Our Emblem and it's History
There is more than a century of tradition behind the
Red Cross emblem as a symbol of humanitarian protection.
In June 1859, Henri Dunant visited the battlefields of
Solferino in Italy. When he arrived, he found battlefields strewn with
thousands of wounded and dying victims with no nurses or doctors to care
for them. He organized a group to assist him in a primitive rescue operation.
This mission was the first in what was to become the Red Cross movement.
As a result of Dunant's trip, he wrote a book on his experiences and subsequently
it was recommended that medical personnel be authorized to assist the
wounded in the battlefields of war torn countries and that an emblem be
used to protect them. It was also recommended that governments sign treaties
protecting these workers and that national volunteer societies be formed
to carry out this mission.
While Dunant's vision was spreading in Europe, the civil
war was raging in the United States. Clara Barton went to the battlefield
to help care for the wounded. After the war, she went to Europe where
she learned of the Red Cross Movement. Upon returning home, she worked
to persuade the government to sign the Geneva Conventions.
In 1863 an international conference met in Geneva to try
and find means of remedying the ineffectiveness of the care of the wounded
on battlefields. One of the recommendations called for volunteer medical
personnel of all countries to wear an easily recognized sign: a white
armlet with a red cross, sometimes referred to as the "Geneva Cross".
An international treaty known as the Geneva Convention
was signed on August 22, 1864, by the representatives of twelve countries.
It established the fundamental principle that "wounded or sick combatants,
to whatever nation they may belong, shall be collected and cared for."
It adopted the Red Cross emblem as the international symbol to identify
personnel, material and facilities used to care for the sick and wounded
in times of armed conflict. By the terms of the treaty, persons and facilities
bearing the symbol are protected from attack.
On May 21, 1881, Barton founded the American Association
of the Red Cross. Later, the first chapter was established in Dansville,
NY. The next year, the US Senate ratified the Geneva Conventions, allowing
America to become the 32nd nation to support the international treaty.
In 1900, following years of volunteer service by Barton, the US Congress
granted the American Red Cross a charter, making the volunteer organization
responsible for providing services to members of the US Armed Forces and
relief to disaster victims at home and abroad.
Over the years the protection of the original Geneva
Convention has been extended beyond the battlefield to include the shipwrecked,
the prisoners of war, and the civilian populations affected by armed conflict.
Today, the International
Federation of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent Societies has adopted as
its emblem the red cross and red crescent on a white ground.
What is a Misuse? Restrictions on Use How to Report
Protecting Our Emblem
Jennifer Stearman is a law clerk at the American National
Red Cross in Washington, D.C., and a second-year law student at the University
of Baltimore School of Law. Andrea Morisi is an attorney in the general
counsel's office of the American National Red Cross, where, for nearly
10 years, she has led the effort to protect the Red Cross emblem in the
United States. Heather Angus, a recent law school graduate, has been a
law clerk for the organization for the past two years. Protecting Our Emblem
Mark of the Red Cross
Don't try to copy its name or emblem -- the Red Cross
is protected by federal criminal statute -- 18 U.S.C. §706.
By Jennifer Stearman, Andrea Morisi, and Heather Angus
Intellectual property journals these days are replete
with stories about the growing concerns over trademark piracy, domain
name ownership, and the loss of rights when a trademark ceases to reflect
a brand. These concerns are not foreign to the American National Red Cross,
which has been protecting its famous Greek red cross since the early 1900s.
The Greek red cross is not the only symbol protected
by U.S. criminal law. Similarly situated marks include Smokey Bear, Woodsy
Owl, the Olympic Rings, the 4-H Club emblem, and the presidential seal.
In addition to national protection here, the Olympic Rings and the Greek
red cross are afforded significant international protection. Indeed, because
of its humanitarian significance, the Greek red cross has become the most
stringently protected international symbol in the world.
Today, the Red Cross emblem is used to identify and protect
medical and relief workers, military and civilian medical facilities in
combat zones, mobile units, and hospital ships. It also identifies the
programs and activities of Red Cross national societies throughout the
world.
Behind this
symbol lies more than a century of humanitarian tradition. At a meeting
in Switzerland in 1863, international delegates recommended that volunteer
medical personnel of all countries working to improve the care of the wounded
on battlefields wear an easily recognizable sign. To honor the Swiss origin
of this initiative, the symbol of a red cross on a white background (the
reverse of the Swiss flag) was adopted. The symbol was later incorporated into the treaties known
as the Geneva Conventions. Since almost every nation in the world has
signed the conventions, almost every nation has incurred the responsibility
to establish a Red Cross organization and to protect the emblem of the
Greek red cross.
The United States became a signatory to the Geneva Conventions
in 1882. For 18 years following U.S. ratification, Congress debated how
to enact this country's treaty obligations. Of particular discussion was
how to ensure that use of the emblem was consistent with the conventions
and how to protect the emblem from commercial exploitation.
Among the heroes in that battle for the Red Cross was
Clara Barton, who persistently lobbied the United States to recognize
the Geneva Conventions and who founded the American Red Cross. Today few
know that Barton was also one of the first women to work for the government
in the only agency that then employed women -- the U.S. Patent Office.
Beginning in the spring of 1854, Barton worked as a copyist in a basement
office of the agency for eight years. By 1862, horrified by the miserable
treatment of soldiers injured in the Civil War, Barton left her Patent
Office position to minister to the sick and wounded.
After the war, Barton lobbied for U.S. ratification of
the Geneva Conventions. While she and her supporters awaited congressional
action, they also took steps to meet the conventions' obligations. In
1881, the American Association of the National Red Cross was organized,
and in 1893 it was formally incorporated in the District of Columbia.
In 1897, Barton also filed a trademark application for
the Greek red cross symbol for use on books, pamphlets, paper, and envelopes.
Thirty-one days following her filing, Registration No. 30,428 was issued.
This trademark registration was later abandoned following congressional
enactment of a criminal statute to protect the emblem.
On June 6, 1900, the bill to charter the American National
Red Cross was signed into law. Section 4, which ultimately was codified
as 18 U.S.C. §706, protected the Greek red cross symbol by making
it a misdemeanor for any person or association to use the Red Cross name
or emblem without the organization's permission. Penalties included imprisonment
not to exceed one year and a fine between $1 and $500, payable to the
Red Cross organization. Heated debates took place over the idea of imposing
punishment for the essentially innocent offense of wearing the insignia
of a benevolent organization.
There had been seven trademark registrations for Greek
red crosses by entities unrelated to the Red Cross at the time the American
Red Cross was incorporated. The existence of these users was recognized
in congressional discussion of the act. However, lawmakers took no action
to prohibit the rights of these earlier users.
In 1905, when Congress was revising the Red Cross charter,
the issue of pre-existing rights to use the emblem was again raised. Lawmakers
reiterated Congress' intent that the prohibitions on use of the Red Cross
name and emblem did not make unlawful the use of the Greek red cross by
those with otherwise established rights. However, these sentiments were
again not reflected in the Red Cross charter revision.
At the time of the 1905 revision, the number of trademark
registrations with a Greek red cross had grown to 61, including several
by Johnson & Johnson. Concerned over potential pre-emption, commercial
users lobbied for codification of their existing trademark rights. In
1910, Congress formally established that lawful use of the Red Cross name
and emblem that began prior to Jan. 5, 1905, could continue, but only
if that use was "for the same purpose and for the same class of goods."
By 1942, the number of companies claiming rights existing
prior to Jan. 5, 1905, had swollen to more than 200. Increasingly frustrated
over the prominent advertising campaigns of the pre-1905 users and others,
the Red Cross lobbied Congress to prohibit all commercial uses of the
Red Cross name and emblem. In testimony before the House Committee on
Foreign Affairs, Hermann Hughes, secretary and general counsel of the
Red Cross, testified that his office's workload since 1914 had included
"over 3,500 separate abuse-of-emblem cases . . . on every conceivable
type of merchandise, including doll hospitals, questionable medical clinics,
and varied medicinals of doubtful efficacy, including pile cures and manhood
tablets." But despite extensive hearings on the subject, no amendments
were made to the Red Cross statute.
When the U.S. Criminal Code was recodified in 1948, the
provision protecting the Red Cross emblem was moved from the Red Cross
charter in Title 36 to Title 18. Today, criminal sanctions for misusing
the Red Cross emblem, or any of the other insignias protected by federal
statute, are a fine of not more than $250 or imprisonment of not more
than six months.
Over the last 50 years, the number of pre-1905 users
has dwindled significantly. Johnson & Johnson continues to market
Red Cross brand cotton, first aid kits, and a variety of other consumer
products. Nine West manufactures Red Cross shoes under license from the
US Shoe Corp. Red Cross toothache medication is still available for canker
sores. Some products sold in the Midwest include Red Cross canned vegetables,
Red Cross salt, and Red Cross macaroni. Red Cross Nurse disinfectant,
formerly distributed in the Northeast only, has begun to make its way
across the country. And in a handful of states, there are Red Cross drug
stores. Today, 21 pre-1905 users remain.
Misuses of the emblem continue to plague the Red Cross,
but now they take a more modern form. Nurse dolls, toy ambulances, and
play medical kits still frequently sport the emblem, but they have been
joined by novelties, T-shirts, and items for medical professionals. While
signs for medical establishments have been a mainstay of misuse, recent
years have seen a growing number of walk-in emergency care clinics sporting
the emblem. As the pet industry has burgeoned, the emblem has found its
way onto pet first aid kits and guides. Misuses appear in movies, on television,
and in computer software and games. Service companies, such as those for
car repair or lawn maintenance, tout themselves as service "doctors"
and incorporate medical symbols to promote themselves.
In addition, plus signs have become popular symbols in
trademark applications by companies that wish to promote their products
as new and improved or superior to those of their competitors. When these
plus signs are thickened and colored red, they are indistinguishable from
the Greek red cross. And, of course, the Internet is the newest arena
for infringement. The Red Cross has been the target of a domain name pirate,
and it receives many notifications about misuses appearing on various
Web sites.
The Red Cross' approach to addressing misuse centers
on educating others about the Geneva Conventions and the federal law providing
protection of the emblem. In most cases, misusers voluntarily cease coloring
their crosses or pluses red. Only infrequently is it necessary to resort
to legal action.
Those contacted about misuse of the Red Cross emblem
often cite the Lanham Act in defense of their use. They argue that there
is no likelihood of confusion, that the Greek red cross is in the public
domain, or that their use is permitted by other Lanham Act provisions.
What they fail to understand is that 18 U.S.C. §706 takes precedence
over the Lanham Act. Arguments regarding continuous use or incontestability
do not apply unless the owner can establish use back to 1905. Distinctions
as to the class of goods or services for which the mark is used are irrelevant.
The test to establish infringement under the criminal
statute is whether the mark is "a Greek red cross on a white ground,
or any sign or insignia colored in imitation thereof." There are
no other tests of whether there is likelihood of confusion between the
Red Cross' emblem and the potentially infringing mark. Due to the federal
criminal statute and the United States' continuing obligations under the
Geneva Conventions, the emblem cannot revert into the public domain, despite
nearly a century of abuse.
Ultimately, permitting more widespread use of the emblem,
thus undermining its instant identification with the humanitarian principles
of the Red Cross, would not be in anybody's interest. The Greek red cross
represents much more than a particular organization. It indicates to members
of a devastated community that help has arrived. It provides hope in times
of disaster, and, most important, it protects lives in times of war and
armed conflict.
Reprinted with permission of Legal Times, 1730 M
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Copyright, Legal Times, 1997. |