McChina v McDonald's
Keith Parkins | 04.12.2001 16:14
Mc or Mac.' -- Justice David Neuberger
'It's lucky they sell only fucking hamburgers.' -- Dave Morris, McLibel
co-defendant
The McLibel case is taught in all business schools as the classic case of
how not to go about it. McDonald's took on London Greenpeace for handing
out a leaflet which simply told what is common knowledge, that McDonald's
are crap food joints, that serve crap food, with poor working conditions
for their staff. McDonald's served libel writs and lost big time. In
losing they generated millions of dollars of bad publicity for themselves
and exposed to a much wider audience just how bad McDonald's are.
Once a bully always a bully. McDonald's clearly learnt nothing from their
bruising encounter with Helen Steel and Dave Morris, the McLibel
co-defendants. For the last nine years McDonald's have been bullying a
small Farnborough restaurateur, the proprietor of Wings Chinese restaurant
on Alexandra Road in North Camp, Farnborough. The heinous crime of Frank
Yuen, proprietor of the small family business was that he had opened a
handful of Chinese takeaways, one in Wimbledon called McChina, then a
couple of years later two more, a McChina Wok Away in Camberley and a
McChina Wok Away in Farnborough. According to good old Roland McDonald his
trademark had been infringed, customers may become confused. It is
difficult to see how as one serves food, and we are not thinking of
McDonald's.
After nine years of being bullied and terrorised by McDonald's Mr Yuen has
won a stunning victory in the High Court. Mr Justice David Neuberger, and
no we are not making up the name, ruled that the McChina name would not
deceive or cause any confusion among customers. He also ruled that Roland
McDonald had no right to the prefix Mc and told the court: 'This is
supported by the fact that there is no similarity between China on the one
hand and, on the other hand Donald.'
According to Mr Yuen's solicitor he is the first person in Europe to break
Roland's stranglehold on the Mc trademark.
Mr Yuen has achieved his fifteen minutes of fame. He has had media
interest from as far afield as CNN, Hong Kong and China.
Mr Yuen is not the only person to suffer from playground bully Roland
McDonald. Apart from years of harassing anyone of Scottish decent who
dares to put their own name across their own food shop or restaurant,
McDonald's have also sued McAllan's sausage stand in Denmark, the
Scottish-themed sandwich shop McMunchies in Buckinghamshire, gone after
Elizabeth McCaughey's McCoffee shop in San Francisco Bay Area and waged a
twenty-six-year battle against a man called Roland McDonald whose
McDonald's Family Restaurant in a tiny town in Illinois has been around
since 1956.
Not a good year for McDonald's. They have been prosecuted in Camberley for
the worst case in the country of child exploitation, been awarded the
Mouldy Pork Pie Award by the BBC Radio 4 Food Programme, seen their profits
fall, and been forced to face closure of their food outlets due to falling
profits and falling customer demand.
Jose Bove and Francois Dufour, The World is Not for Sale, Verso, 2001
Naomi Klein, No Logo, Flamingo, 2000
Stephen Lloyd, Where there's Mc there's brass: McChina wins verdict over
McDonald's, Farnborough News, 30 November 2001
Eric Schlosser, Fast Food Nation: What the All-American Meal is Doing to
the World, Allen Lane/The Penguin Press, 2001
John Vidal, McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial, The New Press, 1997
Robin Young, Chinese nugget beats big Mac, The Times, 28 November 2001
www.mcspotlight.org
www.mcchinawokaway.com
Keith Parkins
e-mail:
keithpp@hotmail.com