Toronto Star

HBC sues Quebec retailer alleging Zellers trademark infringeme­nt

-

Hudson’s Bay Co. ULC is suing a Quebec retail family over the use of the Zellers brand.

In a statement of claim filed in Federal Court, the company accuses the Moniz family of trademark infringeme­nt, depreciati­on of goodwill and so-called passing off — the deceptive marketing or misreprese­ntation of goods.

The Moniz family is behind various recent trademark applicatio­ns and corporate registries, including Zellers Inc., incorporat­ed in June 2020, Zellers Convenienc­e Store Inc. and Zellers Restaurant Inc.

The defendants could not immediatel­y be reached for comment and a response to the claim has not yet been filed in court. HBC claims the use of the Zellers brand and trademark threatens to cause confusion between their goods and services and those offered by the Bay.

The retailer alleges the intention of taking over the Zellers brand was to either “confuse Canadians or recover a payment from HBC.”

HBC says in court documents that although it closed the last of its stand-alone brick-andmortar Zellers stores in 2020, HBC continued to have plans for the brand and did not abandon the Zellers trademarks and logos. The company launched a pop-up Zellers shop inside a Hudson’s Bay store in Burlington last summer.

HBC spokespers­on Tiffany Bourré said the pop-up Zellers store was intended to “delight our customers with a fun and nostalgic experience with one of HBC’s most beloved brands.”

The company is planning a second pop-up Zellers shop at its department store in Anjou, Que., she said.

Bourré added that the company filed the claim to protect its Zellers brand and avoid consumer confusion.

“The allegation­s in the claim relate to planned unauthoriz­ed third-party Zellers stores, among other unauthoriz­ed uses of the Zellers brand,” she said in an email.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada