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Guiding Cases in PerspectiveTM
指导性案例透视TM
Tianjin China Youth Travel Service
v.
Tianjin Guoqing International Travel Agency,
A Dispute over an Unauthorized Use of Another’s Enterprise Name
Guiding Case No. 29
(Discussed and Passed by the Adjudication Committee of the Supreme People’s Court
Released on June 26, 2014)
CHINA GUIDING CASES PROJECT
Guiding Case No. 29 Highlighted Edition
April 30, 2016*
* The citation of this piece is:《天津中国青年旅行社诉天津国青国际旅行社擅自使用他人企业名称纠纷
案》(Tianjin China Youth Travel Service v. Tianjin Guoqing International Travel Agency, A Dispute over an
Unauthorized Use of Another‘s Enterprise Name), STANFORD LAW SCHOOL CHINA GUIDING CASES PROJECT,
Guiding Cases in PerspectiveTM
, Guiding Case No. 29 Highlighted Edition, Apr. 30, 2016,
http://cgc.law.stanford.edu/guiding-cases/guiding-case-29/. The parts highlighted below are essentially the same as
the relevant parts in the original second-instance judgment of Guiding Case No. 29. Parts highlighted in yellow
and red cover contents included in the “Basic Facts of the Case” and the “Reasons for the Adjudication” sections of
Guiding Case No. 29, respectively. The English version of this Guiding Case was published by the China Guiding
Cases Project on October 20, 2014 and is also available at the abovementioned hyperlink.
Guiding Cases in PerspectiveTM
is a unique serial publication of the China Guiding Cases Project that
identifies the original judgments selected by the Supreme People’s Court, examines their transformation into
Guiding Cases, and explores the treatment of the Guiding Cases in subsequent cases.
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Keywords
Civil Unfair Competition Unauthorized Use of Another’s Enterprise Name
Main Points of the Adjudication
1. An abbreviated enterprise name that has been widely used externally by an enterprise for
a long period of time, that has a certain degree of market visibility and is known to the
relevant public, and that actually already functions as a trade name, may be regarded as
an enterprise name and [thus] be protected [under law].
2. Where, without authorization, [a business operator] uses another’s abbreviated enterprise
name, which actually already functions as a trade name, as an Internet bid-for-ranking1
keyword in business activities, causing the relevant public to be confused and to
misidentify [the enterprise], [the unauthorized use of the abbreviated enterprise name] is
an act of unfair competition.
Related Legal Rule(s)
1. Article 120 of the General Principles of the Civil Law of the People’s Republic of China
2. Article 5 of the Anti-Unfair Competition Law of the People’s Republic of China
Basic Facts of the Case
Plaintiff Tianjin China Youth Travel Service (天津中国青年旅行社)2 (hereinafter
referred to as “Tianjin Qinglü”) claimed: defendant Tianjin Guoqing International Travel
Agency Co., Ltd. (天津国青国际旅行社有限公司) illegally used the plaintiff’s full enterprise
name and abbreviated name, “Tianjin Qinglü”, on [the defendant’s] copyrighted webpage and in
its website source code and search engine, violating the provision(s) of the anti-unfair
competition law.3 [The plaintiff] requested that the defendant be ordered to immediately cease
1 Translators’ note: “Internet bid-for-ranking” (“竞价排名”) is a means of bidding for a higher position on an
online search results page. For more information on the topic, see http://baike.baidu.com/view/40571.htm. 2 Translators’ note: the name “天津中国青年旅行社” is translated here as “Tianjin China Youth Travel
Service” in accordance with the translation used on the company’s website, at http://www.tjcyts.com/. 3 Translators’ note: the term “反不正当竞争法” (“anti-unfair competition law”) as used several times in this
Guiding Case likely refers to 《中华人民共和国反不正当竞争法》 (Anti-Unfair Competition Law of the
People’s Republic of China), adopted on Sept. 2, 1993 and effective as of Dec. 1, 1993, available at
http://www.gov.cn/banshi/2005-08/31/content_68766.htm.
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3
its act of unfair competition, publicly apologize, pay RMB 100,000 in compensation for
economic losses, and bear the costs of the litigation.
Defendant Tianjin Guoqing International Travel Agency Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to
as “Tianjin Guoqinglü”) defended its position, claiming: [the abbreviated name] “Tianjin
Qinglü” was not registered and was [thus] not owned by the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s claimed
losses were not based on facts or law, [and the defendant therefore] requested that the court
reject the plaintiff’s litigation claims.
The court handled the case and ascertained: Tianjin China Youth Travel Service, which
was established on November 1, 1986, was a state-owned enterprise engaged in the business of
domestic and inbound and outbound tourism and was directly subordinate to the Communist
Youth League Tianjin Committee. The Communist Youth League Tianjin Committee had
issued a certificate stating that “Tianjin Qinglü” was the abbreviated enterprise name of Tianjin
China Youth Travel Service. In 2007, Jin Wan Bao4 and other media [outlets] began using the
abbreviated name “Tianjin Qinglü” to refer to Tianjin China Youth Travel Service when
reporting on activities undertaken by Tianjin China Youth Travel Service. In its quotation
sheets, travel contracts, collaboration documents [signed] with business operators in the same
industry, invoices, and other materials, as well as daily business activities, including [advertising
on] signboards on its business premises, [Tianjin China Youth Travel Service] used “Tianjin
Qinglü” as the abbreviated name of the enterprise. Established on July 6, 2010, Tianjin
Guoqing International Travel Agency Co., Ltd. was a limited liability company engaged in such
business as domestic tourism and inbound tourism reception.
At the end of 2010, Tianjin Qinglü discovered that when “Tianjin China Youth Travel
Service” or “Tianjin Qinglü” was searched on Google’s search engine, the top-ranked search
result and the area used to indicate sponsors’ links respectively displayed
[t]he Internet business office of Tianjin China Youth Travel Service
www.lechuyou.com Tianjin Guoqing online business office is your ideal choice
and provides excellent quality, caring, and pleasant service for your trips
and
[t]he Internet business office of Tianjin Qinglü www.lechuyou.com Tianjin
Guoqing online business office is your ideal choice and provides excellent
quality, caring, and pleasant service for your trips.
When the link [www.lechuyou.com] was clicked, it led to a website entitled Tianjin Guoqing
International Travel Agency Lechuyou. At the top of the webpage were words like “Tianjin
4 Translators’ note: the name “今晚报” (literally, “Evening News”) is translated here as “Jin Wan Bao” in
accordance with the translation used on the company’s website, at http://epaper.jwb.com.cn/jwb/html/2014-
07/21/node_2.htm.
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Guoqing International Travel Agency—Youth Travel Agency Qinglü/Tianjin Guolü”. The
webpage’s content included business information and pricing for Tianjin Guoqing Travel. The
website copyright [was attributed to] Lechuyou Net−Tianjin Guoqing and [the website] listed the
contact telephone number and business address of Tianjin Guoqinglü. Meanwhile, when
Tianjin Qinglü searched “Tianjin Qinglü” on Baidu’s search engine, the top-ranked search result
and the area used to indicate promotional links displayed
[w]elcome to Tianjin Qinglü, a trustworthy business entity, bringing together
classic domestic and outbound tour routes, 100% of tours [organized], Tianjin
Qinglü 400-611-5253 022.ctsgz.cn.
When the link was clicked, it again led to the aforementioned website entitled Tianjin Guoqing
[International Travel Agency] Lechuyou.
Results of the Adjudication
On October 24, 2011, the No. 2 Intermediate People’s Court of Tianjin Municipality
rendered the (2011) Er Zhong Min San Zhi Chu Zi No. 135 Civil Judgment:
1. [the court orders] defendant Tianjin Guoqing International Travel Agency Co., Ltd. to
immediately cease the infringing act;
2. [the court orders] the defendant to publish, within 30 days of the judgment’s coming into
effect, a statement of apology on its company website for 15 days;
3. [the court orders] the defendant to pay plaintiff Tianjin China Youth Travel Service RMB
30,000 as compensation for economic losses;
4. [the court] rejects the plaintiff's other litigation claims.
After the judgment was pronounced, Tianjin Guoqinglü appealed. On March 20, 2012,
the Higher People’s Court of Tianjin Municipality rendered the (2012) Jin Gao Min San Zhong
Zi No. 3 Civil Judgment:
1. [the court] upholds Items 2, 3, and 4 of the aforementioned civil judgment [rendered by]
the No. 2 Intermediate People’s Court of Tianjin Municipality;
2. [the court] alters Item 1 [of the judgment] from “[the court orders] defendant Tianjin
Guoqing International Travel Agency Co., Ltd. to immediately cease the infringing act”
to “[the court orders] defendant Tianjin Guoqing International Travel Agency Co., Ltd. to
immediately cease using the words ‘Tianjin China Youth Travel Service’ and ‘Tianjin
Qinglü’ and [cease using the aforementioned words] as the search link keywords for
Tianjin Guoqing International Travel Agency Co., Ltd.’s website”;
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3. [the court] rejects the defendant’s other claims for appeal.
Reasons for the Adjudication
In the effective judgment, the court opined:5 Article 6, Paragraph 1 of the Interpretation
of the Supreme People’s Court on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in the
Handling of Unfair Competition Civil Cases6 provides:
An enterprise name that has been registered in accordance with law with the
authority in charge of enterprise registration, or a foreign (regional) enterprise
name that is in commercial use within the territory of China, should be deemed to
be an “enterprise name” [as set forth in] Article 5, Item (3) of the anti-unfair
competition law. A shop name within an enterprise name that has a certain
degree of market visibility [and] that is known to the relevant public may be
deemed to be an “enterprise name” [as set forth in] Article 5, Item (3) of the anti-
unfair competition law.
