Docket: T-416-16
Citation:
2017 FC 806
Ottawa, Ontario, September 7, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
BETWEEN:
|
LES MARQUES
METRO / METRO BRANDS S.E.N.C.
|
Applicant
|
and
|
1161396 ONTARIO
INC.
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
I. Nature of the Matter 4
II. The Application. 4
III. The Opposition. 4
IV. The Decision under Review.. 6
V. New Evidence on Appeal 8
(1) Gina Petrone. 10
(2) Francis Parisien. 11
(3) Denis Gendron. 13
(4) N. Arthur Smith. 13
VI. Standard of Review.. 14
VII. Issues. 17
VIII. Analysis. 18
A. Was the TMOB’s decision not to strike the statement of
opposition reasonable?. 18
(1) Position of the parties. 18
(2) The Registrar’s conclusion that
the TM Application is for specific goods is reasonable. 20
(a) Subsection 30(b): “use the
trade-mark in association with each of the general classes of goods or
services” 21
(b) Trade-marks Office’s practice. 22
(c) Post-advertisement amendments are
irrelevant 25
(d) Conclusion. 25
(3) Subsection 30(b) requires that
the trade-mark have been used association with each specific good or service
listed in the application. 26
(a) The words of subsection 30(b) of
the Act 26
(b) The context of the Act 27
(c) Conclusion. 30
B. Has 116 Inc. used the Mark in association with “cookies
and biscuits” since at least as early as the claimed date of first use?. 31
(1) Onus. 31
(2) Subsection 30(b) of the Act 32
(3) Respondent’s Allegations of
Frivolous and Vexatious Application by the Opponent 32
C. Does the Court, in exercising the discretion vested in
the Registrar of Trade-marks, have jurisdiction to issue a “split” decision
pursuant to subsection 38(8) of the Act?. 33
(1) Background. 33
(2) Judicial comity. 35
(3) Analysis. 36
(a) The wording of subsection 38(8)
is ambiguous. 36
(b) The context of the Act is not
particularly helpful 37
(c) One of the objects of the Act is
the balance between free competition and fair competition. 38
(d) The Bill C-31 amendments are not
indicative of Parliament’s intent 39
(e) Policy reasons support the
Registrar’s jurisdiction to issue split decisions. 40
(i) It is unreasonable and unfair for
a partially successful opposition to result in a complete refusal of the entire
application. 40
(ii) Split decisions prevent the
perverse effect of encouraging inefficient practices thereby upholding one of
the purposes of the Act 41
(f) Coronet was correctly decided and
is not distinguishable. 42
(4) Conclusion. 43
IX. Conclusions. 43
JUDGMENT.. 44
APPENDIX.. 45
[1]
This is an appeal pursuant to section 56 of the
Trade-marks Act, RSC 1985, c T-13 [Act] from a decision of a Hearing
Officer of the Trade-marks Opposition Board [TMOB] dated December 22, 2015
(cited as 2015 TMOB 227) [Decision] respecting application No. 1,333,541 [TM
Application] wherein registration of the word IRRESISTIBLES [Mark] for “candy and snacks, namely candy bars, chocolate bars, all
sugar confectionary, peanut brittle, caramel bars, cookies & biscuits, all
gummi confectionary, chocolate confectionary, chocolate mints, assorted
chocolate boxes, and marshmallow derivative candy” [Goods] was allowed.
For the reasons that follow, I find that the appeal should be allowed.
[2]
The Respondent, corporate entity 1161396 Ontario
Inc. [116 Inc.] filed the TM Application with the Canadian Trade-marks Office
on February 1, 2007, based on use in Canada since at least as early as August
2001. The TM Application was approved and subsequently advertised in the
Trade-marks Journal on February 20, 2013.
[3]
The Applicant, Les Marques Métro / Metro Brands
S.E.N.C. [Metro], filed an opposition to the registration of the Mark on July
19, 2013, alleging pursuant to paragraph 38(2)(a) of the Act that the TM
Application does not conform to the requirements of subsection 30(b) of the Act
as the Mark has not been used by 116 Inc. in Canada in association with “cookies and biscuits” since the claimed date of first
use, being “at least as early as August 2001”.
[4]
Metro filed as its evidence a certified copy of
the affidavit of Mr. Sarbjit Singh [Singh Affidavit], the President and sole
owner of 116 Inc., dated July 31, 2014. The Singh Affidavit attests inter
alia that 116 Inc. has been doing business as S & M Enterprises since
1995. It also appears from the exhibits of the affidavit that at least some of 116
Inc.’s good associated with the Mark (IRRESISTIBLES) are distributed by the
corporate entity “One Better Inc”. The Singh
Affidavit was produced by 116 Inc. in the context of a prior opposition
proceeding respecting trade-mark application no. 1,329,344 for the trade-mark
IRRESISTIBLE by Metro, which was abandoned on October 23, 2012 [previous
opposition].
[5]
116 Inc. filed as its evidence the affidavit of
Mr. Karol Pawlina [Pawlina Affidavit], a student in their employ. The Pawlina
Affidavit essentially produced copies of the correspondence and procedure from
the previous opposition.
[6]
There was no cross-examination upon any of the
affidavits filed in the Opposition.
[7]
In his decision, the Hearing Officer first dealt
with house-keeping and procedural matters. These not being highly relevant, I
would simply refer to the Decision which can be found on the web at:
cipo.ic.gc.ca.
[8]
The Hearing Officer then dealt with the issue of
whether the Registrar of Trade-marks erred in refusing 116 Inc.’s interlocutory
request to strike and reject the statement of opposition on the basis that it
failed to disclose an arguable case. 116 Inc. alleged that the test pursuant to
subsection 30(b) “merely requires that an [a]pplicant
prove use in association with the general class of wares and not with each
product listed in an application for registration”. As the Statement of
Opposition alleged that 116 Inc. (the trade-mark applicant) had not used the
Mark in association with each of the Goods set out in the TM
Application, 116 Inc. claimed that Metro had not properly pled its sole ground
of opposition. In the interlocutory decision, the Trade-mark Opposition Board
made the following findings on behalf of the Registrar:
In my view in the instant case the
application is not for wares of one general class but for individually named
specific wares. In this regard, whether the specified wares are separated by a
coma or a semi-colon is not determinative of whether the wares are specified as
a general class or as a separate class. In my view, the phrase “namely” in the
application serves to specify that separate wares follow the adverb. Further, at this stage of the proceedings the [sic] in the
opposition, a proper pleading need only allege the material facts but not the
evidence which the party intends to adduce to establish those facts: see Pepsico
Inc and Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd v Registrar of Trade-marks (1975), 22 CPR
(2d) 62 (FCTD).
In view of the above, I find that the ground
of opposition, as pleaded, discloses an arguable case with respect to one or
more or all of the specific wares enumerated in the application. Whether the
opponent succeeds in proving its case with respect to any or all of the wares
will depend on the evidence filed by the parties. In this regard, the Board,
acting on behalf of the Registrar, has jurisdiction to issue divided decisions:
see Produits Ménagers Coronet Inc. v. Coronet-Werke Heinrich Schlerf GmbH (1986),
10 CPR (3d) 482 (FCTD).
[emphasis added]
[9]
At the opposition hearing, the Hearing Officer
refused to reconsider the interlocutory ruling seeing as the Registrar had not
erred at law or in the appreciation of the facts in concluding that “the application is not for wares of one general class but
for individually named specific wares”.
[10]
Turning to the issue of whether the TM Application
met the requirements of subsection 30(b) of the Act, the Hearing Officer
held that Metro’s subsection 30(b) ground of opposition was set out in
sufficient detail in the statement of opposition to enable 116 Inc. to reply
thereto and to understand the case it had to meet. He then found that the Singh
Affidavit was relevant and admissible evidence.
[11]
Metro argued that since the Singh Affidavit is
purported to show use of the Mark in association with the applied for goods, it
is reasonable to believe that if evidence of use of the Mark in association
with the opposed goods was available, that 116 Inc. would have produced it as
it was in his best interest to do so. The Hearing Officer’s views are well
summarized in the following portions of paragraphs 65-66 of his Decision:
[65] […] The Singh affidavit does not
claim to show use of the Mark with each of the applied for goods in the subject
application; it does not claim to provide photos of an exhaustive list of
labels or packaging of candy or snack items that bear the Mark. […]
[66] There is no inconsistency in the
evidence provided by Mr. Singh in his affidavit. The Singh affidavit does not
cast doubt, put into question, or even speak to the claimed date of first use
of the Mark with “cookies and biscuits”. The Singh affidavit simply does not
address use of the Mark with these particular goods.
[12]
In brief, the Hearing Officer was not convinced
that the Singh Affidavit satisfied Metro’s initial evidential onus to show that
the Mark was not used in association with “cookies and
biscuits” at the claimed date of first use. For this reason, he
dismissed the subsection 30(b) ground of opposition and rejected the
opposition.
[13]
On March 10, 2016, Metro filed the present
application for judicial review, appealing the Decision before this Court. In
support of the present appeal, Metro has filed new evidence pursuant to
subsection 56(5) of the Act in the form of sworn affidavits, each of
which I discuss in the following paragraphs.
[14]
Conversely, 116 Inc. has not tendered any new
evidence and has declined to cross-examine any of Metro’s affiants.
Nonetheless, 116 Inc. argues that all of Metro’s newly filed evidence is
entirely irrelevant as it postdates the material date at which evidence is to
be considered for purposes of subsection 30(b) of the Act, which is the
date of filing of the trade-mark application, being February 1, 2007 (Redsand
Inc v Dylex Ltd (1997), 74 CPR (3d) 373 at 383 (FCTD).
[15]
Metro has submitted two decisions of the TMOB to
support its argument that evidence postdating the material date may be used by
an opponent to satisfy its initial evidential onus (Seven-up Canada Co v
Caribbean Ice Cream Company Ltd, 2007 CanLII 80903 at 4 (TMOB) [Seven-up];
Brasstech, Inc v Elte Carpets Limited, 2014 TMOB 92 at para 14) [Brasstech]
. In Seven-up, the TMOB explained that such evidence may be admissible
because
it is difficult
for a third party to produce evidence to show that there was no use of another
party's mark at any date, let alone at a date several years ago, and it is for
this reason that the evidential burden in cases like this is lighter. The
Applicant has the opportunity to rebut such evidence[.]
[16]
In Brasstech, the TMOB cited the Seven-up
decision and endorsed its reasoning. I find that the reasons provided in Seven-up
and Brasstech are consistent with this Court’s recognition that the
evidential burden of proof imposed on an opponent can be quite problematic. As
explained by Justice Rennie in Bacardi & Co v Corporativo de Marcas GJB,
SA de CV, 2014 FC 323 at para 29 [Bacardi]:
To adduce evidence of non-use of a mark by a
competitor is problematic in two ways: first, because it requires [the
opponent] to prove that something did not occur (an inherently difficult
exercise), and second, because such evidence is far more likely to be in the
possession of the applicant, not the party opposing the mark. It would be a
challenge for [the opponent] to keep records of non-sale (whatever those
records might look like) of all of its competitor's products.
[17]
The main issue with evidence of non-use
postdating the material date is the probative value of such evidence or, put
differently, the reasonableness of the inferences that can be drawn from such
evidence regarding non-use at or prior to the material date. This will depend
on numerous factors, notably the amount of time elapsed between the material
date and the facts established by the evidence.
[18]
In view of the above, I find that the evidence
submitted by Metro that postdates the material date is admissible, subject to
relevance, exclusion rules, and the Court’s discretion. Indeed, 116 Inc. raises
questions of relevance and, in addition, argues that some of the new evidence
has little or no probative value and is prejudicial to 116 Inc..
[19]
It is now trite law that relevance relates to
whether there is a connection between tendered evidence and a material fact,
such that it makes it possible to infer the existence of one from the existence
of the other (Cloutier v R, [1979] S.C.R. 709 at 731 (SCC)). Put
differently, the evidence must tend to increase or diminish the probability of
a material fact at issue (R v Arp, [1998] 3 S.C.R. 339 at 360 (SCC)). For
purposes of the section 30(b) ground of opposition, evidence will be relevant
if it tends to increase or diminish the possibility that 116 Inc. has used the
Mark at the relevant date. I now turn to the evidence tendered by Metro.
[20]
Metro has filed the affidavit of Ms. Gina
Petrone [Petrone Affidavit], a clerk employed by Counsel for Metro’s law firm,
dated April 5, 2016. The Petrone Affidavit contains a list and printouts of all
116 Inc.’s trade-mark applications, registrations and corresponding information
obtained from the Canadian Intellectual Property Office’s [CIPO] website. Metro
alleges that out of 27 trade-mark applications and registrations in 116 Inc.’s
name, only one application (application no. 1,711,130, filed January 15, 2015,
for the mark SNACK ATTACK) references “cookies”
and “biscuits”. Upon reviewing the Petrone
Affidavit, the Court noticed the registration of the mark BRITTLE BITS (LMC
750673) registered based on use in Canada since at least as early as November
15, 2006, in association with “cookies and biscuits”.
The Court also takes note of application no. 1,609,443 for the mark
IRRESISTIBLES based on use since at least as early as May 10, 2000, in
association with “snacks”.
[21]
116 Inc. submits that the Petrone Affidavit is
irrelevant and immaterial as it does not provide relevant factual proof of use
or lack thereof by 116 Inc. at the material date. The premise of Metro’s
argument relating to the Petrone Affidavit is that 116 Inc.’s trade-mark
applications and registrations are representative of 116 Inc.’s business over
time. Based on Metro’s argument, the Court could imply that 116 Inc. is generally
in the business of selling candy and chocolate goods, not “cookies and biscuits”. That is not a very convincing
argument. While I agree that the evidence is relevant, I find it has little
probative value.
[22]
Metro has also filed the affidavit of Mr.
Francis Parisien [Parisien Affidavit], Vice-President for Eastern Canada at
ACNielson Company of Canada [Nielson], sworn March 31, 2016. Nielson operates
and maintains a database called MarketTrack, which collects on an ongoing basis
thousands of point of sale data obtained from optical scanning of packaged
consumer goods. The point of sale data includes the Universal Product Code
[UPC], a unique series of numbers that identifies it to a specific manufacturer
and product. The Parisien Affidavit attests that the UPC codes are part of the
GS1 identification system, which is widely used in Canada and internationally
for goods sold in stores. MarketTrack only contains data from 2010 until
present. However, the Parisien Affidavit reveals that MarketTrack has not found
any sales of “cookies” or “biscuits” associated with 116 Inc. since 2010.
[23]
116 Inc. argues that the Parisien Affidavit and
the data collected by MarketTrack is irrelevant as it postdates the material
date, has no probative value, is prejudicial to 116 Inc., and constitutes
hearsay. 116 Inc. further argues that there is no indication that Mr. Parisen
conducted the attached research. Having resolved the issue of evidence
postdating the material date, I would note that the fact that MarketTrack only
collects data from 2010 is beyond Metro’s control. Had data been available for
the years preceding 2010, the situation may well have been different. It is
clear that the absence of use of the Mark since 2010 in association with “cookies” or “biscuits”
is relevant and sufficiently probative. I disagree that the evidence is
prejudicial to 116 Inc. and refuse to use my discretion to discard it. Further,
the Parisien Affidavit being uncontroverted, 116 Inc. cannot now suggest that
Mr. Parisien has not conducted the research when it could have cross-examined
the affiant, but declined to do so. I also disagree with 116 Inc. that the
sales figures derived from Neilson’s database constitute inadmissible hearsay.
I accept that the data from Nielson satisfies the best evidence rule regarding
electronic documents (see Canada Evidence Act, RSC 1985, c C-5, ss
31.1-31.8) [Canada Evidence Act] . I further accept that the document is
admissible as it is a business record made in the usual and ordinary course of
business pursuant to section 30 of the Canada Evidence Act. Finally, the
mere fact that 116 Inc. has adduced evidence of sales under the general class
of “candy and snacks” in the Singh Affidavit has
no bearing on the admissibility of Metro’s evidence.
[24]
Metro further filed the affidavit of Mr. Denis
Gendron [Gendron Affidavit], who is the president of United Grocers Inc. [UGI].
In his affidavit, Mr. Gendron explains that he was personally given by Mr. Sam
Singh (the affiant of the Singh Affidavit) two catalogs featuring 116 Inc.’s
products so that Mr. Gendron may provide them to UGI’s members for future
business purposes. The catalogs are entitled “Product
Catalogue 2016” and “Product Catalogue”.
[25]
116 Inc. argues that the Gendron Affidavit is
irrelevant and would not have had any impact on the Registrar of Trade-marks’
Decision. I disagree. While the Gendron Affidavit postdates the material date,
it is nevertheless relevant. Moreover, it is more probative than the Singh
Affidavit itself as the nature of a product catalog suggests that it would be
more likely to contain all of 116 Inc.’s products sold at the time the catalog
was made.
[26]
Metro’s final piece of evidence is the affidavit
of Mr. N. Arthur Smith [Smith Affidavit], the Chief Executive Officer of GS1
Canada Inc. [GS1 Canada]. In his affidavit, Mr. Smith attests that Metro
requested a list generated from GS1 Canada’s database of all the products and
suppliers associated either with One Better Inc. or with UPC codes featuring
two company prefixes [company Codes] associated with 116 Inc.. The search
identified S/M Enterprises as the sole entity registered with GS1 Canada
associated with the company Codes. From the search, a list of all products
associated with the company Codes from July 2007 to January 2016 was generated.
The list does not mention “cookies and biscuits”.
