Henley v Henley Constructions No room for two Henleys in the national building industry
16 November 2021
16 November 2021
Henley was established in Victoria in 1989, and quickly grew to become one of the largest home builders in Australia. By the mid-1990s, Henley operated in Victoria, South Australia, New South Wales, the ACT and Queensland under the "Henley" trade mark.
In the early 2000s, Henley scaled back its operations in New South Wales to focus on its operations in Victoria, Queensland and South Australia, but it continued to build some houses in New South Wales and also built houses in other states for customers located in New South Wales.
In 2003, Henley began marketing its services at www.henley.com.au. Since then, this website has had significant numbers of visitors, and Henley has built homes for customers, from all over Australia and overseas.
In late 2006 in Sydney, Patrick Sarkis founded Henley Constructions Pty Ltd. He did not conduct any proper searches to establish whether the name Henley was free to use, despite being told by a contractor that another builder had previously used the name "Henley" in New South Wales.
The Court also found, contrary to Sarkis's evidence, that his wife had conducted a Google search for "Henley" that revealed the website at www.henley.com.au, and had told him about it. Despite knowing about Henley, Patrick Sarkis merely relied on the fact that "Henley Constructions Pty Ltd" was available for registration with ASIC as it was not an exact match with any Henley group company names.
From 2006 to around 2017, Henley Constructions primarily built low-rise apartments for Patrick Sarkis' own development companies, which were then sold to the public under the branding of the relevant development vehicle.
In around 2017, Henley Constructions ramped up its public-facing marketing of the "Henley Constructions" brand. This attracted Henley's attention, and when Henley put Henley Constructions on notice of Henley's rights, Henley Constructions and Patrick Sarkis doubled down on their marketing efforts, including via social media and a redesign of the company logo that placed greater emphasis on the word "Henley".
The Court ultimately decided in Henley's favour on all of the issues in dispute concerning Henley Constructions and Patrick Sarkis' use of "Henley Constructions" (and various other "Henley" formative marks), and accordingly held that they had infringed Henley's trade mark rights.
Henley Constructions argued that its use of "Henley Constructions" was the use of its own name in good faith (ie it had a "use of own name" defence). However, the Court found that Patrick Sarkis' failure to conduct proper enquiries in 2006, despite knowing about Henley, meant that he had not acted in good faith in adopting the name.
Henley Constructions also argued that, because it had used the name since 2006, it would be entitled to its own trade mark registration for "Henley Constructions". However, the Court found that any application by Henley Constructions to register the mark would be successfully opposed by Henley, on any one of the grounds raised by Henley (including that Henley is the owner of the "Henley" mark in Australia for building services).
Henley Constructions unsuccessfully sought to remove and/or limit some of Henley's trade mark registrations on the following grounds:
The Court also found that Henley Constructions and Patrick Sarkis' use of "Henley Constructions" constituted misleading and deceptive conduct under the Australian Consumer Law, as consumers of building services would likely be misled to believe that Henley Constructions was associated with Henley.
The Court found that Patrick Sarkis was jointly liable for, and aided and abetted, the infringing conduct as he was the only person responsible for making management decisions for his company at all relevant times. He was the sole shareholder of the company and ultimately approved all marketing decisions. The Court found that Patrick Sarkis engaged in conduct that was "deliberate and recklessly indifferent to the risk of creating consumer confusion" and that he was "knowingly involved" in the wrongdoing.
The Court will shortly grant the non-pecuniary relief sought by Henley (including restraining Henley Constructions and Patrick Sarkis from using "Henley"). Henley has also sought an account of the profits derived from Henley Constructions' infringing conduct, but the case on quantum will be heard at a later date.
Ashurst acted for Henley in this proceeding.
Authors: Kellech Smith, Partner and Will Scott, Senior Associate.
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