Judgments

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American Cyanamid Company (Appellant)
v.
Record Chemical Co. Inc. (Respondent)
Trial Division, Noël A.C.J.—Montreal, Septem- ber 21; Ottawa, October 31, 1972.
Trade marks—"Pine-Sol" registered trade mark in connec tion with disinfectants—Whether "Pine-L" confusing there- with—Trade Marks Act, R.S., 1970, c. T-10, s. 6(2)(5).
Appellant, the owner of the registered trade mark Pine- Sol, which it had substantially used and advertised in Canada for many years in connection with disinfectants so that it had become actually distinctive of its wares, opposed respondent's application for registration of the trade mark Pine-L for use in association with disinfectants. The Regis trar allowed respondent's application, holding that the two marks were substantially different and that there was no confusion between them.
Held, on appeal, the Registrar ought to have refused registration of respondent's mark Pine-L. As a matter of first impression and with the average or hurried customer in mind, and without breaking up the marks into their undivid ed components, and taking into account the small inherent distinctiveness of the word "Pine" and the difference in the two other parts of the marks "L" and "Sol", the marks were not substantially different and, therefore, are not only confusing within the meaning of section 6(2) of the Trade Marks Act but also within the meaning of subsection (5) thereof and its paragraphs.
APPEAL from Registrar of Trade Marks.
David E. Clarke for appellant.
S. Godinsky, Q.C., for respondent.
NOEL A.C.J.—This is an appeal from the decision of the Registrar of Trade Marks, dated February 18, 1972, accepting the respondent's application to register the trade mark Pine-L for use in association with disinfectants based on use of the mark in association with disinfectants since at least as early as January 15, 1967. The said application was accorded serial number 305,359 by the Registrar.
The appellant is the owner of the trade mark Pine-Sol registered in Canada on June 3, 1955
for use in association with detergents, deodo rants, disinfecting and bleaching fluids under number 100,773. The right to the exclusive use of the word "Pine" was disclaimed.
The appellant opposed respondent's applica tion for registration of its trade mark Pine-L upon the following grounds:
(a) that under Section 37(2)(a) of the Trade Marks Act the application did not comply with the requirements of Sec tion 29 of the Act in that the statement of use in the said application is not supported by the facts;
(b) that the trade mark PINE-L is not registrable in view of Sections 37(2)(b) and 12(1)(d) of the Trade Marks Act because it is confusing within the meaning of Section 6 of the Trade Marks Act with Appellant's trade mark PINE - SOL registered in Canada on June 3, 1955 for use in association with detergents, deodorants, disinfecting and bleaching fluids under number 100773. The application for Appellant's said registration was filed with the Trade Marks Office, Ottawa, on October 20,. 1954 based on proposed use and the affidavit of use was filed with the Registrar of Trade Marks on June 2, 1955;
(c) that the trade mark PINE-L is not registrable in view of Sections 37(2)(c) and 16(1) of the Trade Marks Act because it is confusing within the meaning of Section 6 of the Act with the Appellant's trade mark PINE -SOL previ ously used in Canada by the Appellant and/or its regis tered user in association with the wares of the said Registration Number 100773;
(d) that the trade mark PINE-L is not registrable in view of sections 37(2)(d) and 2(f) of the Trade Marks Act because it does not distinguish the wares in association with which it is alleged to be used by the Respondent from the wares in association with which the Appellant's trade mark PINE -SOL is registered and used in Canada.
The appellant further submits that:
(a) on the basis of the evidence filed by the Respondent in the Opposition, the Respondent has not used the trade mark PINE-L in Canada in association with disinfectants;
(b) PINE-L used in Canada as a trade mark for disinfect ants by Respondent is confusing with PINE -SOL used as a trade mark in Canada by Appellant in association with the wares of registration number 100773 within the meaning of Section 6 of the Trade Marks Act and is not registrable by virtue of the Appellant's earlier date of and continuing use of PINE -SOL as a trade mark in Canada as aforesaid, and by virtue of Appellant's registration of PINE -SOL as a trade mark as aforesaid;
(c) the Respondent's trade mark PINE-L does not actually distinguish nor is it adapted to distinguish disinfectants sold by the Respondent in Canada from the wares of the Appellant recited in its said Registration number 100773 and sold by Appellant and/or its registered user in Canada in association with the trade mark PINE -SOL.
The pertinent parts of the Registrar's decision are reproduced hereunder:
With respect to the first ground of opposition, the oppo nent submitted in its written argument and at the hearing, that the applicant had failed to establish that it had used the trade mark PINE-L in association with disinfectants and since the date specified in the application, January 15, 1967. In support of its allegations, the opponent referred to the affidavit filed on behalf of the applicant and in which an officer of the applicant states that "My company com menced the use of the trade mark PINE-L at least as early as 15th of January 1967 in association with detergents [sic]. The opponent pointed out that the applicant had not filed any specimens of the alleged use of the alleged trade mark and of the alleged product, and that the statement in the affidavit evidence referred to the use of the trade mark in association with "detergents" whereas the wares specified in the application are "disinfectants". The opponent further relied on its reply evidence consisting of several affidavits wherein it is stated that the applicant's product PINE -L had not been located in various stores across Canada.
Although it is stated in the affidavit subscribed by the President and Executive Director of Record Chemical Co. Inc. (the applicant) that the company "commenced the use of the trade mark at least as early as the 15th of January 1967 in association with detergents" it would appear from the other statements made in the affidavit that reference to "detergents" is merely a clerical mistake and that as a matter of fact the applicant has used the trade mark PINE -L in association with Pine oil disinfectants. On the other hand, the fact that the applicant's product PINE -L was not located in various stores across Canada is not conclusive evidence that the mark is not in use in Canada since other stores that were not inspected on opponent's behalf might very well have sold the applicant's products.
He then said in his conclusion:
Although the opponent's mark has been substantially used and advertised in Canada in association with detergent, deodorant and disinfecting fluids since at least as early as the year 1955, the opponent cannot acquire the monopoly of the word PINE for wares whose active ingredients include pine oil. The only common feature between the marks of the parties is the word "pine" which is clearly descriptive of
the character or quality of the wares detergents, deodorants, disinfecting and cleaning fluids.
The marks PINE-L and PINE -SOL considered in their entire- ties are substantially different and having regard to the circumstances of the case on the basis of the admissible evidence, I am of opinion that the marks are not confusing within the meaning of section 6 of the Trade Marks Act and the opposition is therefore rejected pursuant to section 37(8) of the Trade Marks Act.
The main attack launched by the appellant is that the Registrar properly instructed in law could not conclude as he did that they were substantially different and, therefore, not confusing.
Counsel for the appellant submitted that it was obvious from a reading of the above rele vant passages of the Registrar's decision that in reaching his conclusion, the latter disregarded the word "Pine" because of the emphasis he laid on the descriptiveness of the word and his statement that the opponent (the appellant) cannot acquire the monopoly of the word "Pine" for wares whose active ingredients include pine oil.
This appears to be precisely what the Regis trar did if one refers to the language used in the latter part of his decision reproduced above. He indeed made four findings:
(1) the opponent's trade mark Pine-Sol has been substantially used and advertised in Canada;
(2) the opponent cannot acquire the monopo ly of the word "Pine" for wares whose active ingredients include pine oil;
(3) the only common feature between the marks is the word "Pine" which is clearly descriptive, and
(4) the marks considered in their entirety are substantially different.
I should say that the Registrar's findings that the appellant's trade mark Pine-Sol has been substantially used and advertised in Canada is fully supported by the evidence even if there was here no evidence of people in the market
place stating that such was the case. The proof of extensive sales over a long period of time, as contained in the James Edwin Archer affidavit (which was not contested by the respondent) is, in my view, sufficient to establish that appel lant's trade mark has thereby acquired a distinc tiveness sufficient to entitle it to registration. The word "Pine", of course, is not an inherently distinctive or arbitrary word. It is indeed descriptive and under the former legislation, the Unfair Competition Act, could not have been registered as a trade mark as it could not then have become distinctive of the wares of anyone. The present Trade Marks Act, how ever, has changed this as it appears from a reading of the definition in section 2 which says that:
"distinctive" in relation to a trade mark means a trade mark that actually distinguishes the wares or services in associa tion with which it is used by its owner from the wares or services of others or is adapted so to distinguish them; [the italics are mine.]
It then follows that if the appellant has estab lished that the word "Pine" together with "Sol" has been used by it so as to actually become distinctive of its wares and this, as already mentioned, is what has happened here, then its owner can have rights in a descriptive word and it can become such as here a perfectly valid trade mark.
A trade mark may consist of a number of words some of which may be what are called weak words or less strong words than others. The matter, however, of determining whether the mark is confusing or not, under section 6 of the Trade Marks Act must still be decided by looking at the entirety of the trade mark without breaking it up into parts and looking at one part only and downgrading the other on the basis that no one can obtain a monopoly in a particu lar descriptive word. The appellant, as already mentioned, disclaimed the word "Pine" but the marks must still be considered in their totalities
in determining whether there is a likelihood of confusion between them.
No doubt, in the case of weak marks or of marks possessing little inherent distinctiveness, small differences may be accepted to distin guish one from the other, but this does not mean that any such weak portions of a mark must be discounted in so distinguishing.
With this in mind, the problem should then here be confined to the question of confusion uncluttered by the consideration of monopoly in one of the words and even by the matter of distinctiveness of the appellant's trade mark as the latter's Pine-Sol is a registered trade mark. However, as already mentioned, even if the distinctiveness of the appellant's trade mark had to be considered, the evidence as to the appellant's use of it is sufficiently convincing to establish that such use had definitely and actu ally distinguished its wares.
Having regard to all of the circumstances of this case and the fact that both marks are used in association with the sames wares, i.e., disin fectants (the composition of the ingredients is the same in the Pine-L label as the active ingredients in the Pine-Sol product) which are items purchased by persons who do not always examine labels, I am of the view that as a matter of first impression and with the average or hurried customer in mind, and without break ing up the marks into their undivided compo nents, and even taking into account the little inherent distinctiveness of the word "Pine" and the differences in the two other parts of both trade marks "L" and "Sol", the marks are not substantially different and, therefore, are not only confusing within the meaning of section 6(2) of the Trade Marks Act but also within the meaning of subsection (5) thereof and its para graphs. It follows, of course, that the Registrar should have refused to register the respondent's mark Pine-L.
This conclusion would be sufficient to end the matter. The appellant, however, submitted a second ground of appeal which was not before the Registrar and which is raised for the first time in these proceedings.
The submission is that under section 29(a) of the Act, an applicant for the registration of a trade mark must file "a statement in ordinary commercial terms of the specific wares or serv ices in association with which the mark has been or is proposed to be used", and that the respondent here does not use the mark it alleges it used.
Donald H. Smith, a trade mark agent, states in his affidavit produced herein, that during the hearing before the Registrar of Trade Marks on January 20, 1972, he requested of Mr. Godinsky, the respondent's counsel, a specimen label and was given the one attached to his affidavit and marked Exhibit A, which he says "I understand to be a sample of the label being used in Canada by the Applicant on which the Applicant relies as use of the trade mark applied for in these proceedings". The specimen label mentioned above contains the trade mark Pine'L, that is "Pine" with an apostrophe rather than Pine-L with a hyphen, which is the trade mark the respondent applied for.
Counsel for the appellant says that initially the difference may well have been of little significance and the applicant might have suc ceeded in convincing the Registrar to permit an amendment on the ground that this discrepancy would not alter its character or identity under section 36 of the Trade Marks Act. But this, he says, can no longer be done after the advertise ment provided in section 37 because the appli cant can not, at that stage, correct the error and justify the registration of one mark by the use of another.
Counsel for the appellant submits that the Registrar did not know that the trade mark used by the applicant (the respondent) was different
from the one sought to be registered and had he known after the advertisement of respondent's application that the trade mark sought was not the one used, would have refused the application.
Counsel for the respondent, on the other hand, took the position that Smith's label, Exhibit A, does not indicate that that is the only label being used although he admitted that it was a label used in 1972 by the respondent. It is not, he said, the exclusive type of label used as two affidavits produced by Mr. Kuchar and filed by the respondent, indicate that he is deal ing with the trade mark Pine-L and not Pine'L. Counsel for the respondent also suggests that if counsel for the appellant found a contradiction here, he should, he says, have attacked it by cross-examination, which he did not do. He added that Mr. Smith's Exhibit A does not show that it was used in association with a disinfect ant because, he says, it is not, but that it is used as a cleaner. This, however, is not entirely so if one refers to the label where the word "Clean- er" appears immediately under the words Pine'L, and immediately under "Cleaner" and linked to it by a "&" the words "disinfectant for home hygiene" appear.
The question here is what sort of difference can be of sufficient magnitude to enable one to say that a trade mark is really different from another. If the applicant had made an applica tion for registration of its trade mark Pine-L in fancy lettering or in small case lettering or in script, could the appellant take the position that the respondent is not using the same trade mark? I would not think so. If instead of using a hyphen, an apostrophe is used such as here, could it not be said that these words are differ ent trade marks. The matter is more doubtful. There is, however, in my view, no necessity to answer that question here as I have come to the conclusion that there is sufficient evidence in Mr. Kuchar's affidavits and in the application of the respondent to indicate that even if the latter has used the word mark Pine'L on certain labels, they have used the word mark Pine-L
also sufficiently to entitle it to apply for registration.
In view, however, of the conclusion I have reached on the first ground, the appeal is there fore allowed with costs and the matter is referred back to the Registrar for appropriate action in accordance with these reasons.
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