This piece of writing includes the interaction of intellectual rights, more
precisely trademarks with the international disputes in the first part along
with the role of intellectual rights in investment disputes and following a
detailed analysis of a landmark investment case law, a Tobacco plain packaging
BIT dispute namely "Philip Morris Asia Limited v. The Commonwealth of
Australia."
Introduction
There is a complex relation or proportionality between the investment disputes
and intellectual property rights. If we talk, specifically about the trademark
rights, there is a complex intersection exists between trademark and investment
issues. Whenever there is a question of investment related to intellectual
rights or any property is regarded as an investment. There are various reasons
and indifferences which creates disagreements which leads to consequential
investment disputes. The reason could be some expropriation claims, or some
breach of fair and equitable treatment, which is also known as FET Principles,
and many more.
There is a wired interplay between the trademark and investment disputes, in the
same scenario, both the states and the investors have their role to play, they
must conduct the navigation with a careful approach to protect their
intellectual rights while balancing with the liabilities or obligations.
Relation Between Ip Laws And Investor-State Disputes
What connection exists between investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS), an ad
hoc dispute resolution mechanism overseen by the International Centre for
Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) Convention, and intellectual property
rights (IPRs).
A few high-profile cases where IPRs have been claimed to be protected under
investment law and treaties have drawn attention to this issue. Although the
arbitral tribunals ruled in favour of the states in both cases, the investors'
claims sparked a heated discussion. These cases are not thoroughly examined in
this article. Rather, the purpose of this essay is to examine how intellectual
property (IP) is evaluated as a protected investment using both domestic and
international IP law.
Intellectual property rights (IPRs) are expressly included in the definition of
investment under international investment agreements (IIAs). Among the broad
kinds of information covered by IPRs are "Copyright and related rights,
trademark rights, geographical indications, industrial designs, patent, layout
designs of integrated circuits, concealed knowledge, plant breeders' rights...
utility model rights."
This is significant since establishing jurisdiction is the primary means of
gaining admission to the ICSID tribunal. For a dispute to fall within the
jurisdiction of ICSID, the parties must demonstrate that the issue is a direct
result of an investment. Additionally, arbitral tribunals have developed
standards for evaluating investments, dubbed the "Salini test," which primarily
considers contribution, duration, risk, and the host state's economic progress.
Investment And IP Rights
When enforcement mechanisms for intellectual property (IP) are just, lawful, and
capable of appreciating the "balance" struck in the system, IP systems function
remarkably well. Enforcing intellectual property rights (IPRs) within an
appropriate institutional framework would allow the IP system to optimize social
and economic wellbeing.
Most of us will undoubtedly concur that intellectual property (IP) is a type of
market intervention used by the government to promote innovation and production
and other good social ends. With this in mind, intellectual property owners and
users resort to national courts and IP offices for dispute resolution or to
interpret specific sections in order to guarantee legal clarity.
On the other hand, nations utilize the World Trade Organization's ("WTO")
dispute settlement process to get clarity on the terms and obligations of the
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) at the
international level. For IP owners to assert their rights, it is extremely
uncommon to use any other adjudicating forum outside of national systems and WTO
dispute settlement.
There are various landmarks judgment concerning the same. We will try to
understand the relationship between investment law and Intellectual Property
laws related to trademark through one of the landmark case analyses, namely,
Philip Morris Asia Limited v. The Commonwealth of Australia.
There are many principles and regulations provided in the same case, some of
them are as follows:
- Tobacco Packaging Regulations:
This ruling is the most recent in a string of legal actions filed by tobacco
companies and other nations in response to government actions governing the
appearance of packaging used to hold tobacco products, both in domestic courts
and before international tribunals. These regulations limit the ability of
tobacco businesses to distinguish their brands through package design. Australia
is the first nation to unify the look of all cigarette packaging through the
introduction of plain packaging regulations. Tobacco companies operating in
Australia are no longer permitted to place their logos or marketing content
(aside from the brand name and variant names, in standard font) on their
products; all cigarettes sold in the country must now be packaged in
standard-sized boxes with an unappealing colour and look (by design).
- Question of balance:
It is now evident that the difficult question of finding a "balance" between a
foreign investor's rights and expectations and a state's ability to exercise its
legislative and regulatory powers without having to compensate for any negative
effects will not be addressed by these arbitral proceedings.
