Date:
20141021
Docket: T-2107-13
Citation: 2014 FC 997
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, October 21, 2014:
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Bédard
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BETWEEN:
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VERGER DU MINOT INC.
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Appellant
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and
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CLOS SAINT-DENIS INC.
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an appeal of Verger du Minot Inc. (the
appellant), pursuant to s 56 of the Trade-marks Act, RSC, 1985, c
T-13 (the Act), of the decision rendered on October 29, 2013, by the Trade-marks
Opposition Board (the Board) acting on behalf of the Registrar of Trade‑marks
(the Registrar). In its decision, the Board allowed the opposition made by the
respondent, Clos Saint-Denis Inc., and declared that the trade-mark “CRÉMANT DE
GLACE” (the Mark) was deceptively misdescriptive of the character or quality of
the services in association with which they are proposed to be used (paragraph
12(1)(b) of the Act). For the reasons set out below the appeal is
dismissed.
I.
Background
[2]
The appellant specializes in manufacturing, producing,
bottling and selling apple cider. On April 5, 2005, it filed an application
with the Registrar to register the Mark based on proposed use in Canada. The
application was advertised for opposition purposes in the Trade‑marks
Journal of March 13, 2011. The statement of wares covered by the Mark reads
as follows:
Alcoholic drinks,
excluding wines and beers, specifically apple ciders.
[3]
In support of its application, the appellant
filed an affidavit of its president, Robert Demoy, and an affidavit of Jessica
Rodriguez-Cerquiera, paralegal with the trade-marks department of its agent. In
his affidavit, Mr. Demoy explains the scope and the manner in which the Mark has
been both used and promoted in Canada since 2005. The affidavit of Ms. Rodriguez-Cerquiera
puts into evidence a number of trade-marks registered in the Trade-marks
registry that contain the word “glace” [ice] in association with apple cider or
alcoholic drinks.
[4]
The respondent opposed the registration of the
Mark. Its statement of opposition raised many grounds of opposition, but only
the ground of opposition alleging the non-registrability of the Mark
(paragraphs 12(1)(b) and 38(2)(b) of the Act) was filed with the
Board.
[5]
The respondent submitted to the Board that the
Mark was deceptively misdescriptive of the character of the associated wares.
According to the respondent, the expression in the Mark, “crémant de glace”,
indicates that the wares are a slightly sparkling
wine, fermented from fruit exposed to a period of natural freezing,
whereas that appellant actually wishes to register the Mark for apple cider.
The respondent submitted that the ordinary meaning of the word “crémant” refers
to a slightly sparkling wine, whereas cider is made by fermenting apple juice
not grape juice. As for the expression “de glace”, whether it is associated
with cider or wine, it designates a sweeter wine or cider that is made with
frozen fruit.
[6]
In support of its opposition, the respondent
filed the affidavit of Kimberly Sévigny, paralegal with the trade-marks department
of its agent, that aims to enter into evidence a number of definitions from
online and traditional dictionaries of the words and expressions “crémant”, “cidre”,
“vin”, “vin de glace” and “cidre de glace”.
[7]
Given the definitions it submitted, the respondent
alleged that the Mark is deceptively misdescriptive because it suggests
something that is not the case and it is misleading because it leads the
consumer to believe that it suggests a sort of wine when the wares are cider.
[8]
In reply to the opposition, the appellant also
asserted that the word “crémant” is not exclusive to the field of wine and that
it could also refer to the action “de crémer” [to cream]. The appellant
asserted that this was the first definition provided in the dictionary Le
Nouveau Petit Robert. It also contends that the Mark should be considered a
whimsical mark able to suggest several ideas. Moreover, seen as a whole, the
Mark, which is an expression invented by its president, suggests one condition
or state of apple cider from among many possibilities, and this condition is
not an essential characteristic for the consumer. The appellant also submitted
that the Mark should be analyzed with respect to the labels on the cider
bottles, which clearly indicated that they contain cider.
[9]
The appellant also submitted that the Mark is
part of a family of marks that it already owns and that already associate the
word “crémant” with cider. The appellant is the owner of two other trade-marks
that are registered in relation to apple cider, “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT” and
“CRÉMANT DE POMME”. According to the appellant, given the existence of its
family of marks, the average Canadian consumer was already accustomed to
associating the term “crémant” with something other than wine.
II.
