Judgments

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T-4223-76
McDonald's Corporation (Appellant)
v.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada (Respondent)
Trial Division, Addy J.—Ottawa, December 13, 1976 and January 5, 1977.
Trade marks — Appeal from decision of Registrar of Trade
Marks refusing registration Application for trade mark for future use in Canada — Whether registrable under s. 12(1)(a)
Sections 30(l) and 36 not complied with Revised application submitted to obtain benefit of s. 14(1) and avoid strict application of s. 12 — Whether Registrar should hear evidence of previous foreign registration — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 12(1)(a), 14(1), 16, 29(d), 30(1), 36, 46.
Appellant claims that the Registrar of Trade Marks erred in holding that its mark was not registrable by virtue of section 12(1)(a) and in refusing to consider evidence showing that the mark was registered in the appellant's country of origin.
Held, the appeal is allowed and the matter is referred back to the Registrar. The Registrar did not err in finding that the mark was not registrable within the terms of section 12(1)(a) since the applicant did not establish that it had complied with that section. The Registrar did err in refusing to consider evidence that the mark was registered in the appellant's country of origin as provided for in section 14(l). The application was made strictly for the purpose of proposed future use in Canada and the applicant is entitled under section 16 to ask for the relief granted by section 14(1) against some of the strict requirements of section 12.
APPEAL from decision of Registrar of Trade Marks.
COUNSEL:
N. H. Fyfe for appellant.
D. F. Friesen for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Smart & Biggar, Ottawa, for appellant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
ADDY J.: This is an appeal from a decision of the Registrar of Trade Marks whereby he refused the appellant's application to register the trade mark "RONALD McDONALD" as a proposed
mark for future use in conjunction with food services.
The grounds of the appeal are twofold, namely that the Registrar erred in holding that the mark was not registrable by virtue of section 12(1) (a) and that he also erred in refusing to consider evidence filed on behalf of the appellant showing that the mark is the subject-matter of a registered mark in the United States of America, the country of origin of the appellant.
At the close of the hearing before me, I stated that I was reserving my decision on the second ground of appeal but that in so far as the first ground was concerned I was not prepared to hold that the Registrar erred in deciding that the appel lant had failed to establish that the name "RONALD McDONALD" was not "primarily merely the name ... of an individual who is living or has died within the preceding thirty years." Although there was evidence that the name was used to identify a fictitious clown, a drawing of which has now been registered as a mark in Canada, the evidence in my view fell considerably short of establishing that section 12(1 )(a) has been complied with, especially if one applies the test suggested by Jackett P., as he then was, in the case of Standard Oil Co. v. The Registrar of Trade Marks' at page 532.
The issues raised in the second ground of appeal, however, are much more difficult to resolve. The original application for a proposed mark was filed on the 7th of December 1970, on the ground of proposed future use of the word in conjunction with restaurant services. Subsequently, that is on the 16th of August 1972, the appellant filed a revised application containing for the first time the following statement:
The trade mark has been duly registered by the applicant in the United States of America, the country of origin of the applicant on August 12th, 1969 under No. 874,861 and the applicant claims the benefit of Section 14 of the Act on the basis of such registration.
The appellant, on the same date, filed an affidavit by one Paul Schrage in support of the application.
It is important to note here that, in order to conform to the provisions of section 36 of the Trade Marks Act, the appellant had previously
' [1968] 2 Ex.C.R. 523.
advertised his application on the 4th of August 1971 and only filed a certified copy of the United States registration of the mark with the Registrar of Trade Marks on the 23rd of August 1972.
The Registrar rendered his decision on the 15th of September 1976 and had this to say about the amendment to the application requested by the appellant and the effect of section 30(1) on the amendment:
Pursuant to subsection 30(1) of the Trade Marks Act, "an applicant whose right to registration of a trade mark is based on a registration of such trade mark in another country of the Union shall, before the date of advertisement of his application in accordance with section 36, furnish a copy of such registra tion certified by the office in which it was made, ...."
Those sections of the Trade Marks Act relating to the basis upon which a trade mark application may be filed in Canada include subsection 29(d) of the Trade Marks Act, which pro vides that a trade mark application in Canada may be based upon a trade mark that is a subject in another country of the Union of the registration or an application for registration by the applicant or it's predecessors in title. Subsection 30(1) provides that the applicant must furnish a certified copy of the registration from the other Union country before the date of advertisement of it's [sic] application in accordance with sec tion 36. Pursuant to subsection 30(1) the Registrar may not accept an amendment to an application either adding or sub stituting a basis of application based upon registration in another Union country after the date of advertisement of the mark applied for in Canada.
The amendment of the application claiming the additional basis of application based upon registration of the mark RONALD MCDONALD in the United States is rejected. The scheme of the Act is that the basis of application be clearly determined prior to advertisement and an amendment to an application basing the application on registration in another Union country after the date of advertisement is not permitted.
Under section 46 of the Act, the Registrar has the power, if circumstances justify it, to extend the time fixed for doing any act or fulfilling any of the requirements of the Act or of the Regulations. However, section 30(1) lays down in a mandatory fashion (the word "shall" is used) that a copy of the foreign registration must be filed before the advertisement. These are two distinct requirements and the Act states that one must be fulfilled before the other. This is not a question of an extension of a time period for doing any particular act. There is no power given to the Registrar to waive or relieve
against any such a statutory priority as opposed to the power to extend time.
Section 30(1) obviously applies to requests for registration where the right to register is based on the registration of the mark in another country of the Union.
Counsel for the appellant argues however that even though he requested the application to be amended, had the amendment been granted, it still would remain fundamentally, essentially and solely an application based on future use and not in any way an application based in whole or in part on registration in another country and that, as a result, section 30(1) does not apply.
The subject-matter of a registration under the Act must be a mark that is registrable no matter what the basis of the right to the registration might be. Once a mark is registrable it may be registered on any one of the three bases for regis tration mentioned in section 16. Section 14 applies only to marks registered in the country of origin of the applicant or his predecessor in title and in such a case relieves against some of the strict require ments of section 12. If a name-mark has been previously so registered, in order to be registrable in Canada it need not be established that it is not primarily merely the name of an individual but proof that it is not without distinctive character will suffice.
I can find nothing in the wording of section 14 nor in any other part of the Act including section 16, which would in any way restrict the application of section 14 to marks which are registered on the basis of section 16(2). On the contrary, the word ing seems quite clear and unequivocal. If a mark is registered in the country of origin of the applicant or his predecessor, the benefit of the section can be invoked to determine whether the mark is regis- trable in Canada regardless of the basis on which registration is sought, whether such basis be past use in Canada, proposed use in Canada or use and registration in the country of origin. The applicant has in his amended application only requested to be granted the benefit of section 14(1). He still has not requested that the basis of his original request
for registration based on future use in Canada be changed to an application based on previous for eign registration nor that such additional basis be added to the original basis. His application does not either contain any statement similar to that contained in paragraph 5 of Form 3 of the Rules which deal with the registration of trade marks registered and used abroad. The statement in Form 3 provides that the applicant:
... requests registration of the trade mark in respect of the services in association with which it has been registered and used as aforesaid (i.e. in the foreign country). [The words in parenthesis are mine.]
Paragraph 4 of the amended application on the contrary is a verbatim reproduction of the words in paragraph 8 of Form 1 of the Rules which is the form for registration of a trade mark on the basis of previous use in Canada. I cannot conclude therefore that, in so amending his application, the appellant has changed the basis of his application to that of previous registration and use in his country of origin or that he has added this last- mentioned basis to his application. The basis of the application remains the same. In order to obtain registration he would still be obliged to rely on future use in Canada and could not as in the case of an application under section 16(2) rely merely on registration and use in the United States.
It is interesting to note that neither the original application nor the amended one contains the statement provided for in paragraph 6 of Form 4 for registration of a proposed trade mark, to the effect that "The applicant intends to use the trade mark in Canada ...." Notwithstanding this, how ever, neither counsel disputed the fact that the original application was in fact and at law one that was made on the basis of intended use in Canada. Both the Registrar, in his reasons for judgment, and counsel for the respondent, in his representa tions before me, however, felt that the requested amendment was on the additional or added basis of foreign registration and use. On this issue, at the outset of his reasons, the Registrar stated:
The application was based on proposed use in Canada.
When referring to the intended amendment, the Registrar added:
... the applicant filed an amended application for the mark RONALD MCDONALD based on proposed use in Canada and on the additional basis of registration and use of the mark RONALD MCDONALD in the United States.
Since no objection was taken to the form of the application in this regard, I am therefore prepared to agree with both parties and with the Registrar that it was and has remained an application for proposed use in Canada but, for the reasons previ ously expressed, I do not agree that the proposed amendment added to the application the additional basis of registration and use in the United States: it remains solely an application for registration based on proposed use in Canada.
Since the Registrar has refused to consider the evidence submitted by the appellant, in the light of the wording of section 14(1) which must be applied if there is evidence to satisfy him that there was in fact such previous registration in the United States, the appeal is allowed and the matter is referred back to the Registrar to deter mine whether there was no previous registration in the United States and if there was, to determine whether the mark is registrable having regard to the provisions of section 14(1 )(b) of the Act.
Had the application been properly filed in the first place by including the paragraph which was eventually added by the amendment there would have been no question of whether section 30(1) applied or not. There will therefore be no costs granted to the appellant.
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