Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-4267-82
Mayborn Products Limited (Appellant)
v.
Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent)
and
Gowling & Henderson (Requesting Party)
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Ottawa, January 24 and February 22, 1983.
Trade marks — Appeal from Registrar's decision expunging trade mark for non-user following s. 44 notice — Use of mark by subsidiary of registered owner not use by latter "Requesting party" designation in style of cause not constitut ing person so described party to appeal — On appeal, proper designation of "requesting party" "appellant", or joined as "respondent" — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 37(9) (as added by S.C. 1976-77, c. 28, s. 44), 44(1),(2),(4),(5), 56 — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 1716(2)(b).
Practice — Parties — Trade marks — "Requesting party" designation in style of cause not constituting person so described party to appeal — On appeal, proper designation of "requesting party" having initiated s. 44 inquiry, "appellant", or joined as "respondent" — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 37(9) (as added by S.C. 1976-77, c. 28, s. 44), 44(1),(2),(4),(5), 56 — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 1716(2)(6).
The Registrar of Trade Marks, acting under section 44 of the Act, expunged the appellant's mark "Dylon Paintex" for non user. The question, on appeal, was whether use of the trade mark in Canada by a subsidiary is "use" within the meaning of the Act.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed. Use by a subsidiary, if it is not carrying on business as agent of the parent company owner of the trade mark and described as such, is not use by the latter, especially if, as in the present case, the relevant inscription is only susceptible of conveying to the consumer that the subsidiary is the owner of the mark. There is therefore a complete lack of evidence of use of the mark by its registered owner in Canada because the direct chain of selling and delivering the wares in the normal course of trade, which would constitute "use" in Canada, has been broken by the insertion of the subsidiary without identifying it as a mere conduit from the registered owner to the consumer.
The parties to an appeal from a decision under section 44 should be designated as follows: the registered owner, when his trade mark has been ordered to be expunged, "appellant", the Registrar, "respondent", and the "requesting party" who ini tiated the inquiry under subsection 44(1), if the appellant so desires, may be joined as "respondent". If the decision is adverse to the interests of the requesting party, the latter may
appeal as "appellant". "Appellants" and "respondents" are the only categories of parties on such an appeal. The designation of a person as "requesting party" does not constitute such person party to this appeal.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Ports International Limited v. Registrar of Trade Marks (order dated July 22, 1982, Federal Court—Trial Divi sion, T-59-82, not yet reported); Lindy v. Registrar of Trade Marks, [1982] 1 F.C. 241; 57 C.P.R. (2d) 127 (T.D.); Manhattan Industries Inc. v. Princeton Manufac turing Ltd. (1972), 4 C.P.R. (2d) 6 (F.C.T.D.); Uarco Incorporated v. Phil Borden Limited, [1973] F.C. 650; 10 C.P.R. (2d) 97 (T.D.).
NOT FOLLOWED:
Parker-Knoll Ltd. v. Registrar of Trade Marks (1977), 32 C.P.R. (2d) 148 (F.C.T.D.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Marchands Ro -Na Inc. v. Tefal S.A. (1981), 55 C.P.R. (2d) 27 (F.C.T.D.).
CONSIDERED:
Galuga v. Registrar of Trade Marks et al. (order dated March 30, 1983, Federal Court—Trial Division, T-6647-82, not yet reported).
REFERRED TO:
Good Humor Corporation of America v. Good Humor Food Products Limited et al., [1937] Ex.C.R. 61.
COUNSEL:
Robert Gould for appellant.
Michael Ciavaglia for respondent.
No one appearing on behalf of requesting
party.
SOLICITORS:
Smart & Biggar, Ottawa, for appellant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for request ing party.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
CATTANACH J.: As is indicated in the style of cause this is an appeal pursuant to section 56 of the Trade Marks Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10] from a decision of the Registrar of Trade Marks under section 44 of that Act, exercised by the Registrar through delegation to an Opposition Board under the authority of subsection 37(9) [as added by
S.C. 1976-77, c. 28, s. 44], whereby the Registrar concluded that the appellant, as the registered owner of the trade mark here in question, had failed to establish that the trade mark had been used by it in Canada as it is required to do in response to a notice served upon it pursuant to subsection 44(1) of the Act and accordingly the Registrar held that the trade mark shall be expunged.
The appellant, Mayborn Products Limited, whose address is Worsley Bridge Road, Lower Sydenham, London, SE 26 5HD, England, is the registered owner of the trade mark "Dylon Pain - tex" for use in association with "paints, dyes, colouring materials, ingredients thereof and addi tives therefore". I have taken the liberty of insert ing a comma after the word "dyes" and the words "colouring materials" because the context so dic tates even though in the trade mark as registered these commas are omitted (which corresponds with the statement of wares in the application for regis tration in Canada) but they are not omitted from the certified copy dated December 4, 1973 of the pending application before the Trade Mark Regis try in Great Britain which application matured into registration on June 16, 1972 and which is the priority filing date claimed in the application for registration in Canada. Likewise the concluding word in the statement of wares should read "there- for" rather than "therefore".
The trade mark registration, which was applied for in Canada on August 21, 1972, was registered on August 2, 1974.
By notice dated March 24, 1981 pursuant to section 44 of the Act addressed to the registered owner and its agent for service the Registrar required the registered owner to establish by affidavit or statutory declaration whether the trade mark is in use in Canada and, if not, the date when it was last so used and the reason for the absence of such use since that date.
This request was made by Gowling and Hender- son, Barristers and Solicitors, as well as Patent and
Trade Mark Agents, Toronto, Ontario on Febru- ary 24, 1981, most likely on behalf of a client.
In the style of cause Gowling and Henderson are named as a party identified as "Requesting Party". I am not aware of any such category of party to a statement of claim, a declaration, notice of appeal or in the style of cause in any like originating document.
In statements of claim and counterclaims there are plaintiffs and defendants. In some instances where a defendant alleges a claim over against another person in the event of the defendant being found liable to the plaintiff there may be a claim over by the defendant against a third party. Spe cific rules govern third party proceedings.
Deceased persons and persons under a disability may sue as plaintiffs or be sued as defendants through a representative who discloses that repre sentative capacity.
Generally in common law and chancery matters a plaintiff who conceives that he has a cause of action against a defendant is entitled to pursue his remedy against that party alone. He cannot be compelled to proceed against other persons whom he has no desire to sue except in the circumstances contemplated in Rule 1716(2)(b) [of the Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] and then only as a defendant but there can be no joinder as a plaintiff without that party's consent.
There are certain statutes which require that specified persons shall be plaintiffs and if they declined to do so they may be added as a defend ant, not as a plaintiff, and in other instances provision is made that specified persons shall be named as defendants. I have in mind the Patent Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4] and the Canada Ship ping Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. S-9] respectively.
In notices of appeal the parties are appellants and respondents. These are the only categories of parties.
Thus it is the plaintiff or appellant who names the parties whom he desires as defendants or respondents.
If others wish to be joined as defendants they must initiate the application to be so joined and the same applies to respondents to a notice of appeal or for intervenants.
While intervenants may participate they are, by practice, precluded from receiving an award of costs.
The categories mentioned, in the absence of special provisions in Rules or statutes, are the only categories of parties and, in my view, it is improp er to name a person in the style to a statement of claim or notice of appeal without designating the capacity in which that party is so named.
In appeals from decisions from the Registrar of Trade Marks under section 44 of the Trade Marks Act counsel in the present matter indicated that uncertainty and divergent views existed in the profession and requested clarification.
The registered owner of the trade mark which the Registrar has found not to be in use or that there has been no satisfactory explanation for an absence of use pursuant to a request under subsec tion 44(1) and the trade mark has been ordered to be expunged may appeal that decision in the capacity of an "appellant" naming the Registrar as a "respondent" in the notice of appeal.
In my view naming the Registrar in the capacity of a "respondent" should not be disturbed, that practice having prevailed for decades both in the United Kingdom and Canada.
The difficulty arises as to whether the "request- ing party" who initiated an inquiry under subsec tion 44(1) should be added as a party and if so in what capacity.
In numerous instances, where the decision by the Registrar has been adverse to the interests of the requesting party, the requesting party has filed a notice of appeal from that decision in the capaci ty of an "appellant". In my opinion it is quite proper for the requesting party to do so and to do so in that capacity.
That being so it is, in my opinion, equally proper that the requesting party should be joined with the
Registrar as a "respondent" (and that is the only category in which the requesting party can be joined) by the registered owner who appeals a decision by the Registrar as an "appellant" if the appellant so desires.
The view to the contrary is predicated upon the remarks made by my brother Walsh in Parker- Knoll Ltd. v. Registrar of Trade Marks ((1977), 32 C.P.R. (2d) 148 [F.C.T.D.]).
Parker-Knoll Ltd. was the registered owner of a trade mark ordered to be expunged for failure to establish use of the trade mark in response to a notice sent to the registered owner at the written request of Knoll International Inc. by its trade marks agent.
Parker-Knoll Ltd. was the appellant and the Registrar was named as the respondent. These were the only two parties named in the notice of appeal.
At pages 155-156 Walsh J. said:
At the hearing the respondent, the Registrar of Trade Marks, was not represented but Knoll International Inc. who had requested the Registrar to issue the s. 44 notice December 9, 1975, were represented by counsel and opposed the appeal. While they are quite properly not parties to the proceedings, s. 44(2) while limiting the evidence which the Registrar can consider to the affidavit or statutory declaration of the owner nevertheless permits representations to be made not only on behalf of the registered owner but also on behalf of the person at whose request the notice was given. I believe, therefore, that it is proper that the said Knoll International Inc. should be represented by counsel and permitted to make representations at the hearing of the appeal. In the absence of representations on behalf of the Registrar I believe that it is a necessary consequence of the adversary system, as well as a logical extension of the provisions of s. 44(2) to permit Knoll Interna tional Inc. to make such representations, defending the Regis trar's decision to expunge the trade mark in question, and appellant did not object to this.
With respect and deference to my brother Walsh I do not agree with his statement that:
While they (Knoll International Inc. parenthetically inserted by myself) are quite properly not parties to the proceedings ...
as inconsistent with the course he adopted and the statutory provisions upon which he relied to sup port that statement.
If Knoll International Inc. was not a party to the appeal I fail to follow by what authority it could be represented by counsel and make representa tions at the hearing.
Subsection 44(2) to which Walsh J. referred provides that the registered owner only shall file an affidavit or statutory declaration. That is a strict limitation on the evidence to be placed before the Registrar. But the subsection permits the hearing of representations by or on behalf of the registered owner and by or on behalf of the person at whose request the notice was granted.
By reason of that provision Walsh J. permitted Knoll International Inc. to exercise the rights of a party. In my view if it is proper for the requesting party to exercise those rights it is equally proper and more consistent and logical that Knoll Inter national Inc. be named as a respondent before exercising those same rights on appeal either on its own motion or on motion by the judge himself. The fact that the appellant did not object to the requesting party participating and being represent ed by counsel on appeal does not make that pro ceeding proper.
Subsection 44(2) contemplates a lis, or at the very least a quasi -lis, before the Registrar, the divergent interests having been those of the regis tered owner and the person at whose request the notice was given to the registered owner by the Registrar.
Subsection 44(4) requires that the Registrar shall give notice of his decision to the registered owner and to the person at whose request the notice was given to the registered owner by the Registrar. Normally notice is not given in a lis or quasi -lis to a person who does not have the attri butes of a party thereto and no logical exception appears to prevail here.
Subsection 44(5) dictates the action by the Reg istrar if no appeal is taken from his decision. That appeal is not limited to one party to the lis. Either the registered owner or the party at whose request the notice was given may be the appellant and since that be so either may be named as a respond ent along with the Registrar.
No other case was cited to me nor am I aware of any in which that statement by Mr. Justice Walsh was followed or approved.
On the other hand in Ports International Lim ited v. Registrar of Trade Marks [order dated July 22, 1982, Federal Court—Trial Division, T-59-82, not yet reported] Ports International was named as the appellant and the Registrar was named as the respondent. There were no other parties named. It was therein stated [at page 4]:
I know of no manner in which a person who is not a party to the action can participate therein.
That being so I fail to follow how the "Requesting Party" may make a reply to a notice of appeal in which it is not named as a respondent and should be granted an extension of time to do so as the notice of motion seeks.
In Galuga v. Registrar of Trade Marks et al. [order dated March 30, 1983, Federal Court— Trial Division, T-6647-82, not yet reported] the registered owner of a trade mark appealed from a decision of the Registrar expunging the trade mark naming only the Registrar as respondent.
Counsel for John S. Lockhart, on whose behalf counsel had requested the Registrar to serve the owner with a notice under subsection 44(1), by notice of motion applied for leave to participate in the appeal and to be added to the style of cause as a respondent. An order to that effect with conse quential rights following thereupon was granted.
The practice has developed that patent agents who practice before the Registrar make written requests on behalf of undisclosed clients to the Registrar under subsection 44(1) that notice be given to the registered owner of a trade mark requiring the owner to establish use of the trade marks or justification for failing to do so.
In such circumstances the patent agent, being the agent of an undisclosed principal, it may well follow that the patent agent can be named as a respondent in the capacity of principal under the ordinary principles of agency with the consequence which may flow therefrom.
In the present instance Gowling and Henderson are named in the style of cause as "Requesting Party". I do not recognize that designation as constituting the person so described as a party to the appeal. For that to be the case the designation should have been as a "respondent". That party, however designated, did not appear or participate in the proceedings.
The appellant responded to the notice from the Registrar pursuant to section 44 by affidavit sworn by William Thomas Stone based upon his personal knowledge as a director of the appellant corpora tion.
The affiant establishes that:
1) the appellant is the registered owner of Canadian trade mark registration of the mark DYLON PAINTER;
2) the appellant manufactures and packages the wares in association with which the trade mark is used;
3) these packages "are transferred in the normal course of business" to the appellant's "distributor" of these wares, DYLON INTERNATIONAL LTD., a subsidiary of the appellant;
4) the packages are then transferred to a Canadian distributor, Farquhar International, which in turn transfers "the property in and possession of the said wares .... to purchasers in Canada in the normal course of trade through the sale in Canada by Farquhar International Limited".
There are exhibited to the affidavit copies of invoices establishing the sale in Canada by Far- quhar International Limited to the ultimate con sumer of the wares.
In his decision dated April 27, 1982 the Regis trar, in my opinion, correctly concluded that the appellant by the process described introduced its wares bearing the trade mark "Dylon Paintex" on the packages printed by the appellant in which packages the appellant enclosed its wares, into the channels of trade resulting in a use of the trade mark in Canada.
Parenthetically speaking when I mention the Registrar I mean to include in that word where the context requires the member of the Opposition Board who actually made the decision and signed it "David J. Martin for Registrar of Trade Marks".
What the Registrar did not accept was that the use so described was use in Canada by the appellant.
He predicated his conclusion to that effect upon the language printed upon the package containing the wares.
As previously indicated a specimen of the pack age printed by the appellant or on its instructions in which the appellants inserted its wares before the package and contents were "transferred" to Dylon International Ltd., its distributor and sub sidiary, was annexed to the affidavit sworn by Mr. Stone as Exhibit A.
That package is printed in colours, the back ground being purple. It is rectangular in shape, five inches in length, about two and three-quarters inches in width and one-half inch in depth.
On the front the words "Dylon Paintex" printed in the largest type, encircled by an oblong, are predominant. The word "Paintex" is printed on each end and the words "Dylon Paintex" are printed on each side.
On the reverse side or back of the package instructions are printed in English and French for the use of "Dylon Paintex". The contents are there described as one sachet "Dylon Paintex" and one sachet "Dylon-Cold Dye-Fix".
Beneath the instructions for use and the con tents in type very slightly smaller than that of the words "Dylon Paintex" and "Dylon-Cold Dye- Fix" are printed the words and figures:
"DYLON INTERNATIONAL LTD.,
LONDON,
SE 26 5HD, ENGLAND"
in a single line in high case letters throughout.
Immédiately below that line, in smaller type are printed the legends on the same single line:
"Made in England Trade Marks Registered"
in lower case but with capitals as indicated above.
Where the word "Dylon" appears on the front of the package above the word "Paintex" (the words appearing in different styled type) there is the device of the letter R within a circle. In United States legislation there is the requirement that a registered trade mark shall be so identified. There
is no such requirement in the Trade Marks Act in force in Canada but because of the volume of United States products and advertising thereof in publications which flow into Canada the Canadian purchasing public had become aware of that device signifying a registered trade mark but not necessarily where registered.
In the printed legend on the reverse side of the package the use of the words "Trade Marks Regis tered" in the plural might refer to "Dylon" alone, "Paintex" alone (although "Paintex" is disclaimed in the registration of "Dylon Paintex" in Great Britain) or to "Dylon Paintex". It is remotely possible that the subsidiary, Dylon International Ltd., was intended to be described as the agent to its parent, the appellant, but it was not.
In my view the mere fact that one incorporated company controls another is not sufficient by itself and in the absence of convincing evidence to the contrary to establish that the controlled company carries on business as agent of the controlling company.
A trade mark must be used only to distinguish the wares of the owner of the trade mark and it is an infringement to use it on the wares of a related company, even the subsidiary of the owner of the trade mark.
I do not think that a trade mark as defined in the Trade Marks Act, enacted in 1953, can be adapted to the concept of a "single organization" such as conceived by Angers J. in Good Humor Corporation of America v. Good Humor Food Products Limited et al. ([1937] Ex.C.R. 61, at page 74). There is the possibility that there may be joint owners of a trade mark but they would be acting in concert and in doing so might well consti tute a partnership and the partnership members would be the corporations.
Like the Registrar I am satisfied that there is no question whatsoever that the trade mark "Dylon Paintex" was used in Canada but to me the crucial question remaining to be answered is "By whom was the trade mark used?"
I do not think that the editorial note to Manhat- tan Industries Inc. v. Princeton Manufacturing Ltd. ((1972), 4 C.P.R. (2d) 6 [F.C.T.D.]) in the context in which it was quoted by my brother Addy in Marchands Ro -Na Inc. v. Tefal S.A. ((1981), 55 C.P.R. (2d) 27 [F.C.T.D.] at page 33) is authority to contrary.
The portion quoted by Mr. Justice Addy reads: ... see also editor's note to the effect that the important question is not who is using the mark but whose mark is being
used in Canada.
The pertinent paragraph of the editorial note in its entirety reads [at page 7, 4 C.P.R. (2d)]:
The question is not who iF using the mark but whose mark is being used. As long as the wares originate from the owner it is suggested that his mark is being used even if no sales in Canada are directly made by that owner. In the normal course of trade the wares were placed on the market by the trade mark owner.
I am in agreement with the conclusion reached by my brother Dubé in Lindy v. Registrar of Trade Marks ([[1982] 1 F.C. 241]; 57 C.P.R. (2d) 127 [T.D.]) when he said at page [246 F.C.]:
Reading the Act as a whole, the conclusion is inescapable, in my view, that "use in Canada" means use by the registered owner or a registered user.
That is basic to the concept of a trade mark. It is a mark that is used by a trader to identify as his the wares made by him. (In certain circumstances it may be used by certain persons to identify wares selected by that person for sale by him.) The trade mark confers on the registered owner the exclusive use of the trade mark in Canada.
Likewise I am in agreement with the decisions in the Manhattan Industries case and in Uarco Incorporated v. Phil Borden Limited ([[1973] F.C. 650]; 10 C.P.R. (2d) 97 [T.D.]) that there was a direct chain of selling and delivering the wares, in the normal course of trade.
In this instance that direct chain in the normal course of trade would be the sale by the appellant to its distributor in England, the sale by that distributor to a distributor in Canada (or directly
by the English distributor to a wholesaler or retail er in Canada) and ultimately by the Canadian distributor to a retailer or the consumer.
But that direct chain has been broken by the insertion of Dylon International Ltd., without identifying that corporate entity as being merely a conduit from the registered owner of the trade mark to the consumer.
On the contrary the legend is only susceptible of conveying to the consumer that Dylon Internation al Ltd., was the owner of the trade mark and that follows from a complete absence of a reference to the name of the registered owner from the package nor any indication that Dylon International Ltd. was but the distributor for the registered owner.
That being so there was a complete lack of evidence of the use of the trade mark by its registered owner in Canada. The evidence of use was by its subsidiary, Dylon International Ltd. which is not the registered owner.
For the foregoing reasons I am in agreement with the decision of the Registrar and the appeal is dismissed.
There will be no award of costs for or against any party to the appeal.
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