the IR composite and IR word marks potentially infringed the ICI trade marks. Left to inference in the absence of cogent evidence to explain the reason and timing of the name change, Mr Pham has not shown that he was acting in good faith in changing the corporate name when he did.
114 Accordingly the s 122(1)(a)(i) defence has not been established.