China top court rules in favour of Michael Jordan in trademark case

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China’s highest court has ruled in favour of former basketball star Michael Jordan in a long-running trademark case relating to a local sportswear firm using the Chinese version of his name, overturning earlier rulings against the athlete.

The former Chicago Bulls player sued Qiaodan Sports in 2012, saying the company located in southern Fujian province had built its business around his Chinese name and famous jersey number “23” without his permission.

In 2015 a court ruled in favour of Qiaodan Sports over the trademark dispute, a ruling which was then upheld by the Beijing Municipal High People’s Court. After that ruling, Jordan’s legal team said they would take the case to China’s top court.

The Chinese characters for Jordan’s name read as “Qiaodan” in basketball-mad China, which also has a homegrown superstar in former Houston Rockets player Yao Ming.

On Thursday, China’s Supreme People’s Court overturned earlier rulings in favour of Qiaodan Sports using the characters for Jordan’s Chinese name, although upheld a ruling allowing the firm to use the Romanized version “Qiaodan”.

“I am happy that the Supreme People’s Court has recognised the right to protect my name through its ruling in the trademark cases,” Jordan said in a statement sent to a foreign media agency.

“Chinese consumers deserve to know that Qiaodan Sports and its products have no connection to me.”

Jordan, who has a net worth of $1.24 billion according to Forbes, is the majority owner of the Charlotte Hornets basketball team and has a lucrative endorsement contract with Nike Inc, which makes Air Jordan shoes.