Docket: T-82-05
Citation: 2011 FC 1290
Ottawa, Ontario, November 9,
2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
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1429539 ONTARIO LIMITED
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Plaintiff
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and
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CAFÉ MIRAGE INC., BDD SOLUTIONS
INC.,
MICHAEL BACHOUR, AND AMY
SALAM
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Defendants
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
I. Introduction
[1]
The
Plaintiff is a business corporation that franchises a restaurant concept named
‘The Symposium Café’. The principals of the Plaintiff are two brothers, Mr. William
Argiropoulos and Mr. Terry Argiropoulos, who developed the Symposium Café concept.
The Plaintiff holds the registered trade-mark ‘The Symposium Café’ along with
other trade-marks related to the concept. By 2003, the Symposium Café had expanded
to five restaurants in southern Ontario, with two in Toronto, before
encountering financial difficulties following the economic downturn after
September 11, 2001.
[2]
As
a result of the Symposium Café financial difficulties, a creditor, Mr. Jim
Kotsos, seized four of the Symposium Cafés for non-payment on a promissory
note. The ensuing litigation was resolved by a settlement entered into between
the Symposium Café Group and Mr. Kotsos. Under the terms of the Minutes of
Settlement, the assets of the Kennedy Symposium Café and the Sheppard Symposium
Café were transferred to Mr. Kotsos who was entitled to sell the Sheppard and
Kennedy Cafés within or outside the Symposium Café franchise system. Mr. Kotsos
operated the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés during the period of litigation and
shortly after the settlement sold the assets of the two restaurants to the
Defendant BDD Solutions Inc. on an “as is” basis.
[3]
The
Plaintiff proposed that the new owner, BDD Solutions Inc. and its principals,
Mr. Michael Bachour and Ms. Amy Salam, join the Symposium Café franchise
system. They declined. They operated the Sheppard and Kennedy restaurants under
the name of Café Mirage while retaining the appearance, trade dress,
trade-marks and menus of the Symposium Café.
[4]
The
Plaintiff commenced this lawsuit suing for infringement of its trade-marks,
infringement of copyright of the Symposium Café menus, injunctive relief
against the Defendants, damages, and costs.
[5]
I
conclude that the Plaintiff is entitled to judgment for infringement of its trade-marks
and copyright, injunctive relief with respect to infringement and damages for
infringement of its trade-marks and copyright. The Plaintiff did not prove the
Defendants’ conduct warrants punitive damages. Finally, I dismiss the claim
against the Defendant Amy Salam.
II. Background
Symposium Café Group
[6]
The
Argiropoulos brothers began developing their restaurant concept in 1996. At
the time they operated several deli restaurants under a company called
Biltermar Restaurants Limited (Biltermar). As part of that venture they started
a new restaurant named the Plantation Coffee and Tea Company
[7]
In
September, 1996, Biltermar filed trade-mark applications for ‘Plantation Coffee
and Tea Company Design’ and ‘Plantation Coffee and Tea Company’. When Biltermar
was sold in 2000, the Argiropoulos brothers separated the Plantation Coffee and
Tea Company venture from Biltermar. Later, they renamed the Plantation Coffee
and Tea Company as The Symposium Café and operated under both names during the
transition.
[8]
This
new restaurant venture utilized the “School of Athens” fresco by the
renaissance artist Raphael. The Symposium Café prominently portrayed a School of Athens fresco as a mural
set in an antiqued marble wall pattern and was promoted as a place where people
could meet for food, drink and discussion.
[9]
In
addition to directly operating subordinate restaurants, the Argiropoulos
brothers also franchised their restaurant concept under the Plaintiff and a related
subordinate Ontario franchisor
corporation. They also created separate business corporations to operate each Symposium
Café or hold the restaurant leases.
[10]
The
Argiropoulos brothers are the controlling officers of the Plaintiff Corporation.
They were active in establishing separate corporations for the purposes of
franchise distribution, restaurant operations, and holding restaurant leases.
They have been involved throughout in the development of the Symposium Café
concept and assisting franchisees. For convenient reference, I refer to the
Argiropoulos brothers and their companies, including the Plaintiff,
collectively as the Symposium Café Group.
[11]
In
2000, the Plaintiff applied to trade-mark the ‘Symposium Café Design’ in
association with the provision of a restaurant and catering service and
promotional wares, coffee cups, t-shirts and the like. Two years later, in
2002, the Plaintiff applied to register the trade-mark, ‘The Symposium Café’,
for the same range of restaurant services and wares. In 2005, the Plaintiff also
applied to register, as trade-marks, a series of expressions, first use claimed
as early as 1999, to complement the Symposium Café concept. These trade-marks include:
Second To None
Passport To Pleasure
East Meets West
Escape The Ordinary
Symmetry For The Senses
To Europe And Back In 15 Minutes
Redefining the Café Experience
I will refer
to these phrases as the Symposium Café trade-mark expressions.
[12]
The
Plaintiff also registered as a trade-mark design a three dimensional trade
dress representation of the interior of the Symposium Cafés comprising interior
walls and columns having the appearance of being made of antique cracked stone,
a prominent reproduction of the School of Athens fresco, a circular mahogany
bar consisting of two levels functioning as a display area with the lower level
functioning as a counter area, and a circular floor tile pattern extending
around the circular bar. This trade dress trade-mark design was filed in 2007
and registered in 2008. First use was claimed as 1999, back when the first
Plantation Coffee and Tea Company opened. This trade-marked design was used as
the principal trade dress for each of the Symposium Cafés.
[13]
The
Symposium Café Group also developed a common menu and emphasized delivering the
same service and café experience across the Symposium franchise system.
Symposium Café Financial
Difficulties
[14]
In
2001, the Symposium Café Group was experiencing financial difficulty primarily
due to going over-budget on renovations for a new restaurant in Kingston, Ontario. The
Symposium Café Group borrowed money from Mr. Kotsos, an electrical contractor
who had done work for them. The Symposium Café Group was also indebted to Mr.
Kotsos for electrical work at the Kingston restaurant, owing in
total approximately $512,000.
[15]
On
August 13, 2001, 1480045 Ontario Limited (the Kennedy Symposium Café) provided Mr.
Kotsos with, among other documentation:
• a
blanket general security agreement to Mr. Kotsos
• a term
promissory note for $437,000 due on demand with Mr. William Argiropoulos
guaranteeing payment to Mr. Kotsos.
The events of September 11, 2001 occurred
just weeks after the Symposium Café Group signed the loan agreement with Mr.
Kotsos. The Symposium Cafés’ business dropped 50 per cent and the Symposium
Café Group missed a payment on the promissory note.
[16]
Consequently,
Mr. Kotsos seized the Kennedy Symposium Café, the Sheppard Symposium Café, and two
other Symposium Cafés operating in London, and Waterloo, Ontario. Litigation
ensued.
Transfer of Sheppard and
Kennedy Cafés
[17]
The
four Symposium Café corporations applied to the Ontario Superior Court of
Justice for relief from Mr. Kotsos’ seizures. Mr. Kotsos counter-applied adding
the Argiropoulos brothers and other parties, both individuals and companies of
the Symposium Café Group, as counter-respondents. The Court granted an interim
interlocutory order on February 26, 2002 restoring possession of the London and Waterloo
Symposium Cafés to the Symposium Café Group and possession of the Sheppard and
Kennedy Symposium Cafés to Mr. Kotsos until further order of the Court.
[18]
On
July 21, 2003, the Symposium Café Group and Mr. Kotsos settled. The settlement
confirmed two Symposium Café restaurants, London and Waterloo, were
retained by the Symposium Café Group. All of the assets of the Sheppard and
Kennedy Symposium Cafés were to be transferred to Mr. Kotsos “free and clear of
any encumbrances and governance.” The Minutes of Settlement was filed in the
Ontario Superior Court of Justice to conclude that litigation.
[19]
The
settlement provided that Mr. Kotsos was at liberty to sell the Sheppard and
Kennedy Symposium Cafés within or outside the Symposium franchise system. If
sold outside the Symposium franchise system, Mr. Kotsos agreed the purchase
documentation would contain a covenant on the part of the purchasers to remove
the Plantation/Symposium signage.
Sale of Kennedy
and Sheppard Cafés
[20]
On
September 18, 2003, Mr. Kotsos sold the assets of both the Sheppard and Kennedy
Symposium Cafés to the BDD Solutions Inc., a corporation incorporated by Mr.
Michael Bachour and Ms. Amy Salam. The terms of the Bills of Sale provided that
Mr. Kotsos sold BDD Solutions Inc. all rights, title and interests in the
corporation and the assets of the corporation. The sale agreement provided that
the “purchasers [were] purchasing the assets on an ‘as is, where is’ basis”.
[21]
The
sales agreement between Mr. Kotsos and BDD Solutions Inc. included a covenant whereby
if BDD Solutions Inc. decided not to join as a Symposium Café franchisee, it
would remove the Symposium Café signs and the Symposium Café Group may retrieve
the signs.
Infringement
Claim
[22]
The
Symposium Café Group invited BDD solutions Inc. to join the Symposium franchise
system and continue the Sheppard and Kennedy restaurants as Symposium Café
franchises. They sent a proposal letter in December 2003 offering franchise
rights for $17,500. The proposal would keep the existing agreements in place
giving the Defendants, among other things, the right to use the Symposium
Café/Plantation Coffee & Tea Company names in return for payment of the one
time franchise fee.
[23]
BDD
Solutions Inc. did not accept the proposal from the Symposium Group. Instead it
adopted Café Mirage as the new name for the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés using a sign
design similar in general appearance to that of the Symposium Café Design.
[24]
On
January 4, 2004, counsel for the Symposium Café Group requested the removal of
all signs, menus and other marketing materials associated with the Symposium
Café/Plantation Coffee and Tea Company. On January 7, 2004, counsel for the
Defendants responded indicating that they were prepared to remove the signage
and that they had no intention of utilizing The Symposium Café name.
[25]
The
Defendants replaced the Symposium Café design signs, utilizing the sign box
frames for their new Café Mirage sign but without returning the plastic inserts
to the Symposium Café Group. The two Café Mirages maintained the School of Athens trade dress,
and continued the use of the trade-mark names and expressions in various
signage, menus, and receipts at both the Sheppard and Kennedy locations until
2008 when the Sheppard Café Mirage was substantially renovated. The Kennedy Café
Mirage continued the Symposium Café trade dress appearance.
