Docket: T-1526-14
Citation:
2016 FC 745
Montréal, Quebec, July 4, 2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Locke
BETWEEN:
|
BOULERICE ET
AL.
|
Applicants
|
and
|
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA, BOARD OF INTERNAL ECONOMY, SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
|
Respondents
|
ORDER AND REASONS
I.
Background
[1]
This decision concerns a motion in appeal of a
prothonotary’s decision. The prothonotary’s decision was made in the context of
applications by Members of Parliament of the New Democratic Party (NDP) for
judicial review of several decisions of the Board of Internal Economy of the
House of Commons (BoIE) concerning the propriety of certain printing and
mailing costs incurred by the NDP. The respondents in the underlying
applications are the Attorney General of Canada, the BoIE, and the Speaker of
the House of Commons. For greater clarity, the applicants are referred to
hereinafter as Boulerice et al., and the respondents are referred to as
the Board et al.
[2]
In the context of the underlying applications,
which have been joined together, the Board et al. made a motion to
strike the applications on the ground that this Court lacks jurisdiction to
hear and determine them because it would be interfering with the privileges and
immunities held by the House of Commons. This motion is referred to hereinafter
as the Jurisdiction Motion and is set to be heard over two days in January
2017.
[3]
In the context of the Jurisdiction Motion,
Boulerice et al. filed an affidavit of Maxime St-Hilaire, a professor of
law and alleged expert in comparative constitutional law. The St-Hilaire
affidavit comments on the issue of parliamentary privilege, including its
history in Canada and how it is dealt with in other countries. In response to
the filing of the St-Hilaire affidavit, the Board et al. made a motion
to strike it on the ground that it attempts to introduce inadmissible evidence,
namely expert evidence directed to the state of the law in Canada. The
prothonotary dismissed that motion. The Board et al. now appeals that
dismissal.
II.
The Prothonotary’s Decision
[4]
In his analysis, the prothonotary noted that the
motion before him was an interlocutory motion within another interlocutory
motion in the context of a judicial review application which should be heard
and determined without delay and in a summary way: s 18.4(1) of the Federal
Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7. The prothonotary cited David Bull
Laboratories (Canada) Inc v Pharmacia Inc (1994), 176 NR 48 (FCA), for the
principle that a motion to dismiss a judicial review application should be entertained
only in exceptional cases. The prothonotary then cited Armstrong v Canada
(Attorney General), 2005 FC 1013 [Armstrong], for the principle that
a motion to strike an affidavit in the context of a judicial review application
should be allowed only rarely, when it is in the interest of justice to do so,
where a party will be materially prejudiced, or where not striking would impair
the orderly hearing of the application.
[5]
The prothonotary was not satisfied that the
required exceptional circumstances had been established. Specifically, the
prothonotary found that the Board et al. had failed to establish that
they would suffer material prejudice if the St-Hilaire affidavit was not
dismissed.
[6]
The prothonotary went on to cite a passage from Armstrong
which quoted from Sawridge Band v Canada, [2000] FCJ No 192 (QL), to the
effect that the Court should resist striking an irregular affidavit even where “virtually every paragraph of the affidavit is proper
argument and can properly be made by counsel.”
[7]
The prothonotary concluded by finding that, even
if he was wrong in refusing to strike the St-Hilaire affidavit, the motion to
strike was not made in a timely fashion as required by Rule 58(2) of the Federal
Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 [Rules]. It therefore would have been dismissed on
this ground in any case.
III.
Standard of Review
[8]
The parties are agreed on the standard of review
that is applicable to the present appeal. I must be satisfied that the
prothonotary was clearly wrong, in the sense that his exercise of discretion
was based on a wrong principle or a misapprehension of the facts: Merck
& Co Inc v Apotex Inc, 2003 FCA 488 at para 19.
IV.
Analysis
[9]
The Board et al. do not appear to dispute
the principle that an affidavit should be struck only in exceptional circumstances.
They cite Gravel v Telus Communications Inc, 2011 FCA 14 [Gravel],
which, at para 5, alludes to this principle. As stated by the Federal Court of
Appeal later in the same paragraph, “[t]he reason is
quite simple: applications for judicial review must quickly proceed on the
merits, and the procedural impacts of the nature of a motion to strike are to
delay unduly and, more often than not, needlessly, a decision on the merits.”
This concern is doubled in the present case in which the motion to strike concerns
not the application on the merits, but rather the Jurisdiction Motion.
[10]
The Board et al. argue that the
prothonotary erred in applying Armstrong without recognizing higher and
more recent authority from the Federal Court of Appeal: Gravel, Duyvenbode
v Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FCA 120, Canada (Attorney General) v
Quadrini, 2010 FCA 47 at para 18. However, I am not persuaded that any of
these decisions modified the effect of Armstrong. In fact, as suggested
in the preceding paragraph, Gravel seems consistent with Armstrong
on the test for striking an affidavit (or portions thereof) in the context of
an application.
[11]
The Board et al. also argue that the
prothonotary proceeded on a wrong principle by failing to note Rule 81 of the
Rules, which provides that, generally speaking, affidavits are to be confined
to facts within the deponent’s personal knowledge. In my view, this rule does
not specifically address the admissibility of expert evidence concerning a
disputed legal issue. The prothonotary did not err in this respect.
[12]
The Board et al. raise a legitimate
concern that the refusal to strike the St-Hilaire affidavit will set a
precedent that could encourage parties in litigation to buttress their legal
arguments with affidavits of experts on the legal issues in dispute. I
recognize that one result of the prothonotary’s decision is that the Board et
al. will be forced to consider preparing and filing its own expert
affidavit and cross-examining Mr. St-Hilaire. One might expect that the new
expert would also be cross-examined. This could result in a parallel process in
which the legal issues are argued as a battle of the experts. The Board et
al. argue that all this will add complexity to the Jurisdiction Motion, and
possibly delay both that motion and the hearing of the merits of the judicial
review application, if necessary. The Board et al. assert that this
result would be inconsistent with Rule 3 of the Rules, which provides that the
Rules “should be interpreted and applied so as to
secure the just, most expeditious and least expensive determination of every
proceeding on its merits.” The Board et al. argue that the
prothonotary erred by failing to take all this into account. However, the
prothonotary did consider the potential for additional steps in relation to the
Jurisdiction Motion: see paragraph 23. Accordingly, I am not persuaded that the
prothonotary proceeded on a wrong principle in this respect.
[13]
The Board et al. note that there is an
important difference in the potential effect on the Court of an expert report
on a legal issue versus a lay affiant who simply includes some argument in an
affidavit. The latter will likely have little influence on the Court, while the
former may be given some weight. Indeed, this is presumably the reason that such
an affidavit would be offered in the first place. However, in my view, this is
insufficient reason to conclude that the prothonotary erred. The Court hearing
the Jurisdiction Motion will be able to hear argument on the concern of the
Board et al. in this respect, and ignore any evidence it concludes is
inadmissible.
[14]
In addition to asserting that the prothonotary
erred by exercising his discretion based on a wrong principle, the Board et
al. also argue that the prothonotary erred by misapprehending the facts.
Specifically, the Board et al. point to the prothonotary’s finding that
they had not established that they will suffer a material prejudice or that the
progress of this matter to a hearing on the merits would be significantly
delayed or harmed if the St-Hilaire affidavit is not struck. The Board et
al. argue that the prejudice was self-evident; no evidence was necessary.
In my view, this is another issue on which it was open to the prothonotary to
find that any prejudice that would be suffered by the Board et al. was
not material.
[15]
The Board et al. assert that, if the
facts in this case are not sufficiently exceptional to justify striking the
St-Hilaire affidavit, then no case would satisfy the exceptional circumstances
test. In my view, that was a consideration for the prothonotary, which I can
review only in the event of a clear error, which I do not see in this case.
[16]
Because of my conclusion that the prothonotary
did not err in his decision not to strike the St-Hilaire affidavit, it is not
necessary for me to consider whether the prothonotary erred in his alternative
conclusion that the motion to strike the St-Hilaire affidavit should be
dismissed on the basis that it was not made in a timely fashion.