T-226-99
Canada Post Corporation (Applicant)
v.
The Post Office (Respondent)
Indexed as: Canada Post
Corp.v. Post Office
(T.D.)
Trial Division, Tremblay-Lamer J.--Ottawa, September 5 and
October 5, 2000.
Trade-marks
-- Official marks -- Appeal from Registrar's decision to
give public notice of adoption, use by respondent of official
mark "Mailsort" pursuant to Trade-marks Act, s. 9(1)(n)(iii)
-- For mark to be proper official mark pursuant to s.
9(1)(n)(iii), official mark must have been adopted and used
by any public authority, in Canada as official mark for wares
or services prior to publication of public notice -- Act not
defining "public authority" -- Respondent incorporated
pursuant to British Post Office Act 1969 -- If intended to
restrict application to "Canadian" public authorities,
legislator would have used words "Canadian public authority"
-- "In Canada" not applicable grammatically, in ordinary
meaning to "public authority" in either official language --
"Public authority" not restricted to Canadian public
authority -- S. 9(2) providing code for use of official marks
-- Cannot infer from legislator's silence same legal effect
as s. 50 (deeming use by licensee of trade-mark in certain
situations use by owner) -- Evidence not indicating
"Mailsort" used in Canada by respondent, licensees prior to
publication of notice in Trade-marks Journal -- Respondent
not adopting, using official mark "Mailsort" in Canada as
contemplated by s. 9(1)(n)(iii).
Trade-marks
--
Practice
-- Parties -- Appeal from, judicial review of Registrar of
Trade-marks' decision to give public notice of adoption, use
by respondent of official mark "Mailsort" pursuant to
Trade-marks Act, s. 9(1)(n)(iii) -- Applicant having standing
to seek judicial review of Registrar's decision -- Has
interest in Registrar's decision to accept "Mailsort" as
official mark used by respondent -- Operating postal service,
manufactures, provides products, services incidental to
postal service, and in this capacity used numerous
trade-marks incorporating term "mail" -- Not lacking standing
to appeal because not notified of Registrar's decision --
Present case similar to trade-mark opposition wherein any
party can oppose registration of trade-mark within two months
of publication of mark in Trade-marks Journal -- Need not
have been party to decision appealed from.
This was an appeal from the decision of the Registrar of
Trade-marks to give public notice of adoption and use by the
respondent of the official mark "Mailsort" pursuant to
Trade-marks Act, subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii). In
order to be an official mark pursuant to subparagraph
9(1)(n)(iii), the mark must have been "adopted and
used by any public authority, in Canada as an official mark
for wares or services". The applicant filed an appeal under
section 56 and later obtained leave to add judicial review
pursuant to Federal Court Act, subsection 18.1(1) as a
procedural ground for setting aside the Registrar's decision.
The applicant was established in 1981 by an Act of Parliament
as a successor of the Post Office Department of the
Government of Canada. The respondent was incorporated
pursuant to British Post Office Act 1969. It is wholly
owned by the British Government, and its activities are
overseen by a minister of the British Crown. Through one of
its divisions, the respondent provides postal services and
wares, including mail sorting, storage, transport and
delivery service to organizations that produce and handle
large volumes of mail for delivery to the United Kingdom.
These services operate under the name "Mailsort". The
respondent owns the trade mark "Mailsort" and licenses others
to perform services and/or sell wares in association with
that mark. It asserted that Canadian licensees of the
"Mailsort" mark have used that mark in the provision of wares
and services with the consent and authority of the
respondent, which had control over the character and quality
of the wares and services.
The issues were: (1) whether the applicant had standing to
appeal, or seek judicial review of, the Registrar's decision;
(2) whether the respondent is required to be a Canadian
public authority for the purposes of Trade-marks Act,
subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii); and (3) whether the
respondent adopted and used the "Mailsort" mark prior to
December 16, 1998.
Held, the appeal should be allowed because the
respondent had not adopted and used the mark in Canada.
(1) There appears to be two possible procedures for
challenging a decision of the Registrar to publish an alleged
official mark: judicial review or appeal, but it has not yet
been decided which is more appropriate. Since the applicant
was not a party to the notice given by the Registrar,
judicial review appeared to be more appropriate herein, but
the applicant had standing both to seek judicial review or to
appeal the Registrar's decision. With respect to the
application for judicial review, the applicant has an
interest in the Registrar's decision to accept "Mailsort" as
an official mark used by the respondent. It operates a postal
service, manufactures and provides products and services that
are incidental to the postal service and in this capacity has
used numerous trade-marks incorporating the term "mail".
Despite persistent opposition to the registration of
"Mailsort" as a trade-mark, the applicant was not advised of
the request for the "registration" of an official mark.
Unlike a trade-mark application, there is no requirement that
public notice be given of a request to the Registrar for the
publication of notice of the adoption and use of an official
mark. The applicant did not lack standing to appeal the
decision simply because it had not been notified of the
Registrar's decision pursuant to subparagraph
9(1)(n)(iii). The present case is similar to a
trade-mark opposition wherein any party can oppose the
registration of a trade mark within two months of the
publication of the mark in the Trade-marks Journal.
The opposing party does not need to have been a party to the
decision being appealed from. The applicant has standing to
request the present appeal.
(2) The Act does not define "public authority". If the
intent was to restrict the application to "Canadian" public
authorities, the legislator would have used the words
"Canadian public authority". Neither in English nor in French
do the words "in Canada"/"au Canada" grammatically and
in an ordinary meaning apply to public authority. On a plain
reading of the section, the term "public authority" is not
restricted to Canadian public authority.
(3) For an official mark to be valid under subparagraph
9(1)(n)(iii), a public authority must have adopted and
used the mark in Canada prior to publication of the public
notice. Mere publication of notice of adoption and use is not
conclusive of adoption and use. Any alleged use herein was
through licensees. Section 50 provides that in certain
situations the use of a trade-mark by a licensee will
be deemed to be the use by the owner thereof. There is no
reference to official marks. Subsection 9(2)
specifically deals with the use of an official mark. It
permits another party to use an official mark, but does
not deem that use would accrue to the benefit of the owner of
the official mark. It provides a code for the use of
official marks, and the same legal effect as provided for
trade-marks in section 50 cannot be inferred from the silence
of the legislator. There is a presumption against adding or
deleting words in statutory provisions. In any event, the
evidence did not indicate any use of "Mailsort" in Canada by
the respondent or its licensees prior to the notice published
in the Trade-marks Journal on December 16, 1998 as
contemplated by subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii).
| statutes and regulations
judicially considered |
| Canada
Post Corporation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-10, s.
58(1), (2). |
| Federal
Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 18.1(1) (as
enacted by S.C. 1990, c. 8, s. 5). |
| Patent
Rules, SOR/96-423, R. 10. |
| Post
Office Act 1969 (U.K.), 1969, c. 48, s. 6. |
| Trade-marks
Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. T-13, ss. 7(b),
9(1)(d),(n)(iii), (2) (as am. by S.C.
1993, c. 44, s. 226), 11, 19 (as am. by S.C. 1993, c.
15, s. 60), 20 (as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 47, s. 196),
45, 50 (as am. by S.C. 1993, c. 44, s. 233), 56. |
| cases judicially
considered |
| Renaud
Cointreau & Cie v. Cordon Bleu International
Ltd. (1992), 45 C.P.R. (3d) 374; 58 F.T.R. 191
(F.C.T.D.). |
| Canadian
Olympic Assn. v. U.S.A. Hockey, Inc. (1997), 74
C.P.R. (3d) 348 (F.C.T.D.); affd (1999), 3 C.P.R. (4th)
259 (F.C.A.); Magnotta Winery Corp. v. Vintners
Quality Alliance of Canada (1999), 1 C.P.R. (4th)
68; 163 F.T.R. 93 (F.C.T.D.); Pharmascience Inc. v.
Canada (Commissioner of Patents) (1998), 85 C.P.R.
(3d) 59; 161 F.T.R. 76 (F.C.T.D.). |
| Big
Sisters Assn. of Ontario v. Big Brothers of Canada
(1997), 75 C.P.R. (3d) 177 (F.C.T.D.). |
| Côté,
Pierre-André. The Interpretation of
Legislation in Canada, 2nd ed., Cowansville
(Qué.): Éditions Yvon Blais Inc.,
1991. |
APPEAL from the Registrar of Trade-marks' decision to give
public notice of adoption and use by the respondent of the
official mark "Mailsort" pursuant to Trade-marks Act,
subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii). Appeal allowed because it
was not established that the respondent had adopted and used
the mark in Canada.
| A. David Morrow and
Philip D. Lapin for applicant. |
| Anthony M. Prenol
and Szab Gall for respondent. |
| Smart & Biggar,
Ottawa, for applicant. |
| Blake, Cassels &
Graydon LLP, Toronto, for respondent. |
The following are the reasons for order rendered in
English by
[1]Tremblay-Lamer J.: This is an appeal brought by the
applicant, Canada Post Corporation (Canada Post) from the
decision of the Registrar of Trade-marks rendered December
16, 1998, to give public notice of adoption and use by the
respondent, The Post Office, of the mark "Mailsort".
[2]The respondent filed an application with the Registrar
of Trade-marks on August 18, 1998, requesting that pursuant
to the provisions of subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of the
Trade-marks Act1 (the Act), the Registrar
give public notice that The Post Office had adopted and used
the "Mailsort" mark for wares or services.
[3]The Registrar gave the requested notice of adoption and
use of the "Mailsort" mark by the respondent in the
Trade-marks Journal, December 16, 1998 edition.
[4]The applicant filed an appeal to the Federal Court of
Canada under section 56 of the Act, of the Registrar's
decision, by way of a notice of application filed on February
16, 1999.
[5]The applicant filed a notice of motion on February 21,
2000, seeking leave of the Court to amend its notice of
application to add judicial review as a procedural basis for
challenging the validity of the respondent's official
mark.
[6]By order of Pinard J., dated March 29, 2000, the
applicant was granted leave to amend its notice of
application to add judicial review pursuant to subsection
18.1(1) of the Federal Court Act2 as a
further procedural ground for setting aside the Registrar's
decision.
[7]The applicant was established in 1981 by an Act of
parliament as a successor of the Post Office Department of
the Government of Canada. Its objects are essentially to
establish and operate a postal service, to manufacture and
provide such products and services as are necessary or
incidental to the postal service, and to provide other
services that are capable of being conveniently provided in
the course of carrying out the other objects of the
corporation.
[8]The respondent is a corporation incorporated pursuant
to section 6 of the British Post Office Act 1969
[(U.K.), 1969, c. 48], and assented to by Her Majesty, Queen
Elizabeth II. It is wholly owned by the British Government,
and its activities are overseen by a Minister of the British
Crown.
[9]Under authority of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, the
respondent is able to carry on its activities using the title
"Royal Mail" and the Crown and Royal Cypher. Under this
authority, the respondent has created a division called Royal
Mail, which has created a further division called Royal Mail
International.
[10]The respondent, through Royal Mail, provides various
postal services and wares, including mail sorting, storage,
transport and delivery service to organizations that produce
and handle large volumes of mail for delivery to the United
Kingdom. These services operate under the name
"Mailsort".
[11]The respondent owns the trade-mark "Mailsort", and
through its Royal Mail division licenses to others the
ability to perform services and/or sell wares in association
with that mark. Royal Mail International, a division of Royal
Mail, is also authorized to use and to license trade-marks
owned by the respondent, including the "Mailsort" mark.
[12]Royal Mail International offers services to customers
around the world. To facilitate the provision of services
internationally, the respondent has incorporated a
wholly-owned subsidiary in the United States, named Royal
Mail U.S. Inc. Royal Mail U.S. Inc. is licensed to use and
sublicense the "Mailsort" mark.
SUBMISSIONS
[13]The applicant submits that the respondent is not a
public authority in Canada. The Registrar of Trade-marks thus
erred in accepting it as such and in giving public notice of
the adoption and use of the trade-mark "Mailsort".
[14]Furthermore, the applicant submits that the respondent
neither adopted nor used the above-noted mark for wares and
services in Canada.
[15]The applicant also contends that the respondent's
mark, "Mailsort", is or would be unlawful, and therefore
cannot accrue to the benefit of the respondent for the
following reasons:
(a) the respondent's mark is confusing with the registered
trade-marks owned by the applicant,3 and as such,
its use contravenes sections 19 [as am. by S.C. 1993, c. 15,
s. 60] and 20 [as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 47, s. 196] of the
Act;
(b) use of the respondent's mark is prohibited by
paragraph 9(1)(d) and section 11 of the Act, in that
having regard to the aforesaid trade-marks of the applicant
in addition to the official marks of the
applicant,4 such use would likely lead to the
belief that the wares and/or services in association with
which the respondent's mark is allegedly used, have received
or are performed or sold under governmental patronage,
approval or authority;
(c) the use of the respondent's mark does or would direct
public attention to its wares, services or business in such a
way as to cause confusion in Canada between its wares,
services and business and the wares, services or business of
the applicant contrary to paragraph 7(b) of the Act;
and
(d) the use of the respondent's mark in association with
its wares and services suggests that the wares or services
have been authorized or approved by the applicant, or are
used in the business of the applicant, or that they are of a
kind similar or identical to wares or services provided or
performed in the business of the applicant. Such use is
without the written consent of the applicant and is thus
contrary to subsections 58(1) and (2) of the Canada Post
Corporation Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. C-10].
[16]The respondent submits that to claim benefit of
subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act the respondent is
not required to be a Canadian public authority, but
simply a public authority using the mark in Canada.
[17]Furthermore, the respondent contends that the
respondent "adopted and used" the "Mailsort" mark prior to
December 16, 1998 through its authorized Canadian licensees
since approximately 1995.
[18]Lastly, the respondent argues that "lawfulness" is not
a ground recognized in law for challenging the Registrar's
decision to give public notice of adoption and use of a mark
pursuant to subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act.
ISSUES
1. Does the applicant have standing to appeal, or seek
judicial review of the Registrar's decision to give public
notice of adoption and use by the respondent of the mark
"Mailsort"?
2. Is the respondent required to be a Canadian public
authority for the purposes of subparagraph
9(1)(n)(iii) of the Trade-marks Act?
3. Has the respondent adopted and used the "Mailsort" mark
prior to December 16, 1998?
4. Is the use of the "Mailsort" mark by the respondent
unlawful (or would be unlawful) in Canada?
ANALYSIS
| 1. Applicant's
standing to appeal or seek judicial review of the
Registrar's decision |
[19]There appears to be some uncertainty as to the
appropriate procedure for challenging a decision of the
Registrar to publish an alleged official mark.
[20]In Canadian Olympic Assn. v. U.S.A. Hockey,
Inc.,5 Jerome A.C.J. underscored the lack of
legislative authority for granting relief in the nature of
the revocation of an official mark or the rescinding of the
Registrar's decision to give public notice of the adoption
and use of an official mark. Nevertheless, Jerome A.C.J. held
that "[a]ny remedy which the plaintiff might have had with
respect to the Registrar's decision, assuming it had
standing, was to launch an appeal".6
[21]More recently, in Magnotta Winery Corp. v. Vintners
Quality Alliance of Canada,7 Reed J. stated
that there appears to be two possible mechanisms for
challenging a decision of the Registrar to publish an alleged
official mark, namely an appeal under section 56 of the Act,
or an application for judicial review pursuant to section
18.1 of the Federal Court Act. However, Reed J. did
not express an opinion as to which mechanism would be more
appropriate:
I return then to the question whether a judicial review
application is in any event the appropriate procedure. It is
my understanding that other applicants have commenced actions
by appeals under section 56 (e.g., T-2127-98). As noted
above, it is not clear whether this is the correct procedure.
Certainly, a judicial review application is well suited to a
situation in which no notice has been given to an interested
party and I note that courts have implied such requirements
into legislative procedures when they have not been
statutorily required. Counsel for the applicants is of the
view that a section 18.1 judicial review application is the
more legally correct way to proceed. I have no doubt that
what is correct will not be decided by this Court. It will be
for the Court of Appeal to decide. There may, therefore, be
merit in having applications instituted pursuant to both
routes proceeding simultaneously.8
[22]With respect to the question of standing in this
appeal, the respondent relies on Canadian Olympic Assn. v.
U.S.A. Hockey, Inc.9 and Renaud Cointreau
& Cie v. Cordon Bleu International Ltd.10
Counsel for the respondent argues that the applicant does not
have standing to request the present appeal given that it was
not party to the notice given by the Registrar pursuant to
subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act.
[23]In regard to the application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 18.1(1) of the Federal Court
Act, the respondent submits that the applicant is not
directly affected by the decision of the Registrar to give
public notice of the respondent's adoption and use of the
"Mailsort" mark. As support for this contention, counsel for
the respondent cites Pharmascience Inc. v. Canada
(Commissioner of Patents).11
[24]On the issue of the right to appeal the applicant
submits that the Renaud Cointreau & Cie v. Cordon Bleu
International Ltd. decision relied upon by the respondent
can be distinguished from the case at bar. The Cordon
Bleu case involved a section 45 proceeding wherein the
Court held that only parties to the original section 45
proceeding can appeal that decision. Counsel argues that the
present case is not a section 45 proceeding, but rather
similar to a trade-mark opposition in that any party can
oppose the registration of a trade-mark within two months of
the publication of the mark in the Trade-marks
Journal. Marks are published in the Journal for the
purpose of allowing anyone the opportunity to challenge the
decision of the Registrar of Trade-marks to publish those
marks or to challenge the rights sought to be secured by the
applicant.
[25]With respect to the applicant's alleged lack of
interest in this application for judicial review, the
applicant submits that it is directly affected by the
decision of the Registrar. For more than a decade, the
applicant had been consistently and diligently opposing the
registration of trade-marks incorporating the word "mail"
where the associated products or services fall within the
applicant's field of business. In this regard, the applicant
cites a number of decisions of the Trade Marks Opposition
Board where the applicant was successful in opposing the
registration of trade-marks with the term "mail".
[26]Moreover, the respondent's mark "Mailsort", is of a
form similar to many of the applicant's marks, and is for use
in association with a service similar to or identical to
services provided by the applicant. In the performance of its
services and sales of its products, the applicant has
extensively used trade-marks and official marks incorporating
"mail". These marks have been used on a vast scale, such that
every Canadian is repeatedly exposed to them year after year.
The affidavits of Moreland, Hannah (1), Oldale (1) &
(3), and Manor (1)12 show that the applicant's
"mail" marks are, if not famous, at least well-known.
[27]In this regard, it should be remembered that the
applicant is in the mail business and the respondent, in the
sorting business. As a result of the respondent's mark, the
applicant is now unable to combine the words "mail" and
"sort" in any context given that it may be likely to be
mistaken for the respondent's mark.
[28]Furthermore, the applicant argues that contrary to the
submission of the respondent, the
Pharmascience13 case is readily
distinguishable from the present case.
[29]The Pharmascience case involved two decisions
of the Commissioner of Patents to allow Searle to file a
patent application late and subsequently to amend the
application. This Court held that Pharmascience was
only indirectly affected by the decision and therefore lacked
standing in its application for judicial review of the
Commissioner of Patents decisions. It was pointed out that
Pharmascience had a remedy under Rule 10 [Patent
Rules, SOR/96-423] which would allow it to protest the
grant of the patent to Searle and that Pharmascience
could also challenge the resulting patent by bringing an
action for a declaration of invalidity after the patent had
been granted.
[30]Therefore, the applicant submits that unlike the
applicant in Pharmascience, it has no mechanism for
challenging the decision in issue apart from either an appeal
pursuant to section 56 of the Act or judicial review pursuant
to section 18.1 of the Federal Court Act. On that
basis, the applicant has instituted proceedings
simultaneously both as an appeal under section 56 of the Act
and as a judicial review.
[31]In my opinion, considering that the applicant was not
a party to the notice given by the Registrar, the judicial
review route appears to be more appropriate but as did Reed
J. in Magnotta Winery,14 I will leave this
point to be decided by the Court of Appeal. In any event, I
am satisfied that the applicant has both the standing to seek
judicial review or to appeal the Registrar's decision.
[32]I agree with the applicant that Canada Post has an
interest in the Registrar's decision to accept "Mailsort" as
an official mark used by the respondent. Canada Post operates
a postal service, manufactures and provides products and
services that are incidental to the postal service, and in
this capacity has used numerous trade-marks incorporating the
term "mail".
[33]Moreover, it is worth noting that The Post Office
applied to register "Mailsort" as a trade-mark, application
No. 653,304 sometime before December 1991. Canada Post filed
an initial statement of opposition in December 1991 and then
several amended statements of opposition in 1992 and 1997.
However, opposition proceedings never commenced as The Post
Office withdrew its application.15
[34]Contrary to a trade-mark application, there is no
requirement that public notice be given of a request to the
Registrar for the publication of notice of the adoption and
use of an official mark.16 Despite the applicant's
opposition to the registration of "Mailsort" as a trade-mark,
the applicant was not advised of the request for the
"registration" of an official mark.
[35]Furthermore, I do not accept the respondent's argument
that since the applicant did not receive notice of the
decision rendered by the Registrar pursuant to subparagraph
9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act, that the applicant lacks
standing to appeal the decision. The Cordon Bleu case
does not stand for this proposition.
[36]Renaud Cointreau & Cie v. Cordon Bleu
International Ltd. dealt with an appeal from a section 45
decision of the Registrar of Trade-marks. A decision under
section 45 is sent directly to the owner of the trade-mark
registrant and any requesting party other than the Registrar
of Trade-marks. In Cordon Bleu there was no requesting
party and as a result Pinard J. held that the appellants did
not have standing to request an appeal.
[37]As pointed out by counsel for the applicant, in the
present case any party can oppose the registration of a
trade-mark within two months of the publication of the mark
in the Trade-marks Journal. The opposing party does
not need to have been a party to the decision being appealed
from.
[38]In light of these factors, I believe that the
applicant has standing to request the present appeal.
| 2. Under
subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of
the Trade-marks Act does public
authority refer to a Canadian public
authority? |
[39]In order for a mark to be a proper official mark
pursuant to subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act, the
official mark must have been "adopted and used by any public
authority, in Canada as an official mark for wares or
services".
[40]The Act does not define "public authority".
[41]The applicant argues that pursuant to section 9 of the
Act, it is not enough that an entity be a public authority,
the entity must be a "Canadian" public authority.
[42]In my opinion, if the intent was to restrict the
application to only "Canadian" public authorities, the
legislator would have used the words "Canadian public
authority". I am unable to find either in English or in
French that the words "in Canada"/"au Canada" would
grammatically and in an ordinary meaning apply to public
authority.
[43]In statutory interpretation, according to
P.-A. Côté, words in a statute should be
given their ordinary meanings:
As it is presumed that the legislator wishes to be
understood by the citizen, the law is deemed to have been
drafted in accordance with the rules of language in common
use.
