SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation: Little Sisters
Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Commissioner of Customs and Revenue),
[2007] 1 S.C.R. 38, 2007 SCC 2
|
Date: 20070119
Docket: 30894
|
Between:
Little
Sisters Book and Art Emporium
Appellant
and
Commissioner
of Customs and Revenue and
Minister
of National Revenue
Respondents
‑ and ‑
Attorney
General of Ontario, Attorney General of
British
Columbia, Canadian Bar Association,
Egale
Canada Inc., Sierra Legal Defence Fund
and
Environmental Law Centre
Interveners
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron
and Rothstein JJ.
Joint Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 79)
Concurring Reasons:
(paras. 80 to 113)
Dissenting
Reasons:
(paras. 114 to 162)
|
Bastarache and LeBel JJ. (Deschamps, Abella and Rothstein
JJ. concurring)
McLachlin C.J. (Charron J. concurring)
Binnie J. (Fish J. concurring)
|
______________________________
Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Commissioner
of Customs and Revenue), [2007] 1 S.C.R. 38, 2007 SCC 2
Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium Appellant
v.
Commissioner of Customs and Revenue and
Minister of National Revenue Respondents
and
Attorney General of Ontario, Attorney General of
British Columbia, Canadian Bar Association,
Egale Canada Inc., Sierra Legal Defence Fund
and Environmental Law Centre Interveners
Indexed as: Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada
(Commissioner of Customs and Revenue)
Neutral citation: 2007 SCC 2.
File No.: 30894.
2006: April 19; 2007: January 19.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Civil
procedure — Costs — Advance costs — Whether
requirements to award advance costs met.
L is a small corporation that operates a bookstore
catering to the lesbian and gay community. Book sales represent 30 to 40
percent of its business. L, which still struggles to make a profit, is
engaged in litigation to gain the release of four books prohibited by Customs
on the basis that they were obscene. Frustrated after years of court battles
with Customs over similar issues, L chose to enlarge the scope of the
litigation and to pursue a broad inquiry into Customs’ practices. When this
litigation began, L had already fought a protracted legal battle against
Customs, which culminated in this Court’s decision in Little Sisters Book
and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000]
2 S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69 (“Little Sisters No. 1”), where it held that Customs’ practices at the time infringed
ss. 2 (b) and 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
L now seeks to have Customs bear the financial burden of its fresh complaint.
It applied for advance costs to cover the four books appeal as well as a
systemic review of Customs’ practices. In its appeal, L asks for a reversal of
Customs’ obscenity determinations and a declaration that Customs has been
construing and applying the relevant legislation in an unconstitutional
manner. The chambers judge granted an advance costs order for the appeal and
the systemic review, concluding that the three requirements of the Okanagan
test were satisfied. The Court of Appeal set aside the order.
Held (Binnie and
Fish JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per Bastarache, LeBel,
Deschamps, Abella and Rothstein JJ.: Bringing an issue of
public importance to the courts will not automatically entitle a litigant to
preferential costs treatment. Public interest advance costs orders must be
granted with caution, as a last resort, in circumstances where their necessity
is clearly established. The standard is a high one: only the “rare
and exceptional” case is special enough to warrant an advance costs award.
Accordingly, when applying the three requirements set out in Okanagan, a
court must decide, with a view to all the circumstances, whether the case is
sufficiently special that it would be contrary to the interests of justice to
deny the advance costs application. The injustice that would arise if the
application is not granted must relate both to the individual applicant and to
the public at large. Since an advance costs award is an exceptional measure,
the applicant must explore all other possible funding options, including costs
immunities. If the applicant cannot afford the litigation as a whole, but is
not completely impecunious, the applicant must commit to making a contribution
to the litigation. No injustice can arise if the matter at issue could be
settled, or the public interest could be satisfied, without an advance costs
award. Likewise, courts should consider whether other litigation is pending
and may be conducted for the same purpose, without requiring an interim order
of costs. If advance costs are granted, the litigant must relinquish some
manner of control over how the litigation proceeds. An advance costs award is
meant to provide a basic level of assistance necessary for the case to
proceed. Accordingly, courts should set limits on the rates and hours of legal
work chargeable and cap advance costs awards at an appropriate global amount.
The possibility of setting the advance costs award off against damages actually
collected at the end of the trial should also be contemplated. [35‑43]
L’s claim is insufficient to support a finding that
the requirement of special circumstances is met. The context in which merit is
considered is conditioned by the need to show that the case is exceptional.
The four books appeal, in which L alleges a discriminatory attitude on the part
of Customs to some of its merchandise, is extremely limited in scope. L has
advanced no evidence suggesting that these four books are integral, or even
important, to its operations. In this context, it is impossible to conclude
that L is in the extraordinary position that would justify an award of advance
costs. With the systemic review, L is essentially attempting to expand the
scope of the litigation in the hope of bolstering its legal rights in
individual cases. This approach does not bring the case within the scope of
the advance costs remedy. Specifically, the systemic review is not necessarily
based on the prohibition, detention, or even delay of any books belonging to
L. [51‑53]
While L’s constitutional rights should not be
understated, it has not provided prima facie evidence that it remains the
victim of unfair targeting. The fact that Customs continues to detain large
quantities of imported material, including high proportions of gay and lesbian
material, is not, in itself, prima facie evidence that Customs officials
are performing their task improperly, much less unconstitutionally. With
respect to the systemic review, the efficacy of Customs’ changes to its
practices in the wake of Little Sisters No. 1 cannot be determined
to be insufficient on the basis of the number of decisions that have been
unfavourable to L. [54-56]
The history of L’s relations with Customs should not
be understated either, but it does not justify the advance costs application.
This history cannot be used to establish that an injustice will result if
insufficient funds preclude L from arguing the systemic review. The battle L
seeks to fight through the systemic review is, strictly speaking, unnecessary.
It is the four books appeal that lies at the heart of L’s claim against
Customs; the systemic review is simply an attempt by L to investigate Customs’
practices independently of this context. [57‑58]
In the present case, the issues raised do not
transcend the litigant’s individual interests. Because L has chosen to
investigate Customs’ general operations under the systemic review, the four
books appeal concerns no interest beyond that of L itself and, as a
consequence, is not special enough to justify an award of advance costs. The
legal issues being raised by L in the four books appeal were already
considered, and ruled upon, in Little Sisters No. 1. At most, the
four books appeal deals with the application of Little Sisters No. 1
to a specific set of facts. Moreover, the constitutional issues underlying
L’s claim do not satisfy the public importance criterion. The four books
appeal does not address the issue of whether Customs is, in general, correctly
applying the legal test for obscenity; rather, it is limited to the question of
whether Customs reached the right result in prohibiting four specific titles.
While evidence about Customs’ general practices may arise incidentally in the
course of the four books appeal, the broader issues raised by L are being
considered separately, as part of the systemic review. Under the systemic review,
L has sought to demonstrate the far‑reaching importance of this
litigation by arguing that proof that Customs has disobeyed a court order would
have great ramifications. However, short of imputing bad faith to Customs, a
finding that its present practices do not meet this Court’s dictates would not
impugn the integrity of the government at large. Such a finding does not rise
to the level of general public importance simply because it concerns a public
body. Finally, not all Charter litigation is of exceptional public
importance, even if it involves allegations of infringements of freedom of
expression. What must be proved is that the alleged Charter breach begs
to be resolved in the public interest. Where, as here, only one of the
possible results on the merits could render the case publicly important, the
court should not conclude that the public importance requirement is met. It is
in general only when the public importance of a case can be established
regardless of the ultimate holding on the merits that a court should consider
the public importance requirement satisfied. [60‑66]
Absent exceptional circumstances, it is not necessary
to address L’s impecuniosity. Had the three parts of the Okanagan test
been met, the court would still have to exercise its discretion to decide
whether advance costs ought to be awarded or whether another type of order is
justified. In exercising its discretion, the court must remain sensitive to any
concerns that did not arise in its analysis of the test. In the case at bar,
these concerns would have prompted the chambers judge to exercise her
discretion against an advance costs award in respect of the systemic review
since the possibility of hearing the four books appeal before conducting the
systemic review was an alternative to her advance costs award. [67] [72] [75]
Per McLachlin C.J. and
Charron J.: In certain cases raising special circumstances,
judges, invoking their equitable jurisdiction, may order one party to pay the
other’s interim costs where it is necessary to avoid unfairness or injustice.
When interim costs are ordered in public interest cases, the issues raised must
transcend the individual interests of the particular litigant and have special
interest for the broader community. However, even in public interest
litigation, the common law requirement for special circumstances must still be
established as a pre‑condition of interim costs. The three criteria for
an order for advance costs therefore are: (1) impecuniosity;
(2) a meritorious case; and (3) special circumstances making this
extraordinary exercise of the court’s power appropriate. The order is in the
court’s discretion, provided the conditions are made out. [83] [86‑88]
Here, the chambers judge failed to consider whether
the case displayed special circumstances and the Court of Appeal correctly set
aside the interim costs order. While the chambers judge’s findings concerning
L’s inability to finance the litigation and the merit of the case should not be
disturbed, the third pre‑condition for an order of interim costs is not
met, not because the case entirely lacks public interest, but because it does
not rise to the level of the special circumstances required to give the court
jurisdiction to make the order. At stake in this case is the prospect of not
learning how Customs proceeded on the four books appeal. The possible insight
into Customs’ practices and the limited potential remedy do not rise to the
level of compelling public importance or demonstrate systemic injustice. This
case does not fall into the narrow class of cases where one party may be
ordered to pay the interim costs of the other party. [89‑90] [94] [99]
[101] [109]
Per Binnie and
Fish JJ. (dissenting): The ramifications of Little Sisters
No. 1 go to the heart and soul of L’s present application. Systemic
discrimination by Customs officials and unlawful interference with free
expression were clearly established in the earlier case, and numerous Charter
violations and systemic problems in the administration of Customs legislation
were found. In its application for advance costs in this case, L contended
that the systemic abuses established in the earlier litigation have continued,
and that Customs has shown itself to be unwilling to administer the Customs
legislation fairly and without discrimination. The question of public
importance is this: was the Minister as good as his word in 2000 when his
counsel assured the Court that the appropriate reforms had been implemented?
The chambers judge, from whose decision the present appeal has been taken,
concluded that L had established a prima facie case that the promised
reforms had not been implemented. Having listened to evidence and argument,
she ordered interim funding subject to a stringent costs control order, the
terms of which have now been agreed to. The present proceeding is not the
beginning of a litigation journey. It is 12 years into it. [114] [116]
[120]
If shown to be true, L’s allegations mean that it has
suffered special damage as a result of a systemic failure of Customs to respect
the constitutional rights of readers and writers as well as importers. The
public has an interest in whether its government respects the law and operates
in relation to its citizens in a non‑discriminatory fashion. That is
where the interest of this litigation transcends L’s private interest. [130]
In this case, the pre‑conditions set out in Okanagan
for an order of advance costs are satisfied. First, as found by the chambers
judge, and as accepted by the Chief Justice, the impecuniosity requirement
is met. Alternate sources of funding were explored, and a finding of
impecuniosity should not depend on the existence of other parties able to bring
a similar claim. Second, as the Chief Justice also agrees, the claim to
be adjudicated is prima facie meritorious. Third, the issues raised are
of public importance and transcend individual interests. Given that
70 percent of Customs detentions are of gay and lesbian material, there is
unfinished business of high public importance left over from Little Sisters
No. 1. While the proposed systemic review would be an impermissible
expansion of the four books appeal, the four books appeal permits L to explore,
within a limited context, the process under which the importation of these
books was banned, and to that extent provides an opportunity for the systemic
issues to be canvassed. Whether the chambers judge’s discretion is formulated
in terms of “rare and exceptional” circumstances (as held in Okanagan),
or the “special circumstances” formulated by the Chief Justice in this
case, the test is satisfied. Although the chambers judge erred in principle in
ordering advance costs for the so‑called systemic review (because there
is no such action pending), she properly exercised her discretion in awarding
advance costs with respect to the four books appeal. There is no basis on
which to interfere with the exercise of her discretion that this is an
exceptional case of special public importance that should not be defeated by
L’s lack of funds. [131] [133] [141] [145] [148] [153] [156‑158]
It is appropriate to cap the maximum potential public
contribution to the four books appeal at $300,000, subject to further order of
the case management judge. To the extent that L can make a contribution to the
costs, it should also be required to do so. If L is successful and substantial
damages are awarded, it should be obligated to repay the entire amount of the
advance costs plus interest at the usual prejudgment rate as a first charge on
any such award of damages. [159‑161]
Cases Cited
By Bastarache and LeBel JJ.
Applied: British
Columbia (Minister of Forests) v. Okanagan Indian Band, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 371, 2003 SCC 71; referred
to: Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of
Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69; R. v.
Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452; R. v. Sharpe, [2001]
1 S.C.R. 45, 2001 SCC 2; Odhavji Estate v. Woodhouse,
[2003] 3 S.C.R. 263, 2003 SCC 69; Office and
Professional Employees’ International Union, Local 378 v. British Columbia
(Hydro and Power Authority), [2005] B.C.J. No. 9 (QL),
2005 BCSC 8; MacDonald v. University of British Columbia
(2004), 26 B.C.L.R. (4th) 190, 2004 BCSC 412; Canadian
Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney General),
[2004] 1 S.C.R. 76, 2004 SCC 4; Valhalla Wilderness
Society v. British Columbia (Ministry of Forests) (1997), 4 Admin.
L.R. (3d) 120; Sierra Club of Western Canada v. British Columbia (Chief
Forester) (1994), 117 D.L.R. (4th) 395, aff’d (1995),
126 D.L.R. (4th) 437; R. (Corner House Research) v. Secretary
of State for Trade and Industry, [2005] 1 W.L.R. 2600, [2005]
EWCA Civ 192; Hamilton v. Open Window Bakery Ltd., [2004]
1 S.C.R. 303, 2004 SCC 9; R. v. Keating (1997),
159 N.S.R. (2d) 357.
By McLachlin C.J.
Referred to: British
Columbia (Minister of Forests) v. Okanagan Indian Band, [2003]
3 S.C.R. 371, 2003 SCC 71, aff’g (2001), 95 B.C.L.R.
(3d) 273, 2001 BCCA 647; Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120,
2000 SCC 69; Jones v. Coxeter (1742), 2 Atk. 400,
26 E.R. 642; Organ v. Barnett (1992), 11 O.R.
(3d) 210; B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto,
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, aff’g (1992), 10 O.R. (3d) 321.
By Binnie J. (dissenting)
Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada
(Minister of Justice), [2000]
2 S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69; Little Sisters Book and Art
Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice) (1996), 18 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241; R.
v. C. Coles Co., [1965] 1 O.R. 557; British Columbia (Minister
of Forests) v. Okanagan Indian Band, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 371,
2003 SCC 71.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 2 (b),
15(1) , 24(1) .
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, s. 163(8) .
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), ss. 67 , 71 .
Customs Tariff, S.C. 1987, c. 49, Sch. VII, Code 9956.
Customs Tariff, S.C. 1997, c. 36.
Rules of Court, B.C. Reg. 221/90, r. 57(9).
Authors
Cited
Orkin,
Mark M. The Law of Costs, vol. I, 2nd ed. Aurora,
Ont.: Canada Law Book, 1987 (loose‑leaf updated
November 2005).
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court
of Appeal (Saunders, Thackray and Oppal JJ.A.) (2005), 249 D.L.R.
(4th) 695, 208 B.C.A.C. 246, 344 W.A.C. 246,
38 B.C.L.R. (4th) 288, 193 C.C.C. (3d) 491,
7 C.P.C. (6th) 333, 127 C.R.R. (2d) 165, [2005] B.C.J.
No. 291 (QL), 2005 BCCA 94, setting aside a decision of
Bennett J. (2004), 31 B.C.L.R. (4th) 330, [2004] B.C.J.
No. 1241 (QL), 2004 BCSC 823. Appeal dismissed, Binnie and
Fish JJ. dissenting.
Joseph J. Arvay, Q.C., and Irene Faulkner, for the appellant.
Cheryl J. Tobias and Brian McLaughlin, for the respondents.
Janet E. Minor and Mark Crow, for the intervener the Attorney General
of Ontario.
George H. Copley, Q.C., for the intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia.
J. J. Camp,
Q.C., and Melina Buckley, for the intervener the Canadian Bar
Association.
Cynthia Petersen,
for the intervener Egale Canada Inc.
Chris Tollefson
and Robert V. Wright, for the interveners the Sierra Legal
Defence Fund and the Environmental Law Centre.
The judgment of Bastarache, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella
and Rothstein JJ. was delivered by
Bastarache and LeBel
JJ. —
1. Introduction
1
The appellant, Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium, is a corporation
that operates a bookstore serving the gay and lesbian community in Vancouver.
The issue in this appeal is whether it is proper for the appellant to have the
costs of its court battle against the respondents (collectively referred to as
“Customs”) funded by the public purse by means of the exceptional advance (or
interim) costs order contemplated in British Columbia (Minister of Forests)
v. Okanagan Indian Band, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 371, 2003 SCC 71. In our view,
the appellant cannot succeed.
2
The situation in Okanagan was clearly out of the ordinary. The
bands had been thrust into complex litigation against the government that they
could not pay for, and the case raised issues vital both to their survival and
to the government’s approach to aboriginal rights. The issue before the Court
in that case was whether the bands’ inability to pay should have the effect of
leaving constitutional rights unenforceable and public interest issues
unresolved. Mindful of the serious consequences to the bands and of the
contours of the anticipated litigation, this Court decided that a real
injustice would result if the courts refused to exercise their equitable jurisdiction
in respect of costs and if, as a consequence, the bands’ impecuniosity
prevented the trial from proceeding.
3
The situation in the present case differs from that in Okanagan.
A small business corporation is in particular engaging in litigation to gain
the release of merchandise that was stopped at the border. On its face, this
dispute is no different from any other one that could be initiated by the many
Canadians whose shipments may be detained and scrutinized by Customs before
they are allowed to receive them. But the history of this case reveals more.
Understandably frustrated after years of court battles with Customs over
similar issues, this corporation has chosen to enlarge the scope of the
litigation and to pursue a broad inquiry into Customs’ practices. The
appellant wants its present interests, as well as its (and other importers’)
future interests, settled for good, and it wants to stop Customs from
prohibiting any more imports until its complaints are resolved.
4
The question in this appeal is not whether the appellant has a good
cause of action, but whether the cost of the corporation’s attempt to get
Customs to release its merchandise, or the costs of its broad inquiry into
Customs’ practices, should be borne by the Canadian taxpayer. An exceptional
order such as this can be made only in special circumstances, like those in Okanagan,
subject to stringent conditions and to the appropriate procedural controls. In
our opinion, the appellant’s application meets none of the requirements
developed by the Court in that decision.
5
The fact that the appellant’s claim would not be summarily dismissed
does not suffice to establish that interim costs should be granted to allow it
to proceed. That is not the proper test. Quite unfortunately, financial
constraints put potentially meritorious claims at risk every day. Faced with
this dilemma, legislatures have offered some responses, although these may not
address every situation. Legal aid programs remain underfunded and overwhelmed.
Self-representation in courts is a growing phenomenon. Okanagan was not
intended to resolve all these difficulties. The Court did not seek to create a
parallel system of legal aid or a court-managed comprehensive program to
supplement any of the other programs designed to assist various groups in
taking legal action, and its decision should not be used to do so. The
decision did not introduce a new financing method for self-appointed
representatives of the public interest. This Court’s ratio in Okanagan
applies only to those few situations where a court would be participating in an
injustice — against the litigant personally and against the public generally —
if it did not order advance costs to allow the litigant to proceed.
2. Facts
6
The appellant is a business corporation that operates the Little
Sisters Book and Art Emporium, an establishment that caters to the lesbian and
gay community of Vancouver. Book sales represent 30 to 40 percent of the
appellant’s business. Although the appellant’s asset value has grown
significantly in recent years, from $218,446 in 2000 to $324,618 in 2003, it
still struggles to make a profit. It has never netted more than $25,000 in one
year, and in 2003 it lost almost $60,000. Recent losses are at least partly
attributable to an embezzlement of $85,000.
7
The appellant’s claim for advance costs must be considered in the
context of the history of litigation between these two parties. When the
present litigation began, the appellant had already fought a protracted legal
battle against Customs, which culminated in this Court’s decision in Little
Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000] 2
S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69 (“Little Sisters No. 1”). In that case, the
appellant, along with its shareholders, James Eaton Deva and Guy Bruce Smyth,
challenged the constitutionality of Customs’ procedures for detaining obscene
material and of the legislative foundation for those procedures. Writing for
the majority of this Court, Binnie J. agreed that Customs’ practices at the
time infringed ss. 2 (b) and 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms . He also determined that the burden of proving obscenity
rested with the person alleging it. However, Binnie J. held that the
provisions of the Customs Act themselves were constitutional.
8
The remedy sought by the appellant and its shareholders in Little
Sisters No. 1 was an injunction whose terms were generally the same as
those of the injunction requested by the appellant in the case at bar. Binnie
J. felt that a remedy of this nature was not warranted. He wrote the
following, at para. 157:
I conclude, with some hesitation, that it is not practicable to [offer
a structured s. 24(1) remedy]. The trial concluded on December 20, 1994. We are
told that in the past six years, Customs has addressed the institutional and
administrative problems encountered by the appellants. In the absence of more
detailed information as to what precisely has been done, and the extent to
which (if at all) it has remedied the situation, I am not prepared to endorse
my colleague’s conclusion that these measures are “not sufficient” (para. 262) and
have offered “little comfort” (para. 265). Equally, however, we have not been
informed by the appellants of the specific measures (short of declaring the
legislation invalid or inoperative) that in the appellants’ view would remedy
any continuing problems.
He added that
the “findings [in that case] should provide the appellants with a solid
platform from which to launch any further action in the Supreme Court of
British Columbia should they consider that further action is necessary” (para.
158). Costs were awarded to the appellant and its shareholders on a
party-and-party basis.
9
The present litigation, the appellant suggests, is the “further action”
that Binnie J. anticipated. Counsel for the appellant drew a direct line
tracing his client’s current legal battle to this Court’s refusal to offer
injunctive relief back in 2000. Still arguing that it was denied the
appropriate remedy nearly six years ago, the appellant seeks to have Customs
bear the financial burden of its fresh complaint on these new facts.
10
This dispute over costs is related to litigation spawned by Customs’
July 5, 2001 detention of books destined for the appellant. On that
date, eight titles — comprising 34 books — were detained by Customs on the
basis that they were obscene. The appellant was able to obtain the release of
four of these titles within a month. With four titles still being detained,
the appellant chose to request a redetermination for only two: Meatmen,
vol. 18, Special S&M Comics Edition and Meatmen, vol. 24,
Special SM Comics Edition (the “Meatmen comics”). Customs again determined
that these two titles were obscene. Arguing that they were incorrectly
classified, on February 14, 2002, the appellant appealed the redetermination to
the British Columbia Supreme Court, as it was entitled to do pursuant to ss. 67
and 71 of the Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .).
11
While the litigation with respect to the Meatmen comics proceeded,
Customs detained another shipment of books destined for the appellant. Once
again, some of the titles detained by Customs were released without the need
for a redetermination. But after a redetermination, Customs still found two
titles to be obscene: Of Men, Ropes & Remembrance — The Stories from
Bound & Gagged Magazine and Of Slaves & Ropes & Lovers
(the “Townsend books”). On September 26, 2003, the appellant appealed this
decision to the British Columbia Supreme Court, seeking the same relief it was
seeking with respect to the Meatmen comics.
12
The parties have agreed to have the appeals relating to the Meatmen
comics and the Townsend books heard together. The prohibition of these four
titles provides the factual basis for the appellant’s claim on the merits.
13
In its appeals, the appellant asks for a reversal of the Customs’
obscenity determinations, as well as a declaration that Customs has been
construing and applying the relevant legislation in an unconstitutional
manner. As a remedy, it seeks an injunction restraining Customs from applying
certain sections of the Customs Tariff, S.C. 1997, c. 36 , and the Customs
Act to its goods. The appellant also requests damages and “[s]pecial or
increased costs”.
14
On August 14, 2002, the appellant also filed a Notice of Constitutional
Question. Alleging a breach of s. 2 (b) of the Charter , it is
seeking the same remedies as specified above, but is using the constitutional
question to broaden the scope of the injunction it seeks. In its Notice of
Constitutional Question, the appellant states that it wants an order preventing
Customs from applying the relevant sections of the Customs Tariff and
the Customs Act to “anyone or, in the alternative, to the Appellant,
until such time as the Court is satisfied that the unconstitutional
administration will cease”.
15
Bennett J. of the British Columbia Supreme Court, who is both the
presiding judge in this case and the case management judge, defined the scope
of the litigation in her ruling of February 6, 2003 ((2003), 105 C.R.R. (2d)
119, 2003 BCSC 148). Specifically, she approved the appellant’s constitutional
question and found that the appeal of Customs’ decision to prohibit the
appellant’s books “gives a factual context to the issues raised by Little
Sisters” (para. 24). That decision was not appealed.
16
On January 22, 2004, about a month after this Court released its
decision in Okanagan, the appellant applied for advance costs, claiming,
in the words of Bennett J., that it had “run out of money to pursue the
litigation” (para. 6). As James Eaton Deva, a shareholder in the appellant,
stated in his affidavit:
After hearing [the testimony of Anne Kline, the official of Canada
Customs who is responsible for making the final determination of obscenity], we
were convinced that if her testimony reflected the way Canada Customs
approached this issue, then it still had deep systemic problems. If true, then
our ten-year battle, and partial victory in the Supreme Court of Canada, had
failed to effect any significant change. In that case, a court determination
that the Meatmen comics were not obscene would not be sufficient.
