Docket: A-570-14
Citation:
2016 FCA 69
CORAM:
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PELLETIER J.A.
STRATAS J.A.
GLEASON J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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SADHU SINGH
HAMDARD TRUST
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Appellant
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and
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NAVSUN
HOLDINGS LTD., MASTER WEB INC. AND 6178235 CANADA INC.
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Respondents
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
GLEASON J.A.
[1]
In this appeal, the appellant, Sadhu Singh
Hamdard Trust [Hamdard Trust] seeks to set aside part of the judgment rendered on
November 26, 2014 by the Federal Court in the context of a summary trial. In
the judgment, indexed as 2014 FC 1139, the Federal Court dismissed Hamdard
Trust’s claims of copyright infringement and for passing off against the
respondents, Navsun Holdings Ltd. and 6178235 Canada Inc. [the Bains
Defendants] and against the respondent, Master Web Inc. [Master Web]. The
Federal Court also dismissed the Bains Defendants’ Counterclaim.
[2]
In this appeal, Hamdard Trust seeks to set aside
the portions of the Federal Court’s judgment dismissing its claims against the
Bains Defendants. It argues that the Federal Court made several errors of law
and reviewable errors of fact in dismissing these claims, which singly or cumulatively
should result in its appeal being granted.
[3]
It is not necessary to address each of the
arguments made by Hamdard Trust in this appeal as I believe that the Federal
Court made legal and reviewable factual errors, as discussed below, which are
central to its decision to dismiss Hamdard Trust’s claims against the Bains
Defendants. I would accordingly allow this appeal with costs, amend the
judgment below to provide only for the dismissal of Hamdard Trust’s claim
against Master Web and the dismissal of the Bains Defendants’ Counterclaim, with
costs, and would remit Hamdard Trust’s claims against the Bains Defendants back
to the Federal Court for re-determination.
I.
Background
[4]
Hamdard Trust is the owner and publisher of an
Indian Punjabi-language daily newspaper called the “Ajit
Daily”. This paper has been published in India since 1955 and is
well-known among the Punjabi population in India. An online version has been
available since 2002. Only a small number of subscriptions have been sold in
Canada, but several of the affiants whose affidavits were before the Federal
Court on the summary trial motion lived in Canada and deposed or confirmed in
cross-examination that they were aware of the Ajit Daily and its reputation as
an important Punjabi paper in India.
[5]
The Bains Defendants own and publish a Canadian
Punjabi-language newspaper called the “Ajit Weekly”,
a free newspaper that has been published in Canada since 1993 and that is
distributed at the front of supermarkets and other stores. An online version has
been available since 1998. The Ajit Weekly has carried advertisements that
Hamdard Trust believes are offensive to some of the Ajit Daily readership.
[6]
There has been considerable litigation between
Hamdard Trust and the Bains Defendants over the use of the Ajit name and the
stylized depiction of the name on the masthead of the Ajit Weekly, which Hamdard
Trust alleges constitutes an unauthorized copying of the Ajit Daily trade-mark.
One of the actions between the parties produced a partial settlement agreement [PSA]
that was incorporated into an order issued on October 1, 2009 by the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of New York.
[7]
The PSA provides for a limited licence to the
Bains Defendants to use the Ajit Daily logo during the remainder of 2009 and,
thereafter, for a further licence to use an approved variation of the logo
under the conditions noted in the agreement. The section of the PSA granting
the licence states that the licence granted “shall in
no way affect the [p]arties’ respectively asserted trademark and other rights
in any jurisdiction” (subsection C(5)). The PSA does not contain a
release of the Bains Defendants from acts of copyright infringement that may
have pre-dated its execution, but does provide that the PSA is a complete
defence to any claims of infringement based on the partial licences granted by
the PSA. The PSA also provides that it is to be governed by the laws of New
York and that the New York courts retain jurisdiction over the interpretation
and implementation of the PSA.
II.
The Standard of Review
[8]
As this Court held in Collins v. Canada,
2015 FCA 281 at paragraph 38, the appellate standards of review outlined in Housen
v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235 [Housen] govern the
review of determinations made on a motion for summary trial. Thus, the legal
determinations made by the Federal Court in this case are reviewable for
correctness and its conclusions of fact or mixed fact and law from which a
legal question cannot be extricated are reviewable only if the Federal Court
committed a palpable and overriding error. To be palpable, an error must be
obvious, and to be overriding it must be central to the result reached: South
Yukon Forest Corporation v. Canada, 2012 FCA 165, 431 N.R. 286 at paragraph
46.
[9]
In Sattva Capital Corp. v. Creston Moly Corp.,
2014 SCC 5, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 633 [Sattva] at paragraphs 50-52, the
Supreme Court of Canada determined that contractual interpretation involves
issues of mixed fact and law and therefore that review of a trial court’s contractual
interpretations should normally be conducted under the appellate standard of
palpable and overriding error. However, the Court recognized that ignoring a
specific and relevant provision of a contract would constitute an extricable
question of law and would therefore be reviewable on a standard of correctness
(Sattva at paragraph 64).
III.
The Copyright Claim
[10]
In its Statement of Claim issued in the Federal
Court on July 15, 2010, Hamdard Trust alleges that the Bains Defendants
infringed its copyright in the Ajit Daily logo commencing in 1995. By virtue of
section 41 (now 43.1) of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42, which
sets out a three year limitation period, Hamdard Trust can claim for acts of infringement
going back only to July 15, 2007. Arguably, each publication of the Ajit Weekly
constitutes a separate act of copyright infringement as the logo was
republished each week, and, if so, the copyright infringement claim is not
statute-barred.
[11]
The Federal Court dismissed the copyright claim
in paragraphs 78 and 79 of its Reasons, where it stated:
I dismiss the copyright claim against the
Bains Defendants. I have insufficient evidence on construing the United States
agreement and no expert evidence on the United States’ law regarding this partial
settlement agreement approved by the New York Court.
Even without expert evidence, it is clear
that the partial settlement agreement permitted the use of the current form of
the masthead now used by the Defendants. The masthead currently used is exactly
as shown in the partial settlement agreement at Exhibit C and as evidenced by
the email exchange regarding colour of the logo. Any disputes between the
parties regarding copyright should go back to the United States as the parties
agreed to that court retaining jurisdiction over any disputes regarding the
copyright of the mark.
[12]
It is not entirely clear from the foregoing why
the Federal Court decided to dismiss the copyright claim. Three possibilities
emerge from the cited passage:
•
Without expert evidence as to American law, the
Federal Court could not adjudicate the copyright claim;
•
The claim was settled by the PSA because it
permitted the current form of the masthead used by the Bains Defendants; or
•
The issue was more properly decided by a court
in the United States.
[13]
None of the foregoing provides a basis for
dismissing Hamdard Trust’s copyright claim.
[14]
Lack of evidence about American law is not an
impediment to the Federal Court’s interpreting the PSA, to the extent it was
required to do so to adjudicate the copyright claim. Canadian conflict of laws
principles, that the Federal Court was bound to apply, provide that a court
faced with interpreting a contract that contains a choice of foreign law clause
should apply domestic law if it has no evidence as to the content of the
foreign law: JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Lanner (The), 2008 FCA 399, [2009]
4 F.C.R. 109 at paragraphs 15-18; J. Walker, Castel & Walker: Canadian
Conflict of Laws, 6th ed. (Markham: LexisNexis/Butterworths, 2005),
loose-leaf updated October 2015, Vol. 1 at §§ 7-1, 7-4.1 - 7-5. The Federal
Court therefore erred in law in relying on the lack of evidence about American
law as providing a basis for the dismissal of Hamdard Trust’s copyright claim.
[15]
Likewise, the fact that the Bains Defendants’
masthead complied with the PSA, at the time of the summary trial, does not provide
a basis for the dismissal of Hamdard Trust’s copyright claim in its entirety. As
noted, the PSA provides only for a licence to the Bains Defendants to use the Ajit
Daily logo, or a variation of it, from October 1, 2009 onwards and contains no
release for acts of infringement that pre-date October 2009. The copyright
claim, however, stretches back to July 2007. The Federal Court therefore erred
in offering the fact of current compliance with the PSA as a reason for
dismissing Hamdard Trust’s copyright claim as current compliance with the PSA
is irrelevant to the claim for copyright infringements that occurred before October
1, 2009.
[16]
Finally, the choice of forum provision contained
in the PSA does not provide a basis for the dismissal of Hamdard Trust’s
copyright claim because the parties in this case attorned to the jurisdiction
of the Federal Court for adjudication of the copyright claim through their pleadings
and no party objected to the Federal Court’s jurisdiction by reason of the choice
of forum clause in the PSA. Even though neither party raised the choice of forum
clause in the PSA, the Federal Court raised the issue of deferring the dispute
to the New York courts on its own motion. In so doing, it erred in law as a
court cannot of its own motion decline to hear a dispute that falls within its
jurisdiction based on its belief that another forum is more appropriate. As the
Supreme Court of Canada noted in Club Resorts Ltd. v. Van Breda, 2012
SCC 17, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 572 at paragraph 102:
Once jurisdiction is established, if the
defendant does not raise further objections, the litigation proceeds before the
court of the forum. The court cannot decline to exercise its jurisdiction
unless the defendant invokes forum non conveniens. The decision to raise
this doctrine rests with the parties, not with the court seized of the claim.
[17]
Here, the Federal Court had jurisdiction over
Hamdard Trust’s copyright claim by virtue of subsection 20(2) of the Federal
Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7, section 41.24 of the Copyright Act
and the allegations in Hamdard Trust’s Statement of Claim that the
infringements occurred in Canada. The Federal Court therefore could not decline
to hear the copyright claim of its own motion.
[18]
Due to the foregoing errors, the decision of the
Federal Court dismissing Hamdard Trust’s copyright claim against the Bains
Defendants must be set aside.
IV.
The Passing Off Claim
[19]
Hamdard Trust alleges that in misappropriating
the Ajit Daily logo the Bains Defendants were engaged in passing off in
violation of subsection 7(b) of the Trade-marks Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
T-13 and in violation of Hamdard Trust’s common law rights.
[20]
In a claim of passing off, either at common law
or under subsection 7(b) of the Trade-marks Act, a plaintiff must
establish three elements: first, that it possesses goodwill in the trade-mark;
second, that the defendant deceived the public by misrepresentation; and,
third, that the plaintiff suffered actual or potential damage through the
defendant’s actions: Kirkbi AG v. Ritvik Holdings Inc., 2005 SCC
65, [2005] 3 S.C.R. 302 at paragraph 66 [Kirkbi]; Ciba-Ceigy Canada
Ltd. v. Apotex Inc., [1992] 3 S.C.R. 120 at 132, 1992 CanLII 33 (S.C.C.) [Ciba-Ceigy].
[21]
The second element of misrepresentation will be
met if the plaintiff establishes that the defendant has used a trade-mark that
is likely to be confused with the plaintiff’s distinctive mark: Ciba-Ceigy at
136-137, 140. Subsection 6(5) of the Trade-marks Act sets out a
non-exclusive list of factors to be assessed in establishing confusion, namely:
(a) the inherent distinctiveness of the trade-marks or trade-names
and the extent to which they have become known;
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a) le caractère distinctif inhérent des marques de commerce ou
noms commerciaux, et la mesure dans laquelle ils sont devenus connus;
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(b) the length of time the trade-marks or trade-names have been in
use;
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b) la période pendant laquelle les marques de commerce ou noms
commerciaux ont été en usage;
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(c) the nature of the goods, services or business;
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c) le genre de produits, services ou entreprises;
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(d) the nature of the trade; and
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d) la nature du commerce;
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(e) the degree of resemblance between the trade-marks or
trade-names in appearance or sound or in the ideas suggested by them.
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e) le degré de ressemblance entre les marques de commerce ou les
noms commerciaux dans la présentation ou le son, ou dans les idées qu’ils
suggèrent.
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[22]
In dismissing Hamdard Trust’s trade-mark claim,
the Federal Court found that Hamdard Trust had failed to establish any of the
three necessary elements for a claim of passing off.
[23]
With respect to goodwill, the Federal Court viewed
the existence of goodwill from the viewpoint of the number of Ajit Daily subscribers
in Canada. The Court noted as follows at paragraph 81 of its Reasons:
The existence of commercial goodwill is
tested by looking if the party has established that its goods are known in the
market by reason of their distinguishing feature. The goodwill must have been
created through the exclusive use of the name or mark with its business, wares
or services. The relevant market where a plaintiff proves [its] reputation is
the defendant’s market [citations omitted]. So I must ask myself if the people
that subscribe (seven subscribers) to the Ajit Daily in Canada are likely to
suffer a misrepresentation because of the Ajit Weekly’s reputation in the same
market.
[24]
The Federal Court continued its analysis of the
issue in paragraph 84 of its Reasons by stating:
The Plaintiff’s evidence falls short of
demonstrating reputation in the Defendants’ geographic region. There is no
survey or other independent reputable evidence before me to find that the Ajit
Daily has commercial goodwill in Canada or is famous in Canada as the only
evidence presented to me is of seven subscribers in Canada in 2010.
[25]
In analyzing the existence of goodwill solely
from the perspective of those who were shown to have read the Ajit Daily in
Canada, the Federal Court erred in law because use of a trade-mark in Canada is
not a necessary pre-condition for the existence of goodwill in Canadian law. Rather,
the requisite goodwill within a defendant’s market may be shown to exist by
virtue of the reputation of the plaintiff’s trade-mark in the defendant’s
market, even where the plaintiff does not use the trade-mark in that market: Orkin
Exterminating Co. Inc. v. Pestco Co. of Canada Ltd. et al., [1985] O.J. No.
2536, 1985 CarswellOnt 144; Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co. v. Singer, [1996]
2 F.C.R. 694, 1996 CarswellNat 2506 at paragraph 52 aff’d 1998 CanLII 7405
(F.C.A.).
[26]
As the Ontario Court of Appeal noted in Orkin,
at paragraph 49:
[…] a plaintiff does not have to be in
direct competition with the defendant to suffer injury from the use of its
trade name by the defendant. If the plaintiff’s trade name has a reputation in
the defendant’s jurisdiction, such that the public associates it with services
provided by the plaintiff, then the defendant’s use of it means that the
plaintiff has lost control over the impact of its trade name in the defendant’s
jurisdiction.
[27]
Here, there was evidence before the Federal
Court to indicate that the Ajit Daily enjoyed a reputation in the eyes of
several affiants in Canada as a well-known Punjabi-language newspaper published
in India. There was also evidence that a number of Canadians accessed the Ajit
Daily’s online version by visiting its website. It was incumbent on the Federal
Court to evaluate this evidence to determine whether it was sufficient to
establish that the Ajit Daily had garnered a reputation among a wider group in
Canada than the few subscribers who bought the paper. Had such a wider reputation
been established, it would have been sufficient to establish the requisite goodwill
to meet the first step in the tripartite test for passing off. The Federal
Court, however, did not engage in this analysis as it erroneously viewed the
issue of goodwill from the vantage point of the few Canadian subscribers who
were shown to have purchased the Ajit Daily in Canada. The Federal Court therefore
erred in law as it failed to apply the correct test for the assessment of
goodwill.
[28]
With respect to the second essential element for
a claim of passing off, namely that a defendant’s trade-mark be shown to be
confusing with the plaintiff’s mark, the Federal Court found that there was no
confusion between the trade-mark of Hamdard Trust and that of the Bains
Defendants. Both marks are a stylized version of the word “Ajit”, which is a
commonly-used name among Punjabis. The trade-marks in this case are thus not
simply the word “Ajit” but, rather, the word and the stylized way in which it
is written, that both papers use as their logos.
[29]
The Federal Court found that the two marks,
although indistinguishable to a casual consumer somewhat in a hurry, were not
confusing in part because Hamdard Trust’s stylized depiction of “Ajit”, that it
used on the masthead of the Ajit Daily for several years, was not distinctive. In
assessing distinctiveness, the Federal Court stated as follows at paragraph 90
of its Reasons:
The mark is a common Punjabi word and also a
common first name. The word “ajit” is used in business names in the Punjab and
the rest of the world by the Punjabi community. There is no originality that
attaches to this mark as it is simply a word written in a Punjabi font. There
was evidence it is “Nanak heavy” font.
[30]
However, the evidence before the Federal Court indicated
that the stylized version of the word “Ajit” that appears on the masthead of
the Ajit Daily was developed by an employee of Hamdard Trust and that the copyright
for the Nanak heavy font was acquired only in 1995, two years after the
Ajit Weekly had begun using the Ajit Daily logo in Canada. These facts support
the originality of the stylized Ajit Daily trade-mark. If the trade-mark were
original, its use by the Bains Defendants is more likely to have been a result
of a deliberate attempt to copy the Ajit Daily trade-mark, which may well have led
to confusion. Moreover, in assessing the issue of distinctiveness, the Federal
Court failed to consider the evidence as to the reputation that the Ajit Daily
enjoyed, which may have contributed to the mark’s acquiring distinctiveness. The
Federal Court committed a palpable and overriding error in failing to consider
these factors, which are central to the issue of distinctiveness. In short, the
issue is not as straightforward as the Federal Court held and many additional
facts needed to be weighed and considered before determining whether Hamdard Trust’s
mark was distinctive. As the lack of distinctiveness was key to the Federal
Court’s determination as to the lack of confusion, it follows that its finding
on this point cannot stand.
[31]
Finally, the Federal Court held that Hamdard
Trust had not established that it suffered any compensable damages by reason of
the Bains Defendants’ use of the Ajit trade-mark in Canada. In making this
determination, the Federal Court did not consider whether such use might have
tarnished Hamdard Trust’s goodwill as the Federal Court found that no such
goodwill existed. However, the presence of the requisite damages to found a
claim in passing off can be established through proof of a loss of control over
reputation, image or goodwill: Cheung v. Target Event Production Ltd.,
2010 FCA 255 at paragraphs 24, 27-28; Orkin at paragraphs 48-49, 75. The
Federal Court’s findings in respect of damages were therefore erroneously premised
at least in part on its erroneous goodwill determination and, accordingly,
cannot stand.
[32]
Thus, the Federal Court’s dismissal of Hamdard Trust’s
passing off claim must be set aside as the Federal Court erred in respect of central
findings on each of the three elements applicable to a claim for passing off.
V.
Disposition
[33]
Hamdard Trust requests that its action against
the Bains Defendants be remitted back to the Federal Court for re-determination
and that it be free to file additional evidence in respect of the
re-determination. I agree that the matter should be remitted back to the
Federal Court as disposing of the action against the Bains Defendants will
require reassessment of the relevant facts, a task that is inappropriate for
this Court to undertake on appeal in this case. However, I feel it likewise inappropriate
in this case for this Court to determine how the Federal Court’s re-assessment should
be conducted as that is a matter best decided by the Federal Court.
[34]
I therefore would propose that this appeal be allowed
with costs, that the judgment of the Federal Court be varied to provide only
for the dismissal of Hamdard Trust’s claim against Master Web and the dismissal
of the Bains Defendants’ Counterclaim, with costs, and that Hamdard Trust’s
claims against the Bains Defendants be remitted back to the Federal Court for
re-determination. I would provide no directions as to how this re-determination
should be conducted.
"Mary J.L. Gleason"
“I agree
J.D. Denis Pelletier J.A."
“I agree
David Stratas J.A."