Chasing mice or chasing careers; the grown-up world scared Merpel |
The first claim by Vancouver Community College was under section 9(1) of the Canadian Trade-Marks Act 1985, which operates similarly to section 10 of the UK Trade Marks Act 1994, prohibiting (under section 11 of the Canadian Act) the use of any registered trade mark in connection with a business after its registration. The section therefore only applies prospectively, not retrospectively. Vancouver Career College proved a use of the acronym prior to the mark's registration, and the court quickly dispatched Vancouver Community College's claim under section 9.
The second, more pertinent claim to this article, resided under section 7(b) of the Trade-Marks Act, which effectively codifies the common law concept of passing off. The section states that "[n]o person shall... direct public attention to his goods, services or business in such a way as to cause or be likely to cause confusion in Canada, at the time he commenced so to direct attention to them, between his goods, services or business and the goods, services or business of another". As in the UK, passing off hinges on three components: the existence of goodwill, deception of the public due to a misrepresentation and actual or potential damage to the plaintiff; however, in Canada the goods or services have to have acquired secondary meaning in the marketplace in addition to the above three requirements.
Vancouver Community College presented a wealth of evidence for their passing off claim, including several witnesses and nearly 300 documents illustrating historical use of both their name and the acronym VCC to further their claim under passing off.
Even Kats need their degrees |
Ultimately Justice Affleck decided that, although Vancouver Community College did enjoy goodwill in educational services, it had not acquired the requisite secondary meaning within the marketplace. They had also failed to prove confusion through misrepresentation (due to the assessment of confusion at the point of visiting the website, which entails thorough assessment on part of the user who is looking to enrol), leading to the conclusion that there is no likelihood of damage to Vancouver Community College.
Although this Kat is in no position to give an extensive opinion on the application of the law, he still thinks the conclusion of the Supreme Court was the right one. Any prospective students would most likely be Internet-savvy individuals, and would not mistakenly enrol at either College without having to jump through many hoops, revealing the true name of the institution at a given point. The case still is an interesting application of Canadian law, but do our readers disagree in the application of passing off on the Internet through this rationale?