Laurent Massam
Partner
Article
5
As directed by the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court reconsidered its earlier Chanel S De RL v. Lam Chan Kee Co.1 decision in which it held the defendants liable for trademark infringement arising from the offering for sale and sale of counterfeit CHANEL goods. 2
The Federal Court of Appeal remitted the earlier decision back to the Federal Court primarily on the basis that it was unclear in the original decision whether the defendant, Mrs. Lam, was to be held personally liable for four acts of infringement, or only three. As a consequence, it was unclear if the damages awards imposed by the Court were premised on three or four acts of infringement. In addition, the Federal Court of Appeal stated that while the awarded punitive damages may be appropriate, the quantum of the award required a more expansive explanation.
As outlined below, on redetermination, the Federal Court did not vary its original decision. Mrs. Lam and the corporate defendants were held jointly and severally liable for four acts of infringement and ordered to pay $64,000 in compensatory damages, $250,000 in punitive damages, and $66,000 in costs.
The Court's decision clearly communicates its willingness to take a strong stance against counterfeiting and, in particular, recidivist counterfeiting. The decision also reaffirms the Court's willingness to tackle such issues through the summary trial procedure.
The Federal Court clarified its original decision regarding personal liability, the quantum of punitive damages, and costs.
Based on the factual findings articulated in its original decision, the Federal Court reiterated that Mrs. Lam was the controlling mind for both corporate defendants at all relevant times, noting in particular that the defendants' evidence of the sale of the business to Mrs. Lam's children was found to be "self-serving, inconclusive and contradictory."
The Federal Court identified the following factors as sufficient to hold Mrs. Lam jointly and severally liable with the corporate defendants for the infringing activities:
In reconsidering the quantum of punitive damages, the Federal Court rejected the defendants' argument that a lower award of $75,000 would accomplish the Court's goals. The Federal Court stated that "while the amount of $250,000…looks somewhat higher than some prior cases, the Court is satisfied that it is no higher than necessary to deter the subject defendants' misconduct in these specific circumstances."
In support of this position, the Federal Court identified nine key aggravating factors:
The Federal Court of Appeal did not find any error in the Federal Court's original determination of costs. On redetermination, the Federal Court followed its earlier decision ordering a lump sum $66,000 award in lieu of assessed costs.
No additional costs were awarded given that the redetermination before the Court was the result of a Federal Court of Appeal decision in which no costs were awarded, and that neither party should be held responsible for ambiguity in the original judgment.
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