This Lawsuit
[26]
The
Symposium Café Group rebounded from its low of three restaurants in 2004 and
now has nine franchised Symposium Cafés. The Argiropoulos brothers now focus on
managing the franchising operation, assisting new franchisees become established
by providing training and support, developing new food menus, and generally promoting
the Symposium Cafés.
[27]
The
Symposium Café Group made repeated efforts to secure the return of their
Symposium Café Design signs. The Defendants say they took the signs down but offered
no evidence of their return to the Symposium Café Group.
[28]
On
January 13, 2004, the Symposium Café Group’s counsel served notice that the
Defendants would be considered liable for the value of the signs if not
returned or damaged, and for infringement of The Symposium Café trade-marked
design and logos. Further details of the infringement allegations were served on
March 22, 2004. Current counsel for the Symposium Café Group gave notice to
the Defendants of the intention to proceed with this lawsuit on December 1,
2004.
[29]
The
Plaintiff’s Statement of Claim was filed January 17, 2005 and further amended
on January 3, 2006. The Plaintiff advanced claims for:
i. Infringement of their
trade-marks and passing off,
ii. Infringement of copyright
for the Symposium Café menus,
iii. Injunctive relief against
the Defendants,
iv. Damages for infringement of
trade-marks,
v. Statutory damages for
infringement of copyright,
vi. Return of the Symposium signs
or damages in lieu thereof,
vi. Punitive damages, and
vii. Costs.
[30]
The
Defendants filed an Amended Statement of Defence admitting they do not have a
franchise licensing agreement with the Plaintiff but otherwise denying all
allegations and claims in the Amended Statement of Claim
III. Issues
[31]
The
issues in this trial relate to infringement of trade-mark and copyright. The
substantive issues are:
1. Did
the Defendants acquire the right to use the Plaintiff’s trade-marks by
purchasing the assets of the Sheppard and Kennedy Symposium Cafés? If not, did
they infringe the Plaintiff’s trademarks and pass off their restaurants as associated
with the Symposium Café franchise without license to do so?
2. Does
the Plaintiff have copyright in The Symposium Café menus? If so, did the
Defendants commit either secondary or primary infringement of the menu
copyright?
3. Is
the Plaintiff entitled to return of The Symposium Café signs or damages in lieu
of?
4. Did
the Plaintiff prove the individual Defendants liable?
IV. Analysis
Plaintiff’s Evidence
[32]
The
witnesses for the Plaintiff were: Mr. William Argiropoulos, the Vice-President
of Finance and Development of the Plaintiff, Ms. Darlene George and Mr. John
Palumbo, both Symposium Café franchisees, Ms. Valentina B. Potter and Mr.
Vittorio S. R. Scicchitano of Monarch Protection Services which was hired to
report on the appearance and operation of the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés, and
Ms. Mindy Fleming, Operations Manager of Sensor Quality Management which
conducted a survey exercise.
[33]
Mr.
Argiropoulos was a credible witness. He spoke in great detail about how he and
his brother developed the Symposium Café concept and chronicled the development
of what is now a successful franchise enterprise. His evidence on the
development of the Symposium Café concept was not seriously challenged.
[34]
A
significant part of Mr. Argiropoulos’ testimony concerned the development of
the Symposium Café concept. He explained that their intention was to create an
ambiance where people could gather to meet, eat and have discourse on subjects
of interest. The School of Athens artwork captured that ambiance and they built
the Symposium Café concept around the prominent display of a large mural of
that fresco. To compliment the artwork, they had the walls antiqued in a
cracked marble fashion. They added the circular display counter surrounded by a
circular tile pattern. This combination was first used in 1999 in the
Plantation Coffee and Tea Company and replicated in the later Symposium Cafés.
This trade dress was trade-marked as a trade dress design in 2008 for
restaurant services.
[35]
Mr.
Argiropoulos emphasized that the Symposium Café trade dress made their
restaurants unique and differentiated Symposium Café from other franchise
restaurants that have restaurant interior décor similar to one another.
[36]
From
time to time Mr. Argiropoulos’ testimony did stray into hearsay and opinion
evidence, much of which was not determinative. I have not considered that
portion of his testimony. In particular, I have not considered his testimony related
to information obtained from the internet.
[37]
Ms.
George’s testimony was straightforward and I have no difficulty accepting her
testimony. She was a Symposium Café employee who became an independent owner
of two Symposium Café franchises.
[38]
Mr.
Palumbo was also a credible witness. He was a prospective Symposium Café
franchise customer who backed away after seeing the nearby Kennedy Café
Mirage. He later took up a Symposium Café franchise in another location.
[39]
The
testimony of Ms. Potter and Mr. Scicchitano of Monarch Protection Services was
not seriously disputed. They were investigators doing their work. I accept the
evidence of these investigators about the appearance of the Sheppard and
Kennedy Cafés.
[40]
Ms.
Fleming testified about the results of a customer survey. The Defendants
challenged the value of this survey. I agree that the survey had been
insufficiently grounded and I do not give that evidence any weight.
Defendants’ Witnesses
[41]
The
witnesses for the Defendants were Mr. Michael Bachour, President and Director
of BDD Solutions Inc. and Café Mirage Inc., Mr. Jim Kotsos, and Mr. Pele
Dagher, an associate of Mr. Bachour who is involved in the management of the
Café Mirage restaurants.
[42]
Mr.
Bachour was an indifferent witness. His evidence about involvement in the
restaurant business was nowhere near as extensive as that given by Mr. Argiropoulos.
Where his evidence directly differs from Mr. Argiropoulos, I prefer Mr. Argiropoulos’
evidence.
[43]
Mr.
Kotsos’ testimony reflected the acrimony of his previous litigation with the
Argiropoulos brothers and Symposium Café Group. He is a direct and blunt spoken
businessman. Notwithstanding his animosity towards the Argiropoulos brothers,
I see no reason to not accept the main of his testimony. Where I do not relates
to his legal interpretation of the settlement and sale documents which I will
address later.
[44]
Mr.
Dagher’s testimony is credible but does not add much to the narrative. He was
involved with and managed the Café Mirage operations after the purchase of
Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés from Mr. Kotsos.
Documentary Evidence
[45]
Three
legal documents are of relevance. The first is the Minutes of Settlement
between the Symposium Café Group and Mr. Kotsos signed on the 21st of July 2003
and filed with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. The remaining two are
Bills of Sale for the sale and purchase of the assets of the Sheppard and
Kennedy Symposium Cafés by Mr. Kotsos to BDD Solutions Inc., the first being
the Bill of Sale by 1499675 Ontario Limited and the second being by Mr. Kotsos
in his capacity as receiver of the assets of 1480045 Ontario Limited.
[46]
The
Minutes of Settlement provided:
13. The Franchisor and the Counter
Respondents agree that Kotsos is at liberty to sell the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés
or either of them within or outside the Symposium Franchise System.
14. The Franchisor and the Counter
Respondents agree that should Kotsos sell the Kennedy or Sheppard Café to a
purchaser outside the Symposium Franchise System, then Kotsos agrees that the
purchase documentation shall contain a covenant on the part of the purchaser to
remove the Plantation or Symposium signage at the
location within 90 days of closing. If the Franchisor wants the signage, it may
retrieve it from the purchaser.
[47]
The
Bill of Sale for the assets of the Sheppard Symposium Café reads:
1. The Vender hereby grants,
bargains, sells, assigns, transfers and sets over unto the Purchaser all of its
rights, title and interest, if any, in and to the assets …
2. The Purchaser acknowledges by
its acceptance of this indenture that:
(ii) the Purchaser is
purchasing the Assets on an “as is, where is” basis; …
3. Nothing in this Indenture
shall be construed as an attempt to assign any contractual rights forming part
of the Assets that are not assignable in whole or in part with the consent of
the other party to such contract, unless such consent has been given of the
assignment is otherwise lawful.
4. The Vendor covenants that it
has the right to convey to the Purchaser all of its rights, title and interest,
if any, in and to the Assets.
…
11. There is no representation,
warranty, collateral agreement or condition affecting this Indenture or the
transaction provided for herein other than as expressed herein.
The
Bill of Sale for the Kennedy Symposium Café reads much the same.
[48]
Both the
Plaintiff and Defendants submitted other documents in support of their
respective positions. I consider two sets of documents to be of noteworthy
significance.
[49]
The first are
the menus of both The Symposium Café and the Café Mirage as they are directly
relevant to the issue of copyright infringement. The second are the inspection
reports of the Monarch Protection Services investigators which provide evidence
on the appearance of the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés.
Trade-mark Infringement
[50]
The
Supreme Court of Canada has recently had occasion to discuss the nature of
trade-marks in Mattel U.S.A. Inc. v 3894207 Canada Inc., 2006 SCC 22,
[2006] 1 S.C.R. 772. At paragraph 2, Justice Binnie stated:
[t]he legal purpose of trade-marks
continues (in terms of s. 2 of the Trade-marks Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
T-13) to be their use by the owner “to distinguish wares or services
manufactured, sold, leased, hired or performed by him from those manufactured,
sold, leased, hired or performed by others”. It is a guarantee of origin and
inferentially, an assurance to the consumer that the quality will be what he or
she has come to associate with a particular trade-mark (as in the case of the
mythical “Maytag” repairman). It is, in that sense, consumer protection
legislation.
[51]
It
is with this in mind that I consider the issue of trade-mark infringement in
this case.
1.
Did
the Defendants acquire the right to use the Plaintiff’s trade-marks by
purchasing the Sheppard and Kennedy Restaurants? If not, did they infringe the
Plaintiff’s trade-mark and pass off their restaurants as associated with the
Symposium Café franchise without license to do so?
[52]
The
Plaintiff submits that since 1996, the Symposium Café Group has developed its
unique franchise system which uses names, expressions and trade dress design
protected by trade-mark registration and menus protected by copyright. It
submits that while the Defendants chose not to operate within the Symposium
franchise system, they have continued to use the Symposium Café trade dress,
trade-marks and menus in their Kennedy and Sheppard Cafés and, after 2008, have
continued to do so with the Kennedy Café operation.
[53]
The
Plaintiff contends that the Defendants infringed upon its registered
trade-marks by using its trade-marks in the Café Mirage signage and notices.
The Plaintiff submits the Defendants are liable for trade-mark infringement and
passing off contrary to s. 7 of the Trade-marks Act, RSC 1985, c T-13.