[27]
116 Inc. argues that in addition to postdating
the material date, the Smith Affidavit is prejudicial, without probative value,
and should be struck or given no weight. I disagree for substantially the same
reasons provided regarding the Parisien Affidavit. Moreover, I note that the GS1
Canada database did not contain data dating back to the material date, through
no fault of Metro. Had the database also contained data from February to July
2007, this may have indicated that Metro had not provided the best evidence it
could obtain. However, that is not the case here.
[28]
Appeals pursuant to section 56 of the Act
are reviewable on a standard of reasonableness unless new evidence filed
pursuant to subsection 56(5) of the Act would have materially affected
the Registrar’s finding of fact or exercise of discretion, in which case the
trial judge must come to his or her own conclusion as to the correctness of the
Registrar’s decision (Pfizer Products Inc v Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical
Association, 2015 FC 493 at para 140 [Pfizer]; Molson Breweries,
A Partnership v John Labatt Ltd, [2000] 3 FC 145, 5 CPR (4th) 180 at para
29 (FCTD)). In order to have a material effect, the new evidence must be
substantial and significant, the test being one of quality, not quantity: Pfizer
at para 140.
[29]
In view of Metro’s new evidence discussed above,
I am satisfied that the new evidence tendered by Metro would have materially
affected the Registrar’s decision. The new evidence is not a repetition of the
original evidence filed before the Registrar, but better evidence. That is not
to say that the evidence tendered by Metro is perfect, but I believe it would
have changed the TMOB’s conclusion on whether Metro had satisfied its initial
evidential onus with regards to its subsection 30(b) ground of opposition. I
must therefore come to my own conclusion as to the correctness of the
Registrar’s Decision.
[30]
Metro submits that I should, however, review the
TMOB’s decision regarding 116 Inc.’s interlocutory request that the Registrar
strike and reject the statement of opposition on a reasonableness standard. In
its submissions, 116 Inc. argues that the interlocutory ruling by the Registrar
is “incorrect”, which I take it to mean that 116
Inc. would apply a correctness standard. 116 Inc. cites no authority in support
of a correctness standard of review.
[31]
This Court has consistently held that a
correctness standard of review should only apply to those findings of fact
which the new evidence materially affects, while other unrelated issues on
appeal remain subject to a reasonableness standard of review (Worldwide
Diamond Trademarks Limited v Canadian Jewellers Association, 2010 FC 309 at
para 43, aff’d 2010 FCA 326, citing Garbo Creations Inc v Harriet Brown
& Co (1999), 176 FTR 80 (FCTD). See also Community Credit
Union Ltd v Canada (Registrar of Trade Marks), 2006 FC 1119 at para 14).
[32]
I agree that questions of fact and of mixed fact
and law are reviewable on a reasonableness standard. As for questions of law,
the presumption is that a tribunal’s interpretation of its home statute is
reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. Writing for the Supreme Court of
Canada in Rogers Communications Inc v Society of Composers, Authors and
Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35 at para 19 [Rogers], Justice
Rothstein held that this presumption can be rebutted where Parliament has
indicated a contrary intention by conferring concurrent jurisdiction at first
instance to both an administrative tribunal and a court:
I wish to be clear
that the statutory scheme under which both a tribunal and a court may decide
the same legal question at first instance is quite unlike the scheme under which the
vast majority of judicial reviews arises. Concurrent jurisdiction at
first instance seems to appear only under intellectual property statutes where
Parliament has preserved dual jurisdiction between the tribunals and the
courts. However, I leave the determination of the appropriate standard of
review of a tribunal decision under other intellectual property statutes for a
case in which it arises. Nothing in these reasons should be taken as
departing from Dunsmuir and its progeny as to the presumptively
deferential approach to the review of questions of law decided by tribunals
involving their home statute or statutes closely connected to their function.
[33]
The Supreme Court in Rogers held that the
Federal Court of Appeal and the Copyright Board had concurrent jurisdiction at
first instance in matters relating to the certification of tariffs for
communication rights. Thus, the Copyright Board’s interpretation of its own
statute was reviewable on a correctness standard.
[34]
Recently, Justice Russell of the Federal Court
in conducted a Dunsmuir-type analysis to determine the proper standard
of review with regards to the TMOB’s interpretation of the Trade-marks Act
and concluded:
A consideration of the factors leads me to
conclude that the presumption has been rebutted. The Act explicitly provides
for an appeal to the Federal Court in which new evidence may be heard and the
Federal Court is permitted to exercise any discretion vested in the Registrar.
In my view, these provisions rebut any presumption that the legislature
expected the Board to have greater expertise in trade-mark matters than the
Federal Court. Further, the nature of the question is the interpretation of
"distinctiveness." The Board interpreted "distinctiveness"
by reference to Federal Court and Federal Court of Appeal jurisprudence. The
Board has no expertise over the Federal Court in interpreting case law. The
Board's determinations of law will be reviewed on a standard of correctness. (Pfizer
at para 149)
[35]
I agree with Justice Russel’s above reasoning. The Court notes that it has concurrent jurisdiction with the TMOB
with regards to the interpretation of subsection 30(b) of the Act in the
context of appeals pursuant to section 56 of the Act. I will therefore
review the TMOB’s determinations of law and interpretation of the Act on
a correctness standard. However, unless I can extricate a clear question of law
from a mixed question of fact and law, I shall apply the reasonableness
standard to such questions.
1.
Was the TMOB’s decision not to strike the
statement of opposition reasonable?
2. Has 116 Inc. used the Mark in association with “cookies and biscuits” since at least as early as the
claimed date of first use?
3. Does the Court, in exercising the discretion vested in the Registrar
of Trade-marks, have jurisdiction to issue a “split”
decision pursuant to subsection 38(8) of the Act?
[36]
Whether subsection 30(b) of the Act merely
requires 116 Inc. to prove use of the Mark in association with the “general class” of candy and snacks as opposed to in
association with each individually named specific goods, namely cookies and
biscuits, is a mixed question of fact and law. The Registrar’s conclusion that “the application is not for wares of one general class but
for individually named specific wares” is a mixed finding of fact and
law. It must therefore be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness.
[37]
116 Inc. submits that the test pursuant to
subsection 30(b) “merely requires that an [a]pplicant
prove use in association with the general class of wares and not with each
product listed in an application for registration”. Consequently, 116
Inc. believes it satisfies the use requirement under subsection 30(b) of the Act
merely by proving use of the Mark in association with the “general class” of candy and snacks, as opposed to use
in association with the specific goods “cookies and
biscuits”.
[38]
116 Inc. makes the following arguments in its
Memorandum of Fact and Law:
(a) Subsection 30(b) of the Act is explicit in that only the use
in association with the general class of goods or services described in the
application needs be proven (Respondent’s Memorandum of Fact and Law, para 42).
(b) The interlocutory ruling was contrary to the practice before the
Trade-marks Office, the CIPO Examination Manual [Examination Manual],
and the CIPO Goods and Services Manual [Goods and Services Manual]
at the time of the decision and subsequently. Because the goods in the
statement of goods aren’t separated by semi-colons (i.e. “candy and snacks, namely candy bars, […], cookies and
biscuits”), the Goods were not meant to be claimed individually but
rather under the general “candy and snack” class
which falls within Class 30 of the Nice Classification. In support of its
argument before the Hearing Officer, 116 Inc. cited the TMOB decision in Pronuptia
de Paris v Pronovias, 2007 CanLII 80847, [2007] TMOB No 63 (QL) [Pronuptia
cited to QL] (Respondent’s Memorandum of Fact and Law, paras 42-43).
(c) To prove use in association with each of the listed goods isn’t in
accordance with the Act which expressly permits applications to be
amended before and after advertisement, subject to sections 31 and 32 of the Trade-marks
Regulations, SOR/96-195 [Regulations] (Respondent’s Memorandum of
Fact and Law, para 41).
[39]
Metro argues that the Registrar’s conclusion is
that the TM Application was not for goods of one general class (i.e. candy and
snacks), but for individually named specific goods, namely cookies and
biscuits. As such, 116 Inc. needs to show use for each individually named
specific Goods, including use in association with cookies and biscuits. Metro
further argues that even if the TM Application was for general classes of goods,
116 Inc. would still need to show use of the Mark in association with all the Goods
in the TM Application.
[40]
For the reasons that follow, I find that the
Registrar’s decision is reasonable.
[41]
Even though the Hearing Officer does not address
each of 116 Inc.’s above-mentioned concerns specifically, his decision not to
interfere with the Registrar’s interlocutory ruling is nevertheless reasonable.
Below, I review the Hearing Officer’s reasons and, where appropriate,
supplement them to address some of the concerns raised by 116 Inc. which were
not specifically addressed in the Hearing Officer’s reasons.
(a)
Subsection 30(b): “use the trade-mark in association with each
of the general classes of goods or services”
[42]
Section 30(b) of the Act reads as
follows:
Contents of
application
|
Contenu d’une
demande
|
30 An applicant
for the registration of a trade-mark shall file with the Registrar an
application containing
|
30 Quiconque
sollicite l’enregistrement d’une marque de commerce produit au bureau du
registraire une demande renfermant :
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
(b) in the case of a trade-mark
that has been used in Canada, the date from which the applicant or his named
predecessors in title, if any, have so used the trade-mark in association
with each of the general classes of goods or services described in the
application;
|
b) dans le cas d’une marque de commerce
qui a été employée au Canada, la date à compter de laquelle le requérant ou
ses prédécesseurs en titre désignés, le cas échéant, ont ainsi employé la
marque de commerce en liaison avec chacune des catégories générales de
produits ou services décrites dans la demande;
|
[emphasis added]
|
[Non-souligné dans l’original.]
|
[43]
I agree with 116 Inc. that a plain reading of subsection
30(b) of the Act appears to only require that the trade-mark applicant
file an application containing the date of first use for “each of the general classes of goods or services described
in the application”. This is also corroborated in section II.7.1 of the Examination
Manual (“Applications Based on Use in Canada —
Subsection 16(1) and Paragraph 30(b)”). Neither the Registrar’s
interlocutory ruling nor the Hearing Officer’s Decision however suggests that
this was misunderstood. Indeed, they both focused their respective analysis on
whether the TM Application was for goods of a general class or for individually
named specific goods.
[44]
Though the interlocutory decision and the
Hearing Officer’s Decision may not have specifically relied on the Examination
Manual and the Goods and Services Manual, I disagree that the
interlocutory ruling was contrary to practice before the Trade-marks Office. It
is however noteworthy that these manuals, though useful, do not have
legislative authority, and are not intended to, nor can they supersede the
provisions of the Act (Ontario Dental Assistants Association v
Canadian Dental Association, 2013 FC 266 at para 24; Wordex Inc v Wordex,
[1983] 2 FC 570, 70 CPR (2d) 28 at 31).
[45]
First, to the extent 116 Inc. equates “general classes of goods” to classes for goods under
the Nice classification system, I disagree as there is no basis to this
argument. Though it is currently acceptable for goods and services in a
trade-mark application or registration to be grouped and classed according to
the classes of the Nice Classification, there is no legislation in force
requiring trade-mark owners or applicants to refer to Nice classes.
[46]
Second, the Registrar reasonably distinguished
the decision of the TMOB in Pronuptia by concluding that it did not
address whether individually named specific goods separated by commas after “namely” in a statement of goods form part of a
general class of goods. Indeed, Member Carrière in Pronuptia determined
that by using a semi colon to separate a good from other goods in an
application, the applicant had clearly indicated that it considered the other
goods as a separate general class of goods.
[47]
Third, both the Registrar’s ruling and the Pronuptia
decision are both consistent with the Trade-marks Office practice. Section
II.5.4.2 (“Context of the Goods and Services”)
of the Examination Manual explains that “the
context of a statement of goods or services may serve to specify an otherwise
unacceptable statement of goods or services.” The Examination Manual
provides the following example:
For example, "cases" alone are not
acceptable as they could include any type of "cases" from camera
cases to pillowcases. However, in an application for "cameras, tripods,
and cases", the goods "cases" would be acceptable as it is clear
from the context that the "cases" would be restricted to camera
cases. Similarly "delivery" services alone is not acceptable as the
service could include any type of delivery from flower delivery to furniture
delivery.
[48]
“Candy and snacks” are generic terms that take their sense from their context in the
application, seeing as snacks are generally understood to mean any small
portion of food or drink consumed between meals. As emphasized by Metro during
the hearing, it is not uncommon for identical trade-marks to coexist in the
food industry when they relate to intrinsically different goods (see e.g. Edelweiss
Food Products Inc / Aliments Edelweiss Inc v World's Finest Chocolate Canada
Ltd (2000), 5 CPR (4th) 256 (TMOB) (meat and chocolate). See also Clorox
Co v Sears Canada Inc, [1992] 2 FC 579, 41 CPR (3d) 483 (FCTD), aff’d 49
CPR (3d) 217 (FCA) (fruit cake and barbecue sauce)). Therefore, the Registrar’s
conclusion that “the application is not for wares of
one general class but for individually named specific wares” is in my
view clearly reasonable seeing as the phrase “candy and
snacks” – on its own – likely would not have been an acceptable category
of goods without being further specified. As the Examination Manual
States, “[g]oods and services that require further
specification may be specified using the definite terms “namely”, “consisting
of” or “specifically”, which appears to be what 116 Inc. has done in its TM
Application to further specify “candy and snacks”. To conclude otherwise
would allow 116 Inc. to obtain a trade-mark monopoly over the Mark beyond the
scope of protection necessary to protect the public from confusion.
[49]
Section II.5.4.2 of the Examination Manual
also notes the following:
Goods or services which are separated by
semi-colons (;) are generally considered to stand on their own and therefore
must meet the requirements of paragraph 30(a) of the Trade-marks Act
without regard to the other listed goods or services.
[50]
The above note is merely an exception to the
general rule, that an otherwise unacceptable description of good may be
acceptable if the goods listed before or after it serve to qualify the good –
i.e. goods which are separated by semi-colons are generally considered not to
qualify each other.
[51]
Therefore, neither Pronuptia nor the note
in reference to semi-colons in section II.5.4.2 of the Examination Manual
addresses whether individually named specific goods separated by commas after “namely” in a statement of goods form part of a
general class of goods.
[52]
The Registrar relied on the TMOB decisions MAPA
GmbH v 2956-2691 Quebec Inc, 2013 TMOB 22 [MAPA] and Sky Solar
Holdings Co, Ltd v Skypower Global, 2014 TMOB 262 [Sky Solar] as
examples where the TMOB “determined that an applicant
had failed to substantiate a claimed date of first use for some of the applied
for goods or services in a statement of goods or services appearing to fall in
the same general class, notwithstanding the fact that use has been shown with
other goods or services in a statement that includes the term ‘namely’”.
[53]
The Court agrees that the Act allows an
applicant to amend his or her trade-mark application before and after
advertisement, subject to sections 31 and 32 of the Regulations. However,
the Court fails to see how this argument is helpful to 116 Inc.
[54]
In view of the above, the Registrar’s decision
was reasonable. Even on a standard of correctness, I would have arrived at the
same conclusion as the Hearing Officer. Even if the TM Application had been for
the general category of “candy and snacks”, 116
Inc. would still, for the following reasons, have needed to show use of the
Mark in association with each of the goods listed in the TM Application.
(3)
Subsection 30(b) requires that the trade-mark
have been used association with each specific good or service listed in the
application
[55]
Metro has argued that – though subsection 30(b)
of the Act does not require an applicant to provide a date of first use
for each specific good or service in a trade-mark application – every good or
service listed in the application must nevertheless have been used to satisfy
the requirement of subsection 30(b) of the Act. This being a question of
statutory interpretation, it is now trite law that “[t]he
modern approach to statutory interpretation requires that we examine the “words
of an Act … in their entire context and in their grammatical and ordinary sense
harmoniously with the scheme of the Act, the object of the Act, and the
intention of Parliament” (Canadian Broadcasting Corp v SODRAC 2003
Inc, 2015 SCC 57 at para 48, citing Elmer A Driedger, Construction of
Statutes, 2nd ed (Toronto: Butterworths, 1983) at 87, approved and adopted
in Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd, Re, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27 at para 21 (SCC)).
(a)
The words of subsection 30(b) of the Act
[56]
Subsection 30(b) of the Act reveals two
requirements: (1) that the trade-mark application be for a trade-mark that has been
used in Canada; and (2) that the application contain the date of first use for
each of the general classes of goods or services described in the application.
These requirements are readily apparent from a plain reading of subsection
30(b):
Contents of application
|
Contenu d’une
demande
|
30
An applicant for the registration of a trade-mark shall file with the Registrar
an application containing
|
30 Quiconque
sollicite l’enregistrement d’une marque de commerce produit au bureau du
registraire une demande renfermant :
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
(b) in the case of a trade-mark that
has been used in Canada, the date from which the applicant or his named
predecessors in title, if any, have so used the trade-mark in association
with each of the general classes of goods or services described in the
application;
|
b) dans le cas d’une marque de commerce
qui a été employée au Canada, la date à compter de laquelle le
requérant ou ses prédécesseurs en titre désignés, le cas échéant, ont ainsi
employé la marque de commerce en liaison avec chacune des catégories
générales de produits ou services décrites dans la demande;
|
[emphasis added]
|
[Non souligné dans
l’original.]
|
[57]
The Act is clear that only a date of
first use of the Mark in association with each general class of goods or
services must be provided – i.e. the second requirement. However, an ambiguity
remains with regards to the first requirement: does the Act’s first
requirement that the application be based on use of the trade-mark in Canada
imply that all goods in the application must have been used as of the relevant
date? For the reasons that follow, the Court must answer this question in the
affirmative.
[58]
Section 30 of the Act
generally sets out the information that must be included in a trade-mark
application. Non-compliance with section 30 is both a ground of opposition and
a ground for an initial examiner’s rejection of an application for
registration. When filing an application to register a trade-mark in Canada,
there are numerous grounds upon which the application may be based, namely: (1)
prior use of the trade-mark in Canada; (2) prior making known of the trade-mark
in Canada; (3) registration (or application for registration) of a trade-mark
used in a country of the Union; and (4) proposed use of the trade-mark in
Canada. These grounds for registration are reflected in subsections 30(b),
30(c), 30(d) and 30(e) of the Act, respectively:
Contents of application
|
Contenu d’une
demande
|
30 An applicant for the registration of a trade-mark shall file with
the Registrar an application containing
|
30 Quiconque sollicite l’enregistrement d’une marque de commerce
produit au bureau du registraire une demande renfermant :
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
(b) in the
case of a trade-mark that has been used in Canada, the date from which
the applicant or his named predecessors in title, if any, have so used the
trade-mark in association with each of the general classes of goods or
services described in the application;
|
b) dans le cas
d’une marque de commerce qui a été employée au Canada, la date à compter
de laquelle le requérant ou ses prédécesseurs en titre désignés, le cas
échéant, ont ainsi employé la marque de commerce en liaison avec chacune des
catégories générales de produits ou services décrites dans la demande;
|
(c) in the
case of a trade-mark that has not been used in Canada but is made known in
Canada, the name of a country of the Union in which it has been used by
the applicant or his named predecessors in title, if any, and the date from
and the manner in which the applicant or named predecessors in title have
made it known in Canada in association with each of the general classes of goods
or services described in the application;
|
c) dans le cas
d’une marque de commerce qui n’a pas été employée au Canada mais qui est
révélée au Canada, le nom d’un pays de l’Union dans lequel elle a été
employée par le requérant ou ses prédécesseurs en titre désignés, le cas
échéant, et la date à compter de laquelle le requérant ou ses prédécesseurs
l’ont fait connaître au Canada en liaison avec chacune des caté- gories
générales de produits ou services décrites dans la demande, ainsi que la
manière dont ils l’ont révélée;
|
(d) in the case of a
trade-mark that is the subject in or for another country of the Union of a
registration or an application for registration by the applicant or the
applicant’s named predecessor in title on which the applicant bases the
applicant’s right to registration, particulars of the application or
registration and, if the trade-mark has neither been used in Canada nor made
known in Canada, the name of a country in which the trade-mark has been used
by the applicant or the applicant’s named predecessor in title, if any, in
association with each of the general classes of goods or services described
in the application;
|
d) dans le cas
d’une marque de commerce qui est, dans un autre pays de l’Union, ou pour un
autre pays de l’Union, l’objet, de la part du requérant ou de son
prédécesseur en titre désigné, d’un enregistrement ou d’une demande
d’enregistrement sur quoi le requérant fonde son droit à l’enregistrement,
les détails de cette demande ou de cet enregistrement et, si la marque n’a
été ni employée ni révélée au Canada, le nom d’un pays où le requérant ou son
prédécesseur en titre désigné, le cas échéant, l’a employée en liaison avec
chacune des catégories générales de produits ou services décrites dans la
demande;
|
(e) in
the case of a proposed trade-mark, a statement that the applicant, by
itself or through a licensee, or by itself and through a licensee, intends to
use the trademark in Canada;
|
e) dans le cas
d’une marque de commerce projetée, une déclaration portant que le requérant
a l’intention de l’employer, au Canada, lui-même ou par l’entremise d’un
licencié, ou lui-même et par l’entremise d’un licencié;
|
[emphasis
added]
|
[Non souligné dans
l’original.]
|
[59]
If 116 Inc. was to be permitted to register the
Mark in association with a general class of goods, regardless of whether it has
used the Mark in association with all of the goods listed within the general
class, an absurd result would ensue: 116 Inc. would in fact be receiving a
certificate of registration for the Mark on the basis of prior use without
having actually used the Mark in association with some of the listed goods. By
doing so, 116 Inc. would be avoiding the need to file a declaration of use
(section 40(2) of the Act) for those particular goods, as it would have
been required to do if it had applied for the registration of the Mark on the
basis of proposed use.
[60]
The law cannot reasonably be interpreted in a
way that would allow 116 Inc. to circumvent the fundamental requirement of use.
Without use, trade-mark rights do not exist. 116 Inc. cannot exploit section
30(b) of the Act in a way that would frustrate the underlying logic of
the trade-mark registration bases scheme.
[61]
It is the Court’s view
that while subsection 30(b) of the Act merely requires that a date of
first use be provided with regards to each general class of goods or services,
the applied for trade-mark must nevertheless have been used in association with
each of the specific goods or services identified in the general class prior to
the applicant’s filing date. However, the date of first use with respect to
each of the specific goods in the general class may vary. This is consistent
with the TMOB’s reasoning in Parfums Christian Dior v Lander Co Canada Ltd,
6 CPR (4th) 257 at 266, where it stated the following:
However, since the applicant has claimed
that its mark has been used in association with the general class of wares, the
trade-mark FASCINATION must have been used in association with each of the
specific wares identified in the general class prior to the applicant's filing
date although the date(s) when such use commenced with respect to each of the
specific wares in the general class may vary [see in this regard, McCarthy
Tétrault v. Hilary's Distribution Ltd., 67 C.P.R. (3d) 279, at p.284].
Moreover, as noted above, such use of the trade-mark FASCINATION in association
with each of the specific wares in the general class must also have been
continuous 'use' in the normal course of trade.
[emphasis added]
[62]
There are two separate onuses to bear in mind.
[63]
First, Metro (opponent) bears the initial
evidential onus (often called the burden of production or presentation) to
adduce sufficient admissible evidence from which it could reasonably be
concluded that the facts alleged to support the ground of opposition exist. For
the reasons stated by Justice Rennie in Bacardi at paragraph 29 (cited
in this decision at para 15), I agree with Metro that the initial burden on the
opponent is a light one (Bacardi at para 30; Distrimedic Inc c
Richards Packaging Inc, 2012 TMOB 199 at para 25. See also John Labatt
Ltd v Molson Companies Ltd (1990), 30 CPR (3d) 293 at 299 (FCTD) [John
Labatt]).
[64]
Second, once the initial evidential onus has
been satisfied, the burden shifts to 116 Inc. who bears the legal onus (often
called burden of persuasion) of establishing, on a balance of probabilities,
that its trade-mark application complies with the requirements of the Act (MAPA
at para 7; John Labatt at 299-300; Dion Neckwear Ltd v Christian
Dior SA, 2002 FCA 29). The presence of such an onus means that if a
determinate conclusion cannot be reached once all the evidence is in, then the
issue must be decided against 116 Inc. (John Labatt at 300).
[65]
I find that Metro’s new evidence on appeal is
sufficient to satisfy its initial evidential onus. Bearing in mind Justice
Rennie’s comments in Bacardi regarding the problems associated with such
a burden of proof, I am not only satisfied that Metro has made significant
efforts to amass the best evidence it could, but also that Metro’s newly
tendered evidence can reasonably lead to the conclusion that, at the relevant
date, 116 Inc. had not used the Mark.
[66]
The burden of proof consequently falls on 116
Inc., who must show, on a balance of probability, that it has used the Mark as
of the relevant date. Having filed no evidence of use of the Mark, 116 Inc. has
not satisfied me that it has used the Mark since as early as August 2001, nor
at any time since.
[67]
116 Inc. alleges that Metro’s opposition and
subsequent appeal relating to the TM Application is frivolous and vexatious. In
light of my above findings, this accusation is without merit.
[68]
116 Inc. also alleges a number of wrongdoings by
Metro relating to 116 Inc.’s alleged rights in the trade-mark IRRESISTIBLES,
including inter alia misappropriation of 116 Inc.’s Mark, creating
reverse confusion, acting in bad faith, and misleading the Registrar, the TMOB
and the Courts. Comparing itself to David (in the mythical story of David
against Goliath), 116 Inc. argues that Metro (Goliath) has used its dominant market
position to frustrate the legitimate senior trade-mark rights of 116 Inc.
[69]
Beyond being baseless accusations, such matters
are wholly extraneous to the present appeal from the TMOB Decision which
relates to 116 Inc.’s right to register the Mark. Metro has opposed the
registration of the Mark based on non-compliance with subsection 30(b) of the Act,
which is entirely irrelevant to any use of any trade-mark by Metro. If 116 Inc.
claims rights to the Mark in association with “cookies
and biscuits”, then it should have filed evidence to substantiate its
claim. It chose not to do so and must now accept the ensuing consequences.
[70]
Despite the quasi-absence of written submissions
on the matter, the issue of the jurisdiction of the Registrar to issue “split” decisions became a live issue between the
parties at the hearing. A split decision in the context of an opposition is
generally understood to result in an application being accepted for certain
goods and/or services and refused for others (SanDisk Corp v UC Mobile Co,
2016 TMOB 148 at para 58 [SanDisk]). On appeal before this Court, Metro
argued that the TM Application should be refused only in so far as “cookies and biscuits” are concerned, citing the
decision of Produits Ménagers Coronet Inc v Coronet-Werke Heinrich Schlerf
GmbH (1986), 10 CPR (3d) 482 (FCTD) [Coronet] as authority for the
Registrar’s jurisdiction pursuant to subsection 38(8) of the Act to
issue such a split decision. Conversely, 116 Inc. argued that the Registrar –
and therefore the Court in exercising the Registrar’s discretion on appeal –
has no such jurisdiction.
[71]
The Court notes that it is particularly odd for
a trade-mark applicant to argue, as 116 Inc. has, that “after
considering the evidence and argument, the Registrar is under a positive
obligation to do one of two mutually exclusive things: refuse the application
in its entirety; or reject the opposition in its entirety.” This position
is most-often argued by opponents because the logical conclusion flowing from
such an argument is that if a ground of opposition is successful with regards
to any good or service, the only decision the Registrar can issue is one in
which the entire trade-mark application is refused. This was in fact the
position argued by the opponent in Coronet. In the present matter,
having concluded that section 30(b) of the Act required 116 Inc. to have
used the mark in association with all of it specific goods, namely “cookies & biscuits”, the Court must decide if 116
Inc.’s entire TM Application should be refused. Strangely, it is Metro who
argues that the Court should save part of 116 Inc.’s TM Application.
[72]
The TMOB rejected the opposition in its
entirety, and therefore did not need to consider whether it could issue a split
decision. However, having concluded that 116 Inc. has failed to prove use of
the Mark in association with cookies and biscuits, the Court must now determine
whether it can refuse the TM Application in part or if it must refuse it in its
entirety. The Federal Court being a statutory court without inherent
jurisdiction, it must satisfy itself of its jurisdiction even if the issue
hasn’t been raised or properly addressed by the parties (Chavali v Canada,
2001 FCT 268 at para 6, aff’d 2002 FCA 209; Elders of Mitchikinabikok Inik
(Algonquin of Barriere Lake) v Algonquins of Barriere Lake Customary Council,
2010 FC 160 at para 96; Devil's Gap Cottagers (1982) Ltd v Rat Portage Band
No 38B, 2008 FC 812 at para 26). Consequently, the Court directed the
parties to provide further and fuller written submissions on this specific
issue.
(2)
Judicial comity
[73]
Whether the Registrar has the jurisdiction to
issue split decisions is a question of law that appears to have been answered
by this Court in Coronet. The TMOB has consistently relied on this decision
for over 30 years as authority to issue “split
decisions” in over a hundred cases (see e.g. Sky Solar at para
70; SanDisk at paras 58-61; Spin Master Ltd v George & Co, LLC,
2015 TMOB 159 at para 96).
[74]
As a matter of comity, it would appear that I
should follow the Coronet decision. As Justice Mactavish rightly pointed
out in Haqi v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2014 FC
1246 at para 48:
Under principles of stare decisis,
judges of one Court are not bound by decisions of members of their own Court.
However, in accordance with the principle of judicial comity, judges should
follow the decisions of their colleagues involving the interpretation of
statutory provisions unless there is good reason to depart from a prior
decision.
[75]
As stated by the Court of Appeal in Allergan
Inc v Canada (Minister of Health), 2012 FCA 308 at paras 47-48:
the general view appears to be that the
conclusions of law of a Federal Court judge will not be departed from by
another judge unless he or she is convinced that the departure is necessary and
can articulate cogent reasons for doing so. On this test, departures should be
rare.
[76]
However, I agree with 116 Inc. that no decision
appears to have undertaken a textual, contextual, or purposive analysis of
subsection 38(8) of the Act to determine whether it confers upon the
Registrar the jurisdiction to issue split decisions. This, in my view, is a
sufficient reason to revisit the question and to determine whether there is
good reason to depart from the Coronet decision.
[77]
Whether subsection 38(8) of the Act
permits the Registrar to issue split decisions is a question of statutory
interpretation. The modern approach, as discussed above, requires that I
examine the words of the Act in their entire context and in their
grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the Act,
the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament.
[78]
Subsection 38(8) of the Act reads with my
emphasis, as follows:
Decision
|
Décision
|
(8)
After considering the evidence and representations of the opponent and the
applicant, the Registrar shall refuse the application or reject the
opposition and notify the parties of the decision and the reasons for the
decision.
|
(8) Après
avoir examiné la preuve et les observations des parties, le registraire repousse
la demande ou rejette l’opposition et notifie aux parties sa décision
ainsi que ses motifs.
|
[emphasis added]
|
[non souligné dans l’original]
|
[79]
116 Inc. argues that after considering the
matter pursuant to section 38(8) of the Act, “the
Registrar is under a positive obligation to do one of two mutually exclusive
things: refuse the application in its entirety, or reject the opposition in its entirety [emphasis
added].” This submission demonstrates that for the provision to be
unambiguous, as argued by 116 Inc., additional words implying the “entirety” of the result are required. These words are
not in the provision, just as the phrase “in part”
is similarly not included to explicitly authorize the Registrar to render a
decision that only partially refuses the application.
[80]
116 Inc. submits that the Act contains
express provisions permitting the Registrar to issue split decisions in other
contexts (citing sections 45 and 48 of the Act). For example, section 45
of the Act specifically allows for registrations to be expunged or to be
amended. However, given that s. 45 expungements occurred after registration of
a mark, this section is not truly helpful in interpreting subsection 38(8). The
same can be said of section 48. The context of the Act is therefore not
particularly useful and is superseded by the prevailing object of the Act,
which is to attain a balance between free competition and fair competition, as
discussed below.
[81]
The predecessor statute to the current Trade-marks
Act was the Unfair Competition Act, RSC 1952, c 274, whose purpose
was “to bring some semblance of order in the
market-place and to codify or structure in statute form the rights, duties and
privileges of intellectual property owners at common law. Its whole thrust is
to promote and regulate the lawful use of the trade marks” (McCabe v
Yamamoto & Co (America), [1989] 3 FC 290 at para 29).
[82]
Though the current Act does not have an
object clause, it can reasonably be said that the Act is to be
interpreted as continuing the policy and purpose of its predecessor (ibid).
This is in accordance with the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision Mattel
Inc, v 3894207 Canada Inc, 2006 SCC 22 at para 21, where the Court
stated that “[t]rade-mark law rests on principles of
fair dealing. It is sometimes said to hold the balance between free
competition and fair competition” [emphasis added].
[83]
The jurisdiction to issue split decisions allows
the Registrar to maintain a proper balance between free competition and fair
competition. The rejection of an opposition in its entirety, regardless of
whether the objection was justified for some of the goods or services, would be
unfair to the opponent. Conversely, the refusal of the application, regardless
of whether some goods or services associated with the trade-mark should be
registrable, would be unfair to the applicant. In either scenario, the public
interest is not well served seeing as the former promotes unfair competition,
and the latter stifles free competition.
[84]
The object of the Act therefore favours
an interpretation of subsection 38(8) of the Act which allows the
Registrar or the Court to issue split decisions. Only through such an
interpretation can the proper balance between free competition and fair
competition be attained.
[85]
Parliament has adopted amendments to the Act
through Bill C-31 which are not yet in force. Notably, subsection 38(8) of the Act
will be replaced by the proposed subsection 38(12), which reads as follows:
Decision
|
Décision
|
(12) After
considering the evidence and representations of the opponent and the
applicant, the Registrar shall refuse the application, reject the opposition,
or refuse the application with respect to one or more of the goods or
services specified in it and reject the opposition with respect to the others.
He or she shall notify the parties of the decision and the reasons for it.
|
(12) Après avoir examiné la preuve et les
observations des parties, le registraire rejette la demande, rejette
l’opposition ou rejette la demande à l’égard de l’un ou plusieurs des
produits ou services spécifiés dans celle-ci et rejette l’opposition à
l’égard des autres. Il notifie aux parties sa décision motivée.
|
[emphasis added]
|
[mon emphase]
|
[86]
116 Inc. argues that proposed subsection 38(12)
suggests that Parliament intended to provide a power to the Registrar which it
does not have – i.e. the jurisdiction to issue split decisions. Conversely, Metro
argues that in adopting subsection 38(12), Parliament intended to confirm the
jurisdiction to issue split decision, thereby affirming the status quo of
more than 30 years of issuing split decisions in over a hundred cases. In the
Court’s view, the Bill C-31 amendments to the Act which are not yet in
force neither support the position that the Registrar currently has
jurisdiction to issue a “split decision” nor
that it does. This post hoc reasoning is useless unless substantiated by
further evidence of Parliament’s intent in adopting the changes in the text of
the Act. No such evidence was provided by the parties, and the Court is
satisfied that, had such evidence been available, it would have been provided.
