Docket: A-113-15
Citation:
2015 FCA 104
CORAM:
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NOËL C.J.
GAUTHIER J.A.
WEBB J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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JAMIESON
LABORATORIES LTD.
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Appellant
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and
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RECKITT
BENCKISER LLC AND RECKITT BENCKISER (CANADA) LIMITED
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Respondents
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
NOËL C.J.
[1]
This is an appeal from a decision (2015 FC 215)
of Brown J. of the Federal Court (the Federal Court judge), wherein he granted
an interlocutory injunction against Jamieson Laboratories Ltd. (Jamieson)
pending disposition of the action brought by Reckitt Benckiser LLC and Reckitt
Benckiser (Canada) Limited (collectively Reckitt) to enforce their “MEGARED”
trade-mark. The injunction prohibits Jamieson from using the word “OMEGARED”
and mandates, on a forthwith basis, the recall of products and other materials
that would offend the terms of the prohibition.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I would uphold the
Federal Court judge’s order subject to allowing a 30-day period in order to
allow Jamieson to comply.
BACKGROUND
[3]
Reckitt Benckiser LLC is the owner of Canadian Trade-mark
Registration No. TMA 793,186 (the Mark), covering use of the word MEGARED
in association with, among other things, supplements containing omega-3 fatty
acids. Reckitt Benckiser (Canada) Limited is the licensee and sole Canadian
distributor of MEGARED products. The MEGARED line of products is made
exclusively from krill oil, which has a red colour and contains omega-3 fatty
acids.
[4]
Jamieson currently markets a line of omega-3
fatty acid products in Canada under the brand “Omega RED”. Though most of the
products in this line are krill oil-based, one of the products is fish
oil-based. Prior to a rebranding effort undertaken in January 2013, a version
of this line of products that included only krill oil had been marketed under
the unregistered trade-mark “Super Krill”.
[5]
The Mark was first registered in Canada in March
2011, back when it was owned by Schiff Nutrition International Inc. (Schiff).
Though Schiff had experienced much success with the Mark and its associated
line of omega-3 products in the United States, it had yet to launch its
products in Canadian stores at that point.
[6]
In Fall 2012, having decided to enter the North
American market, Reckitt engaged both Schiff and Jamieson in acquisition talks.
In December 2012, Reckitt acquired Schiff and terminated discussions with
Jamieson.
[7]
The next month, in January, 2013, Jamieson
decided to undertake the rebranding described in paragraph 4. A particular fish
oil-based product, also red in hue due to its salmon content, was to be added
to the existing line of krill oil-based products that had until then been sold
under the “Super Krill” brand. This new set of products was to be marketed
under the new brand name “Omega RED”. In February, 2013, Jamieson filed a
trade-mark application in Canada for the similar, though not identical “OmegaRed”,
based upon proposed use in association with “vitamins, minerals, nutritional
supplements and dietary supplements”. In June, 2013, Jamieson commenced the
launch of its new “Omega RED” brand name in Canadian stores.
[8]
This launch prompted two warning letters from
Reckitt, which had not yet launched its own MEGARED brand in Canadian stores,
having decided to delay its launch until December 2013/January 2014.
[9]
Jamieson continued to market its “Omega RED”
product line, and, in response, Reckitt filed an action on October 16, 2014
claiming trade-mark infringement and passing off. On November 28, 2014, Reckitt
filed a notice of motion for an interlocutory injunction, which motion the
Federal Court judge allowed on February 20, 2015.
[10]
Jamieson brought an appeal against the
interlocutory injunction on February 27, 2015, and moved on March 2, 2015, for
a stay pending the disposition of the appeal. The stay was granted on March 12,
2015 (2015 FCA 71), on condition that the appeal would be heard on an
accelerated basis.
DECISION OF THE
FEDERAL COURT
[11]
In deciding whether to grant the interlocutory
injunction sought by Reckitt, the Federal Court judge applied the tripartite
test from RJR-McDonald v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1. S.C.R.
311 [RJR-McDonald]. Under this conjunctive test, the moving party
must demonstrate that there is a serious issue to be tried, that irreparable
harm will result to the moving party if the relief is not granted and that the
balance of convenience favours the moving party.
[12]
With respect to the first element, the Federal
Court judge concluded that there was a “very serious issue” to be tried. Having
noted the exclusivity afforded under the Trade-marks Act, .R.S.C, 1985,
c. T-13 [the Act], the Federal Court judge went on to conclude that Jamieson
had undertaken its rebranding effort with the dominant purpose of frustrating
Reckitt’s entry into the Canadian market (reasons at paras. 34 and 45). He
further held that a serious issue arose as to infringement and passing off after
finding it to be likely that Jamieson had deliberately engaged in both (reasons
at paras. 47 to 50).
[13]
With respect to the second element of the RJR-McDonald
test, the Federal Court judge found several forms of irreparable harm. First,
he concluded that, in the absence of an injunction, Reckitt’s damages in the
event of success in the underlying action would be impossible to calculate,
given that Reckitt would never have had the chance to operate its business in
the absence of Jamieson’s infringing behavior (reasons at para. 54). Second, he
concluded that Reckitt would lose goodwill due to a loss of the distinctiveness
of the Mark (reasons at para. 55). Third, he found that customers could develop
quality concerns, as Jamieson’s fish oil-based products could be confused as
members of the MEGARED line, marketed by Reckitt as containing exclusively
krill oil-based products (reasons at para. 58).
[14]
With respect to the third element of the RJR-McDonald
test, the Federal Court judge found that the balance of convenience favoured
Reckitt. In addition to his findings at the serious issue and irreparable harm
stages of the analysis, the Federal Court judge relied on his conclusion that
Jamieson had proceeded with its rebranding activity “eyes wide open” to the
possibility of legal action by Reckitt (reasons at paras. 63 and 64). The
Federal Court judge rejected the argument that rebranding to “Super Krill”
would cause Jamieson irreparable harm (reasons at para. 67). He also rejected
Jamieson’s argument that Reckitt was guilty of delay or laches, holding that
Reckitt’s market entry had been delayed due to valid concerns relating both to
its business environment and legal risks (reasons at para. 65). Ultimately, in
the Federal Court judge’s view, Jamieson was “a likely trade-mark infringer
marketing a likely confusing product” (reasons at para. 67).
POSITION OF THE PARTIES
[15]
Before this Court, Jamieson argues that the
Federal Court judge erred at every step of his application of the RJR-McDonald
test and that his decision must be set aside.
[16]
With respect to whether Reckitt raised a serious
issue to be tried, Jamieson argues that the Federal Court judge committed four
errors of law. First, he erred in assessing Reckitt’s trade-mark infringement
claim under section 19 of the Act. Because the marks at issue were not
identical, the appropriate provisions were section 20 and subsection 6(5)
(Jamieson’s memorandum at paras. 51 and 52). Among other consequences, this
error resulted in a failure to consider the Mark’s inherent distinctiveness and
the extent to which it had become known (Jamieson’s memorandum at paras. 54 and
55). Second, he considered Jamieson’s motive in assessing the infringement
issue, even though mens rea plays no role in this question (Jamieson’s memorandum at para. 77).
Third, he went too far into the merits in his assessment of the infringement
issue, allowing his conclusions to determine the result of his assessment on
the other branches of the RJR-McDonald test (Jamieson’s memorandum at
para. 10). Fourth, he failed to assess Reckitt’s passing off claim to any
extent at all (Jamieson’s memorandum at para. 64).
[17]
With respect to the question whether Reckitt
would suffer irreparable harm without the relief requested, Jamieson argues
that the Federal Court judge was bound by Centre Ice Ltd. v. National Hockey
League et al (1994), 53 C.P.R. (3d) 34 (FCA) [Centre Ice] and that,
had he applied that authority, Reckitt’s failure to produce evidence of, for
instance, price reductions or lost sales, would have been fatal to its claim
(Jamieson’s memorandum at paras. 83 and 88). Absent the clear and specific
evidence required under Centre Ice, the Federal Court judge was in no
position to conclude that the damages cited by Reckitt were truly irreparable
(Jamieson’s memorandum at paras. 88, 90 and 91).
[18]
With respect to the Federal Court judge’s
analysis of the balance of convenience, Jamieson argues that he disregarded its
evidence of harm on the basis of his findings on the merits (Jamieson’s
memorandum at paras. 97and 98). Jamieson also argues that the Federal Court
judge failed to account for the implications of the mandatory nature of the
injunction he issued (Jamieson’s memorandum at para. 102). Finally, Jamieson
argues that the Federal Court judge erred in failing to assess Reckitt’s delay
in asserting its rights, and that this factor should have led the Federal Court
judge to deny the remedy claimed, given its equitable nature (Jamieson’s
memorandum at para. 103).
[19]
For its part, Reckitt argues that Jamieson’s
appeal is premised on a strained reading of the Federal Court judge’s reasons.
If the Federal Court judge went beyond what was required under the RJR-McDonald
test, argues Reckitt, it was only because Jamieson so fiercely contested before
him whether a serious issue had been made out (Reckitt’s memorandum at para.
57).
[20]
Otherwise, Reckitt supports the decision of the
Federal Court judge relying essentially on the reasons that he gave.
Ultimately, the decision was a discretionary one, and Jamieson has provided no
basis to overturn it.
ANALYSIS
[21]
The decision by a Federal Court judge whether to
grant an interlocutory injunction is a discretionary one. As this Court has
recently held, such decisions ought to be reviewed within the general appellate
framework set out in Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R.
235 [Housen] (Imperial Manufacturing Group Inc. and Home Depot of
Canada Inc. v. Decor Grates Incorporated, 2015 FCA 100 at paras. 18 and
19). As a decision on a question of mixed fact and law, the Federal Court
judge’s decision can only be set aside, absent an error on an extricable
question of law, if he committed a palpable and overriding error (Housen
at para. 36).
[22]
The Federal Court judge correctly identified the
tripartite test from RJR-McDonald as the one governing the dispute
before him. Neither party disputes this authority. The issue is whether the
test was properly applied.
[23]
The threshold the moving party must meet in
establishing a serious issue is a low one. Unless it can be shown that the
moving party’s arguments are either frivolous or vexatious, a serious issue
will be made out (RJR-McDonald at para. 55).
[24]
Jamieson does not argue before this Court that
Reckitt’s motion is frivolous or vexatious. Nor does it argue that the Federal
Court judge erred in finding otherwise. Rather, it argues that the Federal
Court judge delved too far into the merits of the underlying action, that his
analysis on the merits was flawed and that his determinations on these points
controlled his analysis of the other two branches of the RJR-McDonald test.
[25]
I accept that the Federal Court judge went too
far in assessing the merits of Reckitt’s case. As a general rule, the question
whether a serious issue exists should be answered on the basis of no more than
an “extremely limited review of the case” (RJR-McDonald
at para. 55). In an interlocutory matter such as this one, the
underlying dispute remains to be decided, and judges sitting on such matters
should generally avoid wading any further into that underlying dispute than is
strictly necessary to deal with the matter before them. In particular, the
finding that “Jamieson is a likely trade-mark infringer
marketing a likely confusing product”, although made in the context of
the balance of convenience analysis, goes beyond the bounds of necessity
(reasons at para. 67).
[26]
That said, I am satisfied that the Federal Court
judge’s reasons, in their substance if not their explicit form, provide a
sufficient basis for concluding that Reckitt has made out a serious issue of
potential trade-mark infringement (reasons at paras. 29 and 50). I need not
consider the Federal Court judge’s additional comments on the question of
passing off as the demonstration of a single serious issue suffices to meet
this part of the test (Canada (Attorney General) v. Simon, 2012 FCA 312
at para. 34).
[27]
If, as Jamieson argues, the Federal Court judge
permitted his extensive analysis of the merits to predetermine or taint his
consideration of the questions of irreparable harm or balance of convenience,
it is at these later stages of the analysis that this argument must be
addressed.
[28]
Turning to irreparable harm, I do not believe
that the Federal Court judge erred in determining that such harm would befall
Reckitt in the absence of the relief requested. I need only observe that
Reckitt’s contention that its potential harm would be impossible to quantify
has not been undermined by Jamieson’s submissions.
[29]
Jamieson’s reliance on Centre Ice is
misplaced given the facts of this case, wherein the party seeking to enforce
its trade-mark entered the market in question after the alleged infringer. It
of course makes no practical sense to require a plaintiff to demonstrate such
damages as lost sales or price reductions when the only market environment in
which the plaintiff has ever operated has been one in which the alleged
infringer has operated as well.
[30]
Jamieson’s only argument in respect of this
point of distinction is that any difficulty in comparing Reckitt’s sales from
before and after Jamieson’s use of the Mark could have been avoided had Reckitt
sued earlier. This discloses no reversible error. Although I accept that a
delay in proceeding may operate against the moving party, this involves an
exercise of discretion which was open to the Federal Court judge on the facts
before him.
[31]
With respect to Jamieson’s argument that the
Federal Court judge erred in relying on jurisprudence from the quia timet setting,
his reasons disclose that he did so only to illustrate and affirm the general
principle that, where there is no possibility of quantifying a party’s losses,
those losses can be considered irreparable (reasons at para. 53). In this
respect, Jamieson has not demonstrated that the Federal Court judge erred in
determining that Reckitt’s losses would be incalculable, and therefore
irreparable, should it succeed in the underlying action.
[32]
Finally, it has not been shown that the Federal
Court judge erred in determining that the balance of convenience favours
Reckitt.
[33]
Central to Jamieson’s submissions on this point
is the assertion that the Federal Court judge disregarded its evidence of harm and
failed to undertake the required risk-balancing exercise (Jamieson’s memorandum
at paras. 95 and 96). Jamieson attributes this oversight to the Federal Court
judge’s erroneous insistence that Jamieson was a “likely trade-mark infringer”
and that it had proceeded with its “eyes wide open” to the possibility of
Reckitt’s taking legal action (Ibidem at para. 95).
[34]
This submission does not confront the Federal
Court judge’s conclusion that Jamieson failed to demonstrate that the harm that
it would suffer, if the injunction sought was issued, would be irreparable
(reasons at para. 67). Specifically, he did not accept Jamieson’s assertion
that it would be impossible to revert to marketing its “Super Krill” brand.
[35]
As was found by the Federal Court judge, the
potential harm resulting from reverting to “Super Krill” is compensable by way
of damages. Given that Reckitt has made an undertaking to cover such damages
and that this undertaking remains unchallenged, Jamieson is assured of being
made whole if successful on the merits.
[36]
Finally, I accept that not all the potential harm
pled by Jamieson is associated with reverting to the “Super Krill” brand.
Specifically, Jamieson also argued that the potential harm resulting from
consumers’ health concerns and from reputational loss vis-à-vis Jamieson’s
retail partners arose from a different concern, being the “forthwith” nature of
the injunction sought. As outlined in the prior decision granting the stay, I
accept that reputational damages of an irreparable nature could result from a
precipitated removal of the products in question. This, however, goes to the
terms of implementation of the order, rather than its issuance. The Federal
Court judge focused his attention on the latter as did the parties before him.
However, I am satisfied that had he been pressed to address this discrete issue,
he would have provided for a period of implementation.
[37]
For the foregoing reasons, I would dismiss the
appeal, subject to varying the terms of the order so as to remove the word
“forthwith” from paragraph 2 and substitute the words “within 30 days from the
date of the order as varied on appeal”. Reckitt shall be entitled to its costs.
“Marc Noël”
“I agree
Johanne
Gauthier J.A.”
“I agree
Wyman W.
Webb J.A.”