Date: 20090917
Docket: T-663-08
Citation: 2009 FC 928
Toronto, Ontario, September 17,
2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Kelen
BETWEEN:
3082833
NOVA SCOTIA COMPANY
Appellant
and
LANG MICHENER LLP and
REGISTRAR OF TRADE-MARKS
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an appeal pursuant to section 56 of the Trade-marks
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
T-13, as amended (the Act), from a decision of the Registrar of
Trade-Marks dated February 21, 2008 expunging the appellant's trade-mark TMA No. 436,567
for the trade-mark
ENTRE NOUS for use in association with "telecommunications services,
namely long distance telephone services". The Registrar had no evidence
that there was a license agreement between the owner of the trade and the user.
[2]
The only issue is whether the new evidence on this appeal
proving that there was a licensing agreement for the use of the ENTRE NOUS
trade-mark by a non-owner of the trade-mark means that the Registrar’s decision
to expunge should be set aside.
[3]
The respondents have not opposed this appeal and have not appeared
before the Court on this matter.
Overview
[4]
This seemly complicated trade-mark matter is quite simple.
The trade-mark is being used by Primus, a subsidiary of the appellant. The
appellant erroneously failed to explain or produce this evidence before the
Registrar so the Registrar expunged the trademark for non-use. On appeal to the
Federal Court, the owner of the trade-mark can lead new evidence proving the
use of the trade by a licensee, which it has done. Accordingly, the appeal will
be allowed, without opposition, and the trademark reinstated.
FACTS
Background
[5]
On
November 25, 1994 the applicant’s predecessors in title caused the trade-mark
ENTRE NOUS to be issued for registration under TMA No. 436,267.
[6]
The
applicant 3082833 Nova Scotia Company (3082833) is a corporation incorporated
pursuant to the laws of the Province of Nova Scotia. 3082833 is
the last owner in the chain of title to the trade-mark ENTRE NOUS. [3082833 was
created as a result of the continuation of 3362426 Canada Inc., which carried
on business as Primus Telecommunications Canada Inc. (PTC), to 3082854 Nova
Scotia Limited, which subsequently amalgamated with 3074313 Nova Scotia Limited
to form 3082833 On January 31, 2004.]
[7]
Unlike
3362426 Canada Inc. which carried on business as PTC, 3082833 is currently the
sole shareholder of PTC. PTC carries on business as a as a provider of
telecommunication services, including providing long distance services in Canada.
[8]
On
February 3, 2005, Lang Michener LLP requested that the Registrar issue a Notice
in accordance with s. 45 of the Act to the applicant in connection to the ENTRE
NOUS trade-mark. On February 15, 2005 The Registrar issued the Notice.
[9]
On
February 21, 2006 Lang Michener LLP submitted written submissions to the
Registrar. Lang Michener submitted that the trade-mark ENTRE NOUS should be
expunged for the following reasons:
1. Any use of the Registered Mark that is
shown by the evidence is not use by the owner and is not deemed to have had the
same effect as such use by the owner;
2. The Registered Mark was not in use
with the Registered Services during the Relevant Period within the meaning of
“use” as defined in sections 2 and 4(2) of the Act;
3. The Registered Mark was not used as a
trade-mark during the Relevant Period within the meaning of “trade-mark” as
defined in section 2 of the Act;
4. The “issuance” of invoices which
purport to display the Registered Mark is merely tokenism and the invoices were
not within the ordinary course of trade; and
5. There is no evidence to justify the
non-use of the Registered Mark by the owner during the Relevant Period [page 3
of the submissions of Lang Michener LLP].
[10]
The
applicant submitted to the Registrar an affidavit by Rob Warden, Vice President
of PTC, dated September 15, 2005 (1st Warden Affidavit). The 1st
Warden Affidavit stated that PTC, which he later referred to as ‘Primus’, was a
wholly owned subsidiary of 3082833. The affidavit went on to state that Primus
was the owner of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark and along with its predecessors in
title has used the trade-mark from as early as October 5, 1994.
[11]
The
1st Warden Affidavit attached a copy of the trade-mark certificate
showing 3082833 as being the owner of the registered trade-mark ENTRE NOUS and
the information showing the chain in title to 3082833.