[87]
There are compelling policy reasons supporting
the Registrar’s jurisdiction to issue split decisions. First, it is an
unreasonable and unfair outcome that a partially successful opposition results
in a complete refusal of the entire application. Second, split decisions
prevent the perverse effect of encouraging inefficient practices.
[88]
The relevant wording of subsection 38(8) reads
that the “Registrar shall refuse the application or
reject the opposition” [emphasis added]. 116 Inc. argues that to refuse
the application or reject the opposition constitutes two mutually exclusive
outcomes, with which there is no disagreement, but that either must be done in
their “entirety”, which is an unreasonable and
unfair interpretation of the provision.
[89]
The wording of subsection 38(8) of the Act
provides for what is described as an “either/or”
outcome. By this is meant that choosing one option, eliminates the other; like
the soup or salad choice on a restaurant menu. The concept behind a reasonable
either/or option is that the outcomes are judged to be equivalent. The soup
option is intended to replace the salad option on the restaurant menu as
reasonably providing equal value for the customer’s money, where the decision
relates to choosing appealing food to eat.
[90]
The termination of the application that
results from a decision that only extends to accepting or rejecting the opposition
proceeding is an outcome that is not logically or reasonably connected to the
decision. The argument is like saying that the choice of a glass of water
provides the same value as that of a bowl of soup on food choice. There exists
no rational connection between the decision on the trademark opposition
relating to specific wares and its effect on wares not relevant to the
decision. The either/or choice makes no sense if read literally as 116 Inc.
argues. Taking into considerations the objectives of
the Act, paragraph 38(8) must be interpreted to allow split decisions; any
other conclusion would be unreasonable and unfair to the applicant.
(ii)
Split decisions prevent the perverse effect of
encouraging inefficient practices thereby upholding one of the purposes of the Act
[91]
The lack of logical connection between the
decision and the extent of the prejudice that flows from striking the
application by literally applying subsection 38(8) to “refuse
the application”, results in unfairness to the applicant. As a matter of
policy, and bearing in mind the object of the Act, section 38(8) should not be
interpreted by not providing for the issuance of split decisions. To conclude
otherwise would be unreasonable and unfair to the applicant.
[92]
It can be presumed that Parliament intended the
trade-mark registration process to be as efficient as possible. I agree with Metro
that refusing to recognise the Registrar’s jurisdiction to issue split
decisions would have the perverse effect of encouraging inefficient practices.
[93]
If the application is refused, trade-mark
applicants would again have to go through the entire trade-mark application
process with a trade-mark application featuring a narrower statement of goods
and services. Eventually, not permitting split decisions would likely impel
trade-mark applicants to file several trade-mark applications instead of a
single one to avoid the risk that an entire trade-mark application would be
refused due to the applied-for mark being unregistrable with respect to a
single good or service listed in the application. This would result in higher
costs for both trade-mark applicants and the Trade-marks Office, as it would
multiply the number of trade-mark applications and opposition proceedings, in
addition to forcing the applicant to incur unnecessary delay and costs.
(f)
Coronet was
correctly decided and is not distinguishable
[94]
As an alternative argument, 116 Inc. submits
that Coronet is distinguishable from the present matter on the basis
that the grounds of opposition were different and did not include a section 30
ground of opposition. 116 Inc.’s distinction between the present matter and the
one in Coronet suggests that split decisions are intra vires of
the Registrar only in respect of certain grounds of opposition. I disagree.
Section 38(8) of the Act makes no such distinction and applies to all
oppositions, regardless of the ground of opposition raised.
[95]
The object of the Act as well as the
policy considerations discussed above are relevant to all opposition
proceedings, regardless of the ground of opposition alleged. To refuse to
acknowledge the Registrar’s jurisdiction to issue a split decision would in all
such cases be unreasonable, and result in an unfair outcome for the applicant.
[96]
Such considerations were undoubtedly the underlying
reasons at the core of Mr. Justice Teitelbaum’s conclusion in Coronet that
the Registrar has jurisdiction to issue split decisions. Accordingly, I
conclude that Coronet was correctly decided.
(4)
Conclusion
[97]
On the basis of the aforementioned reasoning, I
am in agreement with the decision of Coronet that the Registrar has the
jurisdiction to issue split decisions pursuant to section 38(8) of the Act.
IX.
Conclusion
In light of all of the above, the appeal is allowed with costs.
JUDGMENT
FOR T-416-16
THIS COURT’S
JUDMENT is that:
1. The appeal is allowed.
2. The Decision of the Trade-marks Opposition Board is quashed.
3. Trade-mark application no. 1,333,541 is returned to the Trade-marks
Office for further processing with the wares restricted to the following:
“candy and snacks, namely candy bars,
chocolate bars, all sugar confectionary, peanut brittle, caramel bars, all
gummi confectionary, chocolate confectionary, chocolate mints, assorted
chocolate boxes, and marshmallow derivative candy”
4. The Applicant is entitled to costs to be paid by the Respondent.
"Peter Annis"
APPENDIX
The following sections of the Trade-marks
Act are applicable.
Contents of
application
|
Contenu d’une
demande
|
30 An applicant for the registration of a trade-mark shall file with
the Registrar an application containing
|
30 Quiconque sollicite l’enregistrement d’une marque de commerce
produit au bureau du registraire une demande renfermant :
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
(b) in the case of a trade-mark that has been used in Canada, the
date from which the applicant or his named predecessors in title, if any,
have so used the trade-mark in association with each of the general classes
of goods or services described in the application;
|
b) dans le cas d’une marque de commerce qui a été employée au
Canada, la date à compter de laquelle le requérant ou ses prédécesseurs en
titre désignés, le cas échéant, ont ainsi employé la marque de commerce en
liaison avec chacune des catégories générales de produits ou services
décrites dans la demande;
|
(c) in the case of a trade-mark that has not been used in Canada but
is made known in Canada, the name of a country of the Union in which it has
been used by the applicant or his named predecessors in title, if any, and
the date from and the manner in which the applicant or named predecessors in
title have made it known in Canada in association with each of the general
classes of goods or services described in the application;
|
c) dans le cas d’une marque de commerce qui n’a pas été employée au
Canada mais qui est révélée au Canada, le nom d’un pays de l’Union dans
lequel elle a été employée par le requérant ou ses prédécesseurs en titre
désignés, le cas échéant, et la date à compter de laquelle le requérant ou
ses prédécesseurs l’ont fait connaître au Canada en liaison avec chacune des
caté- gories générales de produits ou services décrites dans la demande,
ainsi que la manière dont ils l’ont révélée;
|
(d) in the case of a trade-mark that is the subject in or for another
country of the Union of a registration or an application for registration by
the applicant or the applicant’s named predecessor in title on which the
applicant bases the applicant’s right to registration, particulars of the
application or registration and, if the trade-mark has neither been used in
Canada nor made known in Canada, the name of a country in which the
trade-mark has been used by the applicant or the applicant’s named
predecessor in title, if any, in association with each of the general classes
of goods or services described in the application;
|
d) dans le cas d’une marque de commerce qui est, dans un autre pays
de l’Union, ou pour un autre pays de l’Union, l’objet, de la part du
requérant ou de son prédécesseur en titre désigné, d’un enregistrement ou
d’une demande d’enregistrement sur quoi le requérant fonde son droit à
l’enregistrement, les détails de cette demande ou de cet enregistrement et,
si la marque n’a été ni employée ni révélée au Canada, le nom d’un pays où le
requérant ou son prédécesseur en titre désigné, le cas échéant, l’a employée
en liaison avec chacune des catégories générales de produits ou services
décrites dans la demande;
|
(e) in the case of a proposed trade-mark, a statement that the
applicant, by itself or through a licensee, or by itself and through a licensee,
intends to use the trademark in Canada;
|
e) dans le cas d’une marque de commerce projetée, une déclaration
portant que le requérant a l’intention de l’employer, au Canada, lui-même ou
par l’entremise d’un licencié, ou lui-même et par l’entremise d’un licencié;
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
Statement of
opposition
|
Déclaration
d’opposition
|
38 (1) Within two months after the advertisement of an application for
the registration of a trade-mark, any person may, on payment of the
prescribed fee, file a statement of opposition with the Registrar.
|
38 (1)
Toute personne peut, dans le délai de deux mois à compter de l’annonce de la
demande, et sur paiement du droit prescrit, produire au bureau du registraire
une déclaration d’opposition.
|
Grounds
|
Motifs
|
(2) A statement of opposition may be based on any of the following
grounds:
|
(2) Cette opposition peut être fondée sur l’un des motifs suivants :
|
(a) that the application does not
conform to the requirements of section 30;
|
a) la demande ne satisfait pas aux exigences de l’article 30;
|
(b) that the trade-mark is not registrable;
|
b) la marque de commerce n’est pas enregistrable;
|
(c) that the applicant is not the person entitled to registration of
the trade-mark; or
|
c) le requérant n’est pas la personne ayant droit à l’enregistrement;
|
(d) that the trade-mark is not distinctive.
|
d) la marque de commerce n’est pas distinctive.
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
Decision
|
Décision
|
(8)
After considering the evidence and representations of the opponent and the
applicant, the Registrar shall refuse the application or reject the
opposition and notify the parties of the decision and the reasons for the
decision.
|
(8) Après
avoir examiné la preuve et les observations des parties, le registraire
repousse la demande ou rejette l’opposition et notifie aux parties sa
décision ainsi que ses motifs.
|
Registrar may
request evidence of user
|
Le registraire
peut exiger une preuve d’emploi
|
45 (1) The Registrar may at any time and, at the written request made
after three years from the date of the registration of a trade-mark by any
person who pays the prescribed fee shall, unless the Registrar sees good
reason to the contrary, give notice to the registered owner of the trade-mark
requiring the registered owner to furnish within three months an affidavit or
a statutory declaration showing, with respect to each of the goods or
services specified in the registration, whether the trademark was in use in
Canada at any time during the three year period immediately preceding the
date of the notice and, if not, the date when it was last so in use and the
reason for the absence of such use since that date.
|
45 (1) Le
registraire peut, et doit sur demande écrite présentée après trois années à
compter de la date de l’enregistrement d’une marque de commerce, par une
personne qui verse les droits prescrits, à moins qu’il ne voie une raison
valable à l’effet contraire, donner au propriétaire inscrit un avis lui
enjoignant de fournir, dans les trois mois, un affidavit ou une déclaration
solennelle indiquant, à l’égard de chacun des produits ou de chacun des
services que spécifie l’enregistrement, si la marque de commerce a été
employée au Canada à un moment quelconque au cours des trois ans précédant la
date de l’avis et, dans la négative, la date où elle a été ainsi employée en
dernier lieu et la raison de son défaut d’emploi depuis cette date.
|
[…]
|
[…]
|
Effect of
non-use
|
Effet du
non-usage
|
(3)
Where, by reason of the evidence furnished to the Registrar or the failure to
furnish any evidence, it appears to the Registrar that a trade-mark, either
with respect to all of the goods or services specified in the registration or
with respect to any of those goods or services, was not used in Canada at any
time during the three year period immediately preceding the date of the notice
and that the absence of use has not been due to special circumstances that
excuse the absence of use, the registration of the trade-mark is liable to be
expunged or amended accordingly.
|
(3)
Lorsqu’il apparaît au registraire, en raison de la preuve qui lui est fournie
ou du défaut de fournir une telle preuve, que la marque de commerce, soit à
l’égard de la totalité des produits ou services spécifiés dans
l’enregistrement, soit à l’égard de l’un de ces produits ou de l’un de ces
services, n’a été employée au Canada à aucun moment au cours des trois ans
précédant la date de l’avis et que le défaut d’emploi n’a pas été attribuable
à des circonstances spéciales qui le justifient, l’enregistrement de cette
marque de commerce est susceptible de radiation ou de modification en
conséquence.
|
Notice to
owner
|
Avis au
propriétaire
|
(4)
When the Registrar reaches a decision whether or not the registration of a
trade-mark ought to be expunged or amended, he shall give notice of his
decision with the reasons therefor to the registered owner of the trademark
and to the person at whose request the notice referred to in subsection (1)
was given.
|
(4)
Lorsque le registraire décide ou non de radier ou de modifier
l’enregistrement de la marque de commerce, il notifie sa décision, avec les
motifs pertinents, au propriétaire inscrit de la marque de commerce et à la
personne à la demande de qui l’avis visé au paragraphe (1) a été donné.
|
The following
sections of the Trade-marks Examination Manual are relevant:
II.5.4.2 — Context of the Goods and Services
|
II.5.4.2 Contexte des produits et services
|
In
some cases, the context of a statement of goods or services may serve to
specify an otherwise unacceptable statement of goods or services. Goods or
services may be acceptable when they are understood as being sufficiently
specific in the context of the entire statement of goods or services.
|
Dans certains cas,
le contexte de l'énoncé des produits et services peut servir à préciser une
description qui autrement serait inacceptable. En effet, les produits ou les
services peuvent être acceptables lorsque le contexte de l'énoncé est
suffisamment précis.
|
For
example, "cases" alone are not acceptable as they could include any
type of "cases" from camera cases to pillowcases. However, in an application
for "cameras, tripods, and cases", the goods "cases"
would be acceptable as it is clear from the context that the
"cases" would be restricted to camera cases. Similarly
"delivery" services alone is not acceptable as the service could
include any type of delivery from flower delivery to furniture delivery.
|
Par exemple,
« étuis » seul n'est pas acceptable, car il peut s'appliquer à
n'importe quel type d'étui, des étuis d'appareils photo aux étuis à lunettes.
Cependant, si la demande porte sur les « appareils photos, trépieds et
étuis », le terme « étuis » est acceptable, car il est évident
d'après le contexte qu'il s'agit d'étuis d'appareils photo. De même, le
service « livraison » seul ne serait pas acceptable, car il
pourrait s'agir de n'importe quel type de services de livraison, de la
livraison de fleurs à la livraison de meubles.
|
However,
an application for "restaurant services" including the service
"delivery" would be acceptable as the service would be understood
to mean food delivery.
|
Cependant, une
demande portant sur des « services de restaurant » qui inclurait le
terme « livraison » serait acceptable, car il est évident d'après
le contexte qu'il s'agit de livraison de nourriture.
|
Note:
Goods or services which are separated by semi-colons (;) are generally
considered to stand on their own and therefore must meet the requirements of
paragraph 30(a) of the Trade-marks Act without regard to the other listed
goods or services.
|
Remarque : Les
produits ou les services qui sont séparés par un point-virgule (;) sont
généralement considérés comme des services distincts les uns des autres et
doivent rencontrer les exigences de l'alinéa 30a) de la Loi sur les
marques de commerce sans égard aux autres produits ou services listés.
|
II.7.1 Applications Based on Use in Canada — Subsection 16(1) and
Paragraph 30(b)
|
II.7.1 Demandes
d'enregistrement fondées sur l'emploi d'une marque de commerce au Canada —
Paragraphe 16(1), alinéa 30b)
|
Paragraph
30(b) of the Trade-marks Act provides that an application for
registration of a trademark that has been used in Canada must contain the
date from which the applicant or his named predecessors in title, if any,
have used the trademark in association with each of the general classes of
goods or services described in the application.
|
L'alinéa 30b) de
la Loi sur les marques de commerce dispose qu'une demande
d'enregistrement visant une marque de commerce qui a été employée au Canada
doit renfermer la date à compter de laquelle le requérant ou ses
prédécesseurs en titre désignés, le cas échéant, ont employé la marque de
commerce en liaison avec chacune des catégories générales de produits ou
services décrites dans la demande.
|
II.7.1.1 Naming the Date of First Use
|
II.7.1.1
Déclaration concernant la date de premier emploi de la marque
|
It
is not acceptable for the applicant to use an expression such as "on or
about" to identify dates of first use since this is not precise enough.
Acceptable alternatives are "since," "since before",
"since at least", "since as early as" and "since at
least as early as".
|
Le requérant ne
peut utiliser une expression comme « le ou vers le » une certaine
date pour définir les dates de premier emploi, étant donné que ce ne sont pas
des données suffisamment précises. Les autres solutions acceptables sont :
« depuis », « depuis avant », « depuis au
moins », « depuis déjà », et « depuis déjà au
moins ».
|
The
date of first use can be stated as just the year of first use, just the month
and year of first use, or the day, month and year of first use. However, in
all cases the date of first use cannot be subsequent to the filing date of
the application.
|
La date de premier
emploi peut tout simplement être l'année de premier emploi, le mois et
l'année de premier emploi ou le jour, le mois et l'année de premier emploi.
Cependant, dans tous les cas, la date de premier emploi ne peut être
postérieure à la date de production de la demande.
|
Note: When only the month and year are
named, the last day of the month will be regarded as the effective date. When
only the year is named, December 31st of that year will be the determining
date. See also the practice notice entitled Notice - Specific Date
of First Use.
|
Remarque : Lorsque seuls le mois et
l'année sont indiqués, le dernier jour du mois sera considéré comme la date
de premier emploi. Lorsque seule l'année est indiquée, le 31 décembre de
cette année sera considéré comme la date déterminante. Voir l'énoncé de
pratique intitulé Avis — Date spécifique de premier emploi.
|