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T-4929-81
Union Electric Supply Co. Limited (Appellant)
v.
Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent)
Trial Division, Mahoney J.—Ottawa, April 14 and 15, 1982.
Trade marks — Appeal from decision of Registrar to expunge the appellant's trade mark pursuant to subs. 44(3) of the Trade Marks Act — Appellant's affidavit established that the trade mark was displayed in and about the registrant's various premises where registrant's wares were offered for sale — Price tags bearing the trade mark were affixed to the registrant's wares at the time of the sale — Deponent was in a position in terms of experience and office to know whereof he deposed — Registrar held that registrant failed to "show" that the trade mark was in use at the material time because the registrant's affidavit contained only unsubstantiated state ments of use without producing any "reliable" evidence — Whether the Registrar erred in his decision on the evidence before him — Appeal allowed — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 4(1), 44.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
David E. Clarke and Michael A. Holowack
for appellant.
Judith McCann 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
MAHONEY J.: This appeal arises as a result of the respondent's decision to expunge the appel lant's trade mark, registration no. 195,431, UNION LIGHTING CENTRE/CENTRE D'ECLAIRAGE UNION,
pursuant to subsection 44(3) of the Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10.
44. (1) The Registrar may at any time and, at the written request made after three years from the date of the registration
by any person who pays the prescribed fee shall, unless he sees good reason to the contrary, give notice to the registered owner requiring him to furnish within three months an affidavit or statutory declaration showing with respect to each of the wares or services specified in the registration, whether the trade mark is in use in Canada and, if not, the date when it was last so in use and the reason for the absence of such use since such date.
(2) The Registrar shall not receive any evidence other than such affidavit or statutory declaration, but may hear represen tations made by or on behalf of the registered owner of the trade mark or by or on behalf of the person at whose request the notice was given.
(3) Where, by reason of the evidence furnished to him or the failure to furnish such evidence, it appears to the Registrar that the trade mark, either with respect to all of the wares or services specified in the registration or with respect to any of such wares or services, is not in use in Canada and that the absence of use has not been due to special circumstances that excuse such absence of use, the registration of such trade mark is liable to be expunged or amended accordingly.
The respondent concedes that, on the evidence before the Court, the appeal should be allowed except as to electric blankets. The appellant urges that the respondent erred in his decision on the evidence before him and that a judgment on that issue is most desirable in view of the large number of decisions which the respondent appears to have made on a similar basis, some 50 of which are said to be in process of appeal to this Court. The appellant says, entirely reasonably, that no appel lant to the Court is likely to limit its evidence on appeal to that similar to what the respondent found insufficient here if it can find additional evidence.
I accept the appellant's point. There is absolute ly no justification in putting a trade mark owner to the expense and trouble of showing his use of the trade mark by evidentiary overkill when it can be readily proved in a simple, straightforward fash ion. Use must be shown, not examples of all uses.
The first affidavit submitted by the appellant was clearly inadequate in light of the judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal in Plough (Canada)
Limited v. Aerosol Fillers Inc.' The respondent quoted that judgment at some length in his deci sion, including the passage, appearing at page 684, which follows:
What subsection 44(1) requires is an affidavit or statutory declaration not merely stating but "showing", that is to say, describing the use being made of the trade mark within the meaning of the definition of "trade mark" in section 2 and of "use" in section 4 of the Act. The subsection makes this plain by requiring the declaration to show with respect to each of the wares and services specified in the registration whether the trade mark is in use in Canada and if not the date when it was last used and the reason for the absence of such use since that date. The purpose is not merely to tell the Registrar that the registered owner does not want to give up the registration but to inform the Registrar in detail of the situation prevailing with respect to the use of the trade mark so that he, and the Court on appeal, can form an opinion and apply the substantive rule set out in subsection 44(3).
The respondent then fairly summarized the ma terial evidence contained in the appellant's second affidavit as follows:
In the second affidavit, dated September 9, 1980, Mr. Hallarn states that the trade mark UNION LIGHTING CENTRE/CENTRE D'ECLAIRAGE UNION, was employed by the registrant in Canada in association with all of the wares specified in the registration except electric blankets, at the date of the Section 44 notice. Mr. Hallarn explains that the said trade mark was displayed in and about the various premises of the registrant where the registrant's wares were offered for sale and sold to the public. The affiant also states that price tags bearing the trade mark were affixed to the registrant's wares at the time of sale in such a manner that the attention of the purchaser would be drawn to the said trade mark. Exhibit A of the affidavit to (sic) shows the manner in which the trade mark was applied to the wares. It is a sample price tag bearing the trade mark UNION LIGHTING CENTRE/CENTRE D'ECLAIRAGE UNION. In conclusion, the affiant states that with the exception of electric blankets all of the wares listed in statement of wares were available and were sold in association with the said trade mark at all material times.