[12]
The
1st Warden Affidavit attached sanitized copies of invoices issued by
Primus Canada to its
customers. The invoices purport to show the previous balance, the state of the
account until the date of billing, the balance to be remitted, promotional
messages, calls made, and long distance consumption. On the last page of each
invoice there is a line that states “sommaire du groupe Entre Nous ilé au…Ce
mois-ci, vos economies Entre-Nous s’élèveent à $...” which roughly translates
as a statement of savings under the Entre Nous or Entre-Nous program in the
current billing cycle. These invoices were produced to show that PTC has used
the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark in the last three years between February 15, 2002 and
February 15, 2005.
[13]
On
August 28, 2006 the applicant sought a retroactive extension of time and leave
to file an amended affidavit of Rob Warden dated August 28, 2006. In its
submission to the Registrar the applicant stated that the1st Warden
Affidavit contained an inadvertent clerical error in paragraph 1. The applicant
stated that the1st Warden Affidavit erroneously identified Primus,
which was defined as PTC, as the owner of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark, instead of
correctly identifying 3082833 as the owner.
[14]
The
applicant never filed the August 28, 2006 affidavit.
Decision under Appeal
[15]
The
Registrar held that the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark was sufficiently used, was
recognizable as trade-mark regardless of the grammatical construction of the
words, and the particular usage of the trade-mark in the invoices was not mere
tokenism.
[16]
However,
the Registrar agreed with the requesting party that the use of the trade-mark
ENTRE NOUS was not by the owner 3082833. The Registrar held that there was no
evidence that either 336242526 Canada Inc., carrying on business as PTC, or
3082833 has used ENTRE NOUS. The Registrar referred to the evidence of in the1st
Warden Affidavit, which stated that PTC and unnamed predecessors used ENTRE
NOUS. The Registrar held that the invoices, which according to the affiant were
issued by PTC, only referred of Primus Canada, implying that he rejected them
as evidence of use by PTC because there was no explanation as to the connection
between Primus Canada and PTC.
[17]
The
Registrar held that the applicant could not claim the protection in s. 50 of
the Act because there was no evidence that PTC has been licensed by 3082833 to
use ENTRE NOUS, or that the 3082833 has, under a license, direct or indirect
control of the character or quality of services. The Registrar held there was
no public notice of any license to claim the protection of s. 50(2) of the Act.
[18]
Since
there was no evidence to justify the non-use of the trade-mark by the owner,
the Registrar expunged the trade-mark in accordance with s. 45(5) of the Act.
Additional Evidence
Filed
[19]
The
applicant with this appeal filed a new affidavit by Rob Warden, dated May 28,
2008 (2nd Warden Affidavit) along with the Notice of Application.
[20]
At
paragraph 7 of the 2nd Warden Affidavit, the affiant states that PTC
has been licensed by way of agreement with 3082833 to use trade-marks owned by
3082833, including the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark. The affiant further states that
“such license entitles Primus to market and perform telecommunications
services, namely long distance telephone services, in association with 3082833
Nova Scotia Company’s trade-marks. Also, by virtue of the license, the
Registrant has direct or indirect control of the character and quality of the
services performed and advertised with the licensed ENTRE NOUS mark and all use
of the mark ENTRE NOUS by Primus is to enure to the benefit of the Registrant.”
[21]
The
2nd Warden Affidavit details the use made of the ENTRE NOUS
trade-mark by PTC. The same or similar attachments that were attached to the 1st
Warden Affidavit are attached to the 2nd Warden Affidavit to show
the purported usage.
LEGISLATION
[22]
The
proceedings in front of the Registrar were commenced in accordance with s. 45
of the Act which requires the trade-mark owner to show usage of the trade-mark
at any time in the preceding three years:
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
wares or services specified in the registration, whether the trade-mark 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.
(2) The Registrar shall not receive any evidence other
than the affidavit or statutory declaration, but may hear representations
made by
or on behalf of the registered owner of the trade-mark or
by or on behalf of the person at whose request the notice was given.
(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 wares or
services specified in the registration or
with respect to any of those wares 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.
…
[Emphasis added]
|
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
chacune des
marchandises 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.
