Vapor
A gin company has been ordered to pay Dame Vera Lynn £1,800 in legal costs after losing a case to trademark the singer‘s name for its drink.
Halewood
International applied to register the trademark “Vera Lynn” in June
last year, due to its use in cockney rhyming slang for the word gin.
The 102-year-old opposed it on the basis that using her name could be seen as an endorsement of the product.
The firm had argued ‘Vera Lynn‘ is more known as slang, than for the singer.
However, trademark hearing officer Al Skilton disagreed.
She
said: “The applicant… has failed to provide any evidence of the level
of understanding of cockney rhyming slang in the UK, or anything to
illustrate the level of awareness of the term Vera Lynn with reference
to gin.
“The evidence falls a long way short of showing that the
relevant public for alcoholic beverages will, on encountering ‘Vera
Lynn‘, see it as a rhyming slang reference for gin, rather than bringing
to mind the entertainer Vera Lynn, who has been in the entertainment
business for 84 years.”
The We‘ll Meet Again singer from
Ditchling, East Sussex, has been popular since the Second World War, and
has been using her name as an unregistered trademark for her music
since 1939.
Dame Vera‘s legal team said the Forces‘ Sweetheart
was also “very well-known for her charity work, including with
ex-servicemen, disabled children and breast cancer.”
Source: dailystockdish.com
Editor:Vapor