"The submission of the respondent that the word
'Caplets' is used 'as a descriptor' contains
within it the hidden premise that a mark cannot
be used as a trade mark if it is also used in a
descriptive way. That premise is incorrect both
as a matter of construction of the Act and as a
matter of authority . . .
The word 'Caplets', like the word 'Vapo Rub'
considered by the Privy Council in De Cordova
And Others v Vick Chemical Coy. (1951) 68 RPC
103 at 107, clearly has a descriptive element.
It is obviously an amalgam of two ordinary
English words 'capsule' and 'tablet', and was no
doubt chosen for the purpose of suggesting to
the reader the characteristics of the tablets
contained in the applicant's packaged products.
It is true that the word has a capacity to pass
into the language as a generic word, but it has
not so far done so. Indeed one might infer that
both (the respondent) and (the appellant) placed
drawings of a capsule-shaped tablet on their
packaging so as to aid the understanding of the
reader as to what was to be found in the packet.
However, a person seeing (the respondent's)
packet and the drawing upon it would, in my
opinion, understand the word Caplets to refer to
the capsule-shaped tablets in the box, that is
to say the product manufactured by Winthrop
Laboratories, a division of (the respondent):
cf. Westinghouse Electric Corporation v
Thermopart Pty. Ltd (1968) WAR 39 at 51.
Nor does it assist (the appellant) to refer to
the word "Caplets" as indicating a particular
dosage form of paracetamol. That is self evident
but it does not prevent the applicant's
(respondent's) use of a word being a trade mark
use . . . (T)he word "Caplets" still signifies
to the objective observer that there is a
connection between the word "Caplets", the goods
in the package and the trade origin of these
goods (the respondent). It is, in my opinion,
use of the word as a trade mark."