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A-392-80
The Queen (Appellant) (Defendant)
v.
87118 Canada Ltd. (Respondent) (Plaintiff)
Court of Appeal, Pratte and Heald JJ. and Lalande D.J.—Montreal, March 26; Ottawa, April 29, 1981.
Crown — Contracts — Incorporation of a company — Appeal from Trial Division decision granting to the respondent corporation damages for losses incurred when corporate name had to be changed — Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs approved respondent's proposed name subject to respondent assuming responsibility for risk of confusion with existing business names and trade marks — Later, respondent was forced to change its name because the Department dis covered an existing business name which was confusing with respondent's name — Trial Judge found that appellant's servants had negligently given false information in response to request for corporate name search, and that "business names" did not include corporate names — Whether appellant was liable either in delict or in contract for damages suffered by respondent — Appeal is allowed — Canada Business Corpo rations Act, S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 33, ss. 11, 12, 254 — Canada Business Corporations Regulations, SOR/75-682, as amended by SOR/76-665, s. 82(1), Schedule 2.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
Ben Bierbrier for appellant (defendant). Norton Segal for respondent (plaintiff).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant (defendant).
Lechter & Segal, Montreal, for respondent (plaintiff).
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
PRATTE J.: Her Majesty appeals from a judg ment of the Trial Division [[1981] 1 F.C. 96] granting to the respondent corporation damages in the amount of $4,000 for the loss it incurred when the name under which it had been incorporated had to be changed.
On April 26, 1977, articles of incorporation of a corporation to be named "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd." were submitted to the Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs pursuant to the Canada Business Corporations Act.' The sum of $210 was enclosed with the articles in payment of the prescribed incorporation fee of $200 and of a fee of $10 to search the name of the intended corporation. 2 By letter dated May 18, 1977, an examiner acting on behalf of the Director informed the incorporator's attorneys that the name "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd." appeared to be available for use as a corporate name. That letter read in part as follows:
This is in reply to your recent enquiry concerning the availabili ty of the following name(s):
[1] MONDIAL CERAMIC & MARBLE LTD.
' S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 33.
2 Section 254 of the Canada Business Corporations Act empowers the Governor in Council to make regulations "requiring the payment of a fee in respect of the filing, examination or copying of any document, or in respect of any action that the Director is required or authorized to take under this Act, and prescribing the amount thereof". Subsection 82(1) of the Canada Business Corporations Regulations, SOR/75-682, as amended by SOR/76-665 was made pursuant to that authority. It prescribes that:
82. (1) The fee in respect of the filing, examination or copying of any document or in respect of any action that the Director is required or authorized to take under the Act shall be the fee set out in Schedule 2 and, except in the case of the fee payable under item 1 in Schedule 2, shall be paid to the Director upon the filing, examination or copying of the document or before the Director takes the action in respect of which the fee is payable.
The first two paragraphs of Schedule 2 read as follows:
1. Each request to the Director containing a maximum of three alternative names for searches concerning the availa bility of a corporate name, including the reservation of the
name $ 10.00
2. Issuance by Director of
(a) certificate of incorporation under section 8 200.00
The Act does not contain any provision relating or referring to "searches concerning the availability of a corporate name". However, it contains a provision relating to the reservation of a corporate name; it is subsection 11(1) which reads as follows:
11. (1) The Director may, upon request, reserve for ninety days a name for an intended corporation or for a corporation about to change its name.
The name appears to be available for use as a corporate name subject to and conditional upon the applicants assum ing full responsibility for any risk of confusion with existing business names and trade marks (including those set out in our search report ....
attached ).
There was attached to that letter, in addition to the search report, which was a computer print-out containing some 37 names, a notice advising that the Corporations Branch of the Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs was "now con ducting all name searches using an automated search system" and, also, the certificate of incor poration of the respondent.
The respondent had been operating its business for nearly a year when, at the end of March 1978, it received a letter from the Department of Con sumer and Corporate Affairs stating that it had just been discovered that there existed a corpora tion named "Mondeal Ceramics Ltd." which had been incorporated in 1974. As that name was considered to be confusing with that of the respondent, "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd.", the letter directed the respondent to change its name within 60 days pursuant to section 12 of the Act. When the respondent failed to comply with that directive, the Director issued a certificate of amendment changing its name to "87118 Canada Ltd."