Impugned Decision
[10]
Subsection 12(1) of the Act governs the
registrability of trade-marks. Paragraph 12(1)(b), which reads as
follows, deals specifically with marks that are deceptively misdescriptive:
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12. (1) Subject to section 13, a trade-mark is registrable if it
is not
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12. (1) Sous réserve de l’article 13, une marque de commerce est
enregistrable sauf dans l’un ou l’autre des cas suivants :
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…
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…
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(b) whether
depicted, written or sounded, either clearly descriptive or deceptively
misdescriptive in the English or French language of the character or quality
of the wares or services in association with which it is used or proposed to
be used or of the conditions of or the persons employed in their production
or of their place of origin;
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(b)
qu’elle soit sous forme graphique, écrite ou sonore, elle donne une
description claire ou donne une description fausse et trompeuse, en langue
française ou anglaise, de la nature ou de la qualité des marchandises ou
services en liaison avec lesquels elle est employée, ou à l’égard desquels on
projette de l’employer, ou des conditions de leur production, ou des
personnes qui les produisent, ou du lieu d’origine de ces marchandises ou
services;
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[11]
The question before the Board was whether the
expression “CRÉMANT DE GLACE” in the Mark is deceptively misdescriptive when
used in relation to cider.
[12]
First, the Board set out the burden of proof
placed on each party and indicated that it is initially for the opponent to
establish the well-foundedness of its opposition. It added that ultimately the
burden falls to the requesting party who must show that the Mark is
registrable, according to the balance of probabilities.
[13]
The Board determined that the evidence submitted
by the respondent, which refers to the dictionary definitions of the words that
make up the Mark, was sufficient to enable it to meet its initial burden.
[14]
It then set out the principles guiding its
review. Inter alia, it indicated that in order to determine whether the
Mark is deceptively misdescriptive, it had to review it as of the date of submission
of the application, in this case April 5, 2005. It added that the issue must be
studied from the viewpoint of the average consumer of the wares at issue and
that the Mark must not be broken down into its various elements and analyzed
minutely, but considered as a whole from the view of the first impression it
gives.
[15]
The Board then stated the applicable test for
determining whether a mark is deceptively misdescriptive at
paragraph 14 of its decision:
To be considered deceptively misdescriptive, a
trade-mark must mislead the public as to the character or quality of the wares
or services. The mark must give a description suggesting that the wares or
services contain something that in fact they do not contain. The prohibition in
regard to deceptively misdescriptive trade-marks aims to prevent the public
from being misled.
[16]
The Board found that the evidence based on the
affidavit of the appellant’s president was irrelevant because it aimed to show
use of the Mark in Canada since the date of submission of the application,
whereas the analysis of registrability of the Mark must be done as of the date
of submissions.
[17]
The Board found that the fact that the term in
the Mark is not found as such in the dictionary is not relevant in itself,
since this does not necessarily imply that this term has no meaning and
provides no description, especially if each portion of a mark has a well-known
meaning. It added that the fact of whether or not the Mark was invented would
not have constituted a guarantee of registrability.
[18]
The Board rejected the appellant’s argument to
the effect that the Mark, in the context of the wares, must necessarily be
viewed as a whimsical mark. It determined that the appellant’s argument was
purely speculative and found that the two terms the Mark is comprised of, “crémant”
and “de glace,” have meanings currently used in the context of the wares.
[19]
It determined that the term “de glace” is an
accepted term currently used to designate wines and ciders made from naturally
frozen fruit (or juice). Regarding the word “crémant”, it upheld the definition
provided by all the dictionaries including Le Nouveau Petit Robert. Referring
to the single definition from Le Nouveau Petit Robert, the Board stated
that it could poorly conceive how the word “crémant,” in the context of the wares,
could be considered by some in the “pictured” meaning of to “cream” and
determined that it should be understood in its regular meaning of a wine
covered by a light froth. The Board thus determined that the average consumer
is more likely than not to think that the word “crémant” followed by the term “de
glace” would infer its everyday meaning and accordingly that the Mark wrongly
refers to a slightly sparkling wine, fermented from
fruit exposed to a period of natural freezing.
[20]
The Board also rejected the appellant’s argument
regarding the labels that indicate that the product is cider and stated that
the Mark must be considered independently and not as it appears on the labels.
[21]
Last, the Board rejected the appellant’s argument
regarding its family of marks. It noted that the owner of a registered
trade-mark does not have the automatic right to obtain the registration of
other marks that are closely related to the Mark covered by the initial
registration. It also indicated that the existence of a family of marks could
not have been presumed in an opposition proceeding, the registration of a mark
does not establish use of the Mark and that the requesting party had the burden
of proving that it uses the trade-marks making up the claimed family. The Board
determined that the appellant had not met that burden and that it had not
submitted exhibits that would make it possible to determine the extent of use
of its two other marks. Thus it found that the argument to the effect that the average
consumer would be accustomed to seeing the word “crémant” associated with
something other than wine, more specifically ciders, is not supported by the
evidence on file.
III.
New Evidence on Appeal
[22]
In an appeal from a decision of the Registrar,
subsection 56(5) of the Act provides the possibility of adducing additional
evidence that was not adduced before the Registrar.
[23]
In this case, the appellant filed a second
affidavit from its president, Mr. Demoy, dated February 14, 2014, that has
several elements.
[24]
First, he put into evidence elements that
establish the use of the Mark since 2005, the extent of this use and the way in
which the Mark is used in its regular business dealings in Canada, and particularly
in Quebec. This part of the affidavit does not add any new information and is
not relevant because it describes the use after the registration date.
[25]
Second, the affidavit introduces elements that
describe the appellant’s use of its two other registered marks, “CRÉMANT DE
POMME DU MINOT” and “CRÉMANT DE POMME”. Mr. Demoy indicated that these two
marks have been used by the appellant in the normal course of business in
Canada in association with cider products since 1988. The affidavit includes a table
that demonstrates the number of bottles sold and the sales figures for products
associated with these two marks from 1988 to 2013. Mr. Demoy also adduced
media reviews, photos of products bearing the mark “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT”
and excerpts from advertising brochures. He also stated that since 1988, advertising
costs represent between 10% and 15% of the annual value of sales for products
bearing the marks “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT” and “CRÉMANT DE POMME”.
IV.
Issue
[26]
This Court must determine whether the Board
erred in finding that the Mark was deceptively misdescriptive of the character
of the wares in association with which it is proposed to be used.
[27]
In order to answer this question, the Court must
first determine the applicable standard of review.
V.
Standard of Review
[28]
The parties agree on the principles that should
guide the Court to identify the appropriate standard of review for the
Registrar’s decision when additional evidence is adduced on appeal. The parties
disagree, however, as to the appropriate standard in this case.
[29]
In principle, the standard of reasonableness
applies to the Registrar’s evidentiary findings (Mattel, Inc v.
3894207 Canada Inc, 2006 SCC 22 at para 40, [2006]
1 S.C.R. 772). As the Supreme Court of Canada clearly stated in Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 SCR 190, on a reasonableness
review, the Court should inquire into the qualities that make a decision
reasonable. The Supreme Court set out the criteria for assessing reasonableness
as follows:
47 ... Tribunals have a margin of appreciation
within the range of acceptable and rational solutions. A court conducting a
review for reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision
reasonable, referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to
outcomes. In judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision
falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.
[30]
However, if the fresh evidence adduced is
relevant, probative and significant such that it could have influenced the
Registrar’s decision, the Court must then conduct its own review of the issue
based on the evidence as a whole, the evidence before the Registrar and that
adduced on appeal.
[31]
Our Court and the Federal Court of Appeal have
often discussed this test for distinguishing the standard of review in varying
ways although the same concepts are still involved.
[32]
In Molson Breweries v John Labatt Ltd,
[2000] 3 FC 145 (FCA) at para 51, [2000] FCJ No 159, the Federal Court of Appeal,
per Justice Rothstein, clearly described the nature of the fresh evidence and
the role of the Federal Court when fresh evidence is adduced in an appeal under
section 56 of the Act:
51 I think the approach in Benson & Hedges
and McDonald's Corp. is consistent with the modern approach to standard
of review. Even though there is an express appeal provision in the Trade-marks
Act to the Federal Court, expertise on the part of the Registrar has been
recognized as requiring some deference. Having regard to the Registrar’s
expertise, in the absence of additional evidence adduced in the Trial Division,
I am of the opinion that decisions of the Registrar, whether of fact, law or
discretion, within his area of expertise, are to be reviewed on a standard of
reasonableness simpliciter. However, where additional evidence is adduced in
the Trial Division that would have materially affected the Registrar's
findings of fact or the exercise of his discretion, the Trial Division
judge must come to his or her own conclusion as to the correctness of the
Registrar's decision.
[Emphasis added.]
[33]
In Maison Cousin (1980) Inc v Cousins
Submarines Inc, 2006 FCA 409 at para 4, [2006] FCJ No 1968, the
Federal Court of Appeal referred to sufficiently significant and probative
evidence. In Accessoires d’Autos Nordiques Inc v Canadian Tire Corp,
2007 FCA 367 at para 30, [2007] FCJ No 1555, the Court stated that it
should conduct its own review of all the evidence “where
new evidence, which is material to the final decision is filed”, and in Shell
Canada Ltd v PT Sari Incofood Corp, 2008 FCA 279 at para 22,
[2008] FCJ No 1320, the Court stated that “the question
which the Federal Court Judge had to address is whether the new evidence
adduced before him would have materially affected the Registrar’s findings of
fact or the exercise of her discretion...” (see also Ron
Matusalem & Matusa of Florida, Inc v Havana Club Holding Inc SA,
2010 FC 786 at para 5, [2010] FCJ No 1006 [Ron Matusalem], affd
by Ron Matusalem & Matusa of Florida, Inc v Havana Club
Holding Inc, SA, 2011 FCA 244, [2011] FCJ No 1285; Ontario
Teachers’ Pension Plan Board v Canada (Attorney General), 2011 FC 58 at
para 21, [2011] FCJ No 73, affd by Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board v
Canada (Attorney General), 2012 FCA 60, [2012] FCJ No 278; Kelly
Properties, LLC v Canadian Council of Professional Engineers, 2013 FCA 287 at
para 4, 455 NR 362; Cliche v Canada (Attorney General), 2012 FC 564 at
para 10, [2012] FCJ No 753 [Cliche]; Continental Teves AG & Co
OHG v Canadian Council of Professional Engineers, 2013 FC 801 at para
16, [2013] FCJ No 865; Hayabusa Fightwear Inc v Suzuki Motor Corp,
2014 FC 784 at para 25, [2014] FCJ No 831).
[34]
The test for additional evidence is one of
quality, not quantity (Hawke & Company Outfitters LLC v Retail
Royalty Co, 2012 FC 1539 at para 31, [2012] FCJ No 1622). In Vivat
Holding Ltd v Levi Strauss & Co, 2005 FC 707 at para 27,
[2005] FCJ No 893, Justice Layden-Stevenson specified that, in order to go
beyond a standard of review of reasonableness, the new evidence must not be
merely repetitive of existing evidence before the Registrar. In Prince v Orange
Cove-Sanger Citrus Assn, 2007 FC 1229 at para 9, [2007] FCJ No
1697, Justice Martineau stated that the new evidence may warrant a
determination de novo if “the additional evidence
has a probative significance that extends beyond the material that was before
the Registrar”.
[35]
Based on this case law, I find that in order to
set aside the reasonableness standard and conduct its own review, this Court
must be satisfied that the new evidence is indeed new and not merely repetitive
of existing evidence before the Registrar. Moreover, this additional evidence
must be relevant and significant such that if it had been submitted to the
Registrar, it would have likely influenced the outcome of the registration
application.
A.
Appellant’s position on the standard of review
[36]
The appellant submits that the Court should
conduct a de novo review of its registration application because the
additional evidence it submitted is significant and could have influenced the Board’s
decision.
[37]
The appellant submits that the evidence of its
use of two other trade-marks that have been registered in relation to apple
cider since 1988, “CRÉMANT DE POMME” and “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT”, which it
describes as a family of marks, would suggest that consumers would not be
confused by the Mark, particularly by the use of the word “crémant” in the
Mark, because they would be accustomed to seeing the word “crémant” associated
with something other than wine, more specifically cider. Moreover, the
appellant stresses the fact that it is the only owner of registered trade-marks
in Canada containing the word ”crémant”. Thus, the appellant is of the
opinion that the use and promotion of its family of marks associating the word “crémant”
with cider, prior to the registration of the Mark, gives the Mark an inherent
distinction because they have affected the average consumer such that he or she
would not be misled by the use of the word “crémant” in association with cider.
B.
Respondent's position on the standard of review
[38]
The respondent submits that the Court must
analyze the Board’s decision according to the reasonableness standard because
the additional evidence would not have had any effect on the Board’s decision.
[39]
First, the respondent submits that the concept
of a family of marks was developed in the context of allegations of confusion
and that it is not relevant to the analysis of the registrability of a mark
under paragraph 12(1)(b) of the Act. According to the respondent, the appellant’s
argument is not supported by the case law or the framework of the Act. The
respondent submits that the appellant has not produced any authority in which
the family of marks concept was applied in the analysis of the registrability
of a mark under subsection 12(1) of the Act.
[40]
The respondent also contends that in claiming
that its Mark is inherently distinctive because of the previous use of marks
other than the applied-for mark, the appellant is trying, in a round-about
manner, to claim the exception under subsection 12(2) of the Act. This
subsection permits the registration of a trade-mark that is not registrable by
reason of paragraph 12(1)(a) or (b) of the Act if it has been so
used in Canada by the applicant or his predecessor in title as to have become
distinctive at the date of filing an application for its registration.
According to the respondent, subsection 12(2) of the Act clearly requires that
the mark at issue become distinctive through its own use and not by the use of
associated marks. Thus, the appellant’s situation does not fit the circumstances
set out in subsection 12(2) of the Act and if Parliament had intended to create
another exception, based on the distinctiveness of a mark as the result of the
prior use of a family of marks, it would have expressly done so. According to
the respondent, the appellant’s argument tries to subvert the purpose of the
Act and suggests an approach that is not supported by the Act.
[41]
In the alternative, the respondent maintains
that if the appellant wishes to rely on the family of marks to contradict the ordinary
meaning of the terms comprising the Mark, the new evidence submitted is clearly
insufficient to show that in the mind of the consumer, the word “crémant” could
be associated with cider because of the use of the alleged family of marks.
[42]
On the one hand, the respondent contends that
the appellant cannot rely on a family of marks comprised of only two marks and
moreover the evidence supports the use of only one of the appellant’s two other
marks, namely “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT”. On the other hand, the respondent
contends that the volume of annual sales of an approximate average of 35,000 bottles
per year across Canada, is clearly insufficient to support the existence of a
family of marks with such widespread use that it would have changed consumers’ perception
of the definition of the word “crémant” and the meaning of the expression “crémant
de glace”. The respondent added that there is no evidence of the geographic
distribution of sales across the country nor any details of the nature and
scope of advertising campaigns associated with these marks. It submits that the
evidence is silent as to the impact that these advertising campaigns may have
had on the public’s perception.
