Aldi accused of trademark infringement by Robinsons over ‘copycat’ squash drink

Robinsons takes Aldi to court over trade infringement claim
Discount RetailGroceryNews

Robinsons has accused Aldi of trademark infringement in the High Court over the appearance of the supermarket’s Sun Quench Squirty Squash.

Robinsons filed a claim in the High Court on 19 March, alleging that the German discounter had committed trademark infringement and passing off.

The British beverage company is being represented by law firm Stobbs, The Grocer reported.

It comes after the intellectual property company represented rival supermarket M&S in a feud over a light-up gin liqueur last year.

Back in January, Aldi also won a High Court battle against drinks company Thatchers, after it accused the grocer of copying one of its products.



Although further details about Robinsons’ allegation are not publicly available, lawyers have highlighted similarities regarding the designs of Robinsons’ Mini and Aldi’s Sun Quench Squirty Squash.

Lawyer Marks & Clerk partner and head of brand exploitation, protection and trademark litigation Kirsten Gilbert said: “We do not know what the claim is about, but can’t help but notice certain similarities with the get-up of the well-known Robinsons brand squash and the Aldi product sold under the Sun Quench brand.”

The German grocery giant did not issue a comment.

In 2022, M&S settled a lawsuit against Aldi over its Colin the Caterpillar cake, after accusing the discounter of copying its design.

Aldi went on to file a legal trademark for its ‘Cuthbert’ cake brand, following the caterpillar cake row.

Click here to sign up to Retail Gazette‘s free daily email newsletter

Discount RetailGroceryNews

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

Aldi accused of trademark infringement by Robinsons over ‘copycat’ squash drink

Robinsons takes Aldi to court over trade infringement claim

Robinsons has accused Aldi of trademark infringement in the High Court over the appearance of the supermarket’s Sun Quench Squirty Squash.

Robinsons filed a claim in the High Court on 19 March, alleging that the German discounter had committed trademark infringement and passing off.

The British beverage company is being represented by law firm Stobbs, The Grocer reported.

It comes after the intellectual property company represented rival supermarket M&S in a feud over a light-up gin liqueur last year.

Back in January, Aldi also won a High Court battle against drinks company Thatchers, after it accused the grocer of copying one of its products.



Although further details about Robinsons’ allegation are not publicly available, lawyers have highlighted similarities regarding the designs of Robinsons’ Mini and Aldi’s Sun Quench Squirty Squash.

Lawyer Marks & Clerk partner and head of brand exploitation, protection and trademark litigation Kirsten Gilbert said: “We do not know what the claim is about, but can’t help but notice certain similarities with the get-up of the well-known Robinsons brand squash and the Aldi product sold under the Sun Quench brand.”

The German grocery giant did not issue a comment.

In 2022, M&S settled a lawsuit against Aldi over its Colin the Caterpillar cake, after accusing the discounter of copying its design.

Aldi went on to file a legal trademark for its ‘Cuthbert’ cake brand, following the caterpillar cake row.

Click here to sign up to Retail Gazette‘s free daily email newsletter

Social


SUBSCRIBE TO OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Discount RetailGroceryNews

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

RELATED STORIES

Latest Feature

Interview: How Stripe & Stare co-founder Katie Lopes built a £5.5m underwear brand from a Devon farmhouse

Katie Lopes has spent nearly two decades trying to reinvent one of retail’s most overlooked categories. As co-founder of Stripe & Stare, the British underwear label built on comfort and cleaner fibres, Lopes sat down with Retail Gazette to talk about how she has grown the business from a Devon farmhouse start-up into a fast-scaling direct-to-consumer brand navigating supply-chain shocks, tougher green rules and rising competition.

When Katie Lopes launched Stripe & Stare in 2017, the business began in her Devon farmhouse, with stock piled among her children’s Lego. Today, the underwear label operates from a 30,000 sq ft warehouse in Devon, complete with cherry pickers and a team of 20 to 25 staff. It is a far cry from what she describes as the “shoebox office” that followed those early kitchen-table years.

Read More


Menu


Close popup

Please enter the verification code sent to your email: