Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-3125-90
The Clorox Company (Appellant)
v.
Sears Canada Inc. (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: CLOROX CO. V. SEARS CANADA INC.. (TD)
Trial Division, Joyal J.—Ottawa, February 5 and March 25, 1992.
Trade marks — Registration — Appeal from refusal to regis ter mark "K.C. Masterpiece" and design in association with barbecue sauce — Respondent alleging confusing with own mark "Masterpiece" for cakes and chocolates — Registrar fol lowed step-by-step procedure leading to conclusion applicant failed to establish no likelihood of confusion — Procedure cre ating technical approach to Act, s. 6(5), not giving due regard "to all the surrounding circumstances" — Various areas of enquiry not to be given equal weight — Decision- making process not to be reduced to mathematical calculation — "Masterpiece" common word deserving narrow protection, user may not unfairly monopolize word — Comparatively small differences sufficient to avoid confusion — Same general class test of limited value concerning supermarket products — Likelihood of confusion to be addressed in light of surrounding circumstances.
This was an appeal from the refusal to register the trade mark "K.C. Masterpiece" and design in association with a bar becue sauce because the Registrar found, on balance, that the applicant had not established no likelihood of confusion with the respondent's registered mark "Masterpiece" used in associ ation with cakes and chocolates, particularly fruitcakes, sold only at Sears stores. The Registrar followed a step-by-step pro cess, considering the factors enumerated in Trade-marks Act, subsection 6(5), and the surrounding circumstances. She found "Masterpiece" was suggestive of the quality of the wares and that "K.C. Masterpiece" and design possessed a higher degree of distinctiveness because of the design. The Registrar con ceded that the nature of the wares and their channels of trade were such that the products would not compete, although they were both food products normally found in the same outlets. In applying the principle of first impression and imperfect recol lection, the Registrar concluded that if a determinate conclu sion on the confusion issue could not be made, that issue had to be decided against the applicant.
Held, the appeal should be allowed.
The danger in the Registrar's approach is that it tends to cre ate a technical approach to the provisions of subsection 6(5)
and to supersede the opening words of subsection 6(5), namely that regard must be had "to all the surrounding circumstances". The paragraphs of subsection 6(5) were not meant to circum scribe the limits of the surrounding circumstances, but to focus the mind of the decision-maker on the more specific fields of enquiry to be addressed. Those fields of enquiry are not exhaustive, nor is each individual area of enquiry to be given equal weight. Otherwise the decision-making process would be reduced to a mathematical calculation. The weight to be given to the individual tests under the various paragraphs of subsec tion 6(5) should be balanced with the more unfettered consid eration of all surrounding circumstances. A decision on the issue of confusion under subsection 6(5) cannot be the sum of the individual tests in the paragraphs which follow. The sur rounding circumstances are overriding.
The Registrar failed to analyze some of those circumstances. (1) As a common dictionary word, "Masterpiece" deserves a narrow ambit of protection. It is descriptive of the quality of the wares. (2) "Masterpiece" is a house brand used exclusively in Sears stores. (3) The user of a mark deserving of limited protection cannot unfairly monopolize the word. Compara tively small differences are sufficient to avoid confusion. That the appellant's mark had a slightly higher level of distinctive ness may be sufficient to avoid confusion. (4) The narrow pro tection doctrine applies to the similarity of wares test. There are so many different products available in supermarkets that courts should be wary of giving too much weight in some cir cumstances to the "same general class" test. Otherwise, the application of such a test alone could result in a weak mark gaining a monopoly over a dictionary word, which the courts are reluctant to accept. (5) Finally, the likelihood of confusion in subsection 6(2) must not be addressed in the abstract, but in the light of surrounding circumstances. It is unlikely that the wares would appear side by side on the same shelf in the same retail store. The test resulting from a literal application of the rule would be more a possibility, rather than a likelihood, of confusion.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Trade-marks Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. T-13, ss. 6(2),(5), 12(1)(d).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
General Motors Corp. v. Bellows, [1949] S.C.R. 678; (1949), 10 C.P.R. 101.
CONSIDERED:
Park Avenue Furniture Corp. v. Wickes/Simmons Bedding Ltd. (1991), 37 C.P.R. (3d) 413 (F.C.A.); Office Cleaning
Services Ltd. v. Westminster Window & General Cleaners Ltd. (1946), 63 R.P.C. 39 (H.L.).
REFERRED TO:
Canadian Schenley Distilleries Ltd. v. Canada's Mani- toba Distillery Ltd. (1975), 25 C.P.R. (2d) 1 (F.C.T.D.); Mission Pharmacal Co. v. Ciba-Geigy Canada Ltd. (1990), 30 C.P.R. (3d) 101; 34 F.T.R. 176 (F.C.T.D.); Mitac Inc. v. Mita Industrial Co. Ltd., T-236-90, Denault J., judgment dated 9/1/92, F.C.T.D., not yet reported; Maximum Nutrition Ltd. v. Kellogg Salada Can. Inc. (1987), 11 C.I.P.R. 1; 14 C.P.R. (3d) 133; 9 F.T.R. 136 (F.C.T.D.); Panavision, Inc. v. Matsushita Electric Indus trial Co. Ltd., T-2728-89, Joyal J., judgment dated 14/1/92, F.C.T.D., not yet reported; Freed & Freed Ltd v. Registrar of Trade Marks et al., [1950] Ex.C.R. 431; [1951] 2 D.L.R. 7; (1950), 14 C.P.R. 19; 11 Fox Pat. C. 50.
AUTHORS CITED
Fox, Harold G. The Canadian Law of Trade Marks and Unfair Competition, 3rd ed., Toronto: Carswell Co. Ltd., 1972.
APPEAL from refusal to register trade mark and design (1990), 33 C.P.R. (3d) 489 (Opp. Bd.). Appeal allowed.
COUNSEL:
David J. McCruder for appellant. R. Scott Jolliffe for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Barrigar & Oyen, Ottawa, for appellant. Gowling, Strathy & Henderson, Toronto, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment ren dered in English by
JOYAL J.: This is an appeal by the appellant from a decision of the Registrar of Trade-marks refusing to register the trade-mark "K.C. Masterpiece" and design in association with a barbecue sauce. The application, under No. 490,598, is based on use and registration in the United States. The mark and design are as follows:
The respondent opposes the registration of the trade-mark on the grounds that it was not registrable pursuant to paragraph 12(1)(d) of the Trade-marks Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. T-13] as it is confusing with the respondent's own registered mark "Masterpiece", registration number 154,632, for wares covering "cakes and chocolates". The respondent alleges fur ther that the applicant is not entitled to registration in view of the respondent's prior use of the "Master- piece" trade-mark. Finally, the respondent claims that the applicant's trade-mark is not distinctive.
OPPOSITION BOARD DECISION
In her considered reasons for decision, the Opposi tion Board Member (hereinafter the Registrar), reviewed the application before her as well as the evi dence adduced by the parties. She refused the appli cation. The full text of her reasons may be found in (1990), 33 C.P.R. (3d) 489 (Opp. Bd.).
In arriving at this conclusion, the Registrar found as follows:
1. The onus of establishing no reasonable likeli hood of confusion between the proposed trade mark and the registered trade-mark rests on the applicant.
2. In so doing, regard must be had for the indicia found in subsection 6(5) of the Trade-marks Act and including an enquiry into all the surrounding circumstances.
3. The registered trade-mark "Masterpiece" pos sesses some degree of inherent distinctiveness though somewhat suggestive with respect to the
quality of the wares. On the other hand, the pro posed mark "K.C. Masterpiece" and design pos sesses a higher degree of distinctiveness in view of the design feature.
4. Concerning the nature of the wares and their channels of trade, the Registrar conceded that bar becue sauce on the one hand and cakes and choco lates on the other are not competing products and by their dissimilar nature would not be expected to emanate from the same source; nevertheless, con sideration had to be given to the fact they are all food products normally found in the same outlets.
5. Although there was evidence that the registered mark "Masterpiece" covered wares available only through Sears retail outlets and were generally pro moted at Christmastime, the Registrar noted that no such restrictions apply to the respondent's state ment of wares and the wares involved, being food products, could very well find themselves on the same shelf in the same store.
6. Although the proposed mark has a higher degree of distinctiveness by reason of its design features, the word "Masterpiece" is its more striking ele ment. In applying the principle of first impression and imperfect recollection, the Registrar concluded that if a determinate conclusion on the confusion issue could not be made, that issue had to be decided against the applicant.
7. Finally, the Registrar considered the use on the trade-marks register and in trade names and corpo rate names of the word "Masterpiece". She found that not much weight could be given to this. The wares and services covered by registered marks were quite dissimilar and the use of the word in corporate name inconclusive. In fact, the wares of the parties belong to the same general class and it is on this basis that the issue should be decided.
THE CASE FOR THE APPELLANT
Appellant's counsel argues that the Registrar came to the wrong conclusion and that it is well within the Court's jurisdiction on an appeal of this nature to form its own opinion as to whether or not the two competing marks are confusing. In more specific terms, counsel submits as follows:
1. An assessment of the confusion issue requires that the totality of the mark must be considered as a matter of first impression by a person of average intelligence acting with ordinary caution, i.e. would the use of both trade-marks in the same area likely lead to the inference that the wares involved have a common source. The appellant urges the Court to follow Park Avenue Furniture Corp. v. Wickes/Simmons Bedding Ltd. (1991), 37 C.P.R. (3d) 413 (F.C.A.); Canadian Schenley Distilleries Ltd. v. Canada's Manitoba Distillery Ltd. (1975), 25 C.P.R. (2d) 1 (F.C.T.D.); H. G. Fox, The Cana- dian Law of Trade Marks and Unfair Competition, 3rd ed., 1972, pages 167-169.
2. The registered mark "Masterpiece" is a very weak mark. It is a common dictionary term, a seemingly laudatory or descriptive word and com monly adopted as a trade-mark. Such marks are entitled to only a narrow ambit of protection. There is quoted in that regard the words of Lord Simonds in Office Cleaning Services Ltd. v. Westminster Window & General Cleaners Ltd. [0946), 63 R.P.C. 39 (H.L.)] as repeated by Rand J. in Gen eral Motors Corp. v. Bellows, [1949] S.C.R. 678, at page 691:
It comes in the end, I think, to no more than this, that where a trader adopts words in common use for his trade name, some risk of confusion is inevitable. But that risk must be run unless the first user is allowed unfairly to monopolize the words. The Court will accept comparatively small differences as sufficient to avert confusion. A greater degree of discrimination may fairly be expected from the public where a trade name consists wholly or in part of words descriptive of the articles to be sold or the services to be rendered.
Appellant's counsel also refers to Harold G. Fox (op. cit.), at page 173 as follows:
When it is contended that two words are confusing by reason of the fact that they suggest the same idea regard should be had to the nature of the words. If the words are distinctive, in the sense of being invented words, small differences will not be sufficient to distinguish them, whereas if the words are com mon or descriptive in meaning, they must be taken with their disadvantages. No person is entitled to fence in the common of the English language and words of a general nature cannot be appropriated over a wide area. [Underlining added.]
3. Appellant's counsel argues, on the facts before the Registrar, that although the respondent's mark "Masterpiece" was limited to cakes and chocolates, its use became even more limited when at the material date, the respondent had effectively restricted its use to fruitcake. In terms of the "material date", the Federal Court of Appeal in the case of Park Avenue Furniture Corp. (op. cit.) has now made it quite clear that on the issue of confu sion, the material date is the date of the disposition of the opposition proceedings. In the interim, of course, more "Masterpiece" registrations have found their way into the register and as a result, the distinctiveness of the mark has become more diluted. Indeed, a trade-mark "Meaty Masterpiece" for cat food has been allowed for registration and there is common evidence that in the food busi ness, cat food is regarded as an ordinary food prod uct.
4. A further result of the foregoing is that although the competing marks both cover food products generally, regard should be had to an inherent, common or well-understood distinction between a condiment, such as barbecue sauce on the one hand and a confectionery, such as fruitcake, on the
other.
5. Appellant's counsel suggests that the Registrar did not adequately respond to the evidence of use by the respondent over the years 1981 to 1985. "Masterpiece" is a house brand of the respondent and the product sold exclusively in Sears outlets. Products under that mark are found in candy coun ters and a mere 0.65% of all the respondent's floor space is devoted to all its food products. This sug gests, says counsel, a very limited exposure of the respondent's mark. This implies, he says, that not much distinctiveness attaches to it.
THE CASE FOR THE RESPONDENT
Respondent's counsel draws the Court's attention to the carefully drafted reasons in the Registrar's decision. Counsel suggests that the Registrar's approach indicates to what extent she considered the various indicia in subsection 6(2) and subsection 6(5) of the Trade-marks Act to arrive at her conclusion. An analysis of her decision discloses the following:
1. The Registrar notes the weakness of the "Mas- terpiece" trade-mark.
2. She recognizes that the onus is on the applicant to prove that as between the two marks "Master- piece" and "K.C. Masterpiece" and design, there is no likelihood of confusion.