In particular, Parliament is presumed to use words in the
same sense as would the "man in the street". The authorities
refer frequently to this prototypical subject and to the
ordinary meanings of words
. . . .17
[44]Therefore, on a plain reading of the section, I agree
with the respondent that the term "public authority" is not
restricted to Canadian public authority.
| 3. Adoption
and use of the mark "Mailsort" in Canada prior to the
critical date |
[45]For an official mark to be valid under subparagraph
9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act, a public authority must have
adopted and used the mark in Canada prior to publication of
the public notice.18 This Court also held that the
mere publication of notice of adoption and use, is not
conclusive of adoption and use.19
[46]The applicant first submits that it is clear from the
evidence that the respondent itself is not alleging that it
actually used the mark in Canada. Any alleged use is through
the respondent's alleged licensees.
[47]The applicant argues that there is no statutory
authority to suggest that licensed use of an alleged official
mark would accrue to the benefit of the owner of the official
mark. Section 50 [as am. by S.C. 1993, c. 44, s. 233] of the
Act, which only applies to trade-marks, reads as follows:
50. (1) For the purposes of this Act, if an entity
is licensed by or with the authority of the owner of a
trade-mark to use the trade-mark in a country and the owner
has, under the licence, direct or indirect control of the
character or quality of the wares or services, then the use,
advertisement or display of the trade-mark in that country as
or in a trade-mark, trade-name or otherwise by that entity
has, and is deemed always to have had, the same effect as
such a use, advertisement or display of the trade-mark in
that country by the owner.
[48]The respondent claims that although section 50 of the
Act does not explicitly deal with trade-marks that its
principle applies to official marks as well.
[49]The respondent claims that Canadian licensees of the
"Mailsort" mark have used that mark in the provision of wares
and services with the consent and authority of The Post
Office and that The Post Office had control over the
character and quality of the wares and services provided by
these Canadian licensees.
[50]I agree with the applicant on this point. Section 50
of the Act provides that in certain situations the use of a
trade-mark by a licensee will be deemed to be the use
by the owner of the trade-mark. There is no reference to
official marks.
[51]Moreover, subsection 9(2) [as am. by S.C. 1993, c. 44,
s. 226] of the Act specifically deals with the use of an
official mark. Subsection 9(2) of the Act does permit another
party to use an official mark but does not deem that use
would accrue to the benefit of the owner of the official
mark. Subsection 9(2) of the Act reads as follows:
9. . . .
(2) Nothing in this section prevents the adoption, use or
registration as a trade-mark or otherwise, in connection with
a business, of any mark . . . .
[52]I am of the view that subsection 9(2) of the Act
provides a code for the use of official marks and I am unable
to infer from the silence of the legislator the same legal
effect as provided for trade-marks in section 50 of the
Act.
[53]According to P.-A. Côté, in statutory
interpretation, there exists a presumption against adding or
deleting words in provisions:
Assuming a statute to be well drafted, an interpretation
which adds to the terms of its provisions or deprives them of
meaning is suspect.
Since the judge's task is to interpret the statute, not to
create it, as a general rule, interpretation should not add
to the terms of the law. Legislation is deemed to be well
drafted, and to express completely what the legislator wanted
to say . . . .20
[54]In any event, even if such interpretation was
possible, a careful review of the evidence adduced does not
indicate any use of the mark "Mailsort" in Canada by the
respondent nor by its alleged Canadian licensees prior to the
notice published in the Trade-marks Journal on
December 16, 1998.
[55]The evidence demonstrates that there is a relationship
between some Canadian companies in association with a service
provided in Canada.
[56]There is evidence that Canadian companies provide a
linehaul service for customers for the delivery of mail to
the respondent in the U.K.
[57]For instance, the Tennant affidavit (president of Key
Mail, an alleged licensee of The Post Office) describes the
service provided by Key Mail. Attached to the supplemental
Tennant affidavit are a bundle of mailing dockets in respect
of shipments of mail of one of Key Mail's customers, Numa
Corp. which the respondent claims demonstrate the use of the
mark "Mailsort" in Canada.21 I am unable to find
that this constitutes evidence of the "Mailsort" service.
[58]Mr. Tennant's company does not sort, tag or bag the
mail. It transports the mail from one location in Canada to
another and arranges for shipping.
[59]The Tennant affidavit also mentions that one of its
customers based in Vancouver, CW Agencies, used "Mailsort" in
Canada, pre-sorting its mail bound for the U.K. in order to
benefit from the "Mailsort" discount.22 Yet, there
are no invoices, nor mail dockets attesting to this fact.
[60]The Kavanagh affidavit (President of INT Access Inc.)
refers to a Postal Services Agreement between DKM Direct
(same company prior to a change of name) and Royal Mail. The
agreement refers to DKM Direct as a customer of Royal Mail.
However, there is no evidence that the respondent is
providing a service for INT Access in Canada. The Kavanagh
affidavit also refers to a "Mailsort" price guide. However,
the guide relates only to the distribution of mail in the
U.K.
[61]The Moore affidavit refers to a bundle of invoices
from Royal Mail to Canadian licensees with respect to mail
delivery in Great Britain for mail processed in
Canada.23 However, these invoices are all dated
1999. Additionally, none of the invoices actually bears the
mark "Mailsort" as the mailsort service is identified in the
invoices by either MS1, MS2 or MS3.
[62]Consequently, based on the evidence presented, I am of
the opinion that the respondent has not adopted and used the
official mark, "Mailsort", in Canada as contemplated by
subparagraph 9(1)(n)(iii) of the Act.
[63]Given my conclusion, I do not find it necessary to
address the issues of improper licensing and "lawfulness"
advanced by the applicant.
CONCLUSION
[64]The appeal is granted. The Registrar erred in
accepting that the respondent has adopted and used the mark
in Canada. The public notice of the official mark "Mailsort"
is ineffective to give rise to any rights or prohibitions
under sections 9 and 11 of the Act.
1 R.S.C., 1985, c. T-10.
2 R.C.S., 1985, c. F-7 [as enacted by S.C.
1990, c. 8, s. 5].
3 See Schedule A of the notice of
application, applicant's record, Vol. I, at pp. 8 -11.
4 See Schedule B of the notice of
application, applicant's record, Vol. I, at p. 12.
5 (1997), 74 C.P.R. (3d) 348 (F.C.T.D.);
affd. (1999), 3 C.P.R. (4th) 259 (F.C.A.).
6 Ibid., at p. 350.
7 (1999), 1 C.P.R. (4th) 68 (F.C.T.D.), at
pp. 77-78.
8 Ibid., at p. 79.
9 Supra, note 5, at p. 350
(F.C.T.D.).
10 (1992), 45 C.P.R. (3d) 374 (F.C.T.D.),
at p. 378.
11 (1998), 85 C.P.R. (3d) 59
(F.C.T.D.).
12 Applicant's record, at Tabs 8, 12, 19,
20, 22.
13 Supra, note 11.
14 Supra, note 7.
15 Applicant's record, Vol. 9, at p.
4217.
16 Magnotta Winery, supra,
note 7, at p. 73.
17 See, P.-A. Côté, The
Interpretation of Legislation in Canada, 2nd ed.
Cowansville: Éditions Yvon Blais Inc., 1991, at p.
219.
18 Big Sisters Assn. of Ontario v. Big
Brothers of Canada (1997), 75 C.P.R. (3d) 177 (F.C.T.D.),
at p. 222.
19 Ibid.
20 P.-A. Côté, supra,
note 17, at p. 231.
21 Exhibit G, applicant's record, Vol. 9,
at pp. 4543-4551.
22 Respondent's record, at p. 3, para.
11.
23 Exhibit E, applicant's record, Vol. 9,
at pp. 4508-4520.