Case involving Cork and Dublin in ‘serious bunfight’ over restaurant names is settled

Son of the Gun, Dublin to re-direct inquiries over next four weeks to Son of a Gun, Cork

Judge Jacqueline Linnane told the very close similarity in restaurant titles had been causing confusion among inhabitants in both localities. Photograph: Getty
Judge Jacqueline Linnane told the very close similarity in restaurant titles had been causing confusion among inhabitants in both localities. Photograph: Getty

Peace has broken out between Cork and Dublin restaurateurs in what a judge in the Circuit Civil Court described as “a serious bunfight” and by no means just a storm in a local teacup over name calling.

Son of a Bun, from McCurtain Street, Cork, and South Dublin café Son of the Bun were in dispute because customers were mixing up their names.

Barrister Freddie Gilligan, for the Cork restaurant, told Judge Jacqueline Linnane the very close similarity in restaurant titles had been causing confusion among inhabitants in both localities.

The court heard that customers around Urbun Café Limited’s Son of the Bun restaurant and takeaway on Old Bray Road, Cabinteely, had been mistakenly seeking deliveries of hot hamburgers from Nalgec Limited’s Son of a Bun chefs in Cork more than a hundred miles.

READ SOME MORE

Mr Gilligan, who appeared for Nalgec with Carrie McDermott of MDM Solicitors, said the two businesses were involved in a trademark and passing-off dispute and Sun of a Bun was seeking lawful restraints against Sun of the Bun using the name of Sun of the Bun or any such similar logo.

Counsel said Nalgec’s Sun of a Bun title and trademarked “Flippin Goof Burgers” had been registered in 2015 and the words Sun of a Bun set in a logo resembling the shape of a hamburger.

The restaurant had traded since May 2015 and had a loyal following in and beyond Cork as far as Dublin and had 6,300 followers on Instagram, 18,600 on Facebook and more than 2,000 on Twitter.

He said that between May and June 2020 the Cork-based Sun of a Bun had received a number of pre-paid orders for hamburgers for collection. Having been prepared they had never been collected and customers had demanded refunds. An investigation revealed that those who had placed the orders believed they had been dealing with Son of the Bun in South Dublin.

Mr Gilligan said the defendant’s on-line promotions, so very similar to those of the plaintiff company, had caused confusion and suggested there was an association between the two companies.

He said MDM Solicitors had written to Urbun Limited asking them to stop using the Son of the Bun logo and to cease operating a copycat business in Dublin. MDM’s letters had been met with replies such as “this is a storm in a local teacup” and inviting the Cork company owners to join the Dublin outfit “in a cuppa”.

The judge said she considered the defendant’s reply to be sarcastic and certainly not a storm in a local teacup. The defendant’s attitude had been reflective of the manner in which the defendants had failed to engage and which had led to the issuing of legal proceedings, the wastage of court time and the cause of unnecessary costs.

Mr Gilligan said there had been talks earlier this week which had led to Urbun Limited agreeing to give sworn undertakings to the court.

Undertakings were given to remove all signage, hoarding and images on social media and all on-line material under the style and title of Son of the Bun.

Under a “full and final settlement” Son of the Gun agreed to re-direct any inquiries over the next four weeks to Son of a Gun which accepted it would highlight on its order page that it was a local Cork-based restaurant.

Urbun Limited agreed to meet the legal costs of the proceedings.