Date: 20090505
Docket: A-482-08
Citation: 2009 FCA 144
CORAM: LINDEN J.A.
SEXTON
J.A.
LAYDEN-STEVENSON
J.A.
BETWEEN:
PHARMACOMMUNICATIONS HOLDINGS
INC.
Appellant
and
AVENCIA INTERNATIONAL INC., JASON LEWIS,
DONALD LAJOIE
AND GREGORY KOCHIK
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT OF THE
COURT
(Delivered from the Bench at Toronto, Ontario, on May 5, 2009)
SEXTON
J.A.
[1]
This
is an appeal by PharmaCommunications Holdings from an order of Deputy Justice
Frenette, dismissing its application for a declaration and a permanent
injunction in respect of its claim that Avencia International had engaged in
statutory passing-off (2008 FC 828).
[2]
PharmaCommunications Holdings, the appellant, was incorporated in
1995. It claims to have owned the unregistered trademarks
“PharmaCommunications” and “Pharmacommunications” since its incorporation. It
claims it has licensed these trademarks to PharmaCommunications Group
Inc./Group PharmaCommunications Inc. (PGI), a related company also incorporated
in 1995. The appellant asserts that it or its predecessors have used those
marks since 1982.
[3]
Avencia International, the corporate respondent,
was incorporated in 2004. It registered the business name “Pharmacomm” in
December 2004 under the Business Names Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. B.17, and
carries on business in Ontario
under that name. The parties dispute the nature of one another’s businesses,
but in our view the precise characterization of either is not relevant to this
appeal. It suffices to say that both parties provide services to the
pharmaceutical industry.
[4]
The appellant made an application to the Federal
Court for a declaration that 1) it was the owner of the unregistered trademark
“PharmaCommunications”; 2) that the corporate and individual respondents have
engaged in statutory passing-off as defined by paragraph 7(b) of the Trade-marks
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. T-13 (“the Act”); and 3) that the respondents’
business name was confusingly similar to the appellant’s trademark. The
appellant also sought a permanent injunction restraining the respondents from
using any confusing trade names, trademarks, or business names, in particular
“Pharmacomm” and “PharmaComm”, and other relief. The application also named
three individuals who the appellant claimed were directors or officers of
Avencia International, although their personal liability is disputed.
[5]
The
applications judge dealt only with the main issue, whether the respondents were
liable for statutory passing-off. After reviewing the evidence and arguments put forth by the
parties, he concluded that the application failed because the appellant had not
adduced any evidence of actual or potential damage, a necessary element of a
claim for statutory passing-off. He therefore did not consider whether the
appellant had a valid trademark, whether it had established goodwill, or
whether there had been deception of the public due to a misrepresentation. It
was also unnecessary to address the test for an injunction, or the liability of
the individual respondents.
[6]
The main issue in this appeal is whether the applications judge
applied the correct test to the claim under paragraph 7(b) of the Act.
Specifically, in the present case, this involves determining whether it is
necessary in a passing-off action for the plaintiff to establish actual or
potential damage as a result of the alleged infringement. This is an issue of
law reviewable by this court on a standard of correctness (Housen v.
Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235 at para. 8). Although
the appellant raised other issues, unless it is successful on this issue, the
court need not address the other subsidiary issues raised by the appellant.
[7]
The appellant argues that the applications judge
erred by applying the common law test to a statutory claim for passing-off. In
its submission, paragraph 7(b) does not require that the court find actual or
potential damage to the claimant. It acknowledges that this court held
otherwise in BMW Canada Inc. v. Nissan Canada Inc., 2007 FCA 255,
380 N.R. 147 at para. 30, but argues that that case should not be followed.
[8]
However,
the appellant has not demonstrated that BMW Canada was manifestly wrong.
Paragraph 7(b) of the Act is a codification of the common law of passing-off, and there are no longer any
“significant differences” between the statute and the common law (Kelly Gill
and R. Scott Joliffe, eds., Fox on Canadian Law of Trade-Marks and Unfair
Competition, 4th ed., looseleaf (Toronto: Thomson Carswell,
2002) at §4.1 and §4.2(e)).
[9]
In Ciba-Geigy v. Apotex Inc., [1992] 3
S.C.R. 120 at 132, the Supreme Court established a tripartite test for
establishing passing-off: 1) the existence of goodwill; 2) the deception of the
public due to a misrepresentation; and 3) actual or potential damage to the
plaintiff. Although Ciba-Geigy was a common law passing-off case, this
test has been applied by the Federal Court in numerous statutory claims (see
for example Prince Edward Island Mutual Insurance v. Insurance Co. of Prince
Edward Island (1999), 159 F.T.R. 112 at para. 26 (T.D.), aff’d (2000), 9
C.P.R. (4th) 520 (F.C.A.)).
[10]
More recently, in Kirkbi AG v. Ritvik
Holdings Inc., 2005 SCC 65, [2005] 3 S.C.R. 302 at para. 66, the Supreme
Court affirmed the tripartite test, including the requirement of actual or
potential damage (at para. 66). It also confirmed that the same principles
inform both the common law and the statute (at para. 63).
[11]
This
court’s decision in BMW Canada is thus consistent with the Supreme
Court’s jurisprudence on passing-off and we are of the view that it should be
followed.
[12]
Alternatively,
the appellant argues that it is unnecessary to lead evidence of actual or
potential damage, and that the court is entitled to presume damages where a
likelihood of confusion has been demonstrated. However, this argument was also
rejected in BMW Canada at paras. 33-35. The appellant has not given any
reason why BMW Canada should not be followed for this proposition. It
has also not challenged the finding below that it led no evidence of actual or
potential damage. Therefore, it is evident that its claim for statutory
passing-off cannot succeed. This is sufficient to dispose of the appeal.
[13]
We
would therefore dismiss the appeal, with costs to the respondents.
“J. Edgar Sexton”
FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: A-482-08
(AN APPEAL FROM THE ORDER OF THE
HONOURABLE MR. ORVILLE FRENETTE, OF THE FEDERAL COURT, DATED JULY 2, 2008, IN
FEDERAL COURT DOCKET NO. T-2278-06.)
STYLE OF CAUSE: PHARMACOMMUNICATIONS HOLDINGS
INC. v. AVENCIA
INTERNATIONAL INC., JASON LEWIS, DONALD LAJOIE
AND GREGORY KOCHIK
PLACE OF HEARING: TORONTO, ONTARIO
DATE OF HEARING: MAY 5, 2009
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT OF THE COURT BY: (LINDEN, SEXTON & LAYDEN-STEVENSON JJ.A.)
DELIVERED FROM THE BENCH BY: SEXTON J.A.
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Bigioni
|
FOR THE APPELLANT
|
Mr. MacKeigan
|
FOR THE RESPONDENTS
|
|
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Bigioni LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
Markham, ON
|
FOR THE
APPELLANT
|
Siskinds LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
London, ON
|
FOR THE
RESPONDENTS
|