LoginSubscribe Now
Follow Us
Sign up to our free newsletter
Solicitors Journal LogoInforming the legal profession since 1856

Find the knowledge you need from the SJ library of over 20,000 legal articles

Search now
Solicitors Journal Logo
  • Legal News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Practice Notes
  • Business
  • International
  • Court Reports
  • AI Search
  • Digital Edition
  • Subscription Options
  • Advertise with Us
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ
    • Guide to Authors
Solicitors Journal

Informing the legal profession since 1856.

Follow us

Topics

  • Legal News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Practice Notes
  • Business
  • International
  • Court Reports

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • FAQ
  • Guide to Authors

Subscribe

  • Subscription Options
  • Digital Edition
  • Free Newsletter

Editorial

editorial@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

Subscriptions

subscriptions@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

Advertising

Advertise with usadvertising@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

© 2026 Solicitors Journal in partnership with the International In-house Counsel Journal

ISSN 0038-1047  ·  Images: Freepix, Unsplash and by permission of the authors

Terms and ConditionsCookie PolicyPrivacy PolicyPLS Clear logoCopyright & permissions

Advance Magazine Publishers v Cornucopia Entertainment: IPEC finds Vanity Fair and GQ marks infringed by ticket advertising

24 Jun 2026Court Report
Share:
Advance Magazine Publishers v Cornucopia Entertainment: IPEC finds Vanity Fair and GQ marks infringed by ticket advertising

IPEC finds Condé Nast's Vanity Fair and GQ trade marks infringed by concierge ticket advertising.

The Intellectual Property Enterprise Court has found that Condé Nast's Vanity Fair and GQ trade marks were infringed by a concierge company that advertised tickets to its exclusive events, including the Vanity Fair Cannes Party and the GQ Men of the Year Awards.

Miss Recorder Amanda Michaels, sitting as a Deputy Judge of the IPEC, delivered judgement on 23 June 2026 in Advance Magazine Publishers Inc and Anor v Cornucopia Entertainment Limited and Anor [2026] EWHC 1488 (IPEC), finding both trade mark infringement and passing off against the First Defendant, Cornucopia Entertainment, and holding its director Minesh Vohra jointly liable for the section 10(3) infringements.

Background and the change of defence

Condé Nast hosts high-profile invitation-only events including the Vanity Fair Cannes Party, the Vanity Fair Oscars Party, and the GQ Men of the Year Awards and Party. No tickets are sold for these events. From 2019, Cornucopia's website and social media accounts advertised access to these events at prices ranging from £4,999 to £39,999.

The First Defendant initially defended on the basis that it had legitimately acquired access through secondary channels. By trial, the defence had fundamentally changed: Cornucopia claimed it had never sold any tickets and that references to the events on its website were purely informational. The court found Mr Vohra, who conducted the defence in person, to be an unreliable witness, reading answers from his mobile phone in the witness box, giving formulaic responses, and contradicting himself on material points.

Proceedings were further disrupted when Mr Vohra attempted to give evidence by video link from Qatar, which the court declined to permit in the absence of any application to Qatar's authorities. He flew back overnight and attended in person on the second day of trial.

The infringement findings

Applying the distinction established in BMW v Technosport London Ltd [2017] EWCA Civ 779 between legitimate informative use and misleading use of a trade mark, the recorder found Cornucopia's advertisements to be transactional rather than informational. The overall presentation of the website, including specific ticket prices, event-specific email addresses and the assertion that Cornucopia was offering "Exclusive Experiences," would lead the average consumer to believe the company had access to tickets and a commercial connection with Condé Nast.

Likelihood of confusion was established under sections 10(1) and 10(2). Under section 10(3), the court found that Cornucopia had taken unfair advantage of the marks' association with glamour and exclusivity, constituting classic parasitism, and that there was a risk of tarnishment through the implication that the events were not genuinely exclusive.

Joint liability

On joint liability, the court applied the Supreme Court's decision in Lifestyle Equities CV v Ahmed [2024] UKSC 17, which requires knowledge of the essential facts making the acts wrongful. Mr Vohra was found not to have sufficient knowledge of a likelihood of confusion to be jointly liable under sections 10(1) and 10(2) or for passing off. Having known of Condé Nast's trade mark registrations and their reputation from at least 2020, and having directed Cornucopia's marketing strategy, he was found jointly liable for the section 10(3) infringements on the basis that he had intended to exploit the marks' reputation for glamour and exclusivity.

The hearing concerned liability only; quantum is to be determined separately.


Theo Barclay (instructed by Stobbs IP) for the Claimants. Minesh Vohra appeared in person for the Defendants.

Latest Articles

The Intellectual Property Enterprise Court has found that Condé Nast's Vanity Fair and GQ trade marks were infringed by a concierge company that advertised tickets to its exclusive events, including the Vanity Fair Cannes Party and the GQ Men of the Year Awards.

Miss Recorder Amanda Michaels, sitting as a Deputy Judge of the IPEC, delivered judgement on 23 June 2026 in Advance Magazine Publishers Inc and Anor v Cornucopia Entertainment Limited and Anor [2026] EWHC 1488 (IPEC), finding both trade mark infringement and passing off against the First Defendant, Cornucopia Entertainment, and holding its director Minesh Vohra jointly liable for the section 10(3) infringements.

Background and the change of defence

Condé Nast hosts high-profile invitation-only events including the Vanity Fair Cannes Party, the Vanity Fair Oscars Party, and the GQ Men of the Year Awards and Party. No tickets are sold for these events. From 2019, Cornucopia's website and social media accounts advertised access to these events at prices ranging from £4,999 to £39,999.

The First Defendant initially defended on the basis that it had legitimately acquired access through secondary channels. By trial, the defence had fundamentally changed: Cornucopia claimed it had never sold any tickets and that references to the events on its website were purely informational. The court found Mr Vohra, who conducted the defence in person, to be an unreliable witness, reading answers from his mobile phone in the witness box, giving formulaic responses, and contradicting himself on material points.

Proceedings were further disrupted when Mr Vohra attempted to give evidence by video link from Qatar, which the court declined to permit in the absence of any application to Qatar's authorities. He flew back overnight and attended in person on the second day of trial.

The infringement findings

Applying the distinction established in BMW v Technosport London Ltd [2017] EWCA Civ 779 between legitimate informative use and misleading use of a trade mark, the recorder found Cornucopia's advertisements to be transactional rather than informational. The overall presentation of the website, including specific ticket prices, event-specific email addresses and the assertion that Cornucopia was offering "Exclusive Experiences," would lead the average consumer to believe the company had access to tickets and a commercial connection with Condé Nast.

Likelihood of confusion was established under sections 10(1) and 10(2). Under section 10(3), the court found that Cornucopia had taken unfair advantage of the marks' association with glamour and exclusivity, constituting classic parasitism, and that there was a risk of tarnishment through the implication that the events were not genuinely exclusive.

Joint liability

On joint liability, the court applied the Supreme Court's decision in Lifestyle Equities CV v Ahmed [2024] UKSC 17, which requires knowledge of the essential facts making the acts wrongful. Mr Vohra was found not to have sufficient knowledge of a likelihood of confusion to be jointly liable under sections 10(1) and 10(2) or for passing off. Having known of Condé Nast's trade mark registrations and their reputation from at least 2020, and having directed Cornucopia's marketing strategy, he was found jointly liable for the section 10(3) infringements on the basis that he had intended to exploit the marks' reputation for glamour and exclusivity.

The hearing concerned liability only; quantum is to be determined separately.


Theo Barclay (instructed by Stobbs IP) for the Claimants. Minesh Vohra appeared in person for the Defendants.

