Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

Yves Gastebled (Plaintiff)
v.
Joseph Stuyck and Paul Malhame (Defendants)
Trial Division, Walsh J.—Montreal, October 1; Ottawa, November 5, 1973.
Trade marks—Passing-off—Damages—No actual dam- age—Sufficiency of general damages—Referee's award— Appeal.
Defendants were restrained from operating a restaurant in Montreal under the name "Le Petit Navire" near plaintiff's restaurant "Le Petit Havre" and $300 damages were award ed by a referee, no actual damage having been proved.
Held, on appeal of the referee's report, the referee's award was adequate.
REVIEW re damages. COUNSEL:
Pierre Lamontagne for plaintiff. Robert Loulou for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Laing, Weldon and Courtois & Co., Mon- treal, for plaintiff.
R. Loulou, Montreal, for defendants.
WALSH J.—This matter came before me by way of an appeal under the provisions of Rule 506 of the Rules of this Court from the report of the Honourable Deputy Judge Jean St-Ger- main, acting in his capacity as duly appointed referee to determine the amount of the damages to be paid by defendants to plaintiff in accord ance with the judgment of Mr. Justice Pratte dated January 26, 1973 granting an injunction restraining defendants from exploiting at num bers 427, 429 and 437 St. Vincent Street in Montreal a restaurant under the name of "Le Petit Navire" or "Petit Navire". The report of the referee fixed the nominal damages suffered by plaintiff in the amount of $300 and the appeal is based on the contention that the report should have granted, in addition to nominal damages, general or exemplary damages and further that plaintiff's attorney did not, during his argument before the referee, state that plain tiff could only claim nominal damages but, on
the contrary, specifically contended that plain tiff had the right to general and exemplary dam ages. The decision of the referee does contain this statement:
[TRANSLATION] On the other hand plaintiff's attorney declared during his argument that in view of the proof made his client could only have the right to nominal damages.
This followed a sentence referring to the fact that the plaintiff when he appeared as a witness admitted that he could not establish any special damages resulting from the exploitation by defendants of the restaurant near his restaurant known as "Le Petit Havre".
Plaintiff contends that although he could not establish special damages he is not limited to nominal damages but is also entitled under the heading of general damages to exemplary or punitive damages. There is no doubt that the jurisprudence permits this although an analysis of the authorities and cases to which I was referred confirms that the quantum of such damages is always a matter for the discretion of the tribunal. Thus, Fox in his text The Canadian Law of Trade Marks and Unfair Competition, 3rd ed., states at page 647:
A plaintiff need not prove damages specifically in order to obtain more than nominal damages.
and again at page 649, referring to the well known case of Bakhshi Singh h v. Hall 0940] 3 W.W.R. 481, 2 Fox Pat. C. 1 at 7) he states:
Difficulty in assessing damages does not relieve the court from the duty of assessing them and doing the best it can.
He also refers, at page 650 to the case of Greenglass v. Brown ((1962) 24 Fox Pat. C. 21) as authority for the proposition that the court also has a discretion to award a successful plaintiff only nominal damages. In . that case, however, it was established that although there was a confusion in the names, the two busi nesses in question were actually non-competi tive which is not the situation in the present case.
Plaintiff also made reference to the case of Underwriters' Survey Bureau Limited v. Massie & Renwick Limited [1942] Ex.C.R. 1 where the report of a referee awarding the sum of $5,000 as nominal and exemplary damages was increased on appeal to the Court which allowed $10,000 as exemplary damages. That judgment at page 4 referred to defendant's infringement of copyright "..., over a period of years, with deliberation, with persistency, with premeditated secrecy ...". It also referred at page 5 to the fact that "... plaintiffs must have been put to much annoyance, inconvenience and disturbance, in the conduct of their busi nesses during the course of the litigation, which extended over a very lengthy period. This action the defendant resisted most strenuously at every step; it never approached the plaintiffs with a suggestion of any kind of a settlement, nor did it ever intimate, so far as I know, its willingness to abandon its infringements". I was also referred to the case of Standard Industries Ltd. v. Rosen 14 Fox Pat. C. 173 where it is stated at page 186: "But the inability to show exact damages does not bar the plaintiff's recovery". The judgment allowed $2,000 gener al damages but then continued to allow an ad ditional $5,000 by way of exemplary damages because the judgment of the Court had been flouted. In the present case the injunction was complied with and in fact, according to defend ants' attorney, the offending sign was removed before the injunction actually took effect and despite defendants' appeal, which defendants later desisted from. While it is true that some four months after the judgment granting the injunction plaintiff made a motion for the incarceration of defendants for failing to comply with it, the judgment on this motion stated:
[TRANSLATION] As it seems that defendants conformed sub stantially with the injunction pronounced by the Court and as the actions which plaintiff complains of could result from a mistake on their part, a mistake which plaintiff could have dissipated himself without having recourse to the Court, the Court dismisses this motion without costs.
With respect to the argument that defendants were written a letter by plaintiff's attorneys
before they opened their restaurant called "Le Petit Navire" requiring them to choose another name for their restaurant, and that their failure to comply with this shows bad faith on their part and aggravates the damages as they cannot claim innocent infringement, it may be said that this is in no way similar with failing to comply with an order of the Court or an injunction. While there is no evidence that they sought legal advice and were advised to persist in the use of this name as it would not infringe that used by plaintiff, they were nevertheless not obliged to cease doing so merely on plaintiff's demand and were entitled to continue to do so until restrained by the Court. They made a valid and serious contestation of plaintiff's action, as it was their legal right to do, and although they were eventually unsuccessful in same, I do not believe that in this case their infringement was so self-evident as to find that their use of the name until restrained from doing so and their contestation of plaintiff's action constituted an aggravation of the damages or need result in substantial exemplary or punitive damages.
Certainly plaintiff, although he could not establish special damages, was entitled to gener al damages and the amount of same need not be so small as to be considered as nominal dam ages only. On the other hand, the punitive or exemplary element in such general damages need not, in my view, be very large in this case. Plaintiff has accomplished the main purpose of the litigation, namely obliging defendants to desist from the use of the offending and con flicting name. In addition to the damages, the costs which have already been taxed against defendants on May 28, 1973 in the amount of $1,067 are substantial.
It is unfortunate that the learned referee in making his report referred to an alleged admis sion which plaintiff's attorney now denies to the effect that plaintiff could only claim nominal damages. However, even if this admission was not made, a reading of the report as a whole
indicates that all relevant evidence was consid ered before the amount of damages was fixed at $300. Reference is made to the fact that the name chosen by defendants was offensive not only because of the name "Le Petit Navire" conflicted with plaintiff's restaurant "Le Petit Havre" but also because defendants' restaurant was in a building formerly occupied by that of plaintiff. Reference was also made to the warn ing letter sent by plaintiff's attorneys to defend ants before they opened their restaurant requir ing them to desist from the use of the name. The report then concludes that taking all this into consideration:
[TRANSLATION] ... the nominal damages suffered by plain tiff should be evaluated at $300.
Again the use of the word "nominal" may be unfortunate if it was intended to use same in contradistinction to the word "exemplary". While it might perhaps have been preferable to refer to the amount awarded as "general dam ages" which would then include both nominal and exemplary, I am inclined to think that read ing the report as a whole it was intended to find that the sum of $300 was adequate, even though this might be a "nominal" sum.
Another consideration should, I believe, be mentioned. The referee was in this case a distin guished and experienced retired Justice of the Quebec Court of Appeal and while he was in this matter acting as a referee rather than as a Judge, it is well established that an appeal tri bunal should not interfere with the decision of a lower tribunal on a question of fact alone and that if that tribunal has the right to exercise discretion, the exercise of this discretion should not be interfered with unless there is a manifest error in law. Plaintiff's attorney contended that there was such an error in law in that exemplary damages should have been awarded in addition to nominal damages. I believe, however, that the essential issue before the referee was to evalu ate the damages resulting from the infringement by defendants of plaintiff's rights and the amount of $300 allowed represents a proper exercise of this discretion even though this amount was perhaps erroneously referred to as "nominal". Whether or not sitting in the first
instance on the matter I would have allowed $300, $500, $1,000 or even $1,500 is not really in issue. Even if it were found that the learned referee made an error in law in appraising these damages, it would still be necessary in order to set aside his report to conclude that, as a result of this error, he arrived at a manifestly wrong and inadequate amount. I do not so find and hence I dismiss the appeal and confirm the report of the referee, although under the cir cumstances I will allow no costs on the dismis sal of this appeal.
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