Dockets: T-1511-15
T-1782-15
T-1783-15
Citation:
2016 FC 776
Ottawa, Ontario, July 8, 2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Kane
BETWEEN:
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APOTEX INC.
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Applicant
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and
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MINISTER OF HEALTH AND ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA AND THE
INFORMATION COMMISIONER OF CANADA
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ORDER AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
Apotex appeals the Order of Prothonotary Martha
Milczynski, made on April 4, 2016, in which she granted the motion of the
Information Commissioner of Canada (the Commissioner) for leave to be added as
a party, specifically a respondent, to Apotex’s application for judicial review.
[2]
The underlying application for judicial review
relates to three separate but identical decisions of the Minister of Health
(the Minister) to disclose information provided by Apotex to the Minister in
response to an access to information request by a requester (or requesters).
[3]
In the context of seeking the approval of the
Minister for Apotex’s pharmaceutical product, Apotex submitted an Abbreviated
New Drug Submission to the Minister. In doing so, Apotex was required to
provide all relevant information regarding its product, including its chemical
composition. This information, if disclosed, could have a negative impact on
Apotex’s scientific, proprietary and other interests, including trade secrets
of very high interest to competitors. Apotex notes that this information is
confidential and is provided to the Minister on the basis that the Minister
will not disclose and will safeguard the information.
[4]
In March 2014, the Minister advised Apotex that
three access to information requests had been received and requested Apotex’s
input on whether exemptions applied to permit the information to be withheld.
In August 2015, the Minister notified Apotex of its decisions to disclose
records in response to the three requests.
[5]
By Order of Justice Luc Martineau dated October
14, 2015, this Court granted the parties’ joint request that the three
applications for judicial review be specially managed. Prothonotary Milczynski
was subsequently appointed as the Case Management Judge and, in this capacity,
has dealt with and will continue to deal with a range of procedural motions
leading up to the determination of the three applications for judicial review.
II.
The Prothonotary’s Order
[6]
On February 29, 2016, the Commissioner brought a
motion in writing pursuant to Rule 369 of the Federal Courts Rules,
SOR/98-106 (the Rules) seeking leave of the Court to be added as a respondent,
as permitted by paragraph 42(1)(c) of the Access to Information Act,
RSC, 1985, c A-1 (the Act).
[7]
By order dated April 4, 2016 (the Order), the
Prothonotary granted the motion and directed that the Commissioner be added as
a respondent to the proceedings and that the style of cause be amended
accordingly and, among other things: set out the applicable time frames for the
exchange of documents; directed that the Commissioner be served with all
further filings; directed that the Commissioner be permitted to file affidavit
material and to complete cross-examination on affidavits within the time frames
set out; and, directed that the Commissioner be permitted to make oral
representations at the hearing of the application for judicial review.
III.
The Issues
[8]
Apotex appeals the Order, arguing that:
•
The Prothonotary breached procedural fairness by
failing to consider the submissions of Apotex, including failing to consider
its request that an oral hearing be held;
•
The Prothonotary erred in law by adding the
Commissioner as a respondent; and,
•
As a result of the errors, the Court should
consider de novo whether the Commissioner should be added as a
respondent.
IV.
The Standard of Review
[9]
The standard of review of a prothonotary’s
discretionary decision was established in Canada v Aqua-Gem Investments Ltd,
[1993] 2 FC 425, 149 NR 273 (FCA) [Aqua-Gem].
[10]
In Merck & Co Inc v Apotex Inc, 2003
FCA 488 at para 19, [2004] 2 FCR 459, leave to appeal to SCC refused, [2004]
SCCA No 80 (QL) [Merck] , Justice Décary restated the Aqua-Gem test
as follows: “Discretionary orders of prothonotaries
ought not to be disturbed on appeal to a judge unless: (a) the questions in the
motion are vital to the final issue of the case, or (b) the orders are clearly
wrong, in the sense that the exercise of discretion by the prothonotary was
based upon a wrong principle or upon a misapprehension of facts.”
[11]
There is no dispute that the addition of the
Commissioner as a respondent is not vital to the final outcome of the
application for judicial review. Only the second prong of the test is
applicable.
[12]
Apotex initially argued that the standard of
review to be applied by the Court should be the appellate standard of review
articulated in Housen v Nikolaison, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235 [Housen]
of “palpable and overriding error.” However,
Apotex agrees that in the present case there would be no difference between
assessing whether the “orders are clearly wrong, in the
sense that the exercise of discretion by the prothonotary was based upon a
wrong principle or upon a misapprehension of facts” or assessing whether
the Prothonotary made a palpable and overriding error.
Other principles from the jurisprudence
[13]
The jurisprudence has established that the Court
should only intervene in a prothonotary’s decision “in
the clearest case[s] of a misuse of judicial discretion” (Sawridge
Band v Canada, 2001 FCA 338 at para 11, [2002] 2 FCR 346 [Sawridge Band],
also referred to as L’Hirondelle v Canada; Sawridge Band v Canada,
2001 FCA 339 at para 4, 283 NR 112; Montana Indian Band v Canada, 2002
FCA 331 at para 7, [2002] FCJ No 1257 (QL) [Montana Indian Band]).
[14]
In Montana Indian Band, Justice Pelletier
emphasized the principle of deference to decisions of a case management judge,
at para 7:
[7] We would like to emphasize once
again the heavy burden upon litigants seeking to overturn an interlocutory
order by a case management judge. This Court is loathe to interfere with
interlocutory orders in any case due to the delay and expense which such
appeals add to any proceeding. This is all the more so where an appeal is taken
from an interlocutory decision of a case management judge who is intimately
familiar with the history and details of a complex matter. Case management
cannot be effective if this Court intervenes in any but the “clearest case of a
misuse of judicial discretion” to echo the words of Mr. Justice Rothstein in Sawridge
Indian Band et al. v. Canada, 2001 FCA 339, (2001) 283 N.R. 112.
[15]
The wide discretion given to prothonotaries by
virtue of their case management role was also highlighted by the Court of
Appeal in j2 Global Communications, Inc v Protus IP Solutions Inc, 2009
FCA 41 at para 16, 387 NR 135. With respect to the second prong of the Aqua-Gem
test, the orders of prothonotaries should not lightly be disturbed:
[16] It has often been said in this
Court that, because of their intimate knowledge of the litigation and its
dynamics, prothonotaries and trial judges are to be afforded ample scope in the
exercise of their discretion when managing cases: see also Federal Courts
Rules, rules 75 and 385. Since this Court is far removed from the fray, it
should only intervene in order to prevent undoubted injustices and to correct
clear material errors. None have been demonstrated here. […]
V.
The Relevant Provisions of the Access to
Information Act and the Federal Courts Rules
[16]
The Act provides,
42 (1) The Information Commissioner may
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42 (1) Le Commissaire à l’information a qualité pour :
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(a) apply to the Court, within the time limits prescribed by
section 41, for a review of any refusal to disclose a record requested under
this Act or a part thereof in respect of which an investigation has been
carried out by the Information Commissioner, if the Commissioner has the
consent of the person who requested access to the record;
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a) exercer lui-même, à l’issue de son enquête et dans les délais
prévus à l’article 41, le recours en révision pour refus de communication
totale ou partielle d’un document, avec le consentement de la personne qui
avait demandé le document;
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(b) appear before the Court on behalf of any person who has
applied for a review under section 41; or
|
b) comparaître devant la Cour au nom de la personne qui a exercé
un recours devant la Cour en vertu de l’article 41;
|
(c) with leave of the Court, appear as a party to any review
applied for under section 41 or 44.
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c) comparaître, avec l’autorisation de la Cour, comme partie à une
instance engagée en vertu des articles 41 ou 44.
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(2) Where the Information Commissioner makes an application under
paragraph (1)(a) for a review of a refusal to disclose a record requested
under this Act or a part thereof, the person who requested access to the
record may appear as a party to the review.
|
(2) Dans le cas prévu à l’alinéa (1)a), la personne qui a demandé
communication du document en cause peut comparaître comme partie à
l’instance.
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[…]
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[…]
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44 (1) Any third party to whom the head of a government
institution is required under paragraph 28(1)(b) or subsection 29(1) to give
a notice of a decision to disclose a record or a part thereof under this Act
may, within twenty days after the notice is given, apply to the Court for a
review of the matter.
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44 (1) Le tiers que le responsable d’une institution fédérale est
tenu, en vertu de l’alinéa 28(1)b) ou du paragraphe 29(1), d’aviser de la
communication totale ou partielle d’un document peut, dans les vingt jours
suivant la transmission de l’avis, exercer un recours en révision devant la
Cour.
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(2) The head of a government institution who has given notice
under paragraph 28(1)(b) or subsection 29(1) that a record requested under
this Act or a part thereof will be disclosed shall forthwith on being given
notice of an application made under subsection (1) in respect of the
disclosure give written notice of the application to the person who requested
access to the record.
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(2) Le responsable d’une institution fédérale qui a donné avis de
communication totale ou partielle d’un document en vertu de l’alinéa 28(1)b)
ou du paragraphe 29(1) est tenu, sur réception d’un avis de recours en
révision de cette décision, d’en aviser par écrit la personne qui avait
demandé communication du document.
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(3) Any person who has been given notice of an application for a
review under subsection (2) may appear as a party to the review.
|
(3) La
personne qui est avisée conformément au paragraphe (2) peut comparaître comme
partie à l’instance.
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(Sections 28 and 29 refer to decisions to
disclose a record.)
[17]
The Rules provide:
1.1 (1) These Rules apply to all proceedings in the Federal Court
of Appeal and the Federal Court unless otherwise provided by or under an Act
of Parliament.
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1.1 (1) Sauf disposition contraire d’une loi fédérale ou de ses
textes d’application, les présentes règles s’appliquent à toutes les
instances devant la Cour d’appel fédérale et la Cour fédérale.
|
(2) In the
event of any inconsistency between these Rules and an Act of Parliament or a
regulation made under such an Act, that Act or regulation prevails to the
extent of the inconsistency.
|
(2) Les
dispositions de toute loi fédérale ou de ses textes d’application l’emportent
sur les dispositions incompatibles des présentes règles.
|
[…]
|
[…]
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104 (1) At
any time, the Court may
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104 (1) La
Cour peut, à tout moment, ordonner :
|
(a) order
that a person who is not a proper or necessary party shall cease to be a
party; or
|
a) qu’une
personne constituée erronément comme partie ou une partie dont la présence
n’est pas nécessaire au règlement des questions en litige soit mise hors de
cause;
|
(b) order
that a person who ought to have been joined as a party or whose presence
before the Court is necessary to ensure that all matters in dispute in the
proceeding may be effectually and completely determined be added as a party,
but no person shall be added as a plaintiff or applicant without his or her
consent, signified in writing or in such other manner as the Court may order.
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b) que soit
constituée comme partie à l’instance toute personne qui aurait dû l’être ou
dont la présence devant la Cour est nécessaire pour assurer une instruction
complète et le règlement des questions en litige dans l’instance; toutefois,
nul ne peut être constitué codemandeur sans son consentement, lequel est
notifié par écrit ou de telle autre manière que la Cour ordonne.
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(2) An order
made under subsection (1) shall contain directions as to amendment of the
originating document and any other pleadings.
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(2)
L’ordonnance rendue en vertu du paragraphe (1) contient des directives quant
aux modifications à apporter à l’acte introductif d’instance et aux autres
actes de procédure.
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VI.
Did the Prothonotary Breach Procedural Fairness?
[18]
Apotex submits that the Prothonotary did not
consider its submissions in response to the motion of the Commissioner to be
added as a party. Apotex points to the manner in which the Prothonotary
identified the applicant and the respondent in her decision and to another
decision of the Prothonotary, in another matter, in which she referred to the
applicant, the respondent and the Commissioner in a different manner. Apotex
also points to the failure to mention Apotex’s request for an oral hearing.
[19]
I do not agree. At the time of the
Commissioner’s motion to be added as a party, there were only two parties to
the application for judicial review: the applicant, Apotex, and the respondent,
the Minister of Health. The Order states: “And Upon
reading the Applicant’s Motion Record and a letter from counsel for the
Respondent advising that the Respondent takes no position with regard to the
motion”. It is clear that the Prothonotary’s reference to “the Applicant” refers only to Apotex. As the Commissioner
notes, the Prothonotary consistently referred to the Commissioner as “the Information
Commissioner of Canada” or “the Information Commissioner” and not as the
“Applicant”, although the Commissioner was the applicant on the particular
motion.
[20]
Apotex also argues that it did not provide a
motion record, rather a response. I note, however, that the document filed by
Apotex on the motion was titled “Responding Motion
Record of the Applicant, Apotex”. Given that Apotex described itself as
the applicant on its own record, its argument cannot succeed. The Prothonotary
was clearly referring to the material provided by Apotex.
[21]
Similarly, Apotex’s submission that the
Prothonotary only referred to the submissions of two parties, when there were
three positions to consider, does not change this finding. The Prothonotary
reiterated the relief requested by the Commissioner in the Commissioner’s
motion at the outset of the Order, with references to the Rules and the
statutory provisions which would permit the Court to grant leave to add the
Commissioner as a party. The Prothonotary then referred to the submissions of
the applicant, and the letter from the Minister.
[22]
Apotex also points to another decision of
Prothonotary Milczynski, also dated April 4, 2016, in Porter
Airlines v Canada (Attorney General), T-1296-15 [Porter I], which
granted the Commissioner leave to be added as a party. In that order,
Prothonotary Milczynski refers to the motion “on behalf
of the Applicant, the Information Commissioner”, although the applicant
on the application for judicial review is Porter Airlines. The Prothonotary also
notes that she had read “the Motion Record on behalf of
the Information Commissioner”, a letter from counsel for the respondent
and a letter from counsel for the applicant. Apotex argues that in the present
case, just as in Porter I, the motion was brought by the Commissioner as
applicant and the Prothonotary’s reference to “the
Applicant” must mean the Commissioner and not Apotex. Apotex adds that
the specific reference in Porter I to “upon
reading” the positions of all three parties can be contrasted with the
lack of such a reference in the present case.
[23]
I do not agree. First, this is not an exercise
in statutory interpretation which calls for the comparison of like words in the
same statutes to have the same meaning and different words to have different
meaning. The orders are unrelated and each stands on its own. There is no
requirement for prothonotaries and judges to use identical words or terms in
their orders and judgments. Second, both orders clearly identify who is who. In
Porter I, the Prothonotary identified “the
Applicant, the Information Commissioner”, which grammatically
distinguishes the Commissioner as the applicant on the motion as opposed to the
applicant on the judicial review. The recital indicating what the Prothonotary
considered refers to all three positions and distinguishes counsel for the
applicant (i.e. Porter) from the Commissioner. I also note that in Porter I,
the applicant (Porter) and the respondent (Minister of Health) did not oppose
the addition of the Commissioner as party.
[24]
In the present case, the Prothonotary
consistently referred to the “Information Commissioner”
as such throughout the Order and never referred to the Commissioner as “the Applicant”.
[25]
The lack of a specific mention to Apotex’s
request for an oral hearing does not support Apotex’s argument that its
submissions were not considered. The Prothonotary was not obliged to hold an
oral hearing or to provide reasons for not doing so.
