Docket: T-1632-13
Citation:
2015 FC 631
Montreal, Quebec, May 13, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
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ROBERT LAVIGNE
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Plaintiff
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and
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MICHEL PARE, JOCELYNE CANTIN,
LUCIE VEILLETTE, MELANIE MATTE, DANIELLE DESROSIERS, JACINTHE MARLEAU, DAVID
LANGTRY
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and
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CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
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and
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ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
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Defendants
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The defendants, Canadian Human Rights Commission
[CHRC] and Attorney General of Canada, are bringing a motion for a declaration
that the plaintiff, Mr. Robert Lavigne, is a vexatious litigant and that the present
action constitutes a vexatious proceeding. The defendants are also seeking
orders: prohibiting the plaintiff from filing any further proceedings before
the Court without having previously obtained the authorization of the Court; instructing
the registry not to accept for filing any further proceedings by the plaintiff
without having previously obtained the authorization of the Court; and dismissing
the present action (file T-1632-13) in its entirety without possibility of
amendment. The whole with costs.
[2]
The legislative basis of the defendants’ motion to
declare the plaintiff a vexatious litigant is subsection 40(1) of the Federal
Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7 [Act], which reads as follows:
40. (1) If the Federal Court of Appeal or the Federal Court is
satisfied, on application, that a person has persistently instituted
vexatious proceedings or has conducted a proceeding in a vexatious manner, it
may order that no further proceedings be instituted by the person in that
court or that a proceeding previously instituted by the person in that court
not be continued, except by leave of that court.
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40. (1) La Cour d’appel fédérale ou la Cour
fédérale, selon le cas, peut, si elle est convaincue par suite d’une requête
qu’une personne a de façon persistante introduit des instances vexatoires
devant elle ou y a agi de façon vexatoire au cours d’une instance, lui
interdire d’engager d’autres instances devant elle ou de continuer devant
elle une instance déjà engagée, sauf avec son autorisation.
|
[3]
In Olympia Interiors Ltd v Canada, 2004
FCA 195, the Federal Court of Appeal reaffirmed the extraordinary nature of the
Court’s power under subsection 40(1) of the Act:
[6] The power conferred on the Court by
subsection 40(1) of the Act is, of course, most extraordinary, so much so that
it must be exercised sparingly and with the greatest of care. In a society such
as ours, the subject is generally entitled to access the courts with a view of
vindicating his or her rights. This concern was obviously in the mind of the
legislators, seeing that some balance is built into section 40 by allowing
proceedings to be instituted or continued with leave of the Court. As was
stated in Law Society of Upper Canada v. Chavali (1998), 21 C.P.C. (4th)
20, at paragraph 20 with respect to parallel legislation of Ontario, "the
order puts the Court in control of the process." The net effect is that a
person who becomes the subject of a subsection 40(1) order is not totally
foreclosed from instituting a fresh proceeding or of continuing an existing
one. He or she must first obtain the Court's permission to do so.
[4]
In addition, Rules 221(1)(c) and (f) of the Federal
Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 [Rules] provide that:
221. (1) On
motion, the Court may, at any time, order that a pleading, or anything
contained therein, be struck out, with or without leave to amend, on the
ground that it
|
221. (1) À tout
moment, la Cour peut, sur requête, ordonner la radiation de tout ou partie
d’un acte de procédure, avec ou sans autorisation de le modifier, au motif,
selon le cas :
|
[…]
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[…]
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(c) is
scandalous, frivolous or vexatious,
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c) qu’il est
scandaleux, frivole ou vexatoire;
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[…]
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[…]
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(f) is otherwise
an abuse of the process of the Court,
and may order the
action be dismissed or judgment entered accordingly.
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f) qu’il
constitue autrement un abus de procédure.
Elle peut aussi
ordonner que l’action soit rejetée ou qu’un jugement soit enregistré en
conséquence.
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[5]
The defendants argue that the plaintiff has
shown a long and persistent history of abuse of the judicial system by filing
at least eighteen applications or actions before the Court over the last twenty
years, many of which were attempts to relitigate the same issues, and by
systematically appealing decisions that were unfavourable to him up to the
Supreme Court of Canada without success. In this respect, the present action is
a vexatious proceeding which attempts to relitigate the question of the
jurisdiction of the CHRC and reproduces allegations already found by this Court
to be without merit. Moreover, the plaintiff has made, in a number of files,
unsubstantiated allegations of scandalous or improper behaviour against the
opposing counsel or the Court. In addition, the plaintiff has failed to pursue
litigation in a timely basis and has voluntarily failed to abide by the Rules
and orders of the Court, while he has been ordered to pay the Crown a total of
more than $22,000 in costs for several of his failed claims since 1996, but he
has only paid $1,150 so far. Finally, the defendants ask the Court to award them
a lump sum of $4,600 in lieu of any assessed costs.
[6]
According to the plaintiff, for the Court to
find that he is a vexatious litigant, it must first find that the present case has
no merit whatsoever and is scandalous, vexatious or frivolous. The plaintiff
argues that the prima facie evidence filed in his affidavit (emails
between CHRC employees) demonstrates that the CHRC did not have the
jurisdiction to approve the out of court settlement reached in January 2008
(confidential Exhibit RL-4) in respect of his complaints against Canada Post
Corporation [the 2008 settlement]. The plaintiff submits that the CHRC had the
legal duty to divulge the fact that it was without jurisdiction to approve said
settlement that included complaint #20070118. Consequently, since the CHRC did
not have jurisdiction, the present action has some merit and the plaintiff ought
not to be declared a vexatious litigant in consequence.
[7]
In support of his claim against the defendants, the
plaintiff argues that the staff of the CHRC has committed the tort of
fraudulent concealment or that of abuse of public office by failing, in 2008,
to disclose that the CHRC did not have the jurisdiction to approve the 2008 settlement.
According to the plaintiff, the defendants have brought the present motion to “obstruct [his] right to have [his] day in court.” The
plaintiff further asks the Court to render a summary judgment declaring that “the Plaintiff is not vexatious on the grounds that the CHRC
committed fraudulent concealment on the Plaintiff and the Court by not
disclosing that it did not have jurisdiction to approve the [settlement].” In
addition, the plaintiff notes that the actions in files T-105-10 and T-107-10
were dismissed for delay. Therefore, the merit of those cases is not res
judicata since there has not been a final determination of the concealment
issue.
[8]
The plaintiff also argues that the affidavit of Mr.
Tony Aquino referring to prior proceedings filed in support of the present
motion should be discarded, or that a negative inference should otherwise be
drawn since Mr. Aquino does not have firsthand knowledge of the particular facts
alleged by the parties in these proceedings. According to the plaintiff, the
Court must also consider the fairness of these prior proceedings before
concluding that he is a vexatious litigant. While it is apparent from the
documentary evidence filed by the defendants with their motion that five of the
plaintiff’s proceedings have been dismissed for delay following his failure to
respect orders of security for costs (T-2200-07, T‑2201-07, T-108-08,
T-105-10 and T-107-10), the plaintiff nevertheless states that the reason why
he did not pay costs or respect previous orders of security for costs is simply
because he is impecunious. The plaintiff also admits that he has failed to
respect certain Rules and deadlines but should be excused of doing so by the
Court because he is self-represented and has acted incompetently. Since the
present action is not vexatious or frivolous on its face, the present motion by
the defendant ought to be dismissed forthwith and the defendants should be
condemned to pay him a lump sum of $8,600 in lieu of any assessed costs (see Lavigne
v Canada (Human Resources Development) (1998), 229 NR 205; 1998 CanLII 7959
(FCA); British Columbia (Minister of Forests) v Okanagan Indian Band, 2003
SCC 71 at para 24; Air Canada v Thibodeau, 2007 FCA 115 at paras 23-24).
[9]
I dismiss for total lack of merit all the arguments
made above by the plaintiff or otherwise raised in his written and oral
submissions. For the reasons mentioned in the following paragraphs, the present
motion for judgment is well founded and should be allowed. I find that in all respect
the allegations of abuse and vexatious conduct made by the defendants are
abundantly supported by the material filed with their motion. Moreover, the
arguments made by the plaintiff with respect to the allegation of “fraudulent
concealment” in 2008 have already been found to have “little merit” and there
is no reason why the present proceeding should not be dismissed in its entirety
without possibility of amendment, as it appears on its face to be a
relitigation of the action in file T-105-10, properly dismissed for delay. The
evidence of abuse is overwhelming. Since the documentary evidence produced with
the affidavit of Mr. Tony Aquino speaks by itself, there is no need, for the
purpose of this motion, that the affiant be personally aware of the particular
facts alleged by the parties in the numerous Court proceedings alluded to by
the defendants. Accordingly, I will only highlight a number of salient facts.
[10]
The plaintiff has been a recurring figure both
at the Federal Court and at the Superior Court of Quebec for now more than
twenty years. During the period of 1994 to 2006, the plaintiff instituted a
series of proceedings related to an infringement of his language rights while
he was employed at Human Resources Development and he also sought to obtain a
declaration that the Official Languages Act, RSC 1985, c 31 (4th Supp) applied
to the Labour Market Agreement [LMA] between the federal government and the
province of Quebec:
•
T-293-94 (Lavigne v Office of the
Commissioner of Official Languages and the Queen): the plaintiff wanted an
order declaring that the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages had
to complete an investigation. The file was discontinued and the motion for an
order to declare null and void the discontinuance was denied.
•
T-1977-94 (Lavigne v Canada (Human Resources
Development), [1997] 1 FC 305): the plaintiff applied for damages under
subsections 77(1) and (4) of the Official Languages Act. He obtained
$3,000 for inconvenience and loss of enjoyment of life as well as costs. He
appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal (A-913-96, 1998 CanLII 7820) where his
appeal was dismissed and applied for leave at the Supreme Court where his
application for leave was dismissed. In July 2003, the plaintiff made a motion
for reconsideration at the Supreme Court but that motion was denied. The plaintiff
also appealed the decision denying him counsel fees in the Bill of costs to the
Federal Court of Appeal (A-104-97, 1998 CanLII 7959) where his appeal was
dismissed. He applied for leave to appeal before the Supreme Court to the
Federal Court of Appeal where his application for leave to appeal was denied,
and then he also applied for leave at the Supreme Court but his application for
leave was dismissed.
•
T-2644-96 (Lavigne v Office of the
Commissioner of Official Languages, Privacy Commissioner of Canada and the
Queen): the plaintiff presented a notice of motion for an order to access
personal information against the Office of the Commissioner of Official
Languages [OCOL] which was discontinued.
•
T-909-97 (Lavigne v Canada (Commissioner for
Official Languages), 1998 CanLII 8632): the plaintiff applied for judicial
review of the OCOL’s refusal to disclose certain interview notes related to the
complaints that led to T-1977-94. The application was granted with costs to the
plaintiff. The appeal and cross appeal were denied without costs by the Federal
Court of Appeal (A-678-98, 2000 CanLII 16113) and by the Supreme Court ([2002]
2 SCR 773).
•
T-2152-99 (Lavigne v Canada (Human Resources
Development), 2001 FCT 1365): the plaintiff applied for a declaration that
the Official Languages Act applied to the LMA and for a declaration that
parts of the LMA were unconstitutional. The application was dismissed and the plaintiff’s
appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal was also dismissed (A-10-02, 2003 FCA
203).
•
Before the Superior Court of Quebec (file
500-05-056434-002), the plaintiff made a motion for judicial review and
declaratory judgment seeking the recognition of his right to have the
government of Quebec plead in English before the Federal Court, which was
dismissed. On appeal to the Quebec Court of Appeal (file 500-09-010505-014),
the Attorney General of Canada’s motion to strike the appeal was granted. The plaintiff’s
application for leave to the Supreme Court was dismissed.
•
T-2291-03 (Lavigne v Canada (Commissioner of
Official Languages): the plaintiff sought to argue once again the case
presented in T-1977-94. The defendants’ (OCOL and the Queen) motions to strike
were granted by a Prothonotary (2004 FC 787) and the plaintiff’s appeal to the
Federal Court was dismissed (2004 FC 1359). The plaintiff appealed to the
Federal Court of Appeal where his appeal was dismissed (A‑577-04, 2005
FCA 210) and to the Supreme Court where his application for leave was
dismissed.