The Plaintiff specifically claims infringement under sections 7, 19, 20 and 22
of the Trade-marks Act.
Statutory
Provisions
[54]
The
Federal Court’s jurisdiction for trade-mark infringement is embodied in section
7 of the Trade-marks Act. Of relevance are subsections 7(b) and 7(c)
which deal with confusion, and passing-off. The relevant provisions read:
7. No
person shall
…
(b)
direct public attention to his wares, services or business in such
a way as to cause or be likely to cause confusion in Canada, at the time
he commenced so to direct attention to them, between his wares, services
or business and the wares, services or business of another;
(c)
pass off other wares or services as and for those ordered or requested;
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7.
Nul ne peut :
…
b)
appeler l’attention du public sur ses marchandises, ses services ou son
entreprise de manière à causer ou à vraisemblablement causer de la confusion
au Canada, lorsqu’il a commencé à y appeler ainsi l’attention, entre ses
marchandises, ses services ou son entreprise et ceux d’un autre;
c)
faire passer d’autres marchandises ou services pour ceux qui sont commandés
ou demandés;
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[55]
In
order to determine whether trade-marks or trade-names are confusing, subsection
6(5) must be examined. This provision provides that:
6.
(5) In determining whether trade-marks or trade-names are confusing, the
court or the Registrar, as the case may be, shall have regard to
all the surrounding circumstances including
(a)
the inherent distinctiveness of the trademarks or trade-names and the
extent to which they have become known;
(b)
the length of time the trade-marks or trade-names have been in use;
(c)
the nature of the wares, services or business;
(d)
the nature of the trade; and
(e)
the degree of resemblance between the trade-marks or trade-names in
appearance or
sound
or in the ideas suggested by them.
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6. (5)
En décidant si des marques de commerce
ou
des noms commerciaux créent de la confusion,
le
tribunal ou le
registraire, selon le cas, tient compte de toutes les circonstances de
l’espèce, y compris :
a) le
caractère distinctif inhérent des marques de commerce ou noms
commerciaux, et la mesure dans laquelle ils sont devenus connus;
b) la
période pendant laquelle les marques de commerce ou noms commerciaux ont
été
en
usage;
c) le
genre de marchandises, services ou entreprises;
d) la
nature du commerce;
e) le
degré de ressemblance entre les marques de commerce ou les noms
commerciaux dans la présentation ou le son, ou dans les idées qu’ils suggèrent.
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[56]
Section
20(1) provides when infringement of a trade-mark is deemed to have occurred:
20.
(1) The right of the owner of a registered trade-mark to its exclusive use
shall be deemed to be infringed by a person not entitled to its use under
this Act who sells, distributes or advertises wares or services in
association with a confusing trade-mark or trade-name, but
no
registration of a trade-mark prevents a person from making
(a)
any bona fide use of his personal name as a trade-name, or
(b)
any bona fide use, other than as a trademark,
(i)
of the geographical name of his place of business, or
(ii)
of any accurate description of the character or quality of his wares or
services, in such a manner as is not likely to have the effect of
depreciating the value of the goodwill attaching to the trade-mark.
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20.
(1) Le droit du propriétaire d’une marque de commerce déposée à l’emploi
exclusif de cette dernière est réputé être violé par une personne non admise à
l’employer selon la présente loi et qui vend, distribue ou annonce des
marchandises ou services en liaison avec une marque de commerce ou un nom commercial
créant de la confusion. Toutefois, aucun enregistrement d’une
marque de commerce ne peut empêcher une personne :
a)
d’utiliser de bonne foi son nom personnel comme nom commercial;
b)
d’employer de bonne foi, autrement qu’à titre de marque de commerce :
(i)
soit le nom géographique de son siège d’affaires,
(ii)
soit toute description exacte du genre ou de la qualité de ses marchandises
ou services, d’une manière non susceptible d’entraîner la diminution de la
valeur de l’achalandage attaché
à la
marque de commerce.
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[57]
No
issue arises about the Plaintiff being the registered holder of trade-marks
with respect to restaurant services and related wares. These trade-marks are:
Symposium Café Design (Filed 2000-04-18,
Registered 2003-08-29)
The Symposium Café (Filed 2002-05-05,
Registered 2005-01-18)
Second To None (Filed 2005-04-29,
Registered 2007-03-07)
Passport To Pleasure (Filed 2005-04-29,
Registered 2006-03-08)
East Meets West (Filed 2005-04-29,
Registered 2006-05-06)
Escape The Ordinary (Filed 2005-04-29,
Registered 2006-03-06)
Symmetry For The Senses (Filed 2005-04-29,
Registered 2006-12-01)
To Europe And Back In 15 Minutes (Filed
2005-04-29, Registered 2006-03-07)
Redefining The Cafe Experience (Filed
2005-04-29, Registered 2007-12-21)
Symposium Café Trade Dress Design (Filed
2007-12-07, Registered 2008-05-21)
[58]
The
Plaintiff claims first use of its registered trade-marks going back as early as
1999 for the Symposium Café Trade Dress Design and the expressions, and 2000
for the Symposium Café Design and The Symposium Café name. The above dates are
reflected in the Trade-Mark data and the certificates of registration. The
Defendants have not challenged this evidence.
Acquiescence
[59]
The
Defendants contend that even though the Plaintiff is not a signatory, it was
involved in the Minutes of Settlement and to suggest otherwise is disingenuous.
The Defendants say this is especially so given that the Plaintiff is also
trying to assert rights under the covenant in the Minutes of Settlement for the
return of the Symposium Café design signs. The Defendants submit the Plaintiff
is bound by the Minutes of Settlement agreed to by the Argiropoulos brothers
and the Symposium companies in which all assets of the Sheppard and Kennedy Symposium
Cafés were transferred.
[60]
The
Defendants submit they are entitled to raise the defence of acquiescence because
the Plaintiff has consented to the use of the trade-marks by the Defendants.
They rely on Boston Pizza International Inc. v Boston Market Corp.,
2003 FC 892, [2003] 238 FTR 1, where Justice Tremblay-Lamer stated:
[42] A
defence of acquiescence may be successful if the expunging party (the
plaintiff) consents to the use and registration of the trade-mark or leads the
defendant to believe that the defendant's use of the mark is proper to the
defendant's prejudice.
[43] In White Consolidated Industries, Inc. v. Beam of Canada Inc.
(1991), 47 F.T.R. 172, Teitelbaum J. adopted at
page 186 the following definition of acquiescence from Archbold v. Scully (1861),
9 H.L.C. 360:
If a party, who could object, lies by and knowingly permits another to
incur an expense in doing an act under the belief that it would not be objected
to, and so a kind of permission may be said to be given to another to alter his
condition, he may be said to acquiesce [...]
[61]
I
agree with the Defendants’ submission that the Plaintiff is bound by the terms
of the Minutes of Settlement even if not specifically listed as a party. The
Argiropoulos brothers are the principals and controlling directors of the
Plaintiff. They established a hierarchy of companies which included 1424930
Ontario Limited, an Ontario corporation that functioned as the franchising
company for Ontario restaurants,
966778 Ontario Inc. (the Sheppard Café), and 1480045 Ontario Limited (the
Kennedy Café), companies which acquired the right to use of the Plaintiff’s
trade-marks.
[62]
In
my view, the parties to the settlement would have understood that use of the
trade-marks in question would be available should the subsequent purchaser
desire to continue within the Symposium franchise system. The Argiropoulos
brothers agreed and they have the complete authority to direct the Plaintiff,
the holder of the trade-marks, to comply. They cannot subsequently say,
without express language in the Minutes of Settlement, the Plaintiff never
consented to subsequent use of the trade-marks by a purchaser who opted to
continue within the Symposium franchise system.
[63]
I
conclude that in the circumstances of this settlement, the agreement of the
Argiropoulos brothers constitutes consent on behalf of the Plaintiff. However,
I must consider what rights were actually transferred by the Minutes of
Settlement.
[64]
The
Defendants say the Plaintiff is estopped from claiming any rights whatsoever
with respect to any trade-marks as those rights have been effectively waived by
the Plaintiff or others acting on behalf of the Plaintiff. The Defendants say
that the Minutes of Settlement transferred all the assets of the Sheppard Café
and the Kennedy Café to Mr. Kotsos who was free to sell those assets.
[65]
I
have no hesitation in concluding that Mr. Kotsos could sell the Sheppard and
Kennedy Cafés within the Symposium franchise system. The Minutes of Settlement
expressly contemplate the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés as being sold “within
or outside the Symposium Café Franchise System”. The fact that the Argiropoulos
brothers sought to persuade the Defendants to continue as part of the franchise
system after BDD Solutions Inc. purchased the restaurants confirms my
conclusion. In my view, Mr. Kotsos was entitled, by the Minutes of Settlement,
to transfer that right to BDD Solutions Inc.
[66]
The
Sheppard and Kennedy Café assets did not, however, include the unlimited right
to use the trade-marks outside of the Symposium franchise system. Mr. Kotsos
says he had the right to do so because he assumed all of the assets of the
Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés under the Minutes of Settlement. Mr. Kotsos is
offering his interpretation of the Minutes of Settlement. I do not accept his interpretation
of the settlement agreement.
[67]
The
Defendants assert BDD Solutions Inc. bought all of the assets that Mr. Kotsos
possessed, including the trade-marks, since the agreements of purchase and sale
specifically refer to and give value to the “Goodwill and trade name” at
$10,000 out of a total of $160,000 for the Sheppard Café and $49,000 out of a
total of $328,000 for the Kennedy Café.
[68]
I
note that the consequent Bills of Sale merely set out the total sale prices
without any breakdown or separate reference to goodwill and trade names.
Moreover, the Bills of Sale restrict the assets transferred to those held by
Mr. Kotsos and are sold “where is, as is”. They expressly further limit the assets
transferred:
2. Nothing in this Indenture
shall be construed as an attempt to assign any contractual rights forming part
of the Assets that are not assignable in whole or in part with the consent of
the other party to such contract, unless such consent has been given of the
assignment is otherwise lawful.
…
11. There is no representation,
warranty, collateral agreement or condition affecting this Indenture or the
transaction provided for herein other than as expressed herein.
[69]
The
evidence of Mr. Bachour is that the Defendants decided not to operate within
the Symposium franchise system.
[70]
The
Symposium Café Group held registered trade-marks for the Symposium Café Design
and The Symposium Café. The Argiropoulos brothers were developing the Symposium
franchise system. Their plans and activities all point to an intention to
maintain and develop the Symposium Café concept as their restaurant franchise
concept. They personally borrowed money to defend their control of the
Symposium Cafés in the litigation with Mr. Kotsos. All of this is contrary to
the suggestion that they would give up rights to the central elements of their
concept notwithstanding the financial and business difficulties they were
contending with.
[71]
Nothing
in the Minutes of Settlement confirms Mr. Kotsos interpretation. I find that
the Minutes of Settlement itself supports the interpretation that what was
transferred was a right to use the Symposium Café trade-marks within the
Symposium franchise system. This was acknowledged by Mr. Kotsos himself when he
agreed that any sale and purchase documentation would contain a covenant on the
part of the purchaser to remove the Plantation/Symposium signage at the
Sheppard and Kennedy Café locations within 90 days of closing should the
purchaser choose not to continue as Symposium Café franchises.
[72]
I
also consider the Defendants were on notice that the Plaintiff no longer
consented to the use of its registered trade-marks as of January 2004 when the
Plaintiffs demanded the return of the Symposium Café Design signs. In December
of that year, the Plaintiff’s solicitor gave notice of its intention to commence
a lawsuit for the Defendants’ infringement of the Symposium Café trade-marks
and the Defendants’ failure to return the signs. I find the Defendants were,
as of January 2004, no longer entitled to use the trade-marks without the
further consent of the registered trade-mark holder, the Plaintiff, which was
never given.
Confusion
[73]
Section
7(b) of the Trade-marks Act provides that no person shall direct public
attention to his services as to cause or be likely to cause confusion between
his services and the services of another. Confusion is defined in section 6 of
the Act which sets out the required approach to a confusion analysis.
Section 6(5) requires that all surrounding circumstances must be considered
including:
(a)
the
inherent distinctiveness of the trade-marks or trade-names and the extent to
which they have become known;
(b)
the length
of time the trade-marks or trade-names have been in use;
(c)
the nature
of the wares, services or business;
(d)
the nature
of the trade; and
(e)
the degree
of resemblance between the trade-marks or trade-names in appearance or sound or
in the ideas suggested by them.
[74]
It
is therefore necessary to apply the criteria in section 6(5) to the present
case.
(a) Inherent
distinctiveness of the trade-marks and length of time they have been known
[75]
The
Symposium trade-marks involve the prominent featuring of the School of Athens coupled with
antiqued marble wall patterns, a circular display counter and tiles, with
trade-mark names and expressions associated with restaurant services. While the
individual components are not particularly distinctive (the School of
Athens,
for instance, is a well known public work of art), the trade dress combination
in conjunction with a restaurant satisfies this requirement for
distinctiveness. Accompanying this imagery and décor are the trade-mark
expressions used in association with the restaurant food, décor and service
experience. The Symposium Cafés established in the Toronto area, London
and Waterloo, Ontario all feature
the same distinctive trade dress.
(b) Length of
time the competing trade-marks have been in use
[76]
The
Plaintiff’s first use of the trade-marks goes back to 1999 while the
Defendants’ usage of the Symposium trade dress is more recent, commencing in a
competing mode in 2004.
(c) Nature of the
Services
[77]
Both
parties operate restaurants in the Toronto area.
(d) Nature of the Trade
[78]
Both
parties provide the same food and service targeting the same clientele, customers
who are going to a restaurant for a sit down meal.
(e) Degree of
Resemblance in Appearance
[79]
The
similarity is to be considered in viewing the trade-marks as a whole. It is to
be viewed as if by an average person with an imperfect recollection of specific
detail who forms an overall impression: Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin v Boutiques
Cliquot Ltée, 2006 SCC 23, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 824 at para 20. The Monarch
Protection Services investigators reported on the similarities of the Sheppard
and Kennedy Cafés with the Symposium Café. The Defendants had kept the
prominent display of the School of Athens artwork, antiqued wall
pattern, circular display counter and floor tiles that are part of the
Symposium Café trade dress. The Defendants also continued the use of the
trade-mark expressions in signage and in menus. Significantly, the Defendants
continued the use of the very large external School of Athens mural with
the Symposium Café trade-marked expression ‘Redefining the Café Experience’ on
the outside of the Kennedy Café Mirage.
[80]
The
Defendants submit that there is no evidence adduced by the Plaintiff to show
confusion between Café Mirage and the Symposium Café. The Defendants submit
that the testimony of Ms. George and Mr. Palumbo should be disregarded because
they are closely related to the Plaintiff. They cite Phillip Morris
Products S.A. v Marlboro Canada Ltd., 2010 FC 1099, [2010] 90 CPR (4th)
1 at paragraph 263 , where the Court stated:
The same is true for the evidence
provided by the Defendant’s sales representatives, although for a host of other
reasons. First of all, they are all employees of a party to this action, and
rely on good relationships with their employer for their livelihood. This
employer-employee relationship of subordination undermines the reliability of
those testimonies. Furthermore, they were all relatively inexperienced and they
made sweeping statements that did not always withstand cross-examination …
[81]
The
Defendants also point to the evidence of Mr. Bachour who testified that he did
not have any problems with confusion between Café Mirage and Symposium Café. The
Defendants acknowledge Mr. Bachour is a party to the proceedings but say his
evidence offsets the contrary evidence of Mr. Argiropoulos who is also a party.
[82]
The
evidence of Mr. Argiropoulos was that individuals told him of confusing Café
Mirage with Symposium Café. The fact that individuals made statements to him is
evidence but the allegation of confusion is hearsay. Mr. Argiropoulos also
testified about his internet research which brought up internet messages
confusing Café Mirage with the Symposium Café. I do not rely upon this internet
evidence, unsupported as it is by expert evidence on the reliability and
utility of this internet documentation: ITV Technologies Inc. v WIC
Television Ltd., 2003 FC 1056, 29 CPR (4th) 182.
[83]
The
testimony of Ms. Potter and Mr. Scicchitano, both of Monarch Protection, also
reported on the continuing use of the trade-mark expressions by the two Café
Mirages at Sheppard and Kennedy. They reported that the Café Mirages maintained the
prominent featuring of the School of Athens artwork, used the same circular display
counter and floor tiles, used copied or similar menus, maintained the prominent
School of Athens artwork and display of the Plaintiff’s trade-mark expression
‘Redefining the Café Experience’ outside the Kennedy Café, and employed the
Symposium Café’s former name Plantation Coffee and Tea Company on its food
receipts.
[84]
Both
Ms. George and Mr. Palumbo testified about their experience as Symposium Café
franchise operators. They had been informed by customers who thought the Café
Mirages were associated with the Symposium Café. Although both have a business
relationship with the Symposium Café Group and an interest in the success of
the Symposium franchise system, they are also independent business persons
operating their own restaurants. As business persons, they are credible witnesses
who are competent to comment on matters concerning the operation of their own
restaurants. I accept their testimony that their restaurant customers told
them about the similarities of Café Mirage with their Symposium Cafés.
[85]
As
restaurant owners, Ms. George and Mr. Palumbo would have regard for comments by
customers that have a bearing on their restaurant businesses. They were
credible witnesses who were each crossed examined. Their evidence was not
shaken. There is no doubt that the statements were made to them.
Notwithstanding the statements are hearsay, there is value in accepting such
statements given if it avoids the necessity of calling a number of customers to
testify about the confusion. Moreover, this hearsay testimony is corroborated
by the Monarch Protection investigators who attended and recorded the
similarities between the Sheppard and Kennedy Café Mirages and the Symposium
Cafés.
[86]
Mr.
Palumbo testified about first seeing the Kennedy Café Mirage. He found it to be
very much the same as the Symposium Café concept. His examination was not that
of an average restaurant customer in somewhat of a hurry; he was a
knowledgeable observer who had reason to more closely examine the trade dress
of the Kennedy Café since he was a prospective Symposium franchise customer.
Such a prospective franchisee would be expected to consider all aspects of a
franchise somewhat closely including potential competition. He came to a
decision not to proceed with his Symposium franchise application because of the
close resemblance and proximity of the Kennedy Café Mirage to the proposed
location for his Symposium Café franchise. He too is a customer, but of the
franchise rather than a restaurant meal. From this perspective, he has also given
direct evidence of confusion.
[87]
Finally,
I consider Mr. Dagher to be in somewhat of a different position from Ms. George
and Mr. Palumbo since he is an employee managing Café Mirage. I give his
testimony about the absence of confusion less weight than that of Ms. George
and Mr. Palumbo.
[88]
The
documentary evidence also supports a finding of confusion. The Café Mirage initially
used the orange menus which Mr. Kotsos had printed when the original Symposium
Café menus became worn. Although the trade-mark name ‘The Symposium Café’ was
removed as well as the references to Symposium (but for one oversight), the
menus continued to use the Symposium Café trade-mark expressions. Significantly,
the menu also listed the Symposium Café Group’s telephone number as the number
to call for franchise information. Even when the new Café Mirage menus were
introduced, the new menus continued to use trade-mark expressions, such as ‘East
meets West’, or similar expressions such as ‘Redefining the Café Experience’
(Symposium Café) and ‘the Evolution of a Café Experience’ (Café Mirage).
[89]
The
legal test for confusion was set out by the Federal Court of Appeal in Polo
Ralph Lauren Corp. v United States Polo Association, (2000), 9 CPR (4th)
51, 286 NR 282. As stated by Malone J.A. at paragraph 3, the proper test as to
the likelihood of confusion is:
…whether, as a matter of first impression
in the mind of an average consumer having a vague or imperfect recollection of
another mark, the use of both trade-marks in the same area and in the same
manner is likely to lead to the inference that wares associated with those
marks are produced or marketed by the same company.
[90]
An
average restaurant customer, entering Café Mirage, seeing the prominent
featuring of the School of Athens, the large display/counter, the antiqued wall
pattern, and seeing the exact and very similar trade-marked expressions with
menus containing the same items, would, in my view, conclude that Café Mirage
was associated with the Symposium Café Group.
[91]
I
am satisfied that, having regard to the above, the average restaurant customer
in somewhat of a hurry would, on first impression, consider the Café Mirage to
be associated with the Symposium Café Group and would be confused by the
Defendants’ use of the Plaintiff’s trade-marks.
[92]
The
Defendants submit that the material date for considering infringement of a
registered trade-mark is the date of the hearing and cites Alticor Inc. v
Nutravite Pharmaceuticals Inc., 2005 FCA 269, [2005] 257 DLR (4th)
60 for that proposition. I
consider this submission to be incorrect. The Trade-marks Act
contemplates trade-marks to have significance from first use and most certainly
from date of registration. The trade-mark expressions were registered before
the Defendants took possession of the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés. Although the
Symposium Café trade-marked trade dress was not registered until 2008, the
evidence supports its first use in 1999 and continuously thereafter.
[93]
In
Alticor, the Federal Court of Appeal explained the date of hearing was
the relevant date when a party is seeking a permanent injunction. That is the
situation here. However, the Plaintiff also seeks damages for infringement from
the time it served notice on the Defendants of their infringement in January
2004. The Federal Court of Appeal stated:
[16] There is, however, no
unwavering rule as to material date. There will be cases where another date or
dates may be more appropriate, depending on the facts of the case and the
remedies being sought. Obviously, such a situation might exist where a party
alleges that infringement both began and ceased at some time prior to trial.
There is no fixed time for confusion to be established; rather the usual
situation is to demonstrate confusion over a period of time, for that is what
generates the damages. Thus, it is plain that the material date, though
normally the time of the hearing, may vary depending on the specific facts and
pleadings of each case.
[94]
The
evidence discloses the Sheppard Café Mirage was renovated in 2008 and no longer
displays the Symposium trade dress. There is no evidence the Kennedy Café Mirage
was similarly renovated. Mr. Bachour testified at trial that nothing had
changed at Kennedy Café. Since the Defendants were in the best position to
provide such evidence and did not, I draw the adverse inference that the
Kennedy Café Mirage continues with the Symposium trade dress.
[95]
I conclude
the relevant dates for confusion are from the date the Defendants no longer had
the licence to use the Symposium trade-marks, being in January 2004, to the
date of this hearing. I find that the Defendants were infringing upon
the Plaintiff’s trade-marks as of January 2004 and that infringement continued
until 2008 in respect of the Sheppard Café Mirage and is ongoing at the time of
the hearing of this matter in respect of the Kennedy Café Mirage.
Copyright Infringement
[96]
Copyright
is established by statute. Briefly summarizing, copyright in a work grants the
author the sole right to produce or reproduce the work. Copyright arises in
every original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic work by an author who
is a citizen of or ordinarily resident of a country that has adhered to the
international treaties on copyright. Copyright subsists for a term of the life
of the author plus fifty years. All of the forgoing is subject to the
variations imposed by various provisions of the Copyright Act, RSC 1985,
c C-42.
[97]
The
purchase of a copyrighted item does not transfer the copyright. For example, if
one buys a book, one does not acquire the copyright to the book. While one can
resell the book without offending the copyright, that person may not copy the
book unless permission is granted by the owner of the copyright or the Copyright
Act exceptions: see David Vaver, Intellectual Property Law: Copyright,
Patents, Trade-marks, 2d ed (Toronto: Irwin Law Inc., 2011) at 58.
[98]
Copyright
protection covers original work, although the standard for such work is not so
much the degree of intellectual originality as authorship. The protection is
for the expression of the work and not the ideas embodied in it. In result,
copyright is about prohibiting copying of original expressions of the work of
an author.
[99]
Finally, almost
everything expressed in print or writing has been held to be literary works. The
Copyright Act lists tables, computer programs, books, pamphlets, and
writings. More unusual works include business records, forms, minutes of
meetings, sudoku puzzles and lawyers’ letters: ibid at 69.
2.
Does
the Plaintiff have copyright in The Symposium Café menus? If so, did the
Defendants commit either secondary or primary infringement of the menu copyright?
[100] The Plaintiff contends it has
copyright on its Symposium Café menus. It submits the Defendants have made use
of the Plaintiff’s copyright protected menus at the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés
without consent thereby infringing its copyright. In particular, the Plaintiff
submits the Defendants’ orange menu was a secondary infringement of their
Symposium Café menus because Mr. Kotsos copied the menus without approval and
the Defendants made knowing use of the copied orange menus. The Plaintiff
further submits the Defendants copied the new Symposium Café menus and thus
infringed the Plaintiff’s copyrights with respect to that menu.
Statutory Provisions
[101] As stated above, the Copyright
Act provides that copyright in a work grants the author the sole right to
produce or reproduce a work:
3.
(1) For the purposes of this Act, “copyright”, in relation to a work, means the
sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any substantial part thereof
in any material form whatever, to perform the work or any substantial part
thereof in public or, if the work is unpublished, to publish the work or any substantial
part thereof, …
|
3. (1)
Le droit d’auteur sur l’oeuvre comporte le droit exclusif de produire ou
reproduire la totalité ou une partie importante de l’oeuvre,
sous
une forme matérielle quelconque, d’en exécuter ou d’en représenter la
totalité ou une partie importante en public et, si l’oeuvre n’est pas publiée,
d’en publier la totalité ou une partie importante; …
|
[102] Infringement of copyright is the doing of anything
that, according to the Copyright Act, only the owner has the right to do
which includes the sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any substantial
part thereof. The statutory definitions of both infringement (section 27(1)) and
secondary infringement (section 27(2)) provide:
27.
(1) It is an infringement of copyright for any person to do, without the
consent of the owner of the copyright, anything that by this Act only the
owner of the copyright has the right to do.
(2)
It is an infringement of copyright for any person to
(a)
sell or rent out,
(b)
distribute to such an extent as to affect prejudicially the owner of the
copyright,
(c)
by way of trade distribute, expose or offer for sale or rental, or exhibit in
public,
(d)
possess for the purpose of doing anything referred to in paragraphs (a) to
(c), or
(e)
import into Canada for the purpose of doing
anything referred to in paragraphs (a)
to
(c),
a
copy of a work, sound recording or fixation of a performer’s performance or
of a communication signal that the person knows or should have known
infringes copyright or would infringe copyright if it had been made in Canada
by the person who made it.
|
27.
(1) Constitue une violation du droit d’auteur l’accomplissement, sans le
consentement du titulaire de ce droit, d’un acte qu’en vertu de la présente
loi seul ce titulaire a la faculté d’accomplir.
(2)
Constitue une violation du droit d’auteur l’accomplissement de tout acte
ci-après en ce qui a trait à l’exemplaire d’une oeuvre, d’une fixation d’une
prestation, d’un enregistrement sonore ou d’une fixation d’un signal de
communication alors que la personne qui accomplit l’acte sait ou devrait
savoir que la production de l’exemplaire constitue une violation de ce
droit,
ou en constituerait une si l’exemplaire avait été produit au Canada par la
personne qui
l’a
produit :
a) la
vente ou la location;
b) la
mise en circulation de façon à porter préjudice au titulaire du droit
d’auteur;
c) la
mise en circulation, la mise ou l’offre en vente ou en location, ou
l’exposition en
public,
dans un but commercial;
d) la
possession en vue de l’un ou l’autre des actes visés aux alinéas a) à c);
e)
l’importation au Canada en vue de l’un ou l’autre des actes visés aux alinéas
a) à c).
|
[103]
Finally,
for the purposes of this case, the following section is also relevant:
34.1
(1) In any proceedings for infringement of copyright in which the defendant
puts in issue either the existence of the copyright or the title of the
plaintiff thereto,
(a)
copyright shall be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, to subsist in the
work, performer’s performance, sound recording or and
(b)
the author, performer, maker or broadcaster, as the case may be, shall,
unless the contrary is proved, be presumed to be the
owner
of the copyright.
|
34.1
(1) Dans toute procédure pour violation du droit d’auteur, si le défendeur
conteste l’existence du droit d’auteur ou la qualité du demandeur :
a)
l’oeuvre, la prestation, l’enregistrement sonore ou le signal de
communication, selon le cas, est, jusqu’à preuve contraire, présumé être
protégé par le droit d’auteur;
b)
l’auteur, l’artiste-interprète, le producteur ou le radiodiffuseur, selon le
cas, est, jusqu’à preuve contraire, réputé être titulaire de ce droit
d’auteur.
|
The Menus
[104]
When Mr. Kotsos took over the
Sheppard and Kennedy restaurants, the Symposium Café menus were included among
the assets. When the Symposium Café menus had become worn, Mr. Kotsos had them
copied, removing all but one reference to Symposium. These copied orange menus
were part of the assets of the restaurants sold to BDD Solutions Inc. The
Defendants continued to make use of the orange menus after they received the
Plaintiff’s unequivocal notice to desist in January 2004.
[105] When the Symposium Café Group
changed its menu, the Defendants produced the new Café Mirage menu which
replicated the School
of Athens
artwork, listed much the same menu items together with identical or strikingly
similar trade-mark expressions and food descriptions which went, in my view,
well beyond coincidence. Consider for example the following descriptions:
Symposium
East Meets West.
Two
separate pleasures on one plate. Vanilla ice cream and strawberries topped
with strawberry puree meet chocolate ice cream, bananas and chocolate syrup –
a mouth watering combination topped with whipped cream.
New
Symposium Café menu.
|
East
Meets West. Two separate pleasures on one plate. Vanilla ice cream and
strawberries topped with strawberry puree meet chocolate ice cream, bananas
and chocolate syrup. A mouth watering combination topped with whipped cream.
New
Café Mirage menu.
|
[106] Other
similarities abound but first up is the portrayal of the respective Café
designs on the cover accompanied by the School of Athens artwork and
the phrases:
Redefining
the Café Experience
New
Symposium Café Menu.
|
The
Evolution of a Unique Café Experience
New
Café Mirage Menu.
|
[107] Mr. Bachour testified that when
they developed the new Café Mirage menu they “changed it [orange menu] a
little”. He does not explain the incorporation of the School of Athens artwork nor the timing for
producing the new Café Mirage menu.
[108] I have no hesitation in
concluding the new Café Mirage menus were inspired by, and copied to a
substantial degree, the new Symposium Café menus.
[109]
The
Plaintiff in its Amended Statement of Claim pleaded that the Defendants
infringed on its copyright which was met by the Defendants’ transverse denial.
In its submissions, the Plaintiff specifically submitted that the Defendants
infringed on its copyright to the Symposium Café menus. The Defendants
responded that the Plaintiff is “estopped from claiming any rights whatsoever
with respect to … any … copyright associated with the two restaurant locations
or any other asset … purchased by the Defendant BDD Solutions Inc.,” as those
rights were waived by the Plaintiff or entities acting with the Plaintiff’s
consent.
Did Symposium Café have copyright in their
menus?
[110]
I would be
initially inclined to say no for two reasons. First, restaurant menu food
descriptions are ubiquitous and many selections are somewhat standardized.
Second, restaurant menus, as happened here, change over time. One may ask, as
David Vaver did, “Has the author spent enough intellectual effort on the
product to deserve protection from others’ copying it for his lifetime and
another fifty years beyond that?”: Vaver at 101. Notwithstanding this
view, I must have regard for the provisions of the Copyright Act and the
jurisprudence on copyright.
[111]
In CCH
Canadian Ltd. v The Law Society of Upper Canada, 2004 SCC 13, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 339 [CCH],
the Supreme Court of Canada discussed the competing views
on originality in a copyright context. The Supreme Court then went on to set
out the test for originality to be applied under the Copyright Act.
Speaking for the Court, the Chief Justice held:
[16] … For a work to be “original”
within the meaning of the Copyright Act, it must be more than a mere
copy of another work. At the same time, it need not be creative, in the sense
of being novel or unique. What is required to attract copyright protection
in the expression of an idea is an exercise of skill and judgment. By
skill, I mean the use of one’s knowledge, developed aptitude or practised
ability in producing the work. By judgment, I mean the use of one’s capacity
for discernment or ability to form an opinion or evaluation by comparing
different possible options in producing the work. This exercise of skill and
judgment will necessarily involve intellectual effort. The exercise of skill
and judgment required to produce the work must not be so trivial that it could
be characterized as a purely mechanical exercise. For example, any skill and
judgment that might be involved in simply changing the font of a work to
produce “another” work would be too trivial to merit copyright protection as an
“original” work.
[Emphasis added]
What I must determine, then, is whether the creation of a
restaurant menu, and the Symposium Café menu in particular, involves an
exercise of skill and judgment that is not so trivial that it could be
characterized as a purely mechanical exercise.
[112]
Firstly,
where an author, as in the case here, applies his acquired knowledge, developed
aptitude or practised ability to the development of a restaurant menu, while
engaging his capacity for discernment or his ability to form an opinion or
evaluation by comparing different possible outcomes, the resulting creation is clearly
the product of an exercise of skill and judgment as envisioned by the Supreme
Court of Canada in CCH. An author’s demonstrated ability to select the
food items to be included in the menu, to generate descriptions of those items
and to arrange the layout and overall design of the menu are examples of the skill
and judgment required to support a finding that a restaurant menu is an
original work deserving copyright protection.
[113]
However, CCH
cautions that the exercise of skill and judgment must not be so trivial that it
could be characterized as a purely mechanical exercise. With regards to
restaurant menus, it is possible to envision a menu that is little more than a
standard list of food items with ubiquitous descriptions, prices and some
identifying information such as the restaurant’s name, location and store
hours. While the creation of such a menu would inevitably be an exercise of
some skill and judgment insofar as the author is required to determine which
items are to be included, the prices, and possibly the order or grouping of the
items, it is less clear whether an exercise of skill and judgment so described could
be categorized as a purely mechanical exercise and thus not an original work
for the purposes of copyright protection. However, where an author demonstrates
a de minimis level of intellectual effort suggesting more than a purely
mechanical exercise of skill and judgment, the resulting menu would be an “original”
work and protected under the Copyright Act.
[114]
The new
Symposium Café menu consists of the depiction of the School of Athens art, the inclusion of its trade-mark
expressions, photographs of menu selections, descriptions extolling the menu
items and prices. Mr. Argiropoulos described the process of selecting the food
items and generating descriptions that achieved the effect they were striving
for as part of the Symposium Café concept. It is clear that thought was given
to the menu food items to be included, the phraseology used in descriptions and
the linking with images to associate the menu with the Symposium concept. I am
satisfied that Mr. Argiropoulos has described a process that meets the standard
of an exercise of skill and judgment in the menu selection, arrangement and
design to establish copyright.
[115]
In
addition, section 34.1 of the Copyright Act provides that in any
proceeding for infringement of copyright, in which the defendant puts in issue
the existence of the copyright or the Plaintiff’s title to the copyright, then
copyright shall be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, to subsist in the
work in any proceedings for infringement of copyright. The Defendants have put
the Symposium Café Group’s copyright at issue as well as control over that
copyright. I consider the Defendants’ denials as engaging s. 34 of the Copyright
Act. Accordingly, copyright is presumed and the Defendants must prove the
contrary. They have not. I need not go further into the question of whether
menu food descriptions can be copyrighted and preserved for the lifetime of an
author plus fifty years.
[116]
It is an
infringement of copyright to do any of the things the copyright owner has the
sole right to do which includes the production, reproduction of the work or any
substantial part in any material form. The question is whether the Defendants
infringed the Plaintiff’s copyright with respect to either the orange menus
initially used or the new Café Mirage menus.
[117]
The
Defendants did not copy the orange menus. They purchased them as part of the
assets acquired from Mr. Kotsos. Mr. Kotsos testified he instructed the
printer to make copies, removing only the references to Symposium Café. I have
no difficulty concluding the orange menus were a substantial copy of the
Symposium Café menus.
[118]
Nevertheless,
I do not consider the orange menus to have been copied without the implied consent
of the Symposium Café Group. Mr. Kotsos had seized the Sheppard and Kennedy
restaurants and held them pursuant to a court order. While Mr. Kotsos
maintained he had no obligations with respect to the Symposium Café Group and
did not want to associate with them, he lawfully held two restaurant
corporations and their assets for a time. The assets of the two restaurant
corporations would include a license, express or implied, to use any
copyrighted Symposium Café menus. I would think that included the right to make
copies when old menus became worn.
[119]
Mr. Kotsos
could, by the terms of the Minutes of Settlement, sell the restaurant
corporations and all their assets within or outside the Symposium Café
franchise. In result, when the Defendants acquired the Sheppard and Kennedy
restaurant assets, they also acquired the orange menus. Since I have concluded
the orange menus were lawfully copied, no secondary infringement can arise with
this subsequent use, even though the implied license expired when the Defendants
declined to join the Symposium Café franchise system.
[120]
The
Defendants’ claim that the Plaintiffs waived all rights by agreeing to transfer
all assets does not succeed. Copyright does not transfer with the physical assets
such as menus. There is no evidence that the Symposium Café Group ever
transferred more than a license to use its trade-marks or copyrights. At best,
the license to use the menus continued until they opted not to join the
Symposium Café franchise. Since copyright is presumed and the Defendants have
failed to prove the Plaintiff was no longer entitled to exclusive copyright,
the presumption of copyright and the Plaintiff’s entitlement to copyright continues.
[121]
The new
Café Mirage menus are similar, but not exact copies of the new Symposium Café
Group menus.
[122]
Subsection
3(1) grants the copyright holder the sole right to “reproduce the work or any
substantial part thereof”. The latter phrase “any substantial part thereof” has
relevance here. The Federal Court of Appeal in CCH Canadian Ltd. v The Law
Society of Upper Canada, 2002 FCA 187, 18 CPR (4th) 161, rev’d
on other grounds 2004 SCC 13, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 339, noted that “substantial”
is not limited to the extent of any copying stating:
[237] What constitutes reproduction of
a substantial part of a work does not depend on a purely quantitative analysis.
Indeed, substantiality may be assessed from a quantitative and/or qualitative
perspective. In U & R Tax Services Ltd. v. H & R Block Canada Inc.,
supra, Richard J. (as he then was) provides the following summary of the
law on substantiality, at paragraph 35:
what constitutes a “substantial part” is
a question of fact and, in this respect, the courts have given more emphasis on
the quality of what was taken from the original work rather than the quantity.
Some of the matters that have been considered by Courts in the past include:
(a)
the
quality and quantity of the material taken;
(b)
the extent
to which the defendant’s use adversely affects the plaintiff’s activities and
diminishes the value of the plaintiff’s copyright;
(c)
whether
the material taken is the proper subject-matter of a copyright;
(d)
whether
the defendant intentionally appropriated the plaintiff’s work to save time and
effort; and
(e)
whether
the material taken is used in the same or a similar fashion as the plaintiff’s.
[123]
In this
instance the Defendants have produced a menu that:
(a)
incorporates
the School of Athens art into the menu although
not quite cropped in the same fashion;
(b)
replicates
the general layout and uses menu food descriptions closely parallel and in some
instances copied word for word; (see paragraph 105)
(c)
the
Symposium Café menu is protected by copyright.
(d)
the timing
and circumstances of the issuance of the new Café Mirage menu, compiled with
the Defendant’s assertion that the Plaintiff acquiesced to their use of
Symposium Café menus, support the inference the Defendants intentionally
appropriated the Plaintiff’s work to save time and effort;
(e)
the
material taken is used as a restaurant menu just as the Symposium Café menu is.
[124]
Given the
degree of copying of the new Symposium Café menu in the Café Mirage menu, I am
satisfied that infringement of copyright is proven.
3. Is the Plaintiff
entitled to return of The Symposium Café signs or damages in lieu of?
[125] The Plaintiff
also alleges the Defendants have failed to return Symposium Café signage they
were obligated to remove
and return to the Plaintiff as part of the business transaction with Mr. Kotsos
and claims damages in lieu of.
[126] The Defendants submit that the
Plaintiff’s claim is a claim for common law conversion, return of property or
damages thereof for which the Federal Court is without jurisdiction. Further,
the Plaintiff submits there is no evidence of damages adduced except for Mr.
Argiropoulos’ guesstimate. The Defendants now submit the Plaintiff was not a
party to the Minutes of Settlement and could not claim rights under that
agreement as a third party, notwithstanding that the Defendants claimed earlier
that the Plaintiff, if only indirectly, was a party to the Minutes of
Settlement.
[127] The evidence before me is that
the plastic insert signage was inscribed with the Symposium Café trade-mark
design. Since the Federal Court has exclusive jurisdiction over matters covered
under the Trade-marks Act including infringement of trade-marks, I do
not accept the Defendants’ submission that this is a subject over which the
Federal Court has no jurisdiction.
[128] Mr. Kotsos agreed to include a
covenant requiring any purchaser to allow the Symposium Café Group to retrieve the
Symposium Café signs. The Defendant, BDD Solutions Inc., agreed to remove the
Symposium Café signage, an obligation which arose once it decided not to join
the franchise. At that point the Defendant was obligated to allow the Symposium
Café Group to retrieve that signage. This is not a matter where a third party,
a stranger to an agreement, is seeking to enforce rights thereto. The
Plaintiff, as trade-mark holder, had rights with respect to the signs which had
its trade-mark Symposium Café Design on it. Both Mr. Argiropoulos and Ms.
George testified about their efforts to have the Symposium Café signs for
Sheppard and Kennedy locations returned but to no avail.
[129] The Defendants presented evidence
they took down the signs but offered no evidence they returned them to the
Symposium Café Group. The Defendant Mr. Bachour testified that he took down the
plastic insert and kept the box to use for their sign. He and Mr. Dagher
testified they called the Symposium Café Group and told them where to pick up
the signs.
[130] I prefer the evidence of Mr.
Argiropoulos and Ms. George over the evidence of Mr. Bachour and Mr. Dagher,
especially since the documentary evidence, the letters of Mr. Argiropoulos and
legal counsel seeking the return, confirm their persistent and repeated efforts
to have the signs returned.
[131] Given that Mr. Bachour and Mr.
Dagher were in the best position to provide evidence that the signs were
returned, but did not, I draw the adverse inference that the signs were not
returned. I find the Symposium Café signs were not returned.
[132] The Defendants submitted that
there is no evidence of damages since the cost of the Symposium Café signs were
estimates only. I do agree that the question of whether the signs composed of
the plastic inserts only or also included the supporting boxes and fittings was
inconclusive. At best, I consider the Plaintiff has proven the plastic inserts
with their trade-mark designs were never returned. The cost of those signs was
not proven. This does not mean the Plaintiff did not incur any damages arising
from the non-return. I consider non-return of the signs also relates to the
Plaintiff’s loss of control over its trade-marks, and as such, is sufficient to
complete the claim for damages.
4. Did the
Plaintiff prove the individual Defendants liable?
[133] Finally, the
Plaintiff submits the individual Defendants, Michael Bachour and Amy Salam, are
jointly liable with the corporate Defendants. The Plaintiff submits Mr. Bachour was
involved in activities infringing the Symposium Café’s trademarks and copyright
but also that Mr. Bachour admitted he does not distinguish between his
corporations, BDD solutions Inc. and Café Mirage, and his own activities.
[134] The Plaintiff submits that Ms.
Salam was also involved in the venture to infringe on the Symposium Café’s
trade-marks. Ms. George testified that Ms. Salam inquired as to the possible
sale of the Symposium Cafés. She signed correspondence and was a shareholder in
another separate business with Mr. Dagher. The Plaintiff submits that Ms.
Salam’s failure to testify at trial, given evidence of her involvement, calls
for the Court to make an adverse inference and conclude she was involved
personally in the Café Mirage operations.
[135] The Defendants submit that
there is no basis for piercing the corporate veil to find the individual Defendants
liable and refer to Mentmore Manufacturing Co. v National Merchandise
Manufacturing Co. Inc. (1978), 40 CPR (2d) 164, 89 DLR (3d) 195 (FCA) [Mentmore
Manufacturing] which held that small, two-person corporations enjoyed the
same benefit as a large corporation.
[136] Further, the Defendants submit
that the Plaintiff has not adduced any evidence Ms. Salam was involved in the
day-to-day activities of the Café Mirages. Ms. Salam is a real estate agent and
her activities with respect to BDD Solutions Inc. were that of a real estate
agent who sometimes directly assisted Mr. Bachour.
[137] I agree with the Defendants that
the evidence does not show Ms. Salam was closely involved with Café Mirage’s
day-to-day activities relating to the trade-mark and copyright infringement.
The evidence shows her involvement with Mr. Bachour and the Defendant
corporations, both with respect to the loan and lease guarantee and her
conversation with Ms. George, but it falls short, in my view, of showing a
day-to-day involvement in Café Mirage operations. The Plaintiff made much of a
letter which it contended was authored by Ms. Salam, but its submissions are
merely speculative in nature. The most extensive evidence was that of the
conversation between Ms. George and Ms. Salam, but that conversation can also
be interpreted in the context of a real estate agent’s interest in a client’s
affairs.
[138] The Plaintiff had to satisfy
the burden of proof that Ms. Salam had a personal involvement in the activities
of the Defendant corporations that constituted infringement of the Symposium
Café Group’s trade-marks and copyright. I conclude that the Plaintiff has not
met that burden and there is no need for Ms. Salam to testify in her defence.
As such, she was not required to testify and no basis exists for making an
adverse inference about her involvement.
[139] I find the Plaintiff has not
proven Ms. Salam was involved and that she participated in the infringement of
the Symposium Café Group’s trade-marks and copyright.
[140] The evidence of Mr. Bachour’s
involvement is much different. He was the principal mover in acquiring the
Sheppard and Kennedy restaurants. He acknowledged hiring a broker to draft the
business plan that paralleled the Symposium Café Groups’ operations. The
business plan reflected an intention to pursue a course of action which
infringed on the Plaintiff’s trade-marks by continuing the “status quo”.
[141] In Mentmore Manufacturing
the Federal Court of Appeal held at paragraph 28 that for an officer or
director of a corporation to be personally liable there must be circumstances from
which it is reasonable to conclude the officer or director’s purpose was the deliberate,
wilful and knowing pursuit of a course of conduct that was likely to constitute
infringement or reflected an indifference to the risk of it.
[142] Most importantly, Mr. Bachour
himself did not separate his involvement from that of his companies. He stated
that BDD Solutions Inc. was not the operating entity for the Sheppard and
Kennedy restaurants; it was just used to make the purchase of the assets in
2004. Café Mirage was not incorporated until 2009 and was used to hold the Café
Mirage name. Mr. Bachour himself acknowledged there was no distinction between
his companies and himself stating at one point “the companies are me”.
[143] In Rivett v Monsanto Canada
Inc., 2010 FCA 207, 87 CPR (4th) 383, the Federal Court of
Appeal held an individual farmer to be personally responsible rather than his farm
corporation. To support that conclusion, the Appeal Court stated:
[99]
To avoid
disgorging profits, Mr. Kerkhof submits that all farming activity done or
managed by him was done on behalf of his company Aldy Farms Inc. As a result,
Aldy Farms earned the profit from the 120 acres of infringing crop grown in
2004 and 2005, not him.
[100] The record does not support
that statement. Firstly, Mr. Kerkhof’s statement of defence simply does not
mention Aldy Farms. Secondly, Mr. Kerkhof, who was represented by counsel
throughout the proceedings, admits to the infringement in his personal capacity
and agrees to disgorge profits. Thirdly, no evidence was provided that
suggested Aldy Farms was the recipient of the revenues and of Mr. Kerkhof’s
services. The only reference to that entity was during his
examination-in-chief. Finally, the Agreed Statement of Facts is to the effect
that Mr. Kerkhof planted, harvested and sold the seeds in his personal
capacity.
[101] Thus, I agree with Monsanto,
that there was no basis for the Judge to take into account the alleged
involvement of Aldy Farms Inc. in the infringing activities of Mr. Kerkhof.
[144] I conclude that Mr. Bachour
was directly involved in the management of Café Mirage and the infringing use
of the Symposium Café Group’s trade-marks and copyright. I find Mr. Bachour
personally liable along with the corporate Defendants.
V.
Remedies
Injunctive Relief
[145] Having found the Defendants
BDD Solutions Inc., Café Mirage and Michael Bachour liable, and considering
the trademark infringement has continued with respect to the Kennedy Café Mirage
and the copyright infringement with the Café Mirage menus, I am satisfied
injunctive relief is in order to protect the Plaintiff’s intellectual property.
[146] The four components of the
trade-marked Symposium Café trade dress design involve the use of the School of Athens art, the cracked antique wall
treatment, the distinctive circular counter display ensemble and the circular
tile pattern together in combination. The circular tile pattern, in my view, is
by itself a weak element of the ensemble as is the cracked antique wall
treatment. The circular counter display is distinctive but the Plaintiff had
once before given that feature up in a restaurant that was part of the
Biltermar restaurants sale. The School
of Athens is a public work of art.
Nevertheless, it is the combination of these four elements that makes the trade
dress design distinctive.
[147] In my view, the School of Athens is the most
dominant and critical component of the four. It embodies the Plaintiff’s
thematic concept of a meeting place for discussion and exchange of ideas. It is
prominently featured in all Symposium Café franchise establishments. It is the
continuing component of the Kennedy Café Mirage and the Café Mirage menus.
[148] I am satisfied the removal of
the School of Athens from the Café Mirage trade dress will effectively dispel
any confusion with the Symposium Cafés.
[149] Accordingly, the Defendants BDD
Solutions Inc, Café Mirage and Michael Bachour, will be enjoined from
displaying the School of Athens in the Kennedy Café, in any of the other Café
Mirage restaurants, in the Café Mirage menus, and in any signage, posters,
internet websites or otherwise.
[150] The Defendants will also be prohibited
from any use, publication or printing of the Plaintiff’s trade-marks being:
Symposium Café Design
The Symposium Café
Second To None
Passport To Pleasure
East Meets West
Escape The Ordinary
Symmetry For The Senses
To Europe And Back In 15 Minutes
[151] The Defendants will deliver
all of its infringing Café Mirage menus depicting the School of Athens to the Plaintiff.
Damages
[152] The Plaintiff
has sought damages calculated in the equivalent of a monthly franchise fee for
the duration of infringement by both the Sheppard and Kennedy Café Mirages.
This would, they submit, make up for their loss. They refer to the award in 2
For 1 Subs Ltd. v Ventresca (2006), 48 CPR (4th) 311, 17 BLR (4th)
179 (Ont
Sup Ct)
as a precedent. However, the Plaintiff’s evidence was that the franchise fee
has been variable over time depending on the circumstances and the prosperity
of the Symposium franchise system.
[153] At one point,
when the Defendants acquired the Sheppard and Kennedy restaurant assets, the
Symposium Café Group invited the Defendants to join the Symposium Café Group
for a one time franchise fee of $17,500.
[154] The Symposium
Café Group also incurred specific loss with Mr. Palumbo’s cancellation of his initial
franchise application because of the proximity of Kennedy Café Mirage to the
proposed site for his franchise. As such, he demanded the return of his $6,588.13
franchise deposit and did not proceed with another Symposium Café franchise
until some time later.
[155] Considering
these together, I am of the view that a global award of $30,000 is appropriate.
[156] The Plaintiff
has sought statutory damages with respect to the copyright infringement with
respect to the Café Mirage menus.
[157] I consider
the copyright infringement to have been committed at two locations, at the
Sheppard Café Mirage and the Kennedy Café Mirage. The renovation to the
Sheppard Café Mirage implies the menus there were also changed. I award damages
in the amount of $2,500 at the Sheppard Café Mirage and $5,000 at the Kennedy
Café Mirage for a total of $7,500 for copyright infringement.
[158] The Plaintiff
seeks damages in lieu of the return of their trade-mark Symposium Café Design
signs. They have variously estimated the value of the signs at $35,000 but
offered no evidence on the costs of the signs.
[159] Nevertheless
the signs and are not without value and could have been used in other Symposium
Café ventures.
[160] I would award
damages for the non-return of the signs in the amount of $5,000 each for a
total of $10,000.
Punitive
Damages
[161] The Plaintiff has also asked
for punitive damages. The Defendants’ appropriation of their Plaintiff’s
intellectual property and non-responsive conduct frustrated and aggrieved the
Symposium Café Group. The Plaintiff takes issue with what it characterizes as a
planned and deliberate attempt by the Defendants to take over their restaurant
concept. The Plaintiff also considers the continuation of this effort during
the course of this litigation as arrogance.
[162] I turn then to consider
whether, on the facts of this case, exemplary or punitive damages should be
awarded. I note first that there is no statutory impediment to assessing
punitive damages in addition to profits or damages calculated in the usual
manner. With respect to the copyrighted works, the Court’s ability to award
punitive damages in addition to an election to statutory damages is enshrined
in s. 38.1(7) of the Copyright Act. (See also Telewizja Polsat S.A. v
Radiopol Inc., 2006 FC 584, 52 CPR (4th) 445 at para 34).
[163] The leading case on
punitive damages is the Supreme Court decision in Whiten v Pilot Insurance
Co., 2002 SCC 18, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 595. As stated by Justice Binnie at
paragraph 36, punitive damages will be awarded against a defendant:
… in exceptional cases for
"malicious, oppressive and high-handed" misconduct that "offends
the court's sense of decency": Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 1130, at para. 196. The test thus limits the award to
misconduct that represents a marked departure from ordinary standards of decent
behaviour. Because their objective is to punish the defendant rather than
compensate a plaintiff (whose just compensation will already have been
assessed), punitive damages straddle the frontier between civil law
(compensation) and criminal law (punishment).
[164] Justice Binnie further
expounded on this general principle in Whiten. As summarized by the
Nova Scotia Supreme Court in 2703203 Manitoba Inc. v Parks, 2006 NSSC 6,
47 C.P.R. (4th) 276 at para 38, rev’d in part 2007 NSCA 36, 57 C.P.R. (4th) 391,
the relevant factors to consider are as follows:
·
Whether
the conduct was planned and deliberate;
·
The intent
and motive of the defendant;
·
Whether
the defendant persisted in the outrageous conduct over a lengthy period of
time;
·
Whether
the defendant concealed or attempted to cover up its misconduct;
·
The
defendants awareness that what he or she was doing was wrong; and
·
Whether
the defendant profited from its misconduct.
[165] The general principles in Whiten
relating to punitive damages were applied in Louis Vuitton Malletier
S.A. v Yang, 2007 FC 1179, 62 CPR (4th) 362 by Justice Snider in
a trade-mark infringement case where the defendants’ conduct met all of the
above factors.
[166] In my view, the actions of the
Defendants do not constitute a basis for punitive damages. The Defendants’
conduct was planned and deliberate but did not involve concealment, obstruction
of court proceedings, or profit not compensable by damages. Its attempt to
exploit the Symposium Café Group’s concept was more in the nature of commercial
competition overreaching lawful bounds.
Costs
[167] The Plaintiff seeks
solicitor-costs against the Defendants.
[168] The fundamental principle is that
an award of costs represents a compromise between compensating a successful
party and not unduly burdening an unsuccessful party: Apotex Inc. v Wellcome
Foundation Ltd. (1998), 84 CPR (3d) 303, 159 FTR 233 at para 7. The general
rule is that costs follow the event and, absent exceptional circumstances,
should be awarded to the successful litigant on a party-and-party basis.
[169] Costs are within the
discretion of the Court: Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, r
400(1). The non-exhaustive factors that may be considered in awarding costs are
delineated in rule 400(3), including “any other matter that [the Court] considers
relevant”.
An award of
solicitor-and-client costs is exceptional. The Supreme Court of Canada has
stated that solicitor-and-client costs should generally be awarded only when a
party has displayed reprehensible, scandalous or outrageous conduct: Hamilton
v Open Window Bakery Ltd., 2004 SCC 9, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 303 at para 26.
[170] Here, the Defendants at worst
can be said to have tried to exploit what they saw as a business opportunity
without due regard for the Plaintiff’s intellectual property. While that
conduct offended and distressed the Plaintiff, it cannot be said to be
reprehensible, scandalous or outrageous. Nor did the Defendants obstruct the
litigation to any degree more than what would be expected in defending in an
action.
[171] I am satisfied that costs of
the action should follow the event on a party-to-party basis. I would award
costs in the middle of Column III together with the usual disbursements
including the costs of the Monarch Agency investigators but not the cost of the
expert witness whose testimony I did not accept.
VI. Conclusion
[172] In conclusion, I would answer
the substantive issues identified above as follows.
1. Did the Defendants
acquire the right to use the Plaintiff’s trade-marks by purchasing the assets
of the Sheppard and Kennedy Symposium Cafés? If not, did they infringe the
Plaintiff’s trade-marks and pass off their restaurants as associated with the
Symposium Café franchise without license to do so?
[173]
The
Defendants did not acquire the right to unrestricted use of the Plaintiff’s
trade-marks when they purchased the assets of the Sheppard and Kennedy Cafés.
The right they acquired was to use the trade-marks within the Symposium Café
franchise and that right ceased when they declined to join the franchise and
the Symposium Café Group served notice to desist. The Defendants are liable for
infringement of the Plaintiff’s trade-marks. Damages are awarded at $30,000.
2. Does the Plaintiff
have copyright in the Symposium Café menus? If so, did the Defendants commit a
secondary infringement or an primary infringement of the copyright?
[174]
The
Plaintiff has copyright in the Symposium Café menus which has not been
disproved by the Defendants. The Defendants committed primary infringement with
respect to the Café Mirage menus. Statutory Damages are assessed with respect
to the Café Mirage Menus at $7,500.
3. Is the Plaintiff
entitled to return of the Symposium Café signs or damages in lieu of?
[175]
The
Plaintiff was entitled to retrieve its trade-mark design signs once the
Defendants had declined to join the Symposium Café Group and were served notice
to desist. Since the signs have not been returned, the Plaintiff is entitled to
damages in lieu of. Damages are assessed in the amount of $5,000,00 each for a
total of 10,000.00
4. Did the Plaintiff prove the
individual Defendants liable?
[176] The Defendant Michael Bachour
is personally liable in respect of the proven claims given his personal
involvement and his acknowledgement that he does not separate the Defendant companies’
activities from his own affairs.
[177] The Plaintiff did not prove
the Defendant Amy Salam liable.
Other Issues
[178]
The
Plaintiff is entitled to injunctive relief as follows:
1.
The
Defendants will be enjoined from displaying the School of Athens art in the
Kennedy Café Mirage, in any of the other Café Mirage restaurants, on the Café
Mirage menus, and on any signage, posters, internet websites or otherwise.
2.
The Defendants
are prohibited from any use, publication or printing of the Plaintiff’s
trade-marks being:
·
Symposium
Café Design
·
The
Symposium Café
·
Second To
None
·
Passport
To Pleasure
·
East Meets
West
·
Escape The
Ordinary
·
Symmetry
For The Senses
·
To Europe And Back In 15 Minutes
3.
The
Defendants will deliver all of its infringing Café Mirage menus with the School of Athens art to the Plaintiffs.
4.
These
prohibitions and order take effect within 60 days of the issuance of this
judgment.
[179] The Plaintiff is awarded
costs on a party-to and party basis. I would award costs in the middle of Column
III together with the usual disbursements, including the costs of the Monarch
Protection Services investigators, but not the cost the expert witness whose
testimony I did not admit.
[180] Given that the Defendant Amy
Salam did not appear at trial and her defence was conducted by legal counsel
for the Defendants, I make no award of costs in respect of her defence costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that:
1.
The
Defendants, BDD Solutions Inc., Café Mirage Inc. and Michael Bachour, are
liable for infringement of the Plaintiff’s trade-marks, copyright and
non-return of signs.
2.
Injunctive
relief is granted as follows:
a)
The
Defendants, BDD Solutions Inc., Café Mirage Inc. and Michael Bachour, are
prohibited from displaying the School of Athens art in the Kennedy restaurant,
in any of the other Café Mirage restaurants, in Café Mirage menus, and on any
signage, posters, internet websites or otherwise promoting Café Mirage.
b)
The
Defendants are prohibited from any use, publication or printing of the
Plaintiff’s trade-marks being:
·
Symposium
Café Design
·
The
Symposium Café
·
Second To
None
·
Passport
To Pleasure
·
East Meets
West
·
Escape The
Ordinary
·
Symmetry
For The Senses
·
To Europe And Back In 15 Minutes
c)
The
Defendants will deliver all of its infringing Café Mirage menus bearing the School of Athens art to the Plaintiffs.
d)
These
prohibitions and order take effect within 60 days of the issuance of this
judgment.
3.
The
Plaintiff is awarded damages against the Defendants, BDD Solutions Inc., Café Mirage
Inc. and Michael Bachour, jointly and severally, for infringement of
trade-marks owned by the Plaintiff in the amount of $30,000, and $7,500 for infringement
of the Plaintiff’s copyright in the menus.
4.
The
Plaintiff is awarded damages against the Defendants, BDD Solutions Inc., Café Mirage
Inc. and Michael Bachour, jointly and severally, assessed in the amount of $5,000 for each
of the two Symposium Café Design signs for a total of $10,000.
5.
The
Plaintiff is awarded party-and-party costs in the middle of Column III together
with disbursements, including the cost of the Monarch Protection Services investigators,
but not the cost of the expert witness.
6.
No award
of costs is made for Ms. Amy Salam.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”