(2) Le registraire
ne peut recevoir aucune preuve autre que cet affidavit ou cette déclaration solennelle,
mais il peut entendre des représentations faites par le propriétaire inscrit
de la
marque de commerce
ou pour celui-ci ou par la personne à la demande de qui l’avis a été donné ou
pour celle-ci.
(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 marchandises
ou services
spécifiés dans l’enregistrement, soit à l’égard de l’une de ces marchandises
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. …
|
[23]
The
Act requires the owner of a trademark to show use of the trademark. Section 50
of the Act allows the owner to show use of the trade-mark where the trade-mark was
used by a party that is licensed or authorized to do so with the authority of
the owner where the owner retains under a license, direct or indirect control
of the character or quality of wares or services, or if notice such license has
been given to the public:
50. (1) For the purposes of this Act, if an
entity is licensed by or with the authority of the
owner of a trade-mark to use the trade-mark in a country
and the owner has, under the licence, direct or indirect control of the
character or
quality of the wares or services, then the use, advertisement
or display of the trade-mark in that country as or in a trade-mark,
trade-name or otherwise by that entity has, and is deemed always to have had,
the same effect as such a
use, advertisement or display of the trade-mark in that
country by the owner.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, to the extent that
public notice is given of the fact that
the use of a trade-mark is a licensed use and of the
identity of the owner, it shall be presumed, unless the contrary is proven,
that the use is licensed by the owner of the trade-mark and the character or
quality of the wares or services is under the control of the owner.
…
|
50. (1) Pour l’application
de la présente loi, si une licence d’emploi d’une marque de commerce est
octroyée, pour un pays, à une entité par le propriétaire de la marque, ou
avec son autorisation, et que celui-ci, aux termes de la licence, contrôle,
directement ou indirectement, les caractéristiques ou la qualité des
marchandises et services, l’emploi, la publicité ou l’exposition de la marque,
dans ce pays, par cette entité comme marque de commerce, nom commercial — ou
partie de ceux-ci — ou autrement
ont le même effet et
sont réputés avoir toujours eu le même effet que s’il s’agissait de ceux du
propriétaire.
(2) Pour l’application
de la présente loi, dans la mesure où un avis public a été donné
quant à l’identité
du propriétaire et au fait que
l’emploi d’une
marque de commerce fait l’objet d’une licence, cet emploi est réputé, sauf preuve
contraire, avoir fait l’objet d’une licence du propriétaire, et le contrôle
des caractéristiques ou de la qualité des marchandises et services est
réputé, sauf preuve contraire, être celui du propriétaire.
…
|
[24]
Section
56 of the Act grants a right of appeal from a decision of the Registrar and
allows the appellant to file additional evidence:
56. (1) An appeal lies to the Federal Court
from any decision of the Registrar under this Act within two months from the
date on which notice of the decision was dispatched by the Registrar or
within such further time as the Court may allow, either before or after the
expiration of the two months.
…
(5) On an appeal under subsection (1), evidence in
addition to that adduced before the Registrar may be adduced and the Federal Court
may exercise any discretion vested in the Registrar.
|
56. (1) Appel de
toute décision rendue par
le registraire, sous
le régime de la présente loi,
peut être interjeté
à la Cour fédérale dans les
deux mois qui
suivent la date où le registraire a
expédié l’avis de la
décision ou dans tel délai
supplémentaire
accordé par le tribunal, soit
avant, soit après l’expiration des deux mois.
…
(5) Lors de l’appel,
il peut être apporté une preuve en plus de celle qui a été fournie devant
le registraire, et
le tribunal peut exercer toute discrétion dont le registraire est investi.
|
ISSUE
[25]
Should
the Registrar’s decision to expunge the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark be set aside?
ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
[26]
The
standard of review of the Registrar’s decision was reasonableness simpliciter [Mattel,
Inc. v. 3894207 Canada Inc., [2006] 1 S.C.R. 772, at
para. 39]. When fresh evidence is adduced under s. 56 of the Act, the standard
of review is changed and the hearing may proceed by way of a fresh hearing on
an extended record rather then a simple appeal [Mattel, supra, at para.
35].
[27]
However,
as a result of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, [2008] S.C.J. No. 9 (QL), it is clear that the standard of reasonablenss
simpliciter has been eliminated, and that reviewing courts must confine
their analysis to two standards of review, those of reasonableness and
correctness.
[28]
Recent
jurisprudence has held that the standard of review of a Registrar’s decision
when new evidence is adduced that would have affected the decision of the
Registrar is correctness [Scotch Whisky Assn. v. Glenora Distillers
International Ltd., 2009 FCA 16, 385 N.R. 159, at para. 15].
[29]
Given
that the applicant filed new evidence that was not available to the Registrar
when the decision was made, I hold that the standard of review shall be
correctness.
ISSUE: Should the
Registrar’s decision to expunge the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark be set aside?
[30]
The
applicant submits that in light of the new evidence in the 2nd
Warden Affidavit it is demonstrable that 3082833 licensed the use of the ENTRE
NOUS trade-mark to its subsidiary, PTC, and in accordance with s. 50, the use
of the trade-mark PTC should then accrue to 3082833.
[31]
The
evidence on this point consists of the sworn statement of Rob Warden in the 2nd
Warden Affidavit where he states at para. 7 that a license agreement exists
between 3082833 and PTC for PTC to use the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark. The 2nd
Warden Affidavit states that 3082833 has direct or indirect control over the
use of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark by PTC.
[32]
It
is not necessary to produce a formal licensing agreement to prove the existence
of a licensing agreement under s. 50 of the Act [Wells'
Dairy, Inc. v. U L Canada Inc. (2000), 7 C.P.R. (4th) 77, 98
A.C.W.S. (3d) 189 (F.C.T.D.) at para. 38; TGI
Friday's of Minnesota, Inc. v. Canada (Registrar of Trade Marks) (1999), 241 N.R. 362, 88
A.C.W.S. (3d) 201 (F.C.A.) at para. 9]. A licensing agreement may be inferred
from the facts. A licensing agreement need not be in writing [Cushman
& Wakefield, Inc. v. Wakefield Realty Corp., 2004 FC 210, 247 F.T.R.
180, at para. 56]. However, the mere fact that there is some common control between the
applicant’s companies is not sufficient to establish that the use of the
trade-mark was controlled and therefore infer a licensing agreement [Cheung
Kong (Holdings) Ltd. v. Living Realty Inc., [2000]
2 F.C. 501, 179 F.T.R. 161, at paras. 44-45]. Evidence of control has to be
adduced.
[33]
In
this appeal the Court is faced with the uncontradicted evidence of Rob Warden,
swearing that a licensing existence exists and that 3082833 maintains control
over PTC’s use of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark.
[34]
I
am prepared to find that the evidence of the chain of title confirms that
3082833 maintains control of the use by PTC of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark and
that a licensing agreement as to the use of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark by PTC
exists between 3082833 and PTC. I make this finding based on the fact that the
predecessor in title to 3082833, 3362426 Canada Inc., carried on business as
PTC. There is no reason to come to the conclusion that after a corporate
reorganization, 3082833, which is the sole shareholder of PTC, would no longer
maintain control of the day to day affairs of PTC, including the use of
trade-marks.
[35]
I
am also prepared to infer from the evidence that PTC carries on business under
the name of Primus Canada, as shown in the invoices attached to the
applicant’s affidavits.
[36]
In
my view, based on the new evidence filed by the applicant, there is evidence of
control of PTC’s use of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark under a licensing agreement
for the use of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark between 3082833 and PTC.
[37]
Since
I have to the conclusion that control by 3082833 of the use of the ENTRE NOUS
trade-mark by PTC is exerted under a licensing agreement, I hold that the PTC’s
use of the trade-mark, which the Registrar affirmed, has the same effect as use
of the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark by 3082833.
[38]
I
will therefore allow the appeal and order that the decision of the Registrar to
expunge the ENTRE NOUS trade-mark be set aside.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
This
appeal will be allowed without costs;
2.
The
decision of the Registrar of Trade-Marks dated February 21, 2008 with respect
to the expunged trade-mark ENTRE NOUS will be set aside; and
3.
The
Registrar of Trade-Marks is ordered to reinstate the appellant’s trade-mark
ENTRE NOUS.
“Michael A. Kelen”