Habanos wint in merkenstrijd US. Jaja, ze zijn niet van gisteren daar op Cuba. Nu de dagen van onze Cubert Castro zijn geteld gaan de flappen en pegels die te verdienen zijn in The Land Off The Free natuurlijk wat zwaarder tellen. Dus wat doet u dan ? Juist, een rechtzaak aanspannen jegens de grote Cohiba-fabrikant die al jaaren nepperts en ander......nah,..nepperts op de markt brengt onder de naam Cohiba. Maar we zijn het natuurlijk met zijn allen eens, Cohiba, daar is er maar 1 van,....de rest wat onder die naam gegoogled wordt kraken we zelf wel af via marktplaats, of deponeren we vriendelijk in de vuilnisbak van ebay of brengen we naar een sigarenzaak waarvan de verkopert kolder uitslaat, en daar zijn er genoeg van.
Afijnt, wij zijn dus bly dat onze lieve vrinden op Cuba deze zaak gewonnen hebben. En, hoe sneller die markt richting the states hoe beter,....ze kennen daar nl fijne en scherpe prijzen.
Habanos :
December 15th, 2009
The Cuban cigar company Cubatabaco has won a court order enjoining General Cigar from continuing to use the COHIBA trademark in the United States.
Federal judge Robert W. Sweet, of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, issued the injunction on December 14, 2009.
COHIBA is the world’s most famous and coveted cigar. It is sold everywhere except the United States, where the U.S. embargo on trade with Cuba prevents its sale. General Cigar, a major U.S. cigar company, sells a Dominican-made cigar under the COHIBA name in the United States.
In issuing the injunction, Judge Sweet found that, at the beginning of the cigar boom in the United States in 1992, “General Cigar selected COHIBA for a new product in order to exploit the reputation and goodwill of the Cuban COHIBA” in the United States. Judge Sweet additionally found that General Cigar “continues to profit from the Cuban COHIBA’s goodwill” in the U.S.
General Cigar has stated that it will appeal Judge Sweet’s decision. Under the terms of the injunction, General Cigar is permitted to sell its Dominican-made cigars under the COHIBA name until its appeal is decided.
Judge Sweet still has before him Cubatabaco’s claim to recover the profits General Cigar has obtained since 1992 by exploiting the COHIBA’s reputation. No date has been set yet for proceedings on Cubatabaco’s claim.
Michael Krinsky and David Goldstein, of the New York law firm Rabinowitz Boudin Standard Krinsky & Lieberman, P.C., the U.S. attorneys for Cubatabaco, said today that “Judge Sweet’s decision fully vindicates the fundamental principle that a company cannot be permitted to reap what it has not sowed, that it cannot be permitted to exploit the goodwill and reputation of another company’s product.”
Judge Sweet found that the COHIBA’s unique reputation for excellence is so strong that the U.S. consumer “primarily associates the designation COHIBA with the Cuban COHIBA,” even though the COHIBA cannot be sold in the United States. Judge Sweet found that this lead General Cigar to “to plagiarize the mark” by “intentional copying.”
Judge Sweet’s decision is the latest round in a 12 years litigation over the COHIBA trademark in the United States.