I. Overview of Likelihood of Confusion
According to international practice (WIPO, EUIPO, USPTO) and Vietnamese law, two trademarks are considered confusingly similar when:
- They are visually, phonetically, or conceptually similar to the extent of causing confusion;
- They are registered for identical or similar goods/services;
- There is a likelihood that the average consumer will misinterpret the origin of the goods/services.
II. Specific Factors for Trademarks Containing Personal Names
1. Fame and Distinctiveness of the Name
- Famous or inherently distinctive names receive stronger protection due to their commercial association.
- Common names like “John Smith” or “Nguyen Van A” have lower distinctiveness unless they are tied to strong commercial recognition.
Example: The mark “Michael Jordan” is more strongly protected than “David Nguyen”.
2. Order and Structure of the Name
- Assessment should consider the full name (surname – middle – given name), not just one component.
- Given names often leave a stronger impression than surnames.
Example: “Anna Marie” and “Anna Bella” are more likely to be confused than “Nguyen Minh Quang” and “Pham Minh Quang”.
3. Additional Elements or Variations
- If the name includes descriptive terms, stylized elements, or symbols, it is essential to assess whether the name remains the dominant impression.
Example: “Dr. Smith Skincare” vs. “Smith Cosmetics”.
4. Context of Use and Commercial Custom
- In some industries (e.g., fashion, cosmetics, artisan food), using personal names as trademarks is common.
- In Vietnam, personal names are not automatically regarded as highly distinctive unless commercial use supports it.
III. Legal Criteria for Similarity Assessment
- Visual, phonetic, and conceptual comparisons.
Example: “Le Anh Tuan” and “Le Anh Toan” are visually similar but phonetically different.
- Possibility of misleading association.
- Dominance of the personal name element within the overall trademark.
IV. Case Law and International Guidelines
- EUIPO: “Gabriel Garcia” refused for similarity to “Garcia Shoes” where “Garcia” was dominant.
- USPTO: Personal names may be refused if previously registered and commercially significant.
- Vietnam: Applicants may be required to prove authorization for using names of famous individuals.
V. Practical Advice for Filing and Counseling
- Consider adding clear distinguishing elements such as logos, descriptive words, or product categories.
- Gather evidence of actual use, commercial history, and brand recognition.
- For famous names, ensure proper authorization or legal rights to use the name.