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T-2540-86
Culinar Foods Inc. (Plaintiff)
v.
Mario's Food Products Ltée, D. & H. Surplus Inc. and M.S. Halpern & Son Salvage Merchandise Limited (Defendants)
INDEXED AS: CULINAR FOODS INC. v. MARIO'S FOOD PROD UCTS LTÉE
Trial Division, Muldoon J.—Ottawa, November 21 and 24, 1986.
Trade marks Practice Interim injunction, preservation order and Anton Piller order Circumstances entitling appli cant to proceed before commencement of action Proposed defendant selling defective coffee in packages bearing appli cant's trade mark Strong prima facie case of wilful infringement of mark Orders granted Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 469, 470, 471 Trade Marks Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10, ss. 19, 20, 22(1).
This was an ex parte motion for an interim injunction, a preservation order and authorization akin to an Anton Piller order. The applicant sought these orders to protect the reputa tion of its registered trade marks: "Unico" and "Unico" and design.
Applicant's coffee had to be removed from retailers' shelves as it had an evil odour and taste. This was verified by consumer complaints and by laboratory tests. Furthermore, two coffee experts thought that the coffee ought to be destroyed. The Vice-President of applicant's Unico division had directed Mario's, one of the proposed defendants, to remove the Unico packaging before disposing of the defective coffee.
Despite being aware of the poor quality of the coffee, pro posed defendant M.S. Halpern & Son sold some of it in packages bearing applicant's trade mark.
Held, orders granted.
The circumstances related in applicant's affidavit were suffi cient to invoke Rules 469(3) and 470(3), permitting it to proceed before commencement of the action. The affidavit presented a strong prima facie case of wilful infringement of applicant's registered trade mark. There was no doubt that it would suffer serious harm from the sale of the defective coffee. In such circumstances, the case law will support the granting of an interim injunction.
The applicant had met all of the essential preconditions enumerated in Anton Piller KG v. Manufacturing Processes Ltd. and is therefore entitled to search for and discover how many cases of coffee bearing its mark are to be sold by Halpern and to whom it intends to sell them.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Zellers Inc., [1984] 1 F.C. 49; (1983), 73 C.P.R. (2d) 1 (F.C.T.D.); Nebula Hold ings Ltd. v. Metrin Laboratories Ltd. (1985), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 562 (B.C.C.A.); Tele-Direct (Publications) Inc. v. Telcor Canada Directories Inc. (1986), 11 C.P.R. (3d) 102 (F.C.T.D.); Nintendo of America, Inc. v. Coinex Video Games Inc., [1983] 2 F.C. 189; (1982), 69 C.P.R. (2d) 122 (F.C.A.); Anton Piller KG v. Manufacturing Processes Ltd., [1976] 1 Ch. 55.
COUNSEL:
David A. Aylen for plaintiff.
No one appearing for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Scott & Aylen, Ottawa, for plaintiff.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MULDOON J.: The proposed plaintiff, the appli cant herein, moves ex parte for an interim injunc tion, a preservation order and authorization akin to an Anton Piller order, pursuant respectively to Rules 469, 470 and 471 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663]. It does so to prevent further infringement, and to protect the reputation of its registered trade marks: "Unico"—No. 117,229; and "Unico" and design—No. 140,600.
Jean-François Douville, Vice-President and General Manager of Unico, a division of the appli cant corporation swore and subscribed his affidavit which was filed on the day of the hearing. The circumstances related therein are amply adequate to invoke Rules 469(3) and 470(3), permitting the applicant to proceed before commencement of the action.
According to Mr. Douville, the applicant's espresso coffee product, bearing the Unico trade mark on its packages and tin can containers has been obtained from the proposed defendant, Mario's Food Products Ltée, of Montréal (herein- after: Mario's). Coffee meeting the applicant's standards has been imported by Mario's, roasted,
ground and packed by Mario's into packages or tins supplied by the applicant (or its predecessor). A sample package is annexed as Exhibit "D" to the deponent's affidavit. Such packages carry the Unico trade mark which appears identically the same on the coffee tins. Coffee was bought from Mario's in 1,000 to 2,000 case lots, each case containing 24 tins or bags of coffee, bearing the Unico trade mark.
Coffee so produced and packed last summer turned out to be rancid, evincing an evil odour and taste. This state is verified by customer, or con sumer, complaints, exemplified in Exhibit "E" and by laboratory tests, exemplified in Exhibit "F". The test results indicated the presence of coliform, yeast and mold, with the following note:
All samples exhibited a burnt off odor, similar to an 'olive oil aroma. This would indicate that the product had absorbed this odour at some point during storage.
Two independent coffee experts, named in Mr. Douville's affidavit, were consulted later and each opined that the coffee was unreclaimable and should be destroyed.
Some 1,581 cases were returned to Mario's in about August, 1986, according to the deponent, who then personally directed Mario's to remove the Unico packaging prior to disposing of the defective coffee.
Late in August, some of the defective coffee, still bearing the applicant's mark, was found on retailers' shelves in Montréal and Toronto. The applicant's sales force then went out to buy up the product from the retailers, who were told the reasons for so doing. It was determined that the defective coffee had been supplied by the second prospective defendant, D. & H. Surplus Inc. of Montréal.
Mr. Douville's affidavit completes the narrative, thus:
24. THAT confident that our supplier, Mario's, would reac- quire the 579 cases from D. & H. Surplus Inc. and being aware through the monitoring activities of our sales force that such product was no longer being offered to Canadian consumers, the matter was allowed to rest through the balance of Septem-
ber and the first week of October, and I thereafter left on a three-week business trip to return to my Toronto office on the 5th of November, 1986. I am informed by my company's national sales manager, Cessare Sisti, and do verily believe that on October 30th Mr. Fred Halpern of M.S. Halpern & Son, which is listed in the Toronto telephone directory as M.S. Halpern & Son Salvage Merchandise, of 1199 Queen Street West, contacted Mr. John Porco, one of our key account managers, wishing to discuss a matter relating to coffee. In my absence, Mr. Porco passed the matter to Mr. Sisti. A call was made to Mr. Halpern on October 31st and we were informed that Halpern had some 525 cases of Unico Gold coffee which they wished to sell to us at $46.10 per case. Attached to this my Affidavit and marked as Exhibit "G" is a copy of the telephone message taken by Mr. John Porco and the notes of the tele phone conversation with Mr. Halpern of October 31st, 1986, which notes awaited me upon my return to the office on November 5, 1986. I did not have an opportunity to review my mail immediately upon my return and thus was unaware of the Sisti note until the following weekend. Upon reading such note I then called Mario's on Monday, November 10th, 1986, and was assured that he had informed D. & H. Surplus Inc. to advise M.S. Halpern & Son not to sell the product. I then relied upon Mario's to themselves reacquire the defective product.
25. THAT Mr. Halpern attempted to contact me during the morning of Tuesday, November 18th, and I was able to return his call at about noon on such date. He informed me that he had buyers for the coffee of which he had more than 500 cases at $46.10 per case and implicitly invited a bid from my company. I informed Mr. Halpern that this was poor quality coffee not fit for human consumption and he replied that notwithstanding its smell and taste he had people who had tried such coffee and were willing to purchase it from him for subsequent retail sale. We agreed that I had 24 hours to get back to him.
26. THAT I immediately contacted [sic] my company's corpo rate solicitor, .... When he returned my call on Thursday morning, November 20th, I was out of the office and I contact ed such law firm upon my return just before noon .... I was then referred to our present Toronto counsel, ... , whom I first contacted at 4:00 p.m. on Thursday, November 20th, 1986. On my counsel's advice, I contacted Mr. Halpern at 5:00 p.m. on such date and he informed me that he had sold some of the subject coffee since we had last talked. He refused to indicate the exact quantity remaining in his possession and when I suggested that it might be in the 500-case range he indicated that such could be possible but he didn't have the time to go back in his plant and count. On this note our conversation ended.
27. THAT it is of critical importance to my company and its exemplary Canadian reputation for superior quality UNICO products that this defective coffee contained in my company's own packaging, and for which packaging it retains ownership, not reach the consumer, entailing a preservation and detention order for those cases of coffee remaining in the possession of M.S. Halpern & Son and the right to inspect their records to
determine the identity of third parties who may have purchased such product from them since October 31st, 1986, for the purpose of repurchasing as much of the defective lot as possible.
Prima facie, there appears here to be wilful infringement of the applicant's registered trade mark contrary at least to sections 19 and 20 of the Trade Marks Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. T-10]. Para graphs 25 and 26 of the affidavit present a strong prima facie case of the wilful flouting of subsec tion 22(1) of the Act, or else, what is known in the vernacular as a "shake-down", on the part of the third prospective defendant, M.S. Halpern & Son Salvage Merchandise Limited.
Counsel for the applicant cited in support of his client's urgent request only four quite cogent juris- prudential precedents. They are:
i) Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Zellers Inc., [1984] 1 F.C. 49; (1983) 73 C.P.R. (2d) 1, a decision by Walsh J. of this Court, in which he held that the defendant's refusal to stop selling goods of a strongly prima facie infringing nature, where there was no doubt that the plaintiff would suffer serious harm supported an interlocutory injunction;
ii) Nebula Holdings Ltd. v. Metrin Laboratories Ltd. (1985), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 562, a unanimous decision of the British Columbia Court of Appeal, upholding a chambers judge's decision in which an interlocutory injunction was granted where a licencee unable to complete an order, threatened itself to sell the products it had made.
iii) Tele-Direct (Publications) Inc. v. Telcor Canada Directo ries Inc. (1986), 11 C.P.R. (3d) 102, a decision by Denault J. of this Court in which he held that the damage which could be caused by a new entrant into the market to the plaintiffs long standing mark, business and reputation by confusion of marks could be substantial, and justified granting an interlocutory injunction.
Those factors, and the reasoning in the three above cited decisions, which are present here, will surely support an interim injunction if they support inter locutory injunctions, as they did.
iv) Nintendo of America, Inc. v. Coinex Video Games Inc., [1983] 2 F.C. 189; (1982), 69 C.P.R. (2d) 122, a unanimous decision of the Appeal Division of this Court in which it granted an "Anton Piller" type of order having found extraor dinary circumstances of the need to preserve documents and materials in circumstances of a strong prima facie case. Heald J. for the Court is reported at page [198 F.C.] 129 C.P.R. where he reviewed the three essential pre-conditions
enumerated by Ormrod L.J. in support of the order granted in Anton Piller KG v. Manufacturing Processes Ltd., [1976] 1 Ch. 55, thus:
First, there must be an extremely strong prima facie case. Secondly, the damage, potential or actual, must be very serious for the applicant. Thirdly, there must be clear evi dence that the defendants have in their possession incriminat ing documents or things, and that there is a real possibility that they may destroy such material before any application inter partes can be made.
In the Court's opinion, in that case, the plaintiff had met all three of these conditions.
In the case at bar, the applicant has likewise met all three of those conditions. According to the affidavit, Mr. F. Halpern said he had "more than 500 cases" of Unico Gold coffee for sale to the applicant at $46.10 per case, but refused to say exactly how many he had. He also said certain unnamed people who had tried such rancid coffee, were willing to buy it from him for retail sale. The applicant is reasonably entitled to search for and discover how many cases bearing its mark are to be sold by Halpern and to whom he intends to sell them, as it appears, during the afternoon of November 21, 1986. The circumstances narrated here are surely exceptional.
The defendant will be enjoined for 10 days, and thereafter until disposition of the applicant's motion for an interlocutory injunction, if the appli cant launches its motion before the expiry of 10 days from November 21, 1986. The conditions for granting such interim injunction were accepted by the applicant's counsel orally before the Court. They are: the applicant shall file, and serve on all prospective defendants, with alacrity, its statement of claim; and, in the event that the applicant's case should fail, it is hereby bound to pay to the prospective third defendant (and the other two, as well) such monetary damages as the Court proper ly assesses they will have suffered as a conse quence of the interim injunction.
The orders are granted, in the following forms proposed by the applicant's solicitors:
(a) the defendant, M.S. Halpern & Son, be enjoined until November 30th, 1986 or until the disposition of an application for an interlocutory injunction by the plain tiff, whichever comes first, from selling, moving or
otherwise disposing of any coffee in its possession or control having marked thereon or in association there with the registered trade mark UNICO (Registration No. 140,600);
(b) the defendant, M.S. Halpern & Son preserve and detain at its own expense, on its premises at 1199 Queen Street West, Toronto, Ontario, or wherever else may be found in the possession or control of the defendant, any and all coffee having marked thereon or in association therewith the registered trade mark UNICO;
(c) the said preservation and detention referred to in para graph (b) herein be until November 30th, 1986 or until the disposition of an application for an interlocutory injunction by the plaintiff, whichever comes first;
(d) a representative of the plaintiff together with a bonded and licensed bailiff nominated by the plaintiff may forthwith, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., enter upon the premises of the defendant M.S. Halpern & Son, for the purposes of:
(i) taking inventory of all coffee products having marked thereon or in association therewith the registered trade mark UNICO; and
(ii) inspecting the said defendant's books and records for the purposes of determining the names and addresses of purchasers, from the said defendant, of coffee marked with the trade mark UNICO thereon;
(e) that the plaintiff undertake to be bound by any order of this Court as to damages;
(f) that the subject order together with copies of all sup porting material be served forthwith and with all due dispatch upon all of the defendants; and
(g) costs in the cause.
As noted above, the proper interpretation of the orders is that if the applicant makes further application for an interlocutory injunction prior to the expiry of 10 days after November 21, 1986, the interim injunction and other orders which have been granted herein will endure until disposition of the applicant's motion for the interlocutory injunction.
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