Legal News desk contact: editorial@solicitorsjournal.com|PLS LogoCopyright & permissions
Judicial independence needs robust protection
Solicitors Journal

Judicial independence needs robust protection

Dame Victoria Sharp recently addressed judicial independence, highlighting its challenges and future amidst societal pressures and technology
News24 Jun 2026
STEP urges government to simplify inheritance tax
Solicitors Journal

STEP urges government to simplify inheritance tax

STEP is calling for crucial reforms to inheritance tax on pensions that protect bereaved families from complexities
News24 Jun 2026
MoJ proposes needs-based cohabitation law reform
Solicitors Journal

MoJ proposes needs-based cohabitation law reform

The Ministry of Justice outlines major cohabitation reform proposals, introducing a needs-based framework with key uncertainties ahead
Opinion23 Jun 2026
Warner Bros Discovery and Paramount v Nokia: Patents Court sets interim RAND payment for global video streaming licence
Solicitors Journal

Warner Bros Discovery and Paramount v Nokia: Patents Court sets interim RAND payment for global video streaming licence

Patents Court determines interim RAND payment for Nokia's video portfolio in landmark streaming dispute.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
Barclays Bank UK Plc & Ors v Financial Ombudsman Service: High Court quashes FOS jurisdiction decisions over unfair credit relationships
Solicitors Journal

Barclays Bank UK Plc & Ors v Financial Ombudsman Service: High Court quashes FOS jurisdiction decisions over unfair credit relationships

High Court rules FOS exceeded its jurisdiction in four consumer credit complaints.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
Staniak v District Court of Lublin: High Court refuses permission on passage of time in Polish extradition appeal
Solicitors Journal

Staniak v District Court of Lublin: High Court refuses permission on passage of time in Polish extradition appeal

Permission refused on fugitivity, exceptional circumstances and oppression in long-running Poland extradition case.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
Barclay v Transport Secretary: High Court dismisses challenges to Gatwick Airport's Northern Runway Project DCO
Solicitors Journal

Barclay v Transport Secretary: High Court dismisses challenges to Gatwick Airport's Northern Runway Project DCO

Planning Court dismisses challenges to Gatwick Airport's Northern Runway Project Development Consent Order on all grounds.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
Hipgnosis Music v Merck Mercuriadis: High Court rules music publishing catalogues idea was not a corporate opportunity
Solicitors Journal

Hipgnosis Music v Merck Mercuriadis: High Court rules music publishing catalogues idea was not a corporate opportunity

High Court dismisses Hipgnosis Music's claims over diverted music catalogues corporate opportunity.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
R (Hylton) v Medway Council: High Court quashes decisions refusing interim care support pending reassessment
Solicitors Journal

R (Hylton) v Medway Council: High Court quashes decisions refusing interim care support pending reassessment

High Court quashes Medway's interim care decisions for treating reassessment as a condition of support.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
Regal BA v Jun Zhang: High Court awards damages over failed sale of £16.9m mansion formerly rented by Harry Kane
Solicitors Journal

Regal BA v Jun Zhang: High Court awards damages over failed sale of £16.9m mansion formerly rented by Harry Kane

Developer awarded damages after buyer twice fails to complete purchase of Harry Kane's former home.
Court Report24 Jun 2026
Bank of India v Firestar Diamond FZE: High Court holds Nirav Modi liable on personal guarantee despite FEMA non-compliance
Solicitors Journal

Bank of India v Firestar Diamond FZE: High Court holds Nirav Modi liable on personal guarantee despite FEMA non-compliance

High Court finds Nirav Modi's personal guarantee enforceable despite absence of RBI consent under FEMA.
Court Report23 Jun 2026
Novo Nordisk v BT and others: High Court approves dynamic blocking order targeting counterfeit Ozempic websites
Solicitors Journal

Novo Nordisk v BT and others: High Court approves dynamic blocking order targeting counterfeit Ozempic websites

High Court approves dynamic blocking to combat counterfeit Ozempic and Wegovy websites.
Court Report23 Jun 2026
SJ Interview: Chris Spelman
Solicitors Journal

SJ Interview: Chris Spelman

Chris Spelman is a partner in DWF's London dispute resolution team, specialising in financial services litigation and investigations, whistleblowing matters, and class action, securities and...
Interview1 Jun 2026
When the rules can't keep up
Solicitors Journal

When the rules can't keep up

From Westminster to the courts, the rules are being written faster than they can settle
Foreword1 Jun 2026