Trademarks Act
Marginal note:Provision of information to pursue remedy
51.06 (1) A customs officer who is detaining goods under section 101 of the Customs Act and who has reasonable grounds to suspect that the importation or exportation of the goods is prohibited under section 51.03 may, in the officer’s discretion, if the Minister has accepted a request for assistance with respect to a relevant protected mark filed by its owner, provide that owner with a sample of the goods and with information about the goods that could assist them in pursuing a remedy under this Act, such as
(a) a description of the goods and their characteristics;
(b) the name and address of their owner, importer, exporter and consignee and of the person who made them;
(c) their quantity;
(d) the countries in which they were made and through which they passed in transit; and
(e) the day on which they were imported, if applicable.
Marginal note:Detention
(2) Subject to subsection (3), the customs officer shall not detain, for the purpose of enforcing section 51.03, the goods for more than 10 working days — or, if the goods are perishable, for more than five days — after the day on which the customs officer first sends or makes available a sample or information to the owner under subsection (1). At the request of the owner made while the goods are detained for the purpose of enforcing section 51.03, the customs officer may, having regard to the circumstances, detain non-perishable goods for one additional period of not more than 10 working days.
Marginal note:Notice of proceedings
(3) If, before the goods are no longer detained for the purpose of enforcing of section 51.03, the owner of a relevant protected mark has provided the Minister, in the manner specified by the Minister, with a copy of a document filed with a court commencing proceedings to obtain a remedy under this Act with respect to the detained goods, the customs officer shall continue to detain them until the Minister is informed in writing that
(a) the proceedings are finally disposed of, settled or abandoned;
(b) a court directs that the goods are no longer to be detained for the purpose of the proceedings; or
(c) the owner of the mark consents to the goods no longer being so detained.
Marginal note:Continued detention
(4) The occurrence of any of the events referred to in paragraphs (3)(a) to (c) does not preclude a customs officer from continuing to detain the goods under the Customs Act for a purpose other than with respect to the proceedings.
- 2014, c. 32, s. 43
- 2017, c. 6, ss. 73(F), 78, 79(E)
- Date modified: