The
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Retail Limited has dragged the Natural
Network Petroleum and Gas Company Limited and two others to Justice I.M.
Sanni of a Federal High Court in Akure over alleged infringement on its
trademark.
The
NNPC had in a suit filed by its counsel, Muyiwa Atoyebi, with case no:
FHC/AK/99/15 joined Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) and Registrar of Trade
Marks, Patent and Designs as 2nd and 3rd defendants respectively.
The
plaintiff had also in a separate suit sued Flory Mummy Nigeria Limited over the
same subject matter.
When
the matter came up on Friday, the court granted an order that CAC and the
Registrar of Trade Marks be served with the writ in their corporate office in
Abuja.
Addressing
newsmen in Abuja over the weekend, the Managing Director of NNPC Retail
Limited, Mr. Fagbola Ladipo stated that the suit was a follow up to the
anti-corruption campaign of President Muhammadu Buhari in his bid to completely
root out corruption in the country.
Asides
that, Mr Ladipo stated that the infringement on the NNPC trademark by the first
defendant had began to cause a dwindling in the sales of NNPC in Ondo state.
He
also noted that the first defendant is imitating NNPC by using its color
combination of red, yellow, green, uniform, emblem and the acronym NNPC to
deceive the public
adding that such had such is a sabotage of government effort to provide
petroleum products to the common man.
In
its writ, the plaintiff is praying the court for a declaration
that the first defendant 'NNPG' mark is phonetically and alphabetically confusingly
identical/similar to NNPC's trademark.
The
plaintiff however prays the court to make an order of perpetual injunction
restraining NNPG from selling, offering any service, advertising for sale or
promoting howsoever the name and consequently the acronym of NNPG in any of its
service outlets, or any similar acronym, mark design and / or trade logo
identical or similar to its own.
It also
wants the court to direct CAC pursuant to Section 31(1) and (4) of the
Companies and Allied Matters act, 1990 to remove the NNPG's name from its
record being similar with its registered trademark, NNPC.
NNPC
further wants the court to direct the Registrar of Trademarks, Patent and
Designs never to accept for registration the word NNPG or any word or color
combination so closely identical or similar to its own.
The
plaintiff further wants
to the court to stop NNPG from using similar/identical colors/combination
of colors to that of the plaintiff as its retail outlets.
In
addition, it wants the court to restrain NNPG from infringing or assisting
others to infringe on the plaintiff's registered trademark, colors/combination
of colors, totems, insignia and emblem.
The
plaintiff is also asking the court to order NNPG to remove all sign posts,
names/acronyms with letters NNPG and any such identical/similar design
infringing on its trademark with immediate effect.
NNPC
also prays the court for the sum N5 million being exemplary damages and N10
million as general damages for the infringement and passing off of its
trademark and design.
In
its statement of claim, the plaintiff avers that sometime in 2015, it
discovered that 1st defendant sells and continues to sell petroleum products
under the confusing brand design of NNPG, at the very
least, confusingly similar to that of the plaintiff's registered trademark NNPC
in Akure, Ondo state.
It
further avered that the 1st defendant with the intention to decieve
unsuspecting general public has also adopted and continually used for its
commercial benefit, in its retain outlets/service stations that exact unique
color/combination of colors with very similar enblem of its own.
In
its particulars of misrepresentation, the plaintiff avers that the acronym
NNPG, coupled with the entire features of its colour combination is associated in
the mind of the public as the plaintiff's service outlet NNPC.
Furthermore
in its particulars to damage to business and goodwill,
the plaintiff states that it is widely known for selling at government
regulated price and quality, while the first defendant has engaged in the habit
of selling far above the government regulated price.
It
also avers that the volume of its sales in Ondo state for petroleum products is
declining and will continue to decline and the plaintiff company will be
adversely affected by use and continous infringement of its trademark.
The
court had however fixed November 10 for hearing.

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