Therefore, an abbreviated enterprise name that has been widely used externally by an
enterprise for a long period of time, that has a certain degree of market visibility and is known to
the relevant public, and that actually already functions as a trade name, should also be regarded
as an enterprise name and [thus] be protected [under law]. As “Tianjin China Youth Travel
Service” was the enterprise name that had been used by the plaintiff since its establishment in
1986, the plaintiff enjoyed an exclusive right to use the enterprise name. As an abbreviated
enterprise name, “Tianjin Qinglü” had been widely used in [Tianjin China Youth Travel
Service’s] business activities since 2007. Relevant publicity reports and clients had also used
“Tianjin Qinglü” to refer to Tianjin China Youth Travel Service. Through many years of use
and publicity in [its] business activities, the [abbreviated enterprise name] had already [come to]
enjoy a certain degree of market visibility, be known to the relevant public, have a stable
affiliated relationship with Tianjin China Youth Travel Service, and have the significance of a
commercial mark that can identify its business operator. Therefore, “Tianjin Qinglü” could be
regarded as an enterprise name and [thus] be protected along with “Tianjin China Youth Travel
Service”.
Article 5, Item (3) of the Anti-Unfair Competition Law of the People’s Republic of China
provides that when engaging in market transactions, business operators must not adopt unfair
5 Translators’ note: the Chinese text does not specify which court opined. Given the context, this should be
the Higher People’s Court of Tianjin Municipality. 6 Translators note: 《最高人民法院关于审理不正当竞争民事案件应用法律若干问题的解释》
(Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in the Handling
of Unfair Competition Civil Cases), adopted by the Adjudication Committee of the Supreme People’s Court on Dec.
30, 2006 and effective as of Feb. 1, 2007, available at
http://www.court.gov.cn/qwfb/sfjs/201006/t20100609_5953.htm.
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means to harm their competitors, including using, without authorization, another’s enterprise
name to cause others to mistake their products for those [of the other]. Therefore, where,
without authorization, a business operator uses another’s enterprise name or abbreviated
enterprise name as an Internet bid-for-ranking keyword, causing the public to be confused and to
misidentify [the enterprise], and uses another’s visibility and goodwill to achieve the goal of
publicizing and promoting itself, [these acts] are acts of unfair competition and should be
prohibited.
As a business operator engaged in travel services, Tianjin Guoqinglü, without Tianjin
Qinglü’s authorization, used various means, including saving keywords that were related to
Tianjin Qinglü’s enterprise name on relevant search engines and then using [those keywords] in
website source code, to cause Tianjin Guoqinglü’s website link to appear directly when the
relevant public searched for “Tianjin China Youth Travel Service” and “Tianjin Qinglü”. As a
result, [the relevant public] was directed to inquire about travel services on Tianjin Guoqinglü’s
website, which had the effect of using the initial confusion of [these] Internet users to compete
for potential customers. [Tianjin Guoqinglü], subjectively, had the intent to cause the relevant
public to become confused and to misidentify [the enterprise] in [its] Internet searches and
inquiries. [Tianjin Guoqinglü], objectively, used “Tianjin China Youth Travel Service” and
“Tianjin Qinglü” without authorization, [thereby] making use of Tianjin Qinglü’s corporate
reputation to harm Tianjin Qinglü’s legal rights and interests. [Tianjin Guoqinglü’s] acts were
[therefore] acts of unfair competition and should be stopped in accordance with law.
As Tianjin Qinglü’s competitor in the same industry, Tianjin Guoqinglü, being fully
aware that Tianjin Qinglü’s enterprise name and abbreviated name had higher visibility, still
used [those names] without authorization and had the intent to borrow another’s name to seek
improper benefits for itself, and [thus] its subjective bad faith was obvious. According to
Article 120 of the General Principles of the Civil Law of the People’s Republic of China,7
Tianjin Guoqinglü should be legally responsible for ceasing the infringement, eliminating the
effects [of such acts], and [paying] compensation for losses. The words “Youth Travel Service
Qinglü” displayed at the top of Tianjin Guoqinglü’s website did not fall within the scope of
protection of the plaintiff’s enterprise name and [thus the use of those words] did not constitute
unfair competition against the plaintiff.
7 Translators’ note: 《中华人民共和国民法通则》 (General Principles of the Civil Law of the People’s
Republic of China), adopted on Apr. 12, 1986, effective as of Jan. 1, 1987, amended on Aug. 27, 2009, available at
http://www.dffyw.com/faguixiazai/msf/200311/20031110212803.htm.