[43]
Last, the respondent submits that a significant
distinction should be made between the meaning implied by the Mark (“CRÉMANT DE
GLACE”) and the meaning implied by the appellant’s two other marks. According
to the respondent, adding the expression “de pomme” after the word “crémant” in
the marks “CRÉMANT DE POMME” and “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT” corrects the
deceptively misdescriptive aspect of the use of the word “crémant” by
specifically associating it with apples. The Mark does not have any word that
corrects the ordinary meaning of the word “crémant”, which refers to wine.
C.
Analysis
[44]
The concept of a family of marks was indeed
developed in the context of allegations of possible confusion under section
6 of the Act (Techniquip Ltd v Canadian Olympic Association, [1999]
FCJ No 1787(QL) at paras 15-16, 250 NR 302 [Techniquip]). When the
existence of a family of marks is proven, the marks in question enjoy greater
protection if there is an allegation of confusion. For example, the party
seeking to establish a family of marks must also establish that it owns and
uses a sufficient number of trade-marks to constitute a “family of marks”. The
following excerpt from Gill, Fox on Canadian Law of Trade-marks and Unfair
Competition, loose-leaf (consulted on October 16, 2014), Toronto: Carswell,
2002, v 8 at pp 8-76.1 to 8-76.4 provides a good explanation of
the family of marks doctrine and the burden on the party claiming to own a
family of marks:
The existence of a family of marks [h]as been
held to be a most material consideration when determining a likelihood of
confusion. Generally, where there exists a family of marks, the owner is
entitled to a broader ambit of protection for the common characteristic than
would otherwise be the case if there existed only one registration. A court or
board may conclude that a straight-forward comparison of two competing marks
leads to the conclusion that the trade-marks are not confusing. But, in the
context of a family of trade-marks, there is a greater likelihood than
otherwise would be the case that the public would consider the impugned
trade-mark to signify merely another product manufactured (or service provided)
by the same person or persons who own the family of trade-marks. …
A party seeking to take advantage of the wider
scope of protection accorded to a family of trade-marks must first establish
use of the trade-marks that comprise the family. …
A party seeking to establish use of a family
of marks must also establish that it is using more than one or two
trade-marks within the alleged family. …
Evidence establishing use of the
trade-marks comprising a family of trade-marks includes sales figures,
advertising expenditures or evidence of a progressive expansion of a line of
products featuring trade-marks exhibiting the characteristics that define the
family of trade-marks.
[Emphasis added] (See also Intuit v
Quicklaw Inc, 2002 FCT 633 at paras 30-33, [2002] FCJ No 818).
[45]
In this case, I do not believe it is necessary
to determine whether the concept of a family of marks is relevant to the
analysis of the registrability of a mark under paragraph 12(1)(b) of the
Act because, in my opinion, there is insufficient evidence of the existence of
a family of marks.
[46]
The appellant claims the existence of a family
of marks comprised of two marks “CRÉMANT DE POMME” and “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU
MINOT”. First, in light of the doctrine and case law, a family composed of only
two marks seems insufficient to conclude that the appellant owns a family of
marks. Moreover, the case law submitted by the parties always speaks of
families of marks made up of more than two marks (Christian Dior, SA v Dion
Neckwear Ltd, 2002 FCA 29 at para 1, [2002] 3 FC 405; Techniquip
at para 1; McDonald’s Corp v Yogi Yogurt Ltd (1982), 66 CPR (2d)
101(FCTD) at p 105, [1982] FCJ No 701).
[47]
Second, I find that there is insufficient
evidence of the use of these two marks.
[48]
In his affidavit, Mr. Demoy produced a table indicating
the annual volume of sales (the number of bottles sold and the sales figures)
for the wares associated with the appellant’s two other marks from 1988 to
2005. The only relevant period is the period prior to the application to
register the Mark on April 5, 2005. The table indicates that during this period
the annual volume of sales went from 1,249 bottles in 1998 to
40,195 bottles sold in 2005. The sales were $6,869 in 1998 and
$271,316 in 2005. Mr. Demoy also submitted photos of products with the
mark “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT” and excerpts from advertising brochures.
[49]
Mr. Demoy’s affidavit, just like the table he
submitted, nonetheless does not divide the volume of sales between the products
associated with each of the two marks. Moreover, all the advertising examples
submitted by the appellant involve only one of the marks, “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU
MINOT”. Thus, it is impossible to know what percentage of the sales volume is
associated with each of the two marks. Therefore, I am of the opinion that
there is insufficient evidence to find that the appellant used, before the date
of the registration application, the two other marks.
[50]
The evidence is also silent with regards to the
geographic distribution of the sales of the products associated with each of
the two marks. The same applies to the content of the advertising to promote
the products associated with the marks and the places where the advertising
campaigns were conducted. Thus, I find that even if the appellant had proven
that it used a family of marks and that this evidence were relevant to an
analysis under paragraph 12(1)(b) of the Act, the evidence does not
demonstrate market penetration or sales volumes significant enough to infer
that the average Canadian consumer of the wares at issue is accustomed to
associating the word “crémant” with cider.
[51]
Under such a context, and in light of an insufficient
and incomplete proof of usage, I cannot find that the average consumer who for
the first time would see cider with the Mark “CRÉMANT DE GLACE” would not
be misled about the character of the product because he would have in
mind the marks “CRÉMANT DE POMME” or “CRÉMANT DE POMME DU MINOT” that are
used with respect to cider.
[52]
Thus, I believe that the evidence submitted by
the appellant is not so significant that it would have likely influenced the Board’s
decision. Therefore, the Board’s decision should be reviewed on the standard of
reasonableness.
VI.
Reasonableness of the Board’s Decision
A.
Appellant’s position
[53]
The appellant submits that the Board made errors
in its assessment of the evidence that warrant the Court’s intervention.
[54]
First, it argues that the Board failed to
consider the Mark in its entirety and in context, but rather that it dissected
it and interpreted it out of context.
[55]
To begin, the appellant relies on the following
definition of “crémant” from Le Nouveau Petit Robert dictionary: “n.m.
de crémer – Vin pétillant à mousse légère, Crémant d’Alsace” [[Translation] “noun – to cream – slightly
sparkling wine. Crémant d’Alsace”]. The appellant submits that the Board
wrongly chose to ignore the first definition of the word “crémant”, which
refers to the action of creaming and not to a type of wine. In the appellant’s opinion,
the Board was speculating when it found that that the word “crémant” could only
be associated with wine in the mind of the consumer, when it had no evidence
that it is well known that “crémant”, in the mind of consumers, can only refer
to wine.
[56]
Second, the Board failed to consider that, viewed
in its context, that is of cider and not wine, the Mark was invented and is a
whimsical expression.
[57]
Third, the appellant submits that the Board also
erred by failing to consider that the labels bearing the Mark clearly indicate
that the product is cider and that this labeling is required under the Regulation
respecting cider and other apple-based alcoholic beverages, CQLR, c S-13, r
4.
[58]
The appellant further maintains that the prior
registration of its two other marks with the word “crémant”, in relation to
cider, should have led the Registrar to be consistent and approve the
registration of the Mark.
B.
Respondent’s position
[59]
The respondent submits that the Board’s decision
is reasonable and does not have any errors which would warrant the Court’s
intervention.
[60]
The respondent contends that the Board did not dissect
the Mark but rather that it examined in its entirety the expression comprising
the Mark, specifically the word “crémant” followed by the expression “de glace”,
and that it conducted its review in relation to the wares affected.
[61]
The respondent argues that the evidence that it
submitted, consisting of several dictionary definitions, clearly demonstrates
that the word “crémant”, in its ordinary meaning and in the context of the
wares at issue, refers to a slightly sparkling wine and not cider. The respondent
submits that although there is a second, clearly isolated, definition of the
word “crémant”, it was completely reasonable, under the circumstances, for the
Board to accept the definition that relates to the ordinary meaning applied in
the context of the wares. The respondent further submits that given the
definitions of the expressions “vin de glace” or “cidre de glace”, that
unanimously indicate that the expression “de glace”, when associated with wine
or cider, designates a manufacturing process using naturally frozen fruit, it
was entirely reasonable to find that the expression “crémant de glace” in the
Mark refers to a type of wine made with frozen grapes.
[62]
The respondent also argues that the Board did
not err by refusing to analyze the Mark as it is found on the labels of the
bottles of cider sold by the appellant since the Mark must be reviewed
independently and not in its marketing context.
C.
Analysis
[63]
In Atlantic Promotions Inc v Canada (Registrar
of Trade-marks), [1984] FCJ No 606 (QL), 2 CPR (3d) 183, the Court discussed
the terms used by Parliament in paragraph 12(1)(b) of the Act and set
out the applicable test for determining whether a mark is deceptively
misdescriptive:
In paragraph 12(1)(b) of the Trade-marks
Act the word “clearly” as modifying the word “misdescriptive” has been
replaced by the word “deceptively” so that it now reads “deceptively
misdescriptive”.
The change was deliberate.
Many words may be “clearly misdescriptive” of
the wares with which they are used in association but are not necessarily “deceptively
misdescriptive”.
In my view the proper test to be applied to
the determination as to whether a trade-mark in its entirety is deceptively
misdescriptive must be whether the general public in Canada would be misled
into the belief that the product with which the trade-mark is associated had
its origin in the place of a geographic name in the trade-mark.
Whether a trade-mark is deceptively
misdescriptive is as much a question of fact as is whether one trade-mark is
confusing with another.
[64]
The parties did not disagree on the general
principles that should apply in determining whether a mark is deceptively
misdescriptive and a brief summary of them will suffice.
[65]
In Cliche, Justice De Montigny heard the
appeal from a decision of the Registrar who had rejected the trade-mark
registration on the basis that the proposed trade-mark was clearly descriptive
of the products or services offered. In my opinion, the general principles
applicable to the review of the registrability of a mark that is alleged to be
clearly descriptive are transferable to the review of a mark that is alleged to
be deceptively misdescriptive of the character or quality of the services or
wares for which it is used. I adopt Justice De Montigny’s statements, at paragraphs
21 and 22, where he indicates that in determining the registrability of a
mark, the mark must be assessed in its entirety, in association with the wares
or services intended by the mark, and from the point of view of the first
impression of the average consumer of the wares or services:
21 There is no disagreement between the
parties about that a word or expression must be considered as a matter of first
impression that it creates in its entirety and not dissected to conduct a
meticulous analysis, isolating each word, in the case of an expression. Where the applicant was mistaken, was when he submitted that the
person who must be concerned with the first impression is the person of average
intelligence, without any other qualification.
22 It is well settled that the descriptiveness
of a word or an expression must not be assessed abstractly, but in association
with the wares or services intended by the proposed trade-mark. The mark must be considered from the point of view of the consumer
or average user of the wares or services it is associated with. In other words,
the test is to determine which first impression the word or expression would
have on the average retailer, consumer or user of the type of wares or services
the mark is associated with.
[66]
In its decision, the Board clearly described the
principles guiding its review of the Mark and it did not err when it set out
the applicable test. I find, therefore, that the Board’s consideration of the
evidence was reasonable.
[67]
First, I do not share the appellant’s opinion
that the Board dissected and reviewed the Mark out of context.
[68]
I agree that the Mark is an expression invented
by Mr. Demoy and that the appellant considers it to be whimsical. Moreover, the
appellant submits that the expression comprising the Mark is not part of
ordinary language. However, although it is invented and whimsical, the Mark is
made up of a word “crémant” and an expression “de glace” that are part of
ordinary language, are defined in the dictionaries and, in the context of the wares,
have a well-known ordinary meaning.
[69]
It was not unreasonable for the Board to use
dictionary definitions to determine the meaning of the words comprising the
Mark and then determine the ordinary meaning of the expression created by these
two words, in the context of the wares.
[70]
Case law has recognized the usefulness of referring
to dictionary definitions to determine the meaning of the words comprising a
mark (Molson Companies Ltd v John Labatt Ltd, [1987] FCJ No 1102 (QL) at
para 2, 91 NR 148), even when the expression contains more than one word (Home
Juice Co v Orange Maison Ltée, [1970] S.C.R. 942 at pp 944, 946,
16 DLR (3d) 740).
[71]
Moreover, expert evidence in support of the
definitions is not always helpful and, in this case, I find that such evidence
was not necessary. The following passage from Mövenpick Holding AG v Exxon
Mobil Corp, 2011 FC 1397 at para 23, [2011] FCJ No 1723, applies here:
23 Both sides produced
affidavits from linguists, who were cross-examined.
Their evidence relates to both the clearly descriptive and confusion aspects of
the case. In my opinion, they add little to the debate and would not have
persuaded the Registrar to change her mind. In this case, where the objective
is to assess the meaning of the words “marché express” in the French language
as perceived on first impression by the reasonable everyday user of the
services, expert evidence which mainly consists of a discussion of rules of
grammar, semantics and linguistic constructions regarding the interpretation of
these words is unnecessary and not particularly helpful.
[72]
In this case, other than one isolated
definition, all the definitions of the word “crémant” filed as evidence by the
respondent refer to a type of wine, a slightly sparkling wine. None of the
definitions of the word “crémant” in evidence refer to a more general meaning
that could refer to an alcoholic beverage that could be made with other fruit.
[73]
Furthermore, as seen in the evidence, the
expression “de glace”, associated with cider or wine, designates a cider or
sweet wine made from fruit or fruit juice that has been naturally frozen.
[74]
In light of the definitions in evidence, I find
that it was reasonable for the Board to accept the ordinary meaning of the
words comprising the Mark, specifically a slightly sparkling wine made from
frozen fruit. The word “crémant” and the expression “de glace” each have
an ordinary meaning, and the expression “crémant de glace”, viewed in its
entirety, also has an ordinary meaning. It is clear from the decision that the
Board did not dissect the Mark and that it assessed the word “crémant” when
followed by the expression “de glace” in the context of the wares, ice ciders. Thus,
the Board came to a reasonable conclusion that is based on the evidence when it
stated “the average consumer is more likely than not to
think that the word “crémant” followed by the accepted term “de glace” would
infer its everyday meaning”. Accordingly, it was reasonable to find that
the Mark describes something that it is not.