Instead, we became convinced that the only way to rectify the problems in
Canada Customs was a systemic remedy, not simply a ruling on individual books.
We decided that we had an obligation to seek that remedy.
3. Judicial History
3.1 British Columbia Supreme Court
(2004), 31 B.C.L.R. (4th) 330, 2004 BCSC 823
17
On the application for advance costs in the British Columbia Supreme
Court, Bennett J. ruled in favour of the appellant. She identified three
“discrete, yet linked, arguments” being advanced by the appellant (para. 15).
The first issue for which the appellant sought an advance costs award was
whether Customs had properly prohibited four titles that the appellant wanted
to import (the “Four Books Appeal”). The second issue was whether Customs had
addressed the systemic problems identified in Little Sisters No. 1 (the
“Systemic Review”). The third issue was whether the definition of obscenity
established by this Court in R. v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452, is
unconstitutional (the “Constitutional Question”).
18
Focussing first on the question of financial capacity, Bennett J. linked
the “prohibitive” cost of appealing prohibition decisions to the fact that so
few of them are brought to court (para. 19). In her brief analysis on this
point, she applied a test of whether the litigant “genuinely cannot afford to
pay for the litigation” and concluded that the appellant could not (paras.
21-22). Bennett J. also found that replacing the appellant’s current counsel
was not a “realistic option” (para. 24).
19
Bennett J. then turned to apply this Court’s analysis from Okanagan separately
to each of the three issues raised by the appellant. On the prima facie
merit requirement, Bennett J. found that there was prima facie evidence
that Customs was not applying the obscenity test from Butler correctly
(para. 29). She also gave some credence to the argument that Customs’
procedures, under which the decision maker in the internal appeal did not look
at the materials presented to the adjudicators at first instance, were flawed
(para. 30). This convinced her that the Four Books Appeal satisfied the prima
facie merit prong of the Okanagan test. Bennett J. then disposed of
this requirement in respect of the Systemic Review and the Constitutional
Question, referring, on the former, to her holding on public importance and, on
the latter, to changes in the decade since Butler (paras. 32-33).
20
Bennett J. turned next to the question of whether the issues raised
“[go] beyond individual interests, are of public importance and have not been
decided in other cases” (para. 34). For the Four Books Appeal, she
concentrated on the detentions that continue to affect the appellant, the
“dearth of case law in this area” and the importance of freedom of expression
in a democracy (paras. 35-43). She concluded that, if Customs is indeed
applying the legal test for obscenity incorrectly, the issue affects all book
importers and is therefore of public importance.
21
On the public importance of the Systemic Review, Bennett J. began her
analysis by noting the “large magnitude of detentions” by Customs (para. 48).
She found that there was “some evidence” of continual targeting of gay and
lesbian material, noted that the time requirements for review were not being
met, and expressed her concern about some alleged inconsistencies in Customs’
detention practices (paras. 49-52). Based on the past litigation between the
parties, Bennett J. was sceptical of Customs’ claim that it had recently
changed its practices (paras. 53-58). In fact, she stated that there was a prima
facie case that the problems in Little Sisters No. 1 had not been
“sufficiently addressed” (para. 59). Moving from this finding, Bennett J. held
that the third requirement of Okanagan was satisfied, based on the
constitutional issues at stake and the public’s interest in knowing whether the
government had failed to comply with a court order (para. 61).
22
However, Bennett J. did not find that the public importance requirement
had been met with respect to the Constitutional Question. Referring to this
Court’s decisions in Butler, R. v. Sharpe, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45,
2001 SCC 2, and Little Sisters No. 1, she held that the Constitutional
Question did not raise an issue of public importance that had not been resolved
in a previous case, as required by Okanagan (paras. 75-87). This
holding has not been appealed.
23
Having determined that the three requirements in Okanagan were
satisfied in respect of the Four Books Appeal and the Systemic Review, Bennett
J. exercised her discretion in favour of ordering advance costs (paras. 44 and
63). She left the determination of the structure of the advance costs order
and the quantum of the award to a later date (para. 94).
3.2 British Columbia Court of Appeal (2005),
38 B.C.L.R. (4th) 288, 2005 BCCA 94
24
Leave to appeal Bennett J.’s advance costs decision to the British
Columbia Court of Appeal was initially denied by Prowse J.A., in chambers. Two
months later, a three-member panel of the Court of Appeal varied Prowse J.A.’s
order and granted leave.
25
Writing for a unanimous court, Thackray J.A. allowed Customs’ appeal.
He began by commenting upon what he considered to be an “incompleteness” in the
process (para. 25). Specifically, he felt that Bennett J.’s failure to
consider the structure of the advance costs order and the quantum of the award
undermined her order. After Bennett J.’s original order, the parties
themselves had reached an agreement on structure and quantum.
26
Turning to the Okanagan criteria, Thackray J.A. focussed his
attention on the impecuniosity and public importance requirements. On the prima
facie merit requirement, he simply held that it was satisfied because the
“case has attained a status above that of being merely frivolous” (para. 28).
27
Considering the appellant’s impecuniosity, Thackray J.A. asked whether
it might be possible for the court to hear the Four Books Appeal before the
Systemic Review. The effect of doing so would be potentially large cost
savings for the public purse, insofar as the result on the Four Books Appeal
might shed light on whether the Systemic Review needed to be heard at all and,
if so, whether it should be publicly funded (paras. 29 and 45). To the
Court of Appeal, the inclusion of the Systemic Review in the litigation
represented “an enormous escalation from [the case’s] original purpose”, making
it proper to consider whether an advance costs award — if necessary — could be
confined to the Four Books Appeal, at least at first (paras. 36-39 and 44).
The Court of Appeal was also reticent to extend this Court’s decision in Okanagan
to a for-profit corporation (para. 41).
28
Thackray J.A. then turned to the public importance requirement. He
noted that the Four Books Appeal was a narrow matter that was confined to four
specific titles (para. 49). It did not involve broad issues that would affect
all book importers.
29
On the Systemic Review, Thackray J.A. canvassed Bennett J.’s reasons in
detail. He took issue with the latter’s conclusions based on the fact that
Customs continues to detain a large number of books, noting that this fact does
not indicate that Customs’ practices are in any way improper (para. 55). He
also observed that the appellant was relying on evidence collected before
Customs had purportedly changed its system; at most, such evidence could be
relied upon to show how quickly Customs had reacted to Little Sisters No. 1,
but it could not serve to determine whether all the problems in Little
Sisters No. 1 had eventually been addressed. This “efficiency” question
was significantly less important to the public than the question of whether the
problems were addressed at all (para. 57).
30
Finally, Thackray J.A. pointed out that Bennett J. had not considered
whether the present litigation could be defined as “special” enough to merit
advance costs, as opposed to simply being important (para. 60). Freedom of
expression, he stated, is always of public interest, but not every freedom of
expression case can satisfy the public importance requirement. In the present
case, it was worth considering the fact that the communities on which the
appellant’s claim would have the greatest impact did not view this case as
sufficiently important to undertake funding it (para. 63). What is more,
Thackray J.A. was hesitant about spending public funds on litigation that could
result in a significant award for the applicant (para. 62).
31
In all, the Court of Appeal concluded that the appellant’s claim was not
of sufficient significance that the public purse should be obligated to help it
move forward. Thackray J.A. concluded that “the public has not appointed
Little Sisters to this role” as a watchdog, and he was “not satisfied that it
is necessary for Little Sisters to be the instrument of reform of Customs”
(paras. 72 and 74). Although recognizing the deference owed to Bennett J., the
court nonetheless felt that this was an appropriate circumstance to find that
the trial judge had erred (para. 66). Accordingly, it set aside her order for
advance costs.
4. Analysis
4.1 Rule in Okanagan
32
Okanagan concerned logging rights of four Indian bands on Crown
land in British Columbia. These bands had begun logging in order to raise
funds for housing and desperately needed social services. Contending that they
had no right to do so, the Minister of Forests served them with stop-work
orders and then commenced proceedings to enforce the orders. The bands tried
to prevent the matter from going to trial, seeking to have it determined
summarily by arguing that it would be impossible for them to finance a full
trial.
33
An exceptional convergence of factors occurred in Okanagan. At
the individual level, the case was of the utmost importance to the bands. They
were caught in a grave predicament: the costs of the litigation were more than
they could afford, especially given pressing needs like housing; yet a failure
to assert their logging rights would seriously compromise those same needs. On
a broader level, the case raised aboriginal rights issues of great public importance.
There was evidence that the land claim advanced by the bands had prima facie
merit, but the courts had yet to decide on the precise mechanism for
advancing such claims — the fundamental issue of general importance had not
been resolved by the courts in other litigation. However the case was
ultimately decided, it was in the public interest to have the matter resolved.
For both the bands themselves and the public at large, the litigation could
not, therefore, simply be abandoned. In these exceptional circumstances, this
Court held that the public’s interest in the litigation justified a structured
advance costs order insofar as it was necessary to have the case move forward.
34
In essence, Okanagan was an evolutionary step, but not a
revolution, in the exercise of the courts’ discretion regarding costs. As was
explained in that case, the idea that costs awards can be used as a powerful
tool for ensuring that the justice system functions fairly and efficiently was
not a novel one. Policy goals, like discouraging — and thus sanctioning —
misconduct by a litigant, are often reflected in costs awards: see M. M.
Orkin, The Law of Costs (2nd ed. (loose-leaf)), vol. I, at § 205.2(2).
Nevertheless, the general rule based on principles of indemnity, i.e., that
costs follow the cause, has not been displaced. This suggests that policy and
indemnity rationales can co-exist as principles underlying appropriate costs
awards, even if “[t]he principle that a successful party is entitled to his or
her costs is of long standing, and should not be departed from except for very
good reasons”: Orkin, at p. 2-39. This framework has been adopted in the law
of British Columbia by establishing the “costs follow the cause” rule as a
default proposition, while leaving judges room to exercise their discretion by
ordering otherwise: see r. 57(9) of the Supreme Court of British Columbia Rules
of Court, B.C. Reg. 221/90.
35
Okanagan did not establish the access to justice rationale as the
paramount consideration in awarding costs. Concerns about access to justice
must be considered with and weighed against other important factors. Bringing
an issue of public importance to the courts will not automatically entitle a
litigant to preferential treatment with respect to costs: Odhavji Estate v.
Woodhouse, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 263, 2003 SCC 69; Office and Professional
Employees’ International Union, Local 378 v. British Columbia (Hydro and Power
Authority), [2005] B.C.J. No. 9 (QL), 2005 BCSC 8; MacDonald v.
University of British Columbia (2004), 26 B.C.L.R. (4th) 190, 2004 BCSC
412. By the same token, however, a losing party that raises a serious legal
issue of public importance will not necessarily bear the other party’s costs:
see, e.g., Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada
(Attorney General), [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76, 2004 SCC 4, at para. 69; Valhalla
Wilderness Society v. British Columbia (Ministry of Forests) (1997), 4
Admin. L.R. (3d) 120 (B.C.S.C.). Each case must be considered on its merits,
and the consequences of an award for each party must be weighed seriously: see Sierra
Club of Western Canada v. British Columbia (Chief Forester) (1994), 117
D.L.R. (4th) 395 (B.C.S.C.), at pp. 406-7, aff’d (1995), 126 D.L.R. (4th) 437
(B.C.C.A.).
36
Okanagan was a step forward in the jurisprudence on advance costs
— restricted until then to family, corporate and trust matters — as it made it
possible, in a public law case, to secure an advance costs order in special
circumstances related to the public importance of the issues of the case (Okanagan,
at para. 38). In other words, though now permissible, public interest advance
costs orders are to remain special and, as a result, exceptional. These orders
must be granted with caution, as a last resort, in circumstances where the need
for them is clearly established. The foregoing principles could not yield any
other result. If litigants raising public interest issues will not always
avoid adverse costs awards at the conclusion of their trials, it can only be
rarer still that they could benefit from advance costs awards. An application
for advance costs may be entertained only if a litigant establishes that it is
impossible to proceed with the trial and await its conclusion, and if the court
is in a position to allocate the financial burden of the litigation fairly
between the parties.
37
The nature of the Okanagan approach should be apparent from the
analysis it prescribes for advance costs in public interest cases. A litigant
must convince the court that three absolute requirements are met (at para. 40):
1. The party seeking interim costs genuinely
cannot afford to pay for the litigation, and no other realistic option exists
for bringing the issues to trial — in short, the litigation would be unable to
proceed if the order were not made.
2. The claim to be adjudicated is prima
facie meritorious; that is, the claim is at least of sufficient merit that
it is contrary to the interests of justice for the opportunity to pursue the
case to be forfeited just because the litigant lacks financial means.
3. The issues raised transcend the individual
interests of the particular litigant, are of public importance, and have not
been resolved in previous cases.
In analysing
these requirements, the court must decide, with a view to all the
circumstances, whether the case is sufficiently special that it would be
contrary to the interests of justice to deny the advance costs application, or
whether it should consider other methods to facilitate the hearing of the
case. The discretion enjoyed by the court affords it an opportunity to
consider all relevant factors that arise on the facts.
38
It is only a “rare and exceptional” case that is special enough to
warrant an advance costs award: Okanagan, at para. 1. The standard was
indeed intended to be a high one, and although no rigid test can be applied
systematically to determine whether a case is “special enough”, some
observations can be made. As Thackray J.A. pointed out, it was in failing to
verify whether the circumstances of this case were “exceptional” enough that
the trial judge committed an error in law.
39
First, the injustice that would arise if the application is not granted
must relate both to the individual applicant and to the public at large. This
means that a litigant whose case, however compelling it may be, is of interest
only to the litigant will be denied an advance costs award. It does not mean,
however, that every case of interest to the public will satisfy the test. The
justice system must not become a proxy for the public inquiry process, swamped
with actions launched by test plaintiffs and public interest groups. As
compelling as access to justice concerns may be, they cannot justify this Court
unilaterally authorizing a revolution in how litigation is conceived and
conducted.
40
Second, the advance costs award must be an exceptional measure; it must
be in the interests of justice that it be awarded. Therefore, the applicant
must explore all other possible funding options. These include, but are not
limited to, public funding options like legal aid and other programs designed to
assist various groups in taking legal action. An advance costs award is
neither a substitute for, nor a supplement to, these programs. An applicant
must also be able to demonstrate that an attempt, albeit unsuccessful, has been
made to obtain private funding through fundraising campaigns, loan
applications, contingency fee agreements and any other available options. If
the applicant cannot afford all costs of the litigation, but is not
impecunious, the applicant must commit to making a contribution to the
litigation. Finally, different kinds of costs mechanisms, like adverse costs
immunity, should also be considered. In doing so, courts must be careful not
to assume that a creative costs award is merited in every case; such an award
is an exceptional one, to be granted in special circumstances. Courts should
remain mindful of all options when they are called upon to craft appropriate
orders in such circumstances. Also, they should not assume that the litigants
who qualify for these awards must benefit from them absolutely. In the United
Kingdom, where costs immunity (or “protective orders”) can be ordered in
specified circumstances, the order may be given with the caveat that the
successful applicant cannot collect anything more than modest costs from the
other party at the end of the trial: see R. (Corner House Research) v.
Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, [2005] 1 W.L.R. 2600, [2005]
EWCA Civ 192, at para. 76. We agree with this nuanced approach.
41
Third, no injustice can arise if the matter at issue could be settled,
or the public interest could be satisfied, without an advance costs award.
Again, we must stress that advance costs orders are appropriate only as a last
resort. In Okanagan, the bands tried, before seeking an advance costs
order, to resolve their disputes by avoiding a trial altogether. Likewise,
courts should consider whether other litigation is pending and may be conducted
for the same purpose, without requiring an interim order of costs. Courts
should also be mindful to avoid using these orders in such a way that they
encourage purely artificial litigation contrary to the public interest.
42
Finally, the granting of an advance costs order does not mean that the
litigant has free rein. On the contrary, when the public purse — or another
private party — takes on the burden of an advance costs award, the litigant
must relinquish some manner of control over how the litigation proceeds. The
litigant cannot spend the opposing party’s money without scrutiny. The benefit
of such funding does not imply that a party can, at will, multiply hours of
preparation, add expert witnesses, engage in every available proceeding, or
lodge every conceivable argument. A definite structure must be imposed or
approved by the court itself, as it alone bears the responsibility for ensuring
that the award is workable.
43
For example, the court should set limits on the chargeable rates and
hours of legal work, closely monitor the parties’ adherence to its dictates,
and cap the advance costs award at an appropriate global amount. It should
also be sensitive to the reality that work often expands to fit the available
resources and that the “maximum” amounts contemplated by a court will almost
certainly be reached. As well, the possibility of setting the advance costs
award off against damages actually collected at the end of the trial should be
contemplated. In determining the quantum of the award, the court should remain
aware that the purpose of these orders is to restore some balance between
litigants, not to create perfect equality between the parties. Legislated
schemes like legal aid and other programs designed to assist various groups in
taking legal action do not purport to create equality among litigants, and
there is no justification for advance costs awards placing successful
applicants in a more favourable position. An advance costs award is meant to
provide a basic level of assistance necessary for the case to proceed.
44
A court awarding advance costs must be guided by the condition of
necessity. For parties with unequal financial resources to face each other in
court is a regular occurrence. People with limited means all too often find
themselves discouraged from pursuing litigation because of the cost involved.
Problems like this are troubling, but they do not normally trigger advance
costs awards. We do not mean to minimize their unfairness. On the contrary,
we believe they are sufficiently serious that this Court cannot purport to
solve them all through the mechanism of advance costs awards. Courts should
not seek on their own to bring an alternative and extensive legal aid system
into being. That would amount to imprudent and inappropriate judicial
overreach.
4.2 Applying the Rule in Okanagan to the
Facts of This Appeal
45
The appellant has asked this Court to award it advance costs with
respect to two separate issues it raises in its litigation against Customs.
The Four Books Appeal concerns Customs’ prohibition of four books imported by
the appellant for sale in its store. The Systemic Review, on the other hand,
involves a broad investigation of Customs’ practices relating to obscenity
prohibitions.
46
We will first consider the merit of these claims, and will then discuss
their public importance. We want to emphasize that the impecuniosity
requirement, though listed first in Okanagan, cannot be used to give
impecunious litigants a prima facie right to advance costs, as some
interveners before this Court have suggested. Accordingly, we will consider it
last. The question of impecuniosity will not even arise where a case is not
otherwise special enough to merit this exceptional award.
4.2.1 Standard of Review
47
A trial judge enjoys considerable discretion in fashioning a costs
award. This discretion has two corollaries.
48
First, a plethora of options are available to a judge when rendering a
decision on costs. While the general rule is that costs follow the cause, as
we have seen, this need not always be the case.
49
Second, a judge’s decision on costs will generally be insulated from
appellate review. In the past, this Court has established that costs awards
should not be interfered with lightly: see Odhavji Estate, at para.
77. But this does not mean that no decision on costs should ever be interfered
with. For instance, in Okanagan, advance costs were granted on appeal
after having been denied by the trial judge. A costs award can be set aside if
it is based on an error in principle or is plainly wrong: Hamilton v. Open
Window Bakery Ltd., [2004] 1 S.C.R. 303, 2004 SCC 9, at para. 27. In
exercising their discretion regarding costs, trial judges must, especially in
making an order as exceptional as one awarding advance costs, be careful to
stay within recognized boundaries.
50
Despite the deference owed to the exercise of a discretion by a trial
judge, we conclude that, in the present case, Bennett J. went beyond the
boundaries this Court set in Okanagan.
4.2.2 Prima Facie Merit and
Public Importance
51
As was explained in Okanagan, the merit requirement involves the
following consideration:
2. The claim to be adjudicated [must be] prima
facie meritorious; that is, the claim is at least of sufficient merit
that it is contrary to the interests of justice for the opportunity to pursue
the case to be forfeited just because the litigant lacks financial means.
[Emphasis added; para. 40.]
The explicit
reference in this passage to the interests of justice suggests that the test
requires something more than mere proof that one’s case has sufficient merit
not to be dismissed summarily. Rather, an applicant must prove that the
interests of justice would not be served if a lack of resources made it
necessary to abort the litigation. The very wording of the requirement
confirms that the interests of justice will not be jeopardized every time a
litigant is forced to withdraw from litigation for financial reasons. The
reason for this is that the context in which merit is considered is conditioned
by the need to show that the case is exceptional. This does not mean that the
case must be shown to have exceptional merit; rather, it must be shown to have
sufficient merit to satisfy the court that proceeding with it is in the
interests of justice. In the case at bar, as found by Bennett J., there is
obviously a serious issue justifying a decision to have the matter proceed to
trial. The question is whether a claim such as the one made by the appellant
is sufficient to support a finding that the requirement of special
circumstances is met. It is difficult to dissociate one from the other. We
think there is no need to do so and will proceed accordingly.
52
Operating a business with some dependence on imports, the appellant is
right to be concerned about what it alleges to be a discriminatory attitude by
Customs towards its merchandise. Yet, the Four Books Appeal is extremely
limited in scope. The appellant has advanced no evidence suggesting that these
four books are integral, or even important, to its operations; furthermore, as
mentioned above, book sales represent only 30 to 40 percent of its operations.
In this context, we find it impossible to conclude that the appellant is in the
extraordinary position that would justify an award of advance costs in the Four
Books Appeal.
53
The same can be said of the Systemic Review. What the appellant is
essentially attempting to achieve with the Systemic Review is to expand the
scope of the litigation in the hope of bolstering its legal rights in
individual cases; as a frequent importer, it will ultimately benefit more from
a general investigation now than it would if it were left to challenge each and
every detention and prohibition when it happened. This is an efficient and
commendable approach, and one that Bennett J. approved. However, it is not one
that would bring the case within the scope of the advance costs remedy.
Specifically, the Systemic Review is not necessarily based on the prohibition,
detention, or even delay of any books belonging to the appellant.
54
We do not wish to understate the appellant’s constitutional rights or
the history of its relations with Customs. In fact, we agree that the
appellant’s history of litigation against Customs provides important context
for the present dispute. From the appellant’s perspective, this history
represents the height of frustration with the government: the appellant already
took Customs to court years ago, argued all the way to this Court that it was
the victim of unconstitutional practices, and succeeded in securing an
important victory that stopped just shy of providing it with the remedy it
sought. The appellant says that any institutional changes made since then are
insufficient, and that Customs may still be victimizing it in the exact same
way. It wants this investigated. Why, it demands to know, must it now abandon
its quest of so many years simply because it lacks the funds to do so?
55
The answer, we submit, is not as frustrating as the appellant implies.
First of all, the appellant has not provided prima facie evidence that
it continues to be targeted. On the contrary, when probed on this issue,
counsel for the appellant simply suggested that Customs was cunning enough to
stop its targeting once litigation had commenced. The appellant relies mainly
on the fact that Customs continues to detain large quantities of imported
material generally, including high proportions of gay and lesbian material; it
then concludes that a significant percentage of these detentions must be
improper. With respect, we cannot agree that this is prima facie evidence
of targeting. Customs’ own decisions, on which the appellant relies, to
overturn a high percentage of its detentions only lend credence to Customs’
argument that it has tried to scrutinize fairly those titles — like the
appellant’s — that remain detained. The fact that Customs continues to detain
a number of titles is not, in itself, prima facie evidence of anything.
There is no prima facie evidence that Customs is performing its task
improperly, much less unconstitutionally.
56
Since there is insufficient prima facie evidence to conclude that
the appellant remains the victim of unfair targeting, the Court’s focus for the
Systemic Review must turn to the more general question of the efficacy of
Customs’ changes to its practices in the wake of Little Sisters No. 1,
and how the effect of those changes on the appellant may still be such as to
make individual challenges pointless. In fact, if one accepts that the
Systemic Review is merely about the speed with which Customs reacted to Little
Sisters No. 1 in the past, it must be concluded that the appellant is at
present enjoying the very outcome it sought in that first series of court
battles. Customs’ changes cannot be determined to be insufficient on the basis
of the number of decisions that have been unfavourable to the appellant.
57
The appellant is wrong to suggest that the history of its relations with
Customs justifies its advance costs application. Binnie J.’s anticipation, at
the conclusion of his majority reasons in Little Sisters No. 1, of
subsequent litigation between the parties did not give the appellant the right
to proceed by drawing on the public purse or even suggest that this was a
possibility. Nor can this history be used to establish that an injustice will
result if insufficient funds preclude the appellant from arguing the Systemic
Review. In making the comment in question, Binnie J. merely recognized that
the appellant, like any other importer, could rely on this Court’s decision
should any further disputes with Customs arise. What is more, his comments
were clearly premised on the expectation that Customs would change — and was
already changing — its practices to accord with the Court’s ruling. None of
the evidence that has been presented has convinced us that this premise should
now be rejected.
58
But even if the appellant had provided more convincing evidence on this
point, and even if the Systemic Review had been framed with more pressing
concerns in mind, we still believe that the requirement of exceptional
circumstances has not been met. The reason for this is that the battle the
appellant seeks to fight through the Systemic Review is, strictly speaking,
unnecessary. It is the Four Books Appeal that lies at the heart of the
appellant’s claim against Customs; the Systemic Review is simply an attempt by
the appellant to investigate Customs’ practices independently of this context.
This observation is underscored by the fact that the appellant initially did
not even intend to pursue the Systemic Review, but changed its strategy once it
began to believe that systemic problems remained after Little Sisters No. 1.
Simply put, the appellant’s direct interest in this litigation disappears if
its books are released — something that it seeks to achieve uniquely through
the Four Books Appeal.
59
The nature of the injustice at stake in the case at bar can be
contrasted with the one that was at stake in Okanagan. In that case,
the bands, having been thrust into a situation requiring litigation, could not
afford to pay for the litigation themselves, but could not afford the costs of
forfeiting it either. The appellant in the instant case, on the other hand,
has taken the Systemic Review upon itself even though it characterizes the
fight as one that “makes no business sense”.
60
The requirement that the issues raised transcend the litigant’s
individual interests and that it be profoundly important that they be resolved
in the interests of justice (Okanagan, at para. 46) can be disposed of
with little difficulty where the Four Books Appeal is concerned. Because the
appellant has chosen to investigate Customs’ general operations under the
Systemic Review, it is clear that the Four Books Appeal concerns no interest
beyond that of the appellant itself and, as a consequence, is not special
enough to justify an award of advance costs. This is especially so given that
all the legal issues the appellant has canvassed in that appeal were already
considered, and ruled upon, by this Court in Little Sisters No. 1. As
the appellant itself observes at para. 10 of its factum, Binnie J. left the
door open to further actions by the appellant with the words, “[t]hese findings
should provide the appellants with a solid platform from which to launch any
further action in the Supreme Court of British Columbia should they consider
that further action is necessary” (Little Sisters No. 1, at para.
158). At most, the Four Books Appeal deals with the application of Little
Sisters No. 1 to a specific set of facts.
61
Bennett J. held that the public importance of the constitutional issues
underlying the appellant’s claim and the broad impact of Customs’ procedures
sufficed to satisfy the public importance criterion. As mentioned above, she
failed to address the special circumstances criterion. Yet, the Four Books
Appeal does not address the issue of whether Customs is, in general, correctly
applying the legal test for obscenity (para. 43). It is limited to the
question of whether Customs reached the right result in prohibiting four
specific titles. While evidence about Customs’ general practices may arise
incidentally in the course of the Four Books Appeal, and while some of those
concerns may have been addressed in the course of the discovery of one witness
for Customs, the broader issues raised by the appellant are being considered
separately, as part of the Systemic Review. The appellant has defined the Four
Books Appeal in a narrow, fact-specific manner such that this appeal cannot
meet the requirements for public importance set out above that would have brought
it within the category of special cases discussed by the Court in Okanagan.
62
Following the same reasoning, the Systemic Review offers greater promise
on the public importance prong, however. To the extent that the narrowness of
the Four Books Appeal discounts any potential for public importance, the
breadth of the Systemic Review should satisfy this prong of the test. Because
the review was framed so expansively, the appellant argues that a court’s
decision on this point will be of great interest both to importers and to
Canada’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans-identified communities.
63
The appellant has sought to demonstrate the far-reaching importance of
this litigation by arguing that proof that Customs has disobeyed a court order would
have great ramifications. To the appellant, it seems, the integrity of
Customs, if not of the entire government, is at stake in this appeal. And
indeed, we would surmise that a finding that Customs had deliberately misled
the court would be shocking to most Canadians. This country boasts a proud
history of compliance by the executive with orders of the judiciary, and we
should be loath to take it for granted. However, short of imputing bad faith
to Customs, a finding that its present practices do not meet this Court’s
dictates would not impugn the integrity of the government at large. This would
merely indicate that Customs has not met its specific obligations as defined by
this Court. The appropriate remedy in such a situation could range from an
award of damages to injunctive relief. But a finding such as this, even if
supported by the kind of evidence this Court found lacking in Little Sisters
No. 1, does not rise to the level of general public importance simply
because it concerns a public body. If it did, the same logic would seem to
imply that it is an exceptional matter every time a public actor is alleged to
be acting illegally — from a Crown corporation involved in a labour dispute to
an administrative agency acting beyond its jurisdiction.
64
The appellant also argues that this dispute is unique because of the
constitutional rights involved, which engage the critical value of freedom of
expression. It portrays itself as a champion of Charter values. But
not all Charter litigation is of exceptional public importance, even if
it involves allegations of infringements of freedom of expression. It is not
enough to contend that the Charter breach, if proven, would have
implications beyond the individual litigant. What must be proved is that the
alleged Charter breach begs to be resolved in the public interest. In
the context of Okanagan, this meant proving that there were issues that
had to be resolved one way or the other. The exceptional circumstances in that
public interest case were related not so much to obtaining a certain result as
to ensuring that the state’s and bands’ rights and obligations were defined
properly — and definitively — in a context where it seemed important that the
court develop a proper method for adjudicating land claims. Thus, not every
case that could, once decided, be seen as being of public importance should be
viewed as a special case within the meaning of Okanagan. Recognizing a
case as special cannot be justified solely by reference to one particular
desired or apprehended outcome of the litigation. It must be based on the
nature of the litigation itself.
65
In the present appeal, the argument is that the litigation is of
exceptional public importance because Customs might be shown to be acting
unconstitutionally. The corollary to this statement is that the litigation
would not be of exceptional public importance if Customs were shown to be
acting in accordance with its constitutional duties. Thus, a valid claim that
a case is of public importance would depend on the outcome of the case. But
if, in a case like the one at bar, the exceptional importance criterion, as
properly defined, is found to be met, there is a danger that this would amount
to prejudging the case on its merits. If the appellant succeeds on the merits,
one might then conclude, based on the Charter breach it has proved, that
the case is at the appropriate level of public importance. But if the
appellant does not succeed, the court endorses Customs’ current system and no
finding of unconstitutionality is made, nothing in this case will have
implications beyond the appellant. For a court to hold, in this situation,
that the exceptional public importance criterion is met could therefore imply
that the court has already decided what its holding on the merits will be.
66
Bennett J. was very sensitive to concerns about prejudging issues and
approached her advance costs analysis with great caution. However, we
respectfully believe that it was an error, in a case like this, to hold that
the public importance requirement was satisfied. Where only one of the
possible results on the merits could render the case publicly important, the
court should not conclude that the public importance requirement is met. It is
in general only when the public importance of a case can be established
regardless of the ultimate holding on the merits, that a court should consider
this requirement from Okanagan satisfied.
4.2.3 Impecuniosity
67
In a case like the present one, it is not even necessary for a court to
consider the applicant’s impecuniosity. The access to justice purpose of
advance costs cannot be triggered absent the kind of exceptional circumstances
that the Court discussed in Okanagan.
68
We agree that corporations are not barred from receiving advance costs
awards. However, the judge should ask in every case whether the applicant has
made the effort that is required to satisfy a court that all other funding
options have been exhausted. In Okanagan, this requirement was
described as follows:
1. The party seeking interim costs genuinely
cannot afford to pay for the litigation, and no other realistic option exists
for bringing the issues to trial — in short, the litigation would be unable to
proceed if the order were not made. [para. 40]
69
In evaluating whether the impecuniosity requirement is met, a court
should also consider the potential cost of the litigation. In the present
appeal, the cost estimate for the trial is well over $1 million. The Four
Books Appeal alone is somewhat more affordable according to the appellant’s
estimate: approximately $300,000. Such cost estimates form an integral part of
the evidence; the court should subject them to scrutiny, and then use them to
consider whether the litigant is impecunious to the extent that an advance
costs order is the only viable option.
70
A court should generally consider whether the applicant has tried to
obtain a loan. In the criminal law context, financing litigation through credit
is something that courts will look for before deciding that an accused’s
failure to obtain counsel merits a constitutional remedy: R. v. Keating
(1997), 159 N.S.R. (2d) 357 (C.A.). An application for advance costs should
demand no less.
71
The impecuniosity requirement from Okanagan means that it must be
proven to be impossible to proceed otherwise before advance costs will be
ordered. Advance costs should not be used as a smart litigation strategy; they
are the last resort before an injustice results for a litigant, and for the
public at large.
5. Conclusion
72
Once the three-part test from Okanagan has been met, the court
must exercise its discretion to decide whether advance costs ought to be
awarded or whether another type of order is justified. In exercising its
discretion, the court must remain sensitive to any concerns that did not arise
in its analysis of the test. Although the appellant in the case at bar has
failed to meet the Okanagan test, we believe that this case also raises
issues that should in any event have prompted Bennett J. to exercise her
discretion against an advance costs award in respect of the Systemic Review
even if the Okanagan test had been satisfied.
73
As we have stressed, the Okanagan test requires that an advance
costs award be used only as a last resort in order to protect the public
interest. The test prevents an applicant from succeeding in an advance costs
application where legal action is unnecessary (the merit requirement) or where
private funding has not been diligently sought (the impecuniosity
requirement). But there will sometimes be other options that are not contemplated
by the Okanagan analysis.
74
Before the appellant raised the advance costs issue, Bennett J. had
decided that it could proceed with three issues before the British Columbia
Supreme Court: the Four Books Appeal, the Systemic Review, and the
Constitutional Question. In her ruling on advance costs, Bennett J. dealt with
each of these issues separately. This was a proper approach to take. However,
after finding that the three steps of the Okanagan test had been
satisfied, Bennett J. should still have addressed the question of whether there
was any way to prevent the injustice she had identified other than through an
advance costs award.
75
There was in fact another possibility: to consider the Four Books Appeal
before hearing the Systemic Review. Resolving — or at least hearing evidence
on — the Four Books Appeal offered the hope of avoiding an advance costs award
for the Systemic Review. Bennett J. should therefore have considered this
approach as an alternative to her award. In these circumstances, it would be
premature to award advance costs for the Systemic Review. Though her
subsequent decision on advance costs in respect of the Systemic Review would
still need to stop short of prejudging the issues raised therein, it is possible
that the evidence and argument presented in the Four Books Appeal would be
helpful in scrutinizing the Systemic Review for merit and exceptional public
importance — and perhaps for determining whether it was even necessary.
76
On the other hand, we recognize that the possible advantages of pursuing
the Four Books Appeal first could be outweighed by the disadvantages of doing
so. When issues are segregated, the potential for inefficiency abounds.
Witnesses examined on the first issue may need to be recalled to address the
second. Redundant expert reports may be sought. The length of the trial
itself may grow exponentially. If it were eventually determined that advance
costs in respect of the Systemic Review were warranted, these additional costs
would be borne by the public purse; this result should definitely be avoided.
77
To proceed in this way is consistent with the principle stated above
that an applicant must be willing to relinquish some control over the
litigation to benefit from an advance costs award. Since a litigant who has
been awarded advance costs is proceeding with the aid of funds received from
another party, the litigant must accept certain limitations. These may be
strictly financial — e.g., caps on spending — but they may also go more
directly to the litigant’s litigation strategy. For instance, spending limits
will mean that litigants proceeding with the aid of advance costs awards may be
limited in their choice and in the number of counsel and experts. Also, the court
awarding advance costs must consider whether the litigant’s chosen method of
proceeding at trial is compatible with the notion of advance costs being a last
resort and may thus need to establish a framework for the conduct of the
planned litigation. In the present appeal, while the appellant understandably
wants to resolve the issues in the Systemic Review as quickly as possible, it
may be preferable to proceed first with the Four Books Appeal before deciding
the issues arising out of the Systemic Review. In response to an argument of
this sort, an applicant must be able to prove either that modifying its
litigation strategy would not be more efficient and would not lead to
demonstrable savings, or that retaining its original litigation strategy is necessary
to ensure that justice is done.
78
The rule in Okanagan arose on a very specific and compelling set
of facts that created a situation that should hardly ever reoccur. As this
Court held in Okanagan, an advance costs award should remain a last
resort. The costs award in the instant case did not meet the required
standards.
6. Disposition
79
The appeal is dismissed, with the parties to bear their own costs.
The reasons of McLachlin C.J. and Charron J. were delivered by
80
The Chief Justice —
I have read the joint reasons of my colleagues Justices
Bastarache and LeBel to dismiss the appeal, as well as those of Justice Binnie
to allow it.
81
I would dismiss the appeal, although for somewhat different reasons than
Bastarache and LeBel JJ. I cannot, with respect, concur entirely in the
statement of the test put forth in either the reasons of Bastarache and LeBel
JJ., nor in the reasons of Binnie J. This disagreement leads me to a different
formulation of the test and a different analysis.
I. Test for Awarding Interim Costs
82
The law does not require a party to provide advance financing of the
claim of its opponent as a general rule. Litigation proceeds on the basis that
each party must finance its own case, subject to post-litigation costs awards.
Sometimes, the state provides assistance to an impecunious party, through legal
aid. Sometimes, lawyers assist a needing party by offering pro bono services
or by working on a contingency fee arrangement. These possibilities do not
negate the general rule that each party must finance its own litigation.
83
However, in certain cases raising special circumstances, judges,
invoking their equitable jurisdiction, may order one party to pay the other’s
interim costs if “the poverty of the person will not allow her to carry on the
cause, unless the court will direct the defendant to pay something to the
plaintiff in the mean time”: Jones v. Coxeter (1742), 2 Atk. 400, 26
E.R. 642 (Ch.). Such an order is rare, and may be made only in “special circumstances”,
where necessary to avoid unfairness or injustice. Such orders have been made
in certain trust, bankruptcy, corporate and family cases. In British
Columbia (Minister of Forests) v. Okanagan Indian Band, [2003] 3 S.C.R.
371, 2003 SCC 71, this Court held that the public interest in litigation could
support a finding of exceptional circumstances sufficient to permit an award of
interim costs. In such cases, policy interests often supersede the interest to
the litigant, and the issues are of significance not only to the parties, but
to the broader community. As LeBel J., for the Court, wrote:
In both these respects, public law cases as a class can be
distinguished from ordinary civil disputes. They may be viewed as a
subcategory where the “special circumstances” that must be present to justify
an award of interim costs are related to the public importance of the questions
at issue in the case. . . . [para. 38]
84
In Okanagan, the third condition that must be met before a court
can order interim costs is described in terms of “special interest”, more
particularly special interest established by the public importance of the
litigation. The test for interim costs orders generally as set out in Okanagan
reads as follows:
There are several conditions that the case law
identifies as relevant to the exercise of this power, all of which must be
present for an interim costs order to be granted. The party seeking the order
must be impecunious to the extent that, without such an order, that party would
be deprived of the opportunity to proceed with the case. The claimant must
establish a prima facie case of sufficient merit to warrant pursuit. And
there must be special circumstances sufficient to satisfy the court that the
case is within the narrow class of cases where this extraordinary exercise of
its powers is appropriate. . . . in the usual case, where the court
exercises its equitable jurisdiction to make such costs orders as it concludes
are in the interests of justice, the three criteria of impecuniosity, a
meritorious case and special circumstances must be established on the evidence
before the court. [Emphasis added; para. 36.]
85
Again, in applying the test, the Court, per LeBel J., stated:
Applying the criteria I have set out to the
evidence in this case as assessed by the chambers judge, it is my view that
each of them is met. The respondents are impecunious and cannot proceed to
trial without an order for interim costs. The case is of sufficient merit that
it should go forward. The issues sought to be raised at trial are of profound
importance to the people of British Columbia, both aboriginal and
non-aboriginal, and their determination would be a major step towards settling
the many unresolved problems in the Crown-aboriginal relationship in that
province. In short, the circumstances of this case are indeed special, even
extreme. [Emphasis added; para. 46.]
86
However, in setting out the test in the context of public interest
litigation at para. 40 of Okanagan, the third condition of special
circumstances was expressed in terms of public interest without express
reference to special circumstances. The third branch is described there as
follows: “3. The issues raised transcend the individual interests of the
particular litigant, are of public importance, and have not been resolved in
previous cases.”
87
Notwithstanding the restricted formulation of the third requirement of
the test at para. 40 of Okanagan, it is clear from the overall tenor of
the reasons in Okanagan that the Court did not intend to depart from the
common law requirement that special circumstances be established as a
pre-condition of interim costs. The test for interim costs in public interest
litigation should not be less exacting than the test for interim costs
generally. Indeed, there is no reason why they should not be the same. In
applying the test, as discussed, the Court confirmed that the search is not
merely for a matter of public interest, but for the very special circumstances
required to justify this extraordinary order.
88
I therefore proceed on the basis that the three criteria for an order
for advance costs are: (1) impecuniosity; (2) a meritorious case; and (3)
special circumstances making this extraordinary exercise of the court’s power
appropriate. This formulation differs from that used by my colleagues
Bastarache and LeBel JJ. in that the third condition is not merely that the matter
be one of public interest, but that it constitute special circumstances in the
sense indicated. The third requirement of special circumstances has been found
in cases involving trusts, family maintenance, corporate and bankruptcy
matters, and, in Okanagan, in cases involving issues of public
importance. However, public importance is not enough in itself to meet the
third requirement. The ultimate question is whether the matter of public
interest rises to the level of constituting special circumstances. As with all
equitable orders, the order is in the court’s discretion, provided the
conditions are made out. However, absent these conditions, it cannot be made.
II. Application of the Test to This Case
89
How the third requirement of the test is formulated makes a difference
in this case. Indeed, it makes a critical difference. The chambers judge
applied the formulation of the test found at para. 40 of Okanagan
((2004), 31 B.C.L.R. (4th) 330, 2004 BCSC 823). She found impecuniosity, merit
and public interest. Having done so, she explained the exercise of her
residual discretion in two short paragraphs. In all of this, she never
discussed the critical condition that the case displayed “special
circumstances”.
90
The Court of Appeal, in setting aside the chambers judge’s order for
interim costs, relied on this error ((2005), 38 B.C.L.R. (4th) 288, 2005 BCCA
94). Thackray J.A. pointed out that the chambers judge did not consider
whether the litigation could be defined as “special” enough — as opposed to
simply being important — to merit advance costs (