选择性分销商标产品和限制网上销售

Igor Materljan, Gordana Materljan
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摘要

本文分析了欧盟法院(CJEU)最近作出的关于选择性分配系统面临的当代挑战的决定。它解决了限制分销商在线销售的合法性问题。在科蒂案(Coty)中,欧洲法院裁定,限制使用第三方平台符合竞争法。科蒂案涉及奢侈品的选择性分销。为了得出这一结论,它依赖于其商标法学。在这方面,出现了几个问题:商标与竞争法之间的联系以及对非奢侈品裁决的适用性。科蒂提出了与欧洲法院早些时候在皮埃尔法布尔案中作出的判决的背离,不同的国家当局对此作出了不同的解释。关于这些问题的争论似乎远未结束。本文的目的是促进讨论,试图调和分歧的决定。它主要以判例法分析为基础,对审查中的决定(即欧洲法院的判例法和不同国家当局作出的不同决定)提供批判性评估。这项研究得到了对有关选择性分销和电子商务的科学法律和经济论文的分析的支持。研究表明,案件的结果在很大程度上取决于具体的事实情况。然而,某些点似乎与所有分析的案例相关,即科蒂对非奢侈品的适用性以及引发违反竞争法的限制程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
SELECTIVE DISTRIBUTION OF TRADEMARKED PRODUCTS AND RESTRICTIONS OF ONLINE SALES
The paper analyses recent decisions delivered by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) addressing the contemporary challenges facing selective distribution systems. It addresses the legality of restrictions of online sales imposed on distributors. In Coty, a case concerning the selective distribution of luxury products, the CJEU ruled that the restriction of using third-party platforms was compatible with competition law. In order to reach that conclusion, it relied on its trademark jurisprudence. In this regard, several issues emerge: the link between trademark and competition law and the applicability of the ruling on non-luxury products. Coty presents a departure from the CJEU’s earlier judgement delivered in Pierre Fabre and different national authorities interpreted it differently. It seems that the debate over these issues is far from over. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to the discussion trying to reconcile diverging decisions. It is principally based on a case-law analysis, providing critical assessment of the decisions under scrutiny (i.e. CJEU’s case law and the divergent decisions delivered by different national authorities). The study is supported by an analysis of scientific legal and economic papers concerning selective distribution and e-commerce. The research shows that the outcome of the cases depends largely on the concrete factual circumstances. However, certain points appear to be relevant for all the analysed cases, i.e. the applicability of Coty to non-luxury products and the extent of restrictions that triggers the breach of competition law.
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