The section 44 notice was issued within the 6 years of Hallarn's experience.
The respondent held:
This second affidavit fails to fulfill the requirements of subsec tion 44(1). The registrant fails to "show" with respect to
'[ 1981 1 1 F.C. 679.
"each" of the wares specified in the registration that the trade mark UNION LIGHTING CENTRE/CENTRE D'ECLAIRAGE UNION was in use in Canada in the normal course of trade prior to and as of the date of the Section 44 notice.
In Section 44 proceedings the registrant bears the onus of "showing", as opposed to merely "stating", that the trade mark is being used within the meaning of Sections 2 and 4 of the Trade Marks Act. It is my opinion that the use of the word "showing" in subsection 44(1) imposes upon the registrant the responsibility to produce reliable evidence from which the Registrar can draw conclusions and render a decision concern ing use of the trade mark. The registrant's affidavit is clearly inadequate in this respect as it contains only unsubstantiated statements of use without producing any reliable evidence such as sample invoices which show sales of each of the wares prior to the date of the Section 44 notice or sales figures for the time period just prior to the date of the notice. The inclusion of the sample price tag marked Exhibit A only shows use of the trade mark as it was applied to the wares themselves. The sample price tag does not confirm that each of the registered wares were transferred to customers in Canada in the normal course of trade or sold on the export market. The absence of "reliable" evidence does not allow me to conclude that the said trade mark was in use prior to and as of the date of the Section 44 notice.
The respondent's reference to "reliable evi dence" appears founded on the following passage from the trial judgment in the Plough case, 2 where Mr. Justice Cattanach observed:
By section 44 the Registrar is not permitted to receive any evidence other than the affidavit and his decision is to be made on the material therein. The allegations are not subject to the crucible of cross-examination and contradictory affidavits are prohibited.
These circumstances, in my view, place upon the Registrar a special duty to insure that reliable evidence is received and that a bare unsubstantiated statement of use is not acceptable and an allegation which is ambiguitas patens in an affidavit renders that affidavit equally unacceptable.
There is no patent ambiguity in the second affida vit and no intimation in the respondent's decision as to why he found it not to be reliable evidence.
Use of a trade mark is defined by subsection 4(1) of the Act.
4. (1) A trade mark is deemed to be used in association with wares if, at the time of the transfer of the property in or
2 [1980] 2 F.C. 338 at p. 344.
possession of such wares, in the normal course of trade, it is marked on the wares themselves or on the packages in which they are distributed or it is in any other manner so associated with the wares that notice of the association is then given to the person to whom the property or possession is transferred.
A tag bearing the trade mark affixed to the wares at the time of sale would seem clearly to be a use of the trade mark "in a manner so associated with the wares that notice of the association is then given to the person", (i.e., the customer), "to whom the property or possession is transferred". When the deponent expressly premised his knowl edge of the use on the practice he observed while working at the appellant's retail outlets in Ottawa and Toronto, the respondent, with respect, erred when he found that transfers to customers in Canada in the ordinary course of trade was not proved.
The deponent's enumeration of the particular wares sold with the tags attached was competent evidence of their use in association with each of those wares; it was not a bald statement of use of the sort found unacceptable by the Court of Appeal. The judgment must be understood in its context. The affidavit there stated only:
2. THAT Plough (Canada) Limited is currently using and was on September 7, 1978 using the registered trade mark PHAR- MACo in the normal course of trade in Canada in association with pharmaceutical preparations.
That is what was held not to "show" use of a trade mark in Canada.
The respondent was not justified in character izing the evidence as not reliable simply because he would have liked more evidence which, it turns out, was available. Anyone charged with the re sponsibility of making a judicial decision is often confronted with having to do so on the basis of less evidence than he would like. It remains that the only evidence the respondent had, while less than he apparently would have liked, was reliable, as I understand that ordinary English word. The depo- nent was manifestly in a position, both from the point of view of his experience with the appellant and his office, to know whereof he deposed. That
evidence also established unequivocally that the trade mark was in use in Canada at the material time in association with the specific wares for which it had been registered, other than electric blankets.
The type of evidence necessary to "show" use of a trade mark in Canada will doubtless vary from case to case depending, to some extent, on the nature of its owner's business, e.g., manufacturer, retailer or importer, and merchandising practices. Perhaps the sort of evidence the respondent would have accepted here is needed in some cases; how ever, he erred in rejecting the evidence he had here as insufficient and unreliable.
The appellant was required, in responding to the section 44 notice, to show use of the trade mark "with respect to each of the wares" specified in the registration. The appeal will be allowed except as to electric blankets.
JUDGMENT
The appeal is allowed subject to the amendment of trade mark registration no. 195,431 by deletion of "electric blankets" from the wares in associa tion with which it is used.
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