Following that change, the respondent sued Her Majesty for damages, claiming that it had had to change its name owing to the negligence of the employees of the Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs who had failed to discover, when they had searched the name "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd.", that there was then in existence a Canadian corporation known as "Mon- deal Ceramics Ltd."
The evidence adduced at trial disclosed that, following the receipt of the articles of incorpora tion of the respondent, employees of the Depart ment had conducted a search, through a computer, in order to discover, among the 1,200,000 trade names and trade marks that formed part of the data base, the names which could be confusing with "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd." The
computer failed to pick out the name "Mondeal Ceramics Ltd." which, as a consequence, was not mentioned in the search report sent to the incor- porator's attorneys on May 18, 1977. The result of the search would have been different, however, had it been made a few months later. In August 1977, an improved automated search system became operational and began to be used by the Department. It is common ground that a search of the name "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd." with this new system would have discovered the name "Mondeal Ceramics Ltd."
The Trial Judge decided in favour of the respondent. He held that, had not the appellant's servants been negligent, they should have found and disclosed, when they answered the request for search of the name "Mondial Ceramic & Marble Ltd.", that there existed a corporation named "Mondeal Ceramics Ltd." As a consequence, he decided that the appellant was liable, both in delict and in contract, for the damage suffered by the respondent as a consequence of that negligence. He assessed that damage at $4,000.
The learned Judge's finding of delictual liability was based on his opinion that the appellant's ser vants had negligently given false information in answer to the request for search of the respond ent's proposed name. But what was the informa tion conveyed by the appellant's servants? It was contained in the letter of May 18, 1977:
This is in reply to your recent enquiry concerning the availabili ty of the following name(s):
[1] MONDIAL CERAMIC & MARBLE LTD.
The name appears to be available for use as a corporate name subject to and conditional upon the applicants assum ing full responsibility for any risk of confusion with existing business names and trade marks (including those set out in our search report....
attached
The Trial Judge construed that letter as stating that the proposed corporate name was not confus ing with any other existing corporate name while it might be confusing with existing business names and trade marks. He interpreted the expression "business names" used in the letter as having a meaning which did not include "corporate names". I cannot accept that interpretation. The expression "business names", in the letter, appears to me to
be used as a synonym of "trade name", a phrase which section 12 of the Regulations correctly defines as meaning "the name under which any business is carried on, whether it is the name of a body corporate, a trust, a partnership, a proprie torship or an individual". In my view, the state ment contained in the letter merely means that the Director has no objection to the proposed name but does not guarantee that it is not confusing with an existing trade name or trade mark. I am there fore of opinion that the letter did not convey any false information and, for that reason, I cannot share the learned Judge's view that, in the absence of contract, the appellant was delictually respon sible for the damage suffered by the respondent.
The judgment under attack, however, is mainly based on the view that the respondent's claim was based on contract. The appellant, according to the learned Judge, was contractually bound to make a search and determine whether the proposed corpo rate name was confusing with another existing name; that search, still according to the Trial Judge, was made negligently and, for that reason, gave incomplete and misleading results. The damage suffered by the respondent therefore resulted, in the Judge's opinion, from the negligent performance of the appellant's contractual obliga tions. I cannot agree with that conclusion. I doubt that the Director ever entered into a contract to search the respondent's proposed corporate name and, if he did, I am of the view that that contract was not made with the respondent but with the incorporator. I also doubt that the Judge's finding of negligence is supported by the evidence. How ever, I do not have to express any opinion on those points since, in my opinion, the terms of the letter of May 18, 1977, 3 clearly excluded any contractu al liability for the damage that might result from the existence of a confusing trade name or trade mark. The learned Trial Judge held otherwise because of the meaning that he gave to the phrase "business names". I have already said that I cannot agree with him on this point.
3 "... subject to and conditional upon the applicants assum ing full responsibility for any risk of confusion with existing business names ...".
For those reasons, I would allow the appeal with costs, set aside the judgment of the Trial Division, and dismiss the respondent's action with costs.
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HEALD J.: I concur.
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LALANDE D.J.: I concur.
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