[26]
The Commissioner brought its motion in writing
pursuant to Rule 369. In accordance with Rule 369, where a respondent to such a
motion objects to its disposition in writing it must set out its reasons in its
memorandum or written representations, following which the moving party may
reply. The Court will then determine whether to dispose of the motion in
writing or fix a time for an oral hearing.
[27]
In the present case, the record reveals that
Apotex requested an oral hearing asserting that the Commissioner’s motion
raises issues that would shape the underlying applications and that submissions
should be made with the benefit of viva voce submissions. The
Commissioner replied (in accordance with Rule 369(3)) noting that the written
submissions addressed all the relevant issues and that Apotex had not provided
any reasons to support that the motion could not be disposed of in writing.
[28]
The Prothonotary obviously agreed with the
Commissioner that the motion could be disposed of based on written submissions.
The Prothonotary did not set a time for an oral hearing and issued her Order.
The first recital in the Order refers to the “motion in
writing … pursuant to Rule 369…”.
[29]
No breach of procedural fairness results from
the determination of the motion in writing. Apotex was clearly aware of all the
issues to address and did so in its written submissions.
[30]
Nor does the failure to address Apotex’s request
for an oral hearing or provide reasons for not doing so support the view that
the Prothonotary failed to consider Apotex’s submissions more generally.
[31]
As noted below, prothonotaries are not required
to provide reasons for the many decisions and orders they make, given the high
volume of motions they consider and the need to advance the underlying
litigation, so long as it is apparent that the submissions have been
considered.
[32]
There is no reason to doubt that the
Prothonotary considered the submissions of Apotex which opposed adding the
Commissioner as a respondent.
VII.
Did the Prothonotary err by exercising her
discretion to grant leave to add the Commissioner as a respondent based on a
wrong principle of law or a misapprehension of the facts?
Apotex’s
submissions
[33]
Apotex argues that the Prothonotary based her
decision on a wrong principle of law because she did not apply Rule 104 as it
has been interpreted by the jurisprudence.
[34]
Apotex submits that the jurisprudence has
interpreted Rule 104 as setting a stringent test of necessity and that special
or exceptional circumstances must exist to depart from the general rule that it
is up to the applicant or plaintiff to identify the respondent (Laboratoires
Servier v Apotex Inc, 2007 FC 1210 at paras 11, 16, 17, 63 CPR (4th) 21 [Servier]).
Apotex argues that Rule 104 alone governs whether the Commissioner may be
granted leave to be added as a party pursuant to paragraph 42(1)(c) of the Act.
[35]
Apotex notes that in Canada (Fisheries and
Oceans) v Shubenacadie Indian Band, 2002 FCA 509, 299 NR 241 [Shubenacadie],
Justice Evans clearly found that the meaning of “necessary
party” set out in Amon v Raphael Tuck & Sons Ltd, [1956] 1 QB
357 at 380 [Amon] applies to the current Rules. A necessary party is,
among other things, a party that is bound by the result.
[36]
Apotex adds that in Air Canada v Thibodeau,
2012 FCA 14 at paras 10-11, 438 NR 321 [Thibodeau], the Court of Appeal
highlighted that the requirement of necessity is the only test and that the
only circumstance to justify adding a respondent is where that respondent would
be bound by the result. Apotex adds that Thibodeau has been applied by
this Court more recently in Cami International Poultry v Canada (Attorney
General), 2013 FC 583, [2013] FCJ No 790 (QL) [Cami].
[37]
Apotex submits that on the motion, the
Commissioner took the position that Rule 104 did not apply and did not argue
that she was a necessary party. Rather, the Commissioner relied on the
provisions of the Act.
[38]
Apotex argues that there is no necessity for the
Commissioner to be added as a respondent. The Commissioner would not be bound
by the outcome of the judicial review. In addition, if the Commissioner is
added as a respondent, it would impact upon and could thwart the ability of
Apotex to narrow the issues or settle the matter with the Minister.
[39]
Apotex also argues that the Commissioner would
not bring any expertise to the issues at stake in the application for judicial
review that Apotex or the Minister lack. Apotex adds that one of the reasons
advanced by the Commissioner in her motion for leave to be added as a
respondent, which relates to Apotex’s possible motion to request that the order
of evidence be reversed on the application for judicial review, is premature
since Apotex has not made such a motion. Regardless, the reversal of the order
of evidence is not unusual and would not have any bearing on the burden of
proof in the judicial review.
[40]
Apotex submits that the interests of the
Commissioner and the assistance she purports to provide could be met by way of
an affidavit or by seeking intervenor status, noting that intervenors are not
bound by the result.
[41]
Despite the deference owed to the discretionary
decisions of a prothonotary in their case management role, Apotex notes that
such decisions are not immune from review (Louis Bull Band v Canada,
2003 FCT 732 at para 15, [2003] FCJ No 961 (QL) (FCTD) [Louis Bull]; Merck
at paras 40-41). Apotex argues that the decision to grant leave to add a
respondent is not within the customary case management role, does not rely on
the Prothonotary’s familiarity with the issues in the case or special
knowledge, and, as in Louis Bull, is a new matter and not subject to the
principle of deference (Louis Bull at paras 15-16).
[42]
Apotex also argues that because the Prothonotary
did not provide reasons, there is no basis for the Court to determine how she
arrived at her decision and no basis for the Court to defer to the
Prothonotary’s exercise of discretion.
The Commissioner’s submissions
[43]
The Commissioner submits that paragraph 42(1)(c)
of the Act clearly provides for the Commissioner to be added as a respondent in
an application for judicial review with leave of the Court. The Commissioner
accepts that Rule 104 has been interpreted in the jurisprudence as setting a
stringent test, but notes that this jurisprudence does not address the
application of the Rule in the context of a statutory provision that
specifically provides for an Agent of Parliament to be added as a party.
[44]
The Commissioner submits that if Rule 104 is
interpreted without regard to the statutory provision, the Commissioner could
not meet the stringent necessity test and, as a result, could not be granted
leave to be added as a party despite the clear words of its governing
legislation.
[45]
The Commissioner notes that the Federal Court of
Appeal has acknowledged that the Rules are subject to the provisions of Acts of
Parliament and nothing has changed to displace this principle (Canada (Human
Rights Commission) v Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 2 FCR 447, 17 Admin
LR (2d) 2 (FCA) [Canada (HRC)]).
[46]
Rule 104 must be reconciled with the Act and its
clear intent to permit the Commissioner to be added as a party. A specific
legislative intent is an exception to the necessity test (Servier at
para 17).
[47]
The Commissioner also submits that Thibodeau,
which denied the Commissioner of Official Languages (COL) leave to be added as
a respondent, can be distinguished. The Commissioner also notes that the
Supreme Court of Canada ultimately granted leave for the COL to intervene
before that Court.
[48]
The Commissioner notes that she is not in the
same category as other individuals that may seek to be added as a party. The
objectives of the Act and the specific duties and responsibilities of the Commissioner
to ensure the proper administration of the Act and that the rights of
requesters are considered in the application of the Act, among other interests,
justify the Commissioner’s party status.
[49]
The Commissioner submits that this Court has
established that the Commissioner may be granted leave to be added as a party
where the Court is satisfied that her participation would assist the Court to
determine a factual or legal issue in the proceeding (Canon Canada Inc v
Infrastructure Canada (28 February 2014), T-1987-13, [Canon]. The
Commissioner points to several orders of this Court granting leave to the
Commissioner to be added as a respondent in various proceedings, as well as
several judgments on applications for judicial review and other proceedings
where the Commissioner had been granted status as a respondent. The recent
decision of Justice Russell in Porter Airlines v Canada (Attorney General)
(23 March 2016), T-1491-15 [Porter II] noted that the Commissioner had
been granted leave in many cases and would be “extremely
helpful” to the Court.
[50]
In the present case, the Commissioner set out
the grounds to be granted leave in her written submissions on the motion, which
were considered by the Prothonotary: the Commissioner’s expertise and ability
to provide assistance to the Court regarding the Act; the Commissioner’s
overall interest in the interpretation and administration of the Act; ensuring
that the interests of requesters are considered; and, the intention by Apotex,
which it has not yet resiled from, to bring a motion to reverse the order of
evidence and the implications for the application for judicial review.
[51]
The Commissioner adds that she would not thwart
any possible settlement and could not deter the Court from approving of such a
settlement.
VIII.
The Prothonotary did not err by exercising her
discretion based on a wrong principle of law or a misapprehension of the facts
Rule 104 and the
statutory provision
[52]
I agree with the Commissioner that a strict
interpretation of Rule 104 without regard to the statutory provisions would
undermine the intention of Parliament that the Commissioner may be granted
leave to be added as a party.
[53]
As noted by Prothonotary Tabib in Canon
at page 2:
The ICC is correct that section 42(1) of the
ATIA contemplates the participation of the ICC as a party in any review applied
under section 44, and that the very strict criteria of “necessity” set out in
Rule 104 would, if applied on a motion under section 42(1) of the ATIA, render
Parliament’s intentions by enacting section 42(1) nugatory, as there will
rarely, if ever, be a case where the ICC’s presence in a judicial review would
be “necessary to ensure that all matters in dispute in the proceeding may be
effectually and completely determined”.
[54]
Rule 1.1 is instructive regarding the intent and
application of the Rules. The Rules provide the mechanism or process, but do
not trump the substantive law where there is inconsistency between the Rules
and the substantive law. Although Rule 104 and paragraph 42(1)(c) may not
be inconsistent on their face, the strict interpretation of Rule 104 would
likely make it impossible in most circumstances to grant leave to the
Commissioner. The Rule must be adapted accordingly.
[55]
This same principle was acknowledged in Canada
(HRC) where Justice Décary considered the predecessor to Rule 104 and other
related rules, which at that time had been recently enacted to complement
amendments to the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, regarding
judicial review applications. Justice Décary noted that the Rules sought to
address the confusion between intervenor and party status. He stated:
The Rules are subject, of course, to
provisions in Acts of Parliament that may grant certain tribunals a distinct
possibility of participating in judicial proceedings, either as a party or
intervenor as of right, or as a party or intervenor with leave of the Court. Where such provisions exist, the Rules shall be adapted
accordingly. For instance, where a tribunal which is given by statute the
standing of party or intervenor, has not been named in the originating motion,
any application by it under Rule 1602(3) or 1611, as the case may be, to be
added as respondent or intervenor will be granted as a matter of course. For
examples of statutory provisions giving a tribunal the possibility of
participating in judicial proceedings, see: the Official Languages Act,
R.S.C., 1985 (4th Supp), c. 31, s. 78(1)(a),(b) and (c) and 78(3); the Access
to Information Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. A-1 , s. 42(1)(a),(b) and (c); the National
Telecommunications Powers and Procedures Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. N-20 (as am.
by R.S.C., 1985 (3rd Supp.), c. 28, s. 301), s. 65(4); and the Canadian
Human Rights Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. H-6 , ss. 40(3), 50(1), 51 and 55.
[Emphasis added.]
[56]
As the Commissioner notes, Apotex has not
acknowledged this jurisprudence, nor has any jurisprudence been cited which
changes or contradicts this authority.
[57]
The jurisprudence relied on by Apotex, with the
exception of Thibodeau, to argue that the Prothonotary erred in law by
not applying the stringent necessity test of Rule 104 does not involve the
application of Rule 104 in the context of a statutory provision which provides
for a party to be added with leave.
[58]
In Servier, Justice Snider noted, at
paras 11-13, that Rule 104 allows the addition of a party only in exceptional
or special circumstances where one of the two tests in Rule 104 is met. Justice
Snider noted that the Court of Appeal had endorsed the meaning of “necessary party” from Amon with approval in Shubenacadie.
[59]
However, Justice Snider noted that other
principles also apply when determining whether a person is a necessary
defendant (at para 17), including that:
• Absent a specific legislative provision (as in, for
example, Nissho-Iwai Canada Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue for Customs
& Excise, [1981] 2 F.C. 721 (T.D.)), when the plaintiff’s statement of
claim seeks no relief against a person and makes no allegations against them
the person will not be considered a necessary party (Shubenacadie, above
at para. 6; Hall v. Dakota Tipi Indian Band, [2000] F.C.J. No. 207 at
paras. 5, 8 (T.D.) (QL); Stevens v. Canada (Commissioner, Commission of
Inquiry), [1998] 4 F.C. 125 at para. 21 (C.A)).
[Emphasis added.]
[60]
Servier did not
address the interplay between a statute that permits a party to be added and
the Rules. Moreover, Justice Snider acknowledged the principle that a party
should not be added where the claim seeks no relief against the added party
(i.e., where they would not be bound), absent a specific legislative provision.
Clearly the jurisprudence has recognized, as in Canada (HRC), that the
provisions of a statute must be respected.
[61]
In Thibodeau, the Court of Appeal denied
the motion of the COL to be added as a respondent, even though the Official
Languages Act, RSC, 1985, c 31 (4th Supp) provides that the COL may be
granted leave to be added as a party, similar to subsection 42(1) of the Access
to Information Act. Justice Blais found that there is only one test
governing the exercise of the judge’s discretion pursuant to Rule 104, that of
necessity (at para 11).
[62]
Justice Blais cited Stevens v Canada
(Commissioner of Inquiry), [1998] 4 FC 125, [1998] FCJ No 793 (QL) (FCA),
which endorsed the following passage from Amon on the meaning of “necessary”:
The person to be joined must be someone
whose presence is necessary as a party. What makes a person a necessary party?
It is not, of course, merely that he has relevant evidence to give on some of
the questions involved; that would only make him a necessary witness. It is not
merely that he has an interest in the correct solution of some question
involved and has thought of relevant arguments to advance and is afraid that
the existing parties may not advance them adequately. That would mean that on
the construction of a clause in a common form contract many parties would claim
to be heard, and if there were power to admit any, there is no principle of
discretion by which some could be admitted and others refused. The court might
often think it convenient or desirable that some of such persons should be
heard so that the court could be sure that it had found the complete answer,
but no one would suggest that it is necessary to hear them for that purpose.
The only reason which makes it necessary to make a person a party to an action
is so that he should be bound by the result of the action, and the question to
be settled therefore must be a question in the action which cannot be
effectually and completely settled unless he is a party.
[63]
Justice Blais then considered, at para 12,
whether it was necessary “to grant the Commissioner
status as a party to completely adjudicate and settle the issues raised in
these proceedings” and found it was not.
[64]
The issue in the present case is not what “necessary” means or whether the Commissioner is a necessary
party, but whether necessity is the only test for adding a party, as found in Thibodeau.
In my view, Thibodeau can be distinguished and, with respect, should not
be relied on for the proposition that necessity is the only test, regardless of
an applicable statutory provision. First, it appears that Justice Blais
accepted that Rule 104 applied in the context of the statutory provision, but
did not address the implications or whether the Rules could override the
statutory provision to the extent that the statutory intent was impaired.
Second, it appears that Rule 1.1 was not raised, which provides that the
statutory provision prevails to the extent of any inconsistency with the Rules.
