Picture this: You’re a local NZ business and you’ve just successfully defended an opposition to registration of your trade mark before the Intellectual Property Office of New Zealand (IPONZ). As a result of your win, the assistant commissioner has awarded you $2850 in costs.
The award is not a lot compared to what you’ve spent, but, hey, at least it’s something.
Your account details have been sent to the losing party and…nothing. Silence. Your lawyers send a reminder for payment and, again, silence. The losing party has shown you its digitus impudicus.1
Frustrating, right? Annoying – sure! Especially when your lawyer tells you that the High Court process to recover the meagre sum awarded by the assistant commissioner will cost more than the award itself. What’s worse in your case is that the loser is based overseas, so in addition there’s the whole process – and cost – of trying to enforce the court’s order for payment in the loser’s jurisdiction. Arrghh!!!
In these circumstances, your victory can seem a very pyrrhic one, and rightly so.
Fortunately, there is something parties in trade mark, patent and design proceedings before IPONZ can do to mitigate the potential for non-payment of costs.
That ‘something’ is obtaining security for costs.
The Trade Marks Act 2002, the Patents Act 2013 and the Designs Act 1953 all have provisions2 which enable the relevant Commissioner to order a party to pay security for costs. Section 167 of the Trade Marks Act 2002, for example, states:
167 Commissioner or court may require security for costs
The Commissioner or the court, as the case may be, may require a party to legal proceedings under this Act to give security for the costs of the proceedings if satisfied that (a) the party does not reside, and does not carry on business, in New Zealand; or (b) there is reason to believe that the party will be unable to pay the costs of the other party if unsuccessful in the proceedings.
If the party does not give the security required, the Commissioner or the court may treat the proceedings as
abandoned by the party and determine the matter accordingly.
Looking at the scenario I started this article with, it would have been prudent for the winner to have applied for an order for payment of security for costs under section 167(1)(a) if it could establish the other side did not reside, and did not carry on business, in New Zealand.
In those circumstances, the commissioner should have ordered security for costs unless there was something in the surrounding circumstances that suggested the commissioner should not have granted the order because it would be unjust on the opponent.3
Applying may also have made the other side think twice about pursuing the opposition – or at least encouraged them to negotiate an acceptable resolution.
Despite the apparent ease with which orders for payment of security may be obtained against overseas parties (I stress ‘may’), orders for payment of security in these circumstances are seemingly rare.4 This is surprising given the number of proceedings involving overseas based vs NZ based parties, and indicates a remarkable amount of trust of NZ based parties’ behalf that their opponents will pay up if they lose. Either that, or that applying for security for costs in IPONZ proceedings is an under-utilised tool. I think both are
probably correct.
- Digitus impudicus ¬(Latin) – the shameless, indecent or offensive finger. In today’s parlance, showing the digitus impudicus is flipping the bird, or giving someone the finger.
- Section 167, Trade Marks Act 2002; section 213 Patents Act 2013; and section 38, Designs Act 1953. There is no provision in the Plant Variety Rights Act 1987 expressly dealing with security for costs in PVR proceedings.
- Foodstuffs (Auckland) Ltd v Homcare HCI Ltd [1991] NZIPOTM 3.
- From reviewing IPONZ decisions on NZLII.org.