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T-4327-80
Silverwood Industries Limited (Applicant)
v.
Registrar of Trade Marks (Respondent)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Ottawa, October 29, 1980.
Trade marks — Extension of time for opposition proceed ings requested by McDonald's — Extension dealt with after Registrar allowed applicant's application under s. 38(1) of Trade Marks Act — Whether Registrar has jurisdiction to permit opposition proceedings after allowing application — No power to rescind or vary because of error or other reasons, a decision previously made by the Registrar of Trade Marks (s. 38(2)) — Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, s. 38.
MOTION. COUNSEL:
Nicholas Fyfe for applicant. Duff Friesen for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Smart & Biggar, Ottawa, for applicant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
COLLIER J.: The relief sought in the applicant's originating notice of motion is allowed. I have some sympathy for the Registrar of Trade Marks. As I see it, the request by McDonald's for an extension of time within which to file opposition proceedings was, inexplicably, never dealt with until after the Registrar "allowed", on June 12, 1980, the application under subsection 38(1) [Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10]. As of that date, the situation was (a) the application had not been opposed; (b) there had, in fact, been no extension of time for filing a statement of opposition.
I cannot accept the submission that a request for an extension of time must be taken to be the commencement of opposition proceedings. A request of that kind may be granted or refused.
Here the request was not acted upon until far too late. At that time subsection 38(2), unfortu nately, came into play. There is no power, as in some statutes such as the Unemployment Insur ance Act, 1971 [S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48], to rescind or vary because of error or other reasons, a deci sion previously made by the Registrar of Trade Marks.
I hold the decision to allow the application was not a nullity. It stands. The Registrar cannot now purport to permit opposition proceedings by any one of the letters of August 21, 1980, extending the time. He at this stage has no jurisdiction to do so. There will be an order in the nature of prohibi tion forbidding him to do so.
This is also, in my view, a proper case for relief in the nature of mandamus. The Registrar has received the declaration of use requested. Provided that declaration meets the Registrar's require ments, he is required by way of mandamus to register the applicant's trade mark, and to issue the appropriate certificate of registration.
What is the situation as to costs in this case? It is sort of an unusual motion.
MR. FYFE: My Lord, I always like costs. I suppose against that position I have to say that certainly Mr. Justice Cattanach has always taken the view that one ought not in the normal course of events to be entitled to collect costs from the Registrar.
THE COURT: Certainly that is the practice in the ordinary appeal proceedings. This is not an appeal proceeding.
What do you say, Mr. Friesen?
MR. FRIESEN: My Lord, in my submission, the rationale for that practice prevails in a case such as this as well. In my submission, it simply would not be appropriate to call for costs against the Registrar.
MR. FYFE: If I may make one further submission in support of a request for costs. My Lord, it has been indicated by my learned friend that there are a number of pending matters, at least in my
offices, seeking relief akin to this. I rather suspect, having argued the application today, that those will have been disposed of, and perhaps some of which will not have to bear the full costs out of its own pocket of saving everybody else's case as well.
THE COURT: In the circumstances, in this case there will be no order as to costs. Thank you very much.
I will put out a formal pronouncement. I see no reason for me to, in effect, say anything about, or to preserve in any way, the right of any other persons. It seems to me the legal consequences will flow from my order. Parties such as McDonald's will have to seek their own advice.
Thank you very much.
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