Third, it appears that the earlier jurisprudence of Canada (HRC), which
specifically states that the Rules should be adapted where the statute grants
tribunals the possibility of participating and specifically mentions the Access
to Information Act, was not raised to the Court of Appeal’s attention in Thibodeau.
[65]
In addition, the conclusion in Thibodeau,
denying leave, can also be distinguished on its facts. Justice Blais noted, among
other factors, that the COL had sought and been granted full intervenor status
in the Federal Court, had made written and oral submissions, had taken part in
cross-examinations, but had not sought to be added as a party. Therefore, the
choice had been made and it was too late for the COL to reverse his position.
Justice Blais found that intervenor status, which was agreed to by Air Canada,
was sufficient.
[66]
In Cami, noted by Apotex as a recent
application of the necessity test and Thibodeau, Chief Justice Crampton
found that the Chicken Farmers of Canada (CFC) should not be added as a
respondent, relying on Thibodeau and Shubenacadie in support of the
stringent test of necessity. Again, Cami did not involve a statute which
provided for the proposed respondent to be added; it dealt only with Rule 104.
There was no statutory provision to permit the CFC to be added as a party.
[67]
Rule 104 must be adapted to permit the Court to
consider whether to exercise the discretion to grant leave to the Commissioner
to be added as a party. As the Commissioner noted, this Court has granted leave
in several cases and has articulated an approach to do so.
[68]
Recently, in Porter II, Justice Russell
granted leave to the Commissioner to be added as a party pursuant to paragraph
42(1)(c), noting among other conclusions and findings, at para 5:
5. All in all, I cannot accept the reasons
for the Applicant’s resistance and it seems to me that, on balance, as in so
many cases where the Commissioner has been granted status under s 42(1) (c) of
the Act, that the Commissioner’s knowledge and background of the statute, its
jurisprudence and the legal issue in this case will be extremely helpful to the
Court in dealing with this dispute.
[69]
Although the Commissioner’s knowledge and
perspective could be beneficial to the parties and to the Court, whether the
Commissioner should be added as a party is a case-by-case determination. That
determination cannot be based on the stringent criteria established in the
jurisprudence with respect to Rule 104 alone.
If Rule 104 is not
applicable, what criteria should guide the exercise of discretion?
[70]
As noted by the Commissioner, many other orders
have been made by prothonotaries and judges to add the Commissioner as a
respondent which do not reflect the approach of Thibodeau, rather the
application of other criteria.
[71]
Prothonotary Tabib’s recent articulation of the
basis for adding the Commissioner, in Canon, appears to capture the
rationale reflected in other orders. Prothonotary Tabib considered what
criteria should guide the exercise of discretion, having found that the
necessity test was not appropriate in the context of an application to be added
as a party pursuant to paragraph 42(1)(c). She noted that there was no
jurisprudence that had addressed the criteria, but found that analogous
jurisprudence suggested that the criteria should be “akin
to those considered on a motion for leave to intervene pursuant to Rule 109.
The Court should be satisfied that the participation of the ICC would assist
the Court to determine a factual or legal issue in the proceedings” (at
pages 2-3).
[72]
This approach reflects the need to reconcile
Rule 104 with the Act to respect both the intention of the Act and the
requirement that leave be sought to be added as a party.
[73]
As noted by Prothonotary Tabib, the Commissioner
will not be automatically added as a party pursuant to paragraph 42(1)(c). The
Court must consider whether and how the addition of the Commissioner would
assist the Court, based on the submissions of the parties, and then determine
whether leave should be granted.
[74]
For example, in Canon, Prothonotary Tabib
noted that the Commissioner’s expertise on its own was not a sufficient reason
to grant leave. However, she found that the Commissioner’s participation would
be useful to the Court in the context of the applicant’s motion for
confidentiality order.
No reason to
displace the principle of deference
[75]
Apotex argues that no deference should be given
to the Prothonotary’s discretionary decision because she exceeded her role as a
case management judge and dealt with a new matter, not dependent on her
familiarity with the issues in the judicial review. I do not agree.
[76]
In Merck, the Court of Appeal addressed
the rule or principle stated in Sawridge Band and Montana Indian Band,
where the Court of Appeal noted that the Court should only interfere in
decisions made by case management prothonotaries or judges “in the clearest case of misuse of judicial discretion”.
The Court of Appeal clarified at para 41:
[41] This rule, of course, only applies
where deference is owed; it does not apply where the discretion has to be
exercised de novo, for example, where, as here, the question is vital to
the final issue of the case or where the case management prothonotary or judge
has made an error of principle (see Apotex, supra, para. 41).
Indeed, in Apotex, Strayer J.A. refused to dilute the legal right a
party has to have relevant questions answered on examination for discovery for
the sake of enhancing the case management system and of expediting the whole
process. Furthermore, as noted by Snider J. in Louis Bull Band, supra,
it is not all orders made by a case management judge or prothonotary which are
made “as a result of an ongoing management function” (para. 16): where an order
deals with “a new matter in respect of which [the case management prothonotary]
had no special knowledge”, the Sawridge rule does not apply. Indeed,
case management prothonotaries and judges are often asked to decide motions
which far exceed the case management expertise they have gained in a given
case.
[77]
In Louis Bull, also relied on by Apotex,
Justice Snider noted the principle that discretionary decisions made by prothonotaries
in the context of case management should not lightly be disturbed, given the
Prothonotary’s familiarity with the issues and expertise more generally, but
found that such decisions are not immune from review. Justice Snider found, on
the facts of that case, that the motion to add a cause of action raised an
entirely new issue and that deference was not appropriate.
[78]
As noted by the Commissioner, motions to add a
party as respondent or intervenor are not complex, unique or beyond the range
of motions dealt with by prothonotaries in their case management role. This is
demonstrated by the several orders cited by the Commissioner where this Court
has made such orders, including on consent.
[79]
In the present case, the Prothonotary had been
appointed as case manager in this proceeding in October 2015 and was familiar
with the issues raised in the underlying applications and, more generally, with
the range of motions that may arise in the context of such applications. In
addition, the Prothonotary had considered motions to add the Commissioner as a
respondent in other proceedings, (for example, in Porter I, as noted by
Apotex). It cannot be said that this motion raised a new issue that did not
draw on the Prothonotary’s expertise and familiarity with the issues or that
went beyond her case management function.
[80]
There is nothing on the facts of the present
case to displace the principle of deference.
There is no
requirement for detailed reasons
[81]
The lack of reasons in the Prothonotary’s Order
does not invite the Court to ignore the principle of deference.
[82]
As noted by Justice Mosley in Apotex v Merck,
2007 FC 250 at para 13, [2007] FCJ No 322 (QL):
[13] The lack of reasons alone will not
automatically give rise to a hearing de novo on an appeal from a
prothonotary’s decision before a judge of this Court. This was the conclusion
Justice François Lemieux reached in Anchor Brewing Co. v. Sleeman Brewing
& Malting Co., 2001 FCT 1066, 15 C.P.R. (4th) 63 at para. 31 having
reviewed the existing precedents. Justice Lemieux noted further at paragraph 32
of his reasons that:
De novo intervention is not justified when, examining all of the
circumstances, including the nature of the order made, the evidence before the
prothonotary, whether the exercise of discretion involves essentially a
consideration of legal principles, reasonably demonstrate the manner in
which the prothonotary exercised his/her discretion.
[Emphasis in the original]
[83]
In Savanna Energy Services Corp v Technicoil
Corp, 2005 FC 842, 272 FTR 159 [Savanna], Justice Harrington found
that the Prothonotary’s reference to the material that had been considered was sufficient,
noting at para 19:
[19] Having come to the conclusion that
the joinder is not a vital issue to the outcome of the cause, is it appropriate
that I exercise discretion de novo on the grounds that the prothonotary
did not give reasons? The reference to "motion records of the
parties" and "hearing submissions of counsel", in my opinion, is
sufficient to preclude me from exercising discretion de novo. (Anchor
Brewing Co. v. Sleeman Brewing & Malting Co. (2001), 15 C.P.R. (4th) 63
(F.C.T.D.); Pharmaceutical Partners of Canada v. Faulding (Canada) Inc.,
2002 FCT 1010, [2002] F.C.J. 1305 (QL) (at para.9); General Electric Co. v.
Wind Power Inc., 2003 FCT 537, [2003] F.C.J. No. 692.) The prothonotaries
deal with an extraordinary volume of procedural issues. It would be
intolerable, and the wheels of justice would grind most slowly indeed, if each
discretionary order had to be accompanied by a full set of motivated reasons in
order to discourage the unsuccessful party from appealing and inviting the
Court to exercise its discretion anew. In any event, I would have exercised my
discretion as the Prothonotary did.
[84]
As in Savanna, I find that the
Prothonotary’s reference in the Order indicating that she had read the
Applicant’s Motion Record (meaning that of Apotex, as found above), the letter
from the Minister and the submissions of the Commissioner, documents which are
reflected in her reiteration of the relief requested, demonstrates that she
considered all the submissions and exercised her discretion to grant leave. The
lack of detailed reasons does not detract from the deference owed.
[85]
In conclusion, there is no basis to disturb the
Order of the Prothonotary. The Commissioner did not purport to be a necessary
party but provided grounds that the Prothonotary found sufficient to grant
leave to be added as a party in accordance with the statutory provision.
Apotex’s opposition to those grounds need not be addressed given that the Court
will not consider de novo whether the Commissioner should be added.
No delay
[86]
With respect to the Commissioner’s submissions
that Apotex’s appeal was out of time, I agree with Apotex that the motion to
appeal was filed, albeit with some deficiencies, in time and that the
deficiencies were shortly rectified after determining, in consultation with the
Commissioner, the appropriate date for the motion to be heard. The Commissioner
was clearly aware of the appeal and of Apotex’s intention to pursue it.
Costs in the cause
[87]
With respect to the Commissioner’s submission
that the appeal should have been dealt with on the basis of written material
and that an oral hearing unnecessarily added to the costs of the parties, I
find that the oral hearing of the appeal was appropriate and beneficial to
ensure that both Apotex and the Commissioner could fully advance their
arguments.
[88]
As agreed to by Apotex and the Commissioner,
costs will be determined in the cause.