[11]
Starting in 2002, the plaintiff also initiated a
series of proceedings related to his employment at Canada Post:
•
T-872-02 (Lavigne v Canada Post Corp):
the plaintiff initiated an action against Canada Post for damages based on an
alleged violation of the Privacy Act, RSC 1985, c P-21. Canada Post’s
motion to strike was granted by a Prothonotary (2002 FCT 863) and a judge of
this Court dismissed the plaintiff’s appeal. The plaintiff appealed to the
Federal Court of Appeal where his appeal was dismissed and his application for
leave to appeal before the Supreme Court was dismissed (A-596-02) and to the
Supreme Court where his application for leave was dismissed.
•
T-500-03 (Lavigne v Canadian Union of Postal
Workers): the plaintiff made an application for a declaration that the CUPW
had misused the plaintiff’s personal information. The defendant’s motion to
dismiss was granted.
•
T-831-06 (Lavigne v Pepin): the plaintiff
initiated an action for damages for negligence and malfeasance in respect of
the termination of the plaintiff’s employment at Canada Post and alleged
harassment by a manager at Canada Post. The defendants’ motion to strike was
granted (2007 FC 747). The plaintiff appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal
where his appeal was dismissed (2007 FCA 123) and to the Supreme Court, where
his application for leave was dismissed.
•
T-206-07 (Lavigne v Canada Post Corporation):
the plaintiff filed a notice of application with regard to his suspension from
his work. The defendant made a motion to strike and the plaintiff made a motion
for an expedited hearing. In April 2007, the Court dismissed the plaintiff’s
motion and suspended the judicial review proceedings until all proceedings
contemplated by the collective agreement and the Canadian Labour Code were
exhausted. In December 2007, the plaintiff discontinued the application.
•
T-1507-07 (Lavigne v Canada Post Corporation):
the plaintiff filed a notice of application for judicial review of a decision
of the Canadian Human Rights Commission not to deal with a complaint. In
November 2007, a Prothonotary ordered a stay of the application sine die.
In December 2007, the plaintiff discontinued the application.
•
Before the Superior Court of Quebec (file
500-17-038022-078), on August 2, 2007, the plaintiff filed a motion for
injunctive relief against Canada Post and CUPW, but he discontinued his motion
on August 21, 2007.
•
T-2200-07, T-2201-07, T-108-08 (Lavigne v
Canada Post Corporation): the plaintiff filed three notices of application
for judicial review of three decisions of the OCOL. The plaintiff made a motion
to compel the OCOL to disclose files regarding linguistic complaints made by
other employees against Canada Post. That motion was denied by a Prothonotary
and the plaintiff’s appeal was dismissed by the Federal Court on July 24, 2009
(2009 FC 756). The Court also dismissed the plaintiff’s motion seeking an order
for costs in advance of litigation and granted in part the respondent’s motion
for an order requiring the applicant to give security for costs. In October
2009, the applications were stayed by a Prothonotary pending the appeal of the
July 24, 2009 order. In February 2012, the plaintiff was required to show cause
why his consolidated applications should not be dismissed for delay. In May
2012, a Prothonotary dismissed the plaintiff’s consolidated applications for
delay. In June 2012, the plaintiff’s motion for an extension of time to file an
appeal of the Prothonotary’s order was dismissed by the Court. The plaintiff
appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal which dismissed his appeal (A-379-12,
2013 FCA 206) as well as his application for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court (A-429-12, A-428-12 and A-379-12).
•
Before the Superior Court of Quebec (file
500-17-043720-088), in June 2008, the plaintiff instituted an action against
Canada Post employees and executives seeking damages and an injunctive relief.
The Court granted the defendants’ motion, dismissed the action and declared the
plaintiff a “vexatious and quarrelsome litigant”. The plaintiff appealed to the
Quebec Court of Appeal and the defendants presented a motion to dismiss the
appeal. The defendants’ motion was granted in part and the QCCA confirmed the
Superior Court’s decision to declare the plaintiff to be a vexatious and
quarrelsome litigant (2009 QCCA 776). The Supreme Court dismissed the plaintiff’s
application for leave.
•
T-105-10, T-107-10 (Lavigne v Canada (Human
Rights Commission); Lavigne v Canada Post Corporation): the plaintiff
initiated two actions to obtain, inter alia, the annulment of the 2008
settlement and damages. The defendants’ motion for the security for costs were
granted in both actions and the plaintiff’s motion to lift confidentiality of
the out-of-court settlement was denied by a Prothonotary (2010 FC 1038). The plaintiff
appealed the Prothonotary’s order to the Federal Court, which dismissed his
appeal, to the Federal Court of Appeal, which dismissed his appeal and his
application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court (A-469-10/A-470-10, 2011
FCA 333), and finally, to the Supreme Court, which dismissed his application
for leave. In January 2011, the plaintiff made a motion for an order requiring
the defendant CHRC to serve and file a motion to strike. That motion was
dismissed by a Prothonotary and the plaintiff’s appeal was dismissed by the
Federal Court. On July 4, 2012, a Prothonotary dismissed the plaintiff’s
actions for delay after the plaintiff failed to show cause for delay and failed
to post the ordered amount as security for costs. The plaintiff appealed the
July 4, 2012 order to a judge of the Federal Court, which dismissed his appeal;
to the Federal Court of Appeal, which dismissed his appeal and his application
for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court (A-428-12/A-429-12, 2013 FCA 207); and
finally, to the Supreme Court, which dismissed his application for leave (2014
CanLII 46946). On January 7, 2015, the plaintiff attempted to file a new motion
but the registry refused to accept the motion for filing.
•
11-T-7 (Lavigne v Canada (Human Rights
Commission): the plaintiff filed a motion for an extension of time to
commence an application. The plaintiff’s motion was dismissed by the Court
(2011 FC 290). On April 13, 2011, the plaintiff filed an appeal, but he
discontinued the appeal on May 16, 2011.
•
T-1632-13 (Lavigne v Paré and al): the
current case, in which the plaintiff filed a new action against the CHRC, the
Acting Chief Commissioner, some of the CHRC employees and the Attorney General
of Canada. The defendants are now asking the Court that the present proceeding
– which is the only active file before the Court – be dismissed as it is
clearly vexatious and an abuse of process.
[12]
There is clear evidence on record of the propensity
of the plaintiff to litigate matters already determined, as well as the
initiation of frivolous actions or motions. At the risk of repeating myself, for
example, one grievance, three complaints before the CHRC, six actions in the
Federal Court (T-831-06, T-206-07, T-1507-07, T-105-10, T-107-10 and T-1632-13)
and two actions in the Superior Court all deal with the same allegations of
discrimination, harassment, discriminatory suspension or discriminatory
termination of the plaintiff. As a matter of fact, various orders or decisions
have already found that the plaintiff was trying to relitigate the same issues,
such as Prothonotary Morneau’s orders in T-2291-03 (2004 FC 787 at para 47) and
T-105-10 and T-107-10, and at the Superior Court, Justice Casgrain’s decision
in file 500-17-043720-088. On four different occasions, the plaintiff applied
for leave to appeal before the Supreme Court, after leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court was denied by the Quebec Court of Appeal or the Federal Court of
Appeal. Finally, the plaintiff also made unsubstantiated allegations of
scandalous or improper behaviour against the opposing party, counsel or the
Court. The plaintiff has made allegations of bad faith, bias, fraud,
dishonesty, conspiracy, abuse of power or malfeasance of public office against
the Queen, Canada Post, the OCOL, CUPW, the CHRC and against Prothonotary
Morneau. It is also apparent that in contravention of the express terms of the
security for costs order and Rule 416(3), the plaintiff continued to file frivolous
or vexatious proceedings, including a motion seeking to compel the CHRC to
bring a motion to strike his claim and which was held to be an improper attempt
to cleave judicial proceedings in order to proceed against some of the
defendants in spite of the security for costs order. Several years after his
appeals of the dismissal of T-105-10 and T-107-10 for delay have been
exhausted, the present action is instituted. It should be dismissed as it is
abusive and constitutes just another attempt by the plaintiff to circumvent the
effects of the order for security for costs as well as the order dismissing his
action for delay in file T-105-10.
[13]
Therefore, I am satisfied that, even though the
plaintiff has had some success in his earliest Official Languages cases, his
subsequent proceedings, particularly those related to his employment at Canada
Post, have become increasingly characterized by the hallmarks of a vexatious
litigant as set out in Wilson v Canada, 2006 FC 1535 [Wilson]:
[29] For a section 40 Order to be issued I
must be satisfied that Mr. Wilson has persistently brought vexatious
proceedings in this Court or has conducted this matter and its related
proceedings in a vexatious manner. I have concluded that this is an
appropriate case for making such an Order because Mr. Wilson’s litigation
conduct has been persistently vexatious and repeatedly found to be an abuse of
the Court process.