Philip Morris Vs Commonwealth Of Australia
Facts Of The Dispute
The present dispute between Phillip Morris Asia Limited, a limited liability
(claimant) company and Commonwealth of Australia (respondent), is regarding the
enactment and enforcement of the Tobacco Plain Packaging Act 2011 and
implementing regulations known as Tobacco Plain Packaging Regulations 2011, by
the respondent. In other words, under a 1993 bilateral investment deal between
Australia and Hong Kong, Philip Morris Asia essentially challenged Australia's
Tobacco Plain Legislation.
The Claimant started Arbitration regarding this dispute in accordance with the
agreement or Treaty between the Govt. of Hong Kong and Govt. of Australia for
the Promotion and Protection of Investment in September 1993. The Claimant is
the regional headquarter of the Philip Morris International Group of Companies (PMI
Group). It claims to owns 100% shares of Philip Morris (Australia) Limited (PM
Australia) which is a holding company in Australia which in turn holds 100%
shares of the Philip Morris Limited (PML).
Claimant said that PML has rights
over certain intellectual property in Australia, including copyright works,
registered and unregistered works, registered and unregistered design, and
overall packaging of the product. The claimant seek relief by taking appropriate
steps to suspend enforcement of the Plain Packaging Legislation and to
Compensate the Claimant for its financial loss.
The Respondent rejected the claim and raised three preliminary objections
regarding the jurisdiction of the tribunal and admissibility of claimant's
claims. The tribunal has bifurcated the proceedings so that only two objections
would be addressed in first phase:-
The respondent first objection was that claimant's investment was not properly
admitted in the host state. The second objection was that tribunal was barred
from considering the Claim of Claimant because the dispute had arisen before the
Claimant had obtained the protection of the treaty as a result of restructuring
its investment in PML. The third objection which was dealt after this was that
neither the shares in PML nor PML's assets constitute investment for the
purposes of the Treaty.
On the above objection made by the respondent, the Claimant contented that
it has fulfil all the requirements related to jurisdiction and its claim
against Australia is valid.
Claimant submits that:
- It is covered as an investor under the Treaty because it is incorporated as a company under the laws of Hong Kong.
- All the "investment" requirements are fulfilled by the company since it holds the assets in the form of direct shareholding in PML Australia and indirect shareholding in PML.
- Its investments are legal under the host State's law because this is admitted by Australia, subject to its laws and investment policies.
- Claimant had satisfied the Dispute Resolution provision of the treaty because the dispute is in relation to Plain Packaging Measures, which substantially diminished the value of the Claimant's investment in Australia.
Analysis Of The Tribunal
Tribunal finds that the adoption of Plain Packaging Measures was foreseeable
well before the Claimant's decision to restructure was taken place. The
introduction of Plain Packaging Legislation was certain from the part of
government.
So the tribunal concludes that here and abuse of right or process has taken
place because an investor has changed its corporate structure to gain the
protection of an investment treaty at that point of time where a dispute was
foreseeable. The Claimant by corporate restructuring acquired the Australian
subsidiaries occurred when there was reasonable prospect that dispute will
arise. So the claims raised by the claimant are inadmissible and the tribunal is
precluded from exercising its jurisdiction over the dispute.
Arbitration Award
The tribunal brings the proceedings to an end because it cannot exercise its
jurisdiction over the dispute. But the tribunal will provide the parties with an
opportunity to make submissions regarding the amounts and the allocation of the
costs of the proceedings and then it will fix and allocate the costs of
arbitration in a final award on costs.
Conclusion
In this instance, the Tribunal has determined that the Plain Packaging Measures
were anticipated long before the Claimant made the choice to reorganize, let
alone put them into effect. Australia's health minister, Roxon, and prime
minister, Kevin Rudd, made clear when they announced the government's plan to
implement plain packaging measures on April 29, 2010. As of that moment, the
Tribunal believed there was no doubt about the Government's intention to
implement plain packaging. As a result, starting on that day, there was a
plausible chance that a disagreement would surface and legislation like to the
Plain Packaging Measures would finally be passed.
Given the discussion above, the Tribunal is forced to conclude that the starting
of this arbitration amounts to an abuse of rights because the corporate
restructuring that allowed the Claimant to acquire the Australian subsidiaries
was done at a time when there was a reasonable chance that the dispute would
arise and because the main, if not exclusive, goal of the restructuring was to
obtain Treaty protection. Consequently, the Tribunal is unable to have
jurisdiction over this dispute and the claims made in this arbitration are
inadmissible.
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