[75]
This conclusion is not less reasonable because
the word “crémant” can have a second meaning. The definition relied upon by the
appellant and that refers to the action of creaming is an isolated definition
that, moreover, seems quite distant from the context of the wares. Thus, it was
reasonable and not speculative to find that the word “crémant”, in its ordinary
meaning, refers to a type of wine. Given all of the evidence, I believe that
the Board was not obliged to accept an isolated definition. In Ron Matusalem,
as in this case, one of the words comprising the mark had two possible meanings
and the Court ruled that the Board’s decision, in which it chose to give the
expression at issue a meaning based on one of the definitions in evidence, was
reasonable.
[76]
I also believe that it was not unreasonable for
the Board, based on the evidence and common sense, to take judicial notice of
the fact that “ciders and wines are alcoholic drinks
generally sold and promoted by way of the same distribution channels”
(para 22 of the decision). Moreover, Mr. Demoy confirmed that the ciders
bearing the Mark are sold through the Société des alcools du Québec (SAQ). Furthermore,
the evidence included samples of SAQ advertising showing two bottles of cider
and three bottles of wine on the same page. Therefore, it seems reasonable to
me, in light of all the evidence, that the Board found that it deemed “it more probable than not that the Mark would lead people to
wrongly believe that the wares consist in a slightly sparkling wine, fermented
from naturally frozen fruit, whereas these are in fact “apple ciders”.
Thus I find that the Board’s conclusion regarding the deceptive character of
the Mark falls within a range of reasonable conclusions it could have drawn
from the evidence.
[77]
I also find that the Board did not err by
refusing to examine the Mark as it appears on the labels submitted by the
appellant. The appellant submits that the labels clearly indicate that the
product associated with the Mark is cider. I agree with that, but the Mark must
be considered independently and not in the way its owner decides to market and
promote it. The fact that there are regulations governing the marketing of
apple cider does not change the fact that a trade-mark must be reviewed
independently.
[78]
Last, I find that it was reasonable for the
Board to reject the appellant’s argument based on its family of marks. Before
the Board, the appellant’s argument was based solely on the fact that it owned
two other registered marks, without any evidence of the use of these marks.
Merely proving the existence of the appellant’s two other registered marks was
clearly insufficient to prove the use of a family of marks. Moreover, as I have
already stated, in my opinion, even the additional evidence submitted by the
appellant in this appeal is also insufficient to establish a family of marks,
even less a family used to such an extent that it would contradict the first
impression of the average consumer of the wares at issue.
[79]
The situation here differs from the context in Dairy
Farmers of Canada v Hunt-Wesson, Inc, [2000] FCJ No 1112(QL), 186 FTR
93. In that case, the Court dismissed an appeal from a decision of the
Registrar who had held that the mark “Goût de Beurre Comme au Cinéma”, in
relation to popcorn or popping corn, was not clearly descriptive or deceptively
misdescriptive. In the Registrar's view, consumers were accustomed to seeing
the word “butter” with food products that contained no butter. This conclusion
relied on evidence of other trade-marks that have the word “butter” for
products that do not contain butter, advertising campaigns that used slogans
such as “I can’t believe it’s not butter” and “Souvenirs de beurre”, and the
existence of other products with “butter” on the label when the product did not
contain any butter. In my opinion, the evidence of “consumer habits” in that
case was much more substantial than in this case.
[80]
The appellant also raised the importance of the
trade‑marks register being consistent and contended that since its two
other marks containing the word “crémant” in relation to cider had been
registered, the Mark should also be registered. It relied on Rothmans,
Benson & Hedges Inc v RJ Reynolds Tobacco Co, [1993] FCJ No
210 (QL) at para 9, 62 FTR 92). I find that this argument cannot succeed.
[81]
First, the appellant’s two other marks are
comprised of expressions that differ from the Mark because they explicitly
associate the word “crémant” with the word “pomme”. Therefore, I can believe
that in such a context, the first impression of the consumer, who would usually
associate the word “crémant” with sparkling wine, could be modified by the
addition of the word “pomme” so that the consumer would understand that the
product was made with apples and not grapes. The Mark has nothing that would
likely counter the ordinary meaning of the word “crémant”. In my opinion, there
is a significant distinction to be made between the meaning inferred by the
Mark and the meaning inferred by the appellant’s two other marks.
[82]
Second, I share the opinion of my colleague
Justice Martineau, who, in Neptune SA v Canada (Attorney General),
2003 FCT 715 at para 22, 237 FTR 240, stated that “if the
Registrar erred in the past, there is no reason to perpetuate that error”.
[83]
Thus, I find that the Board could reasonably
determine that the expression “CRÉMANT DE GLACE” is deceptively misdescriptive
in relation to the relevant wares, alcoholic drinks, excluding wines and beers,
specifically apple ciders. Its decision is intelligible and articulate. It is
supported by the evidence in the record and falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[84]
For all these reasons, the appeal is dismissed.