[30] The authorities have interpreted
“vexatious” as being broadly synonymous with the concept of abuse of process:
see Foy v. Foy (1979), 102 D.L.R. (3d) 342 (Ont. C.A.). It is,
therefore, not surprising that one of the notable characteristics of a
vexatious litigant is the propensity to relitigate matters that have already
been determined against him: see Vojic v. Canada (Minister of National
Revenue), [1992] F.C.J. No. 902 (T.D.).
[31] Other indicia of vexatious behaviour
include the initiation of frivolous actions or motions, the making of
unsubstantiated allegations of impropriety against the opposite party, legal
counsel or the Court, the refusal or failure to abide by rules or orders of the
Court, the use of scandalous language in pleadings or before the Court, the
failure or refusal to pay costs in earlier proceedings and the failure to
pursue the litigation on a timely basis: see Vojic, above; Canada v.
Warriner (1993), 70 F.T.R. 8, [1993] F.C.J. No. 1007; Canada v. Olympia
Interiors Ltd., [2001] F.C.J. No. 1224, 2001 FCT 859 (CanLII), 2001 FCT
859; Mascan Corp. v. French (1988), 49 D.L.R. (4th) 434, 64 O.R. (2d) 1
(C.A.); Foy, above; Canada Post Corp. v. Varma (2000), 2000
CanLII 15754 (FC), 192 F.T.R. 278, [2000] F.C.J. No. 851; and Nelson v.
Canada (Minister of Customs and Revenue Agency), [2002] F.C.J. No. 97, 2002
FCT 77.
[14]
In conclusion, this is one of those cases where
an order under subsection 40(1) of the Act is a necessary remedy in order to
maintain the integrity of the judicial process and to protect the Court and
potential defendants from frivolous litigation (Canada v Olympia Interiors
Ltd, 2001 FCT 859 at para 50 [Olympia Interiors]). There does not
need to be bad faith or vindictiveness on the part of the plaintiff for an
order under subsection 40(1) to be made (Olympia Interiors, above). The
lengthy judicial history above clearly demonstrates that the plaintiff shows
many characteristics of a vexatious litigant, including a propensity to
relitigate matters that have already been determined, the initiation of
frivolous proceedings (including more than twenty appeals or applications for
leave to appeal), unsubstantiated allegations of impropriety against the
opposite parties and the Court, the failure to pay costs and the failure to
pursue the litigation on a timely basis (Wilson, above at paras 30-31).
[15]
In the exercise of the inherent power of the
Court to control its process and considering the discretion vested to the Court
by Rules 47, 53 and 221, I also find that the present action should be
dismissed without any possibility of amendment, as it is vexatious and otherwise
constitutes an abuse of process. It is apparent that it is another attempt by
the plaintiff to relitigate the issue of the alleged lack of jurisdiction of
the CHRC to approve the 2008 settlement (confidential Exhibit RL-4) following
the mediation session that took place on January 18, 2008 as appears from my
close examination of the proceedings, orders and decisions made in files
T-105-10 and T-107-10 (see Amended Statement of Claim (T-105-10), Exhibit 79 pp
926 and following in particular paras 32-38; Lavigne v Canada (Human Rights
Commission), 2010 FC 1038 at paras 21-22; Motion record on appeal of the
order dismissing for delay (T-105-10), Exhibit 92 at paras 33-41; Order
dismissing the motion, Exhibit 94 at pp 1046-1047; Memorandum of Fact and Law
(A-428-12, A-429-12), Exhibit 95; Lavigne v Canada (Human Rights Commission),
2013 FCA 207).
[16]
In view of the result, having considered all
relevant factors mentioned in Rule 400, including the particular circumstances
of this case, the assessable fees under Tariff B, the conduct of the plaintiff,
the important amount of work and research needed by the defendants to prepare
the motion for judgment, the draft bill of costs submitted by the defendants, I
find that a lump sum of $4600, inclusive of all fees and disbursements, is
reasonable, and shall be awarded to the defendants in lieu of any assessed
costs.