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T-3870-82
Hardee's Food Systems, Inc. (Applicant) (Oppo- nent)
v.
Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent)
and
Hardee Farms International Ltd. (Respondent) (Applicant)
Trial Division, Cattanach J.--Ottawa, September 29 and 30, 1982; January 20, 1983.
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Certiorari — Prohi bition — Mandamus — Application for relief under s. 18 of Federal Court Act against decision of Registrar of Trade Marks in opposition proceedings — Respondent, Hardee, allowed to submit amended applications to amend statement of wares to base them not on prior but on proposed use — Whether amendments prohibited by ss. 36 or 37 of Trade Marks Regulations as resulting in changing date of first use
Application dismissed — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 18 — Federal Court Rules 319, 400, 603 — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 16(1),(6), 29, 37(2),(8), 40(1)(c),(2), 56, 59, 65 — Trade Marks Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1559, ss. 35, 36, 37, 42 and Schedule II, forms 4, 7.
The respondent, Hardee Farms International Ltd., made applications under paragraph 40(1)(c) of the Trade Marks Act to amend its statement of wares based on prior use. Before the Opposition Board, Hardee Farms sought to amend its applica tions to base them on proposed use. The Chairman allowed the amendments, concluding that changes from prior to proposed use did not constitute change in the date of first use. The applicant filed a notice of appeal. Hardee Farms successfully argued that no final decision had then been reached by the Registrar and relief under section 18 of the Federal Court Act was available only if the Registrar is a party to the proceedings. This application was brought under section 18 to challenge the Registrar's decision. The question is whether an amendment to change the applications from being based upon prior use to proposed use is prohibited.
Held, the application is dismissed. Section 42 of the Trade Marks Regulations limits amendments during opposition pro ceedings but does not make specific reference to impugned amendments. That did not, however, constitute a casus omis - sus. The applicant relies on paragraph 37(b) of the Regulations in arguing that an amendment after advertisement of an application alleging prior use to proposed use is of necessity a change in date of first use. The words "change a date of first use" appear in both paragraphs 37(b) and 36(c) of the Regula-
tions. Paragraph 36(d) of the Regulations employs different language indicating that a different meaning and subject matter were intended. Paragraph 36(d) is limited to a change in the application from proposed to prior use; paragraphs 36(c) and 37(b), to a change in date of first use to an earlier one. The amendment was not the subject of a specific regulation prohib iting such change. The amendment falls within the broad concept of section 35 of the Regulations and may be made at any time. The Registrar is without discretion to refuse the amendments.
COUNSEL:
J. Guy Potvin and D. Aylen for applicant (opponent).
A. S. Fradkin for respondent Registrar of Trade Marks.
John Allport for respondent (applicant) Hardee Farms International Ltd.
SOLICITORS:
Scott & Aylen, Ottawa, for applicant (opponent).
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent Registrar of Trade Marks.
Sim, Hughes, Toronto, for respondent (appli- cant) Hardee Farms International Ltd.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
CATTANACH J.: By an instrument incorrectly described as an "Originating Notice Of Motion" the solicitor for the applicant invokes the proce dures appropriate to and consistent with an application by way of motion pursuant to Rule 603 whereby proceedings for relief pursuant to section 18 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, may be brought either by way of an action under Rule 400, i.e., by statement of claim or declaration or by way of application under Rule 319, i.e. an application by way of a motion in the normal sense, and at the same time disregards procedures normal and applicable to an originating instrument.
This is a second round in these matters, the first having been by way of notice of appeal pursuant to sections 56 and 59 of the Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, from two identical decisions
of the Registrar of Trade Marks given through the agency of the Chairman of the Opposition Board on August 21, 1981 in the course of opposition proceedings at the conclusion of oral hearings but before a final decision had been made permitting amendments to the application for registration being opposed in which the present applicant was the appellant, the second named respondent herein was the respondent to the appeal and the Registrar of Trade Marks named as the first respondent herein had not been named as a party in the first matter begun by the notice of appeal.
The relief there sought, amongst other forms, was in the nature of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus directed to the Registrar of Trade Marks.
The facts remain constant and accordingly it is expedient to repeat them in the present instance.
The respondent, Hardee Farms International Ltd. (for convenience referred to herein as the second respondent) is the registered owner of trade mark No. 183,067 of the word "Hardee" for use in association with certain food products and trade mark No. 183,068 of what was once called a design mark featuring the word "Hardee" in asso ciation with the like wares.
Both the word mark and the design mark were registered on May 12, 1972.
By two applications identical in form and con tent the second respondent applied under para graph 40(1)(c) of the Trade Marks Act to amend the statement of wares in respect of which the trade marks were registered to add thereto freeze dried and dehydrated food products.
These two applications were prepared upon form 7 of the Trade Marks Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1559, made pursuant to section 65 of the Trade Marks Act and is the specific form designed for use as an "Application for Amendment of a Regis tration to extend the Statement of Wares".
These two applications to amend the statement of wares were filed on November 28, 1975.
The applications to amend were based upon use in Canada since "at least as early as January 1975".
By virtue of subsection 40(2) an application to amend the trade marks register to extend the wares has the same effect as an application for the registration of a trade mark in respect of those wares.
The applications were advertised in the Trade Marks Journal on November 16, 1977.
On April 10, 1978 the applicant herein filed similar statements of opposition to both the applications.
On June 21, 1978 the second respondent herein filed counter statements.
The applicant relied upon the four grounds set forth in subsection 37(2) of the Act as its bases of opposition to the amendments sought. Those grounds were that:
(1) in the applications the wares are not speci fied in ordinary commercial terms being so phrased as to be ambiguous,
(2) the applications do not name a predecessor in title to the alleged use of the trade mark since January 1975, (Objections numbered (1) and (2) are advanced as the applications not being in compliance with section 29 of the Act (see para. 37 ( 2 )(a)).)
(3) as at the date of first use (January 1975) the trade mark was confusing with the trade mark, the application for which was made by the applicants herein, the application for which was filed on April 10, 1975 antecedent to the date of first use alleged by the second respondent (see paragraph 16(1)(b)), and
(4) the trade mark is not distinctive having been used by a party other than the second respond-
ent as well as use by a registered user on wares not approved for use by the registered user.
On February 16, 1979 the applicant herein filed an affidavit in support of its opposition and a further affidavit on November 16, 1979.
On January 30, 1980 the second respondent herein advised the Registrar that it would adduce no evidence.
In July 1980 written arguments were filed by the parties.
An oral hearing (concurrently with respect to both applications) was held before the Chairman of the Opposition Board on April 3, 1981.
At the end of the hearing of representations but before a decision counsel for the second respondent herein requested a two-week delay within which to file amended applications upon receipt of instruc tions from his client to that effect.
The amendment to be sought was a change in the allegation in the applications to extend the wares rather than being based on prior use some time in January 1975 (which counsel doubted would be established) to applications being based on proposed use.
The Chairman granted that delay subject to the caveat that if amended applications were filed leave would be given to the applicant herein to oppose their acceptance.
The chronology of the events to this time can be summarized in tabular form.
Registration No. 183,067 (word mark) May 12, 1972
Registration No. 183,068 (design) May 12, 1972
A. Original Application to extend wares based on use
Date of first use At least as early as January 1975
Filing date November 28, 1975
Advertised November 16, 1977
Opposed April 10, 1978
Counter Statement June 21, 1978
Oral hearing April 3, 1981
Following upon the grant of the delay by the Chairman at the conclusion of the oral hearing following which a decision had not been given the chronology continues.
On April 16, 1981 two amended applications were received.
These applications were prepared on form 4 to the Trade Marks Regulations being an "Applica- tion for Registration of a Proposed Trade Mark". On their face these applications do not purport to be amendments to the existing applications but they were construed and treated as such by the Registrar.
On April 30, 1981 the applicant herein by letter of that date opposed the acceptance of the revised applications from the second respondent by the Registrar on the grounds that:
(1) the Act did not permit the Registrar to accept the amended applications,
(2) the applications were not truly amended applications but new and different applications and, this being so,
(3) the Registrar should proceed to his decision in conclusion of the opposition proceeding as originally framed.
Counsel for the second respondent stated that reliance was not being placed on prior use but the applications were amended to be based on pro posed use rather than on prior use.
Counsel for the second respondent expressed a willingness "that if the amended applications were not accepted for advertisement", that a decision should be made by the Registrar on the applica tions as originally filed under subsection 37(8).
On August 21, 1981 by the Registrar's decision expressed in that letter the Registrar accepted the amendments sought by the second respondent as not being contrary to the Trade Marks Regula tions. He concluded that the change of the bases of the applications from prior use to proposed use did not constitute a change in the date of first use. On the basis that the applications had been accepted by him as amendments he then decided that the amended applications should be readvertised.
By notice of appeal dated and filed October 21,
1981. this decision by the Registrar (through the Chairman of the Opposition Board) was appealed.
In the style of cause the applicant herein was named as the appellant and the second respondent herein was therein named as the respondent.
The Registrar of Trade Marks was not named as a party.
At the hearing of the appeal on March 17, 1982 counsel for the respondent, the second respondent herein, objected to the appellant's status to bring the appeal.
The bases of that objection were threefold and quite simple. They were:
(1) The Registrar had not come to a decision on the Opposition proceedings,
(2) The decision of the Registrar of August 21, 1981 accepting the amended application was a matter between the second respondent in its capacity as an applicant before the Registrar and the Registrar, and
(3) If resort was to relief by the remedies pro vided in section 18 of the Federal Court Act in the nature of certiorari, prohibition and man- damus which was part of the relief sought in the notice of appeal then the proper parties would be the applicant herein in the capacity of an appellant and the Registrar of Trade Marks as the respondent.
For the reasons for judgment expressed on April 16, 1982 the pronouncement of the same date was that the preliminary objection taken by the respondent named in the style of cause in the notice of appeal to the appeal launched was well founded and that the appellant was not entitled to the relief thereby sought.
It was stated in the reasons that accepting the premise that the amendments were merely that, then the proceedings have not been concluded but are concluded when a final decision has been reached and no such final decision had been reached and, even if the amendments were the
substitution of other applications, in either event the remedy would be by the invocation of the appropriate prerogative writs under section 18 of the Federal Court Act and that the proper party to such proceedings would be the Registrar.
The reasons for judgment while stating that the objection to the notice of appeal was well founded continued to state that this conclusion was not to be construed in any way as an impediment to further proceedings against the Registrar.
Following upon the facts as recited above this is the application by notice of motion pursuant to Rule 603(b) as the instrument and means of seek ing that relief.
In my view the resolution of the present applica tion falls to be determined upon the interpretation of sections 35, 36 and 37 of the Trade Marks Regulations made under the authority of section 65 of the Trade Marks Act.
The validity of the pertinent sections of the Regulations was not disputed nor put in issue.
The sections of the Regulations read:
35. Except as provided in sections 36 and 37, an application may be amended, either before or after advertisement.
36. An application for the registration of a trade mark may not be amended at any time
(a) to change the identity of the applicant, except after recognition of a transfer by the Registrar;
(b) to change the trade mark except in respects that do not alter its distinctive character or affect its identity;
(e) to change a date of first use or making known in Canada of the trade mark to an earlier date, except on evidence satisfactory to the Registrar that the change is justified by the facts;
(d) to change the application from one not alleging use or making known the trade mark in Canada before the filing of the application to one alleging such use or making known; or
(e) to extend the statement of wares or services.
37. An application for the registration of a trade mark may not be amended after advertisement
(a) to change the trade mark; or
(b) to change a date of first use or making known in Canada of the trade mark.
The sections are ranged under the heading Amendment of Applications for Registration. By
virtue of subsection 40(2) of the Trade Marks Act an application to extend the wares in respect of which a trade mark is registered, as the present applications are, is to be treated as an application for registration of a trade mark in respect of the wares specified in the application for amendment.
Thus the present applications fall within the sections of the Regulations ranged under the head ing since amendments are being sought to the applications to extend the wares.
The question which arises is whether an amend ment to change the applications from being based upon prior use to applications based upon proposed use is an amendment prohibited by section 36 at any time or section 37 after advertisement.
If not then the amendment may be made either before or after advertisement at the discretion of the applicant for registration and there is no dis cretion vested in the Registrar to refuse the amendment.
The Regulations under the heading Opposition are silent upon the matter of amendments to applications during the currency of opposition pro ceedings but the language of section 35 is suf ficiently broad in its terms to cover that time. Specific mention is made in section 42 of amend ments permitted in the opposition proceedings being limited to a statement of opposition or coun ter statement and then only by leave of the Regis trar upon terms that may be imposed.
The failure to make specific reference to an amendment of an application of one based on prior use to one based upon proposed use does not, in my view, constitute a casus omissus.
If it be an obvious omission then the words of the sections may be read to cover the omission but a casus omissus can in no case be supplied by a court of law for that would be to make laws.
The question here must, in my view, be deter mined by the cardinal rules of legal interpretation one of which a casus omissus should not be creat-
ed by interpretation save in the case of strong necessity.
The contention on behalf of the applicant herein is that, predicated upon paragraph 37(b) of the Regulations, an amendment after advertisement of an application alleging a date of prior use to one based upon proposed use is of necessity a change in the date of first use.
The sound rule of construction is to give the same meaning to the same words occurring in different sections of a statute or regulations made thereunder.
The words used in paragraph 37(b) of the Regu lations are "change a date of first use".
Those same words are used in paragraph 36(c).
Provision is thereby made that no amendment may be made at any time:
... to change a date of first use ... of the trade mark to an earlier date ...
By virtue of paragraph 36(d) no amendment may be made at any time:
... to change the application from one not alleging use (which must of necessity mean an application based on proposed use) ... the trade mark in Canada before the filing ... to one alleging such use ... (that is to one alleging prior use).
Applying the contention on behalf of the appli cant herein to the language of paragraph (d) that the change of an application based on proposed use to one based upon use would of necessity result in a change in the date of first use to an earlier date. In an application based on proposed use the use would follow the filing of the application but in an application based on prior use the trade mark has been used prior to the application. That reasoning is tantamount to saying that paragraph 36(d) by changing proposed use to prior use is to the same effect as changing the date of first use.
If that be so there would be no necessity for paragraph 36(c) which precludes a change in the date of first use because if that were so that
circumstance would be covered by paragraph 36(d).
Prima facie different language in different para graphs in the same section must be interpreted as indicating a different meaning and a different subject matter.
Thus, in my view, paragraph 36(d) is limited to a change in the application from one based on proposed use to one of prior use.
Paragraph 36(c) is limited to a change in the date of first use to an earlier date.
Thus paragraph 37(b) because of the use of the same words therein as in paragraph 36(c), "to change a date of first use", is likewise limited to that subject matter and does not extend to an amendment to change the applications originally based on prior use to applications based on pro posed use.
Such an amendment is not the subject of a specific regulation prohibiting such a change.
That being so the amendment here in question falls within the broad concept of section 35 and may be made at any time either before or after advertisement.
Thus it follows that the amendments presently made are at the instigation of the applicant for registration and there is no discretion in the Regis trar to refuse them.
Accordingly the application for the relief sought by the applicant herein is denied.
The circumstances are such that there shall be no award of costs in favour of the Registrar or the second respondent. Each of the parties shall bear its own costs.
The applications herein have been treated by the Registrar and the second respondent as amended applications rather than as new applications and to have done so corresponds with the actual fact despite the inaccurate use of terminology in sever al instances.
That being so the argument in the opposition proceeding having been completed by the parties I
can see no impediment to the Registrar proceeding to his ultimate decision without the necessity for advertising the matter anew. To do so is inconsist ent with the applications being merely amended and more consistent with there being two new applications which was not the case nor were they treated by the Registrar as new applications.
It is my understanding that all relevant submis sions have been made by the rival parties in the opposition proceedings although the applicant herein has been deprived of two of the four grounds upon which the opposition was based and but two remain.
ORDER
The application is dismissed. There shall be no award of costs in favour of the Registrar of Trade Marks or the second respondent. The parties shall each bear their own costs.
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