LFC tries to snare Liverbird trademark
Nov 15 2008 by David Bartlett, Liverpool Daily Post
LIVERPOOL Football Club is seeking to trade mark the Liverbird – setting it on a collision course with the city council.
Last night the city council said it was taking urgent legal advice over the matter, but only has until next Saturday to register its opposition with the UK Intellectual Property Office.
Deputy council leader Cllr Flo Clucas last night hit out at the club’s American owners for attempting to “steal” the city’s iconic crest for commercial gain.
“The Liverbird belongs to the whole city: it cannot be bought and sold for private profit,” she said.
Liverpool FC defended the move saying that it was only seeking to trade mark its own version of the Liverbird because the club is losing a “substantial amount of money” each year due to counterfeit merchandise.
A spokesman for the club insisted LFC would not try to prevent the council or other bodies using the Liverbird logo.
However, there is disquiet at the council about pledges made by the club given the record of owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks and their broken promises relating to the new stadium and the debt that has been loaded on to the club by the pair.
The application made by Liverpool FC is for a wide-ranging trade mark that would cover uses on common metals, precious metals, paper and cardboard, leather or leather imitations, household or kitchen utensils and containers, and clothing.
It cost the club £450 to apply for the trademark, and will cost the council £200 if it wishes to make a formal objection.
Common reasons for opposing trade marks are that the mark is not unique to the applicant or that someone else owns the trade mark (which does not have to be registered itself) which is the same or similar.
Cllr Clucas said: “This is outrageous. The Liverbird belongs to all the people of Liverpool and not one company or organisation.
“This is a symbol of the city and is used not only by the council but also by hundreds of organisations, charities, voluntary groups and sports clubs.
“It would be wrong for them to be prevented or charged for using it in the future.
“We are taking urgent legal advice on the best steps we can take to ensure the Liverbird remains the proud emblem of the whole city and not the private property of one commercial company.”
“The Moores family would never have contemplated stealing the city’s iconic crest for commercial gain, and the present owners should think again before trampling over an important part of the Liverpool’s heritage.”
LFC already has trade marks on “This is Anfield” and the words “You’ll Never Walk Alone” above the club’s logo.
Last night, a spokesman for the club said: “What we are asking to do here is to register our version of the Liverbird. Our club crest has been registered for some time.”
He said counterfeiters used the Liverbird on its own with the words “Liverpool Football Club” beneath as a way round trade mark infringement.
“If you look at Liverpool City Council’s Liverbird and ours, they are markedly different – there’s no way you can confuse the two.”
He insisted that the club would not try to stop other organisations using their design of the Liverbird, say on the letterhead of businesses.
“Counterfeit goods cost the club a substantial amount of money each year.
“The Liverbird is part and parcel of the city we are not remotely going anywhere near that.”
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