3. She notes the respondent's use of its trade-mark stretching over a number of years, its advertise ments in Sears catalogues and its identification with Sears confectionery products.
4. She applies the test of first impression and imperfect recollection to conclude that the word "Masterpiece" predominates.
5. She finds that both marks are in association with the same class of wares, namely food products.
6. She finds that although the wares are dissimilar, they both cover food products which could nor mally be found in the same outlets.
7. Finding herself unable to make an unqualified determination as to whether or not there is a likeli hood of confusion, she rightly relies on the onus provision to allow the opposition and refuse regis tration.
Respondent's counsel states that the Registrar cov ered the whole field of statutory enquiry under sub section 6(5) in her decision. No material fact on the issues is overlooked. Every point raised by the appli cant is traversed. No error can be found in her rea soning and consequently the Court should be extremely loath to intervene.
In support, respondent's counsel refers to com ments of this Court in Mission Pharmacal Co. v. Ciba-Geigy Canada Ltd. (1990), 30 C.P.R. (3d) 101 at page 107; Mitac Inc. v. Mita Industrial Co. Ltd., T-236-90, judgment dated January 9, 1992, Denault J. (F.C.T.D.), not yet reported; Maximum Nutrition Ltd. v. Kellogg Salada Can. Inc. (1987), 11 C.I.P.R. 1 (F.C.T.D.), at pages 3-4; Panavision, Inc. v. Matsu- shita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd., T-2728-89, Joyal J., judgment dated January 14, 1992 (F.C.T.D.), not yet reported (but against which an appeal has been filed).
All of these cases suggest that this Court should not intervene against a Registrar's decision in opposi tion proceedings unless it is clearly satisfied that the Registrar came to the wrong conclusion on the facts.
Respondent's counsel also refers to Freed & Freed Ltd. v. Registrar of Trade Marks et al., [1950] Ex. C.R. 431, a 1950 decision of Thorson P. in the Exchequer Court of Canada, where it was said that although a judge hearing an appeal from a Registrar's refusal to register a mark is not relieved from the responsibility of determining the issue with due regard to the circumstances of the case, the onus on an appellant does not shift. Further, on the issue of confusion, it is not the likely effect of the use of two marks on the mind of the judge that is in issue, it is whether there is likelihood of confusion in the minds of dealers in and/or users of the goods on which the marks are used.
FINDINGS
I should certainly agree with respondent's counsel that the Registrar's decision is well-structured. She faced what both parties will recognize as a difficult situation. To deal with it, she properly followed a step-by-step procedure and found that on balance, the applicant had not quite succeeded in establishing no likelihood of confusion.
Yet, if otherwise correct, there is always a risk in that procedure. It tends to create a technical approach to the provisions of subsection 6(5) of the statute and, in the decision-making process, to supersede the more generic provision of the opening words of sub-
section 6(5), namely that regard must be had "to all the surrounding circumstances". The paragraphs of subsection 6(5), in my respectful view, are not meant to circumscribe the limits of these surrounding cir cumstances but more to focus the mind of the deci- sion-maker on the more specific fields of enquiry which he or she must necessarily address. Doctrine in trade-mark matters, however, is quite clear that those fields of enquiry are not exhaustive, nor for that mat ter, is each individual area of enquiry to be given equal weight. To argue otherwise would simply reduce the decision-making process to a mathemati cal calculation.
I should not suggest by these comments that such is the virus which may be found in the Registrar's decision. Far from it. I repeat, on a reading of that decision, no particular fault may be found in any of the observations she made under paragraphs 6(5)(a), (b), (c), (d) and (e). Each of them has merit and, in isolation, each of them might otherwise invite endorsement by the Court.
On the other hand, it seems quite clear to me that a decision on the issue of confusion under subsection 6(5) cannot be the sum of the individual tests in the paragraphs which follow. The opening words of sub section 6(5) speak of "all the surrounding circum stances". The surrounding circumstances are overrid ing. It is in regard to those circumstances which are not didactically enumerated in the paragraphs that the case before me merits some findings which are not specifically analyzed in the impugned decision.
Firstly, it is admitted that the mark "Masterpiece" is a common dictionary word which should only be given a narrow measure of protection. More than this, as the Registrar stated, the mark is suggestive, I would say descriptive, of the quality of the wares. Indeed, the Sears catalogues represent Masterpiece fruitcake as "the finest", the top-of-the-line so to speak.
Secondly, the respondent's mark "Masterpiece" is a house brand used exclusively in Sears stores in Canada and, as the volume of sales of products under that brand indicates, there has been relatively limited
exposure. As a house brand, of course, it would not be expected or there is very little likelihood that Sears would peddle its Masterpiece fruitcakes through independent outlets.
Thirdly, if the mark "Masterpiece" itself is deserv ing of limited protection, the law is clear, on the strength of the General Motors case (op.cit.) that its user cannot be allowed unfairly to monopolize the word. "[C]omparatively small differences", the Court quoted in that case [at page 6911 , are deemed "suffi- cient to avoid confusion." It is noted that the appel lant's mark is composed of both the mark "K.C. Mas terpiece" and its design features incorporate not only a stylized border on its label but the words "People Crave it!" and "The Barbecue Sauce". The fact as found by the Registrar that the word "Masterpiece" predominates on the mark and design, inviting the first impression and imperfect recollection test, does not detract from the principle or doctrine I have just quoted. The Registrar herself characterized the appel- lant'smark as_havinga- slightly higher level of dis tinctiveness" and so it might he suggested that this minimal level is all that is required to avoid confu sion.
Fourthly, I should observe that in my view, the "narrow protection" doctrine applies equally when dealing with the similarity of the wares test. It is quite true that fruitcake and barbecue sauce may be said to belong to the general category of foodstuffs, but the test cannot be applied on a black or white basis. One only needs to look at the thousands of dif ferent foods, meats, condiments, confectioneries, cereals and what-not found in some supermarkets to be wary of giving too much weight in some circum stances to the "same general class" test. Otherwise, in the case of a weak mark like "Masterpiece", the effect of the test standing alone would be to grant a monopoly over a particular dictionary word, a status which the courts have historically challenged.
Lastly, I should refer to the likelihood of confusion under subsection 6(2) of the Trade-marks Act. Again,
the weight to be given to that test by any decision- maker must be related to all the surrounding circum stances. The rule speaks of likelihood of confusion if the wares covered by competing marks, as in the classic scenario adopted in trade-mark cases, were placed side by side on the same shelf in the same retail store. In my view of the case before me, this would be a very unlikely occurrence. The respon dent's wares have certainly not been known to have been marketed outside its own premises. Indeed, the Registrar commented on that particular feature of the case but observed that the respondent's statement of wares did not contain any restrictions in that regard and there was therefore no bar to the use of the mark outside Sears outlets.
I should remark, however, that subsection 6(2) speaks of the likelihood of confusion and such a like lihood must not be addressed in the abstract but in the light of surrounding circumstances. Otherwise, an unqualified or literal application of the rule imposes more of a test of possibility of confusion than a test of a likelihood of confusion.
There is of course the possibility of the respon dent's mark being assigned to any person to be used in association with fruitcake and chocolates. It is my view, nevertheless, that the distinguishing guise of the appellant's mark would still avoid the likelihood of confusion.
CONCLUSIONS
I have attempted to traverse the several grounds covered by the Registrar in her decision and I should repeat here that she has covered these grounds care fully. If I should express disagreement with her, it is not with her fact-finding on each of the several grounds but with the ultimate conclusion she has drawn. In that regard, it might be said that her reluc tance to make a determination of the confusion issue was that she could not consider at the date of her decision that the Federal Court of Appeal in the Park Avenue Furniture case (supra), would extend consid erably the material date when the facts become fixed, and that the mark "Meaty-Masterpiece" covering cat
food was admitted to registration. Her view of the case might otherwise have been somewhat different.
In any event, I should prefer to balance the weight to be given to the individual tests under the various paragraphs of subsection 6(5) of the statute with the more unfettered consideration of all surrounding cir cumstances. In the result, it might be said to be the application of the well-known aphorism that on the issue of confusion, the general provision in subsec tion 6(5) is greater than the sum of its individual parts.
With respect, therefore, I should come to a deci sion which is more favourable to the appellant and conclude that the burden on it to establish no reasona ble likelihood of confusion has been met. The appel lant is entitled to the registration of its mark and design.
The appellant is also entitled to its costs.
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