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T-565-84
Smith Kline & French Canada Ltd. (Appellant)
v.
Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: SMITH KLINE & FRENCH CANADA LTD. V. CANADA (REGISTRAR OF TRADE MARKS)
Trial Division, Strayer J.—Ottawa, March 4 and 12, 1987.
Trade marks — Registration — Appeal from Registrar's refusal to register "distinguishing guise" consisting of coloured coating applied to appellant's tablet "Tagamet", brand name for cimetidine — Appellant claiming exclusive use of guise in specific shape, colour and coating — Whether such characteristics permissible elements of distinguishing guise — Distinguishing guise defined as "shaping of wares or their containers" or "mode of wrapping or packaging wares" — Absence of authorities as to what constitutes "distinguishing guise" within meaning of Act — "Wrapping" and "packag- ing" to be given ordinary meaning, i.e. separate covering or container not part of wares themselves — Coating adhering to pill and inseparable therefrom — Not constituting "mode of wrapping or packaging" — Tablets distinguished from capsule containing pellets — Appeal dismissed — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 2, 36(1), 56.
CASE JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
DISTINGUISHED:
Smith Kline & French Inter-American Corporation v. H.T. Chiefetz et al. (1964), 46 C.P.R. 86 (Que. S.C.).
COUNSEL:
R. G. McClenahan, Q.C. and Robert A. Mac-
Donald for appellant.
D. Aylen, Q.C. and R. Kelly for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
STRAYER J.: This is an appeal under section 56 of the Trade Marks Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. T-101
from a decision of the Registrar of Trade Marks refusing, pursuant to subsection 36(1) of that Act, the registration of a "distinguishing guise". This appeal was heard together with the appeal in T-567-84 [[1987] 2 F.C. 633] which was from a decision of the Registrar of Trade Marks refusing registration of a trade mark in respect of the same product of the appellant.
The appellant filed application number 462,697 on December 10, 1980 seeking to register a distin guishing guise. This guise was described in the application, after several amendments in response to issues raised by the Examiner, as follows:
The distinguishing guise consists of a light green coloured coating applied to the outside of a circular biconvex tablet as shown in the attached drawing lined for the colour green. A specimen of the tablet, showing the features constituting the distinguishing guise is affixed to this application. The applicant makes no claim to the shape of the tablet per se or the coating per se used in association with "pharmaceutical preparations and substances in tablet form, containing cimetidine, for the treatment and prophylaxis of gastrointestinal disorders", but claims the right to the exclusive use of the distinguishing guise in the specific shape, colour and coating, limited to the wares described earlier in this paragraph.
In a decision dated January 24, 1984 the Registrar held that a guise as so described "does not consti tute a distinguishing guise as defined in Section 2 of the Trade Marks Act" and he refused the application. Unfortunately, he gives no reasons for his refusal. One can only deduce these from vari ous concerns raised by the Examiner which he describes in his decision. The principal concerns of the Examiner appeared to have been:
(1) That colour as applied as a coating for a pill is not "a mode of wrapping or packaging wares" as referred to in the definition of "distinguishing guise" in section 2 of the Trade Marks Act;
(2) That the applicant was relying on a combi nation of characteristics to establish the distin guishing guise, whereas the definition of "distin- guishing guise" in section 2 requires it to be either "a shaping of wares or their containers"
or "a mode of wrapping or packaging", but not both; and
(3) That even if it were a "distinguishing guise" as defined in the Act, it would not be register- able because of paragraph 13(1)(b) of the Trade Marks Act which allows registration of such a guise only if its exclusive use "is not likely unreasonably to limit the development of any art or industry".
It was agreed by counsel that item (3) was not in issue before me and I shall therefore not deal with it.
Pertinent evidence before me included affidavits which demonstrated that the tablet in question is "Tagamet", the appellant's brand name for cimeti- dine. Its tablets, once compressed, are film-coated with a thin green film. The film contains no essen tial ingredient of the tablet but is used to distin guish the product from other products and "to provide a wrapper or container for the medicament in an appropriate dosage form". There was also evidence before the Registrar as to the volume of sales of "Tagamet" for six months in 1977 and the years 1978-1980. According to this affidavit during this three and one-half year period the sales in Canada totalled some 70 million dollars. Other affidavits from doctors and pharmacists were introduced before the Registrar to support a claim of distinctiveness. Given the disposition which I intend to make of this application, I need consider these affidavits no further.
I have concluded that I should not disturb the finding of the Registrar to the effect that the subject-matter of this application cannot come within the definition of "distinguishing guise" in section 2 of the Trade Marks Act. It will be noted that in its final form, the description of the guise whose registration is sought states that the appli cant claims its exclusive use
... in the specific shape, colour and coating, limited to the wares described earlier ....
that is, all three elements form part of the claimed guise.
The definition of "distinguishing guise" in sec tion 2 of the Act is as follows:
2....
•
"distinguishing guise" means
(a) a shaping of wares or their containers, or
(b) a mode of wrapping or packaging wares
the appearance of which is used by a person for the purpose of distinguishing or so as to distinguish wares or services manufac tured, sold, leased, hired or performed by him from those manufactured, sold, leased, hired or performed by others;
While I am not convinced that an applicant should be precluded from claiming as part of his monopo ly elements described in both (a) and (b) of the definition, I need not decide that matter here. For this application to succeed, the applicant must establish that each of the elements of the monopo ly which he seeks are permissible elements of a "distinguishing guise". I am unable to conclude that the green film adhered to the outside of the pill, which is inseparable from the pill and is consumed with the pill, can be regarded as a "mode of wrapping or packaging" of wares as would be required in part (b) of the definition. There appears to be a dearth of authority on this point but in examining numerous dictionary defini tions of "wrapping" and "packaging" the view is reinforced that these words ought to be given the meaning attached to them in ordinary usage. That is, they must be taken to refer to the use of a separate covering or container which is not part of the "wares" itself. The definition of "package" in section 2, while not directly relevant, and while not exhaustive, is at least consistent with this interpre tation of "packaging". I have considered the cases cited by the appellant but none of them appear to be determinative of the matter. Many of them involve passing off actions which are not directly relevant to the question of what is a registrable "distinguishing guise" as defined in the Act. Many of them relate to trade marks and thus again are not directly relevant to what is registrable as a "distinguishing guise". Counsel did refer me to one case, Smith Kline & French Inter-American Cor poration v. H.T. Chiefetz et al. (1964), 46 C.P.R. 86 (Que. S.C.) where at page 90 St-Germain J. issued an injunction against the manufacture, sale, etc. of a pharmaceutical product, described there-
in, which apparently would be regarded as infring ing a registered "distinguishing guise". The prod uct as described therein involved capsules which, in one case were brown on one end and transparent on the other, and in the other case had one green end, the other end being transparent. I have no further information about the registration of that "distinguishing guise". It is notable, however, that what was involved there was a capsule in which were placed multi-coloured pellets. I need not decide whether that "distinguishing guise" was properly registered but it may well be that a capsule, which is a covering separate from its contents, can be viewed as a "mode of wrapping or packaging wares" in the pharmaceutical context. That is not the kind of product in issue in the present case.
I am therefore dismissing the appeal. I would only add that I do not find the form of the Registrar's decision to be very satisfactory. Rather than a lengthy recitation of the history of the application, it would be much more fair to the parties and useful to this Court on appeal if the reasons for the Registrar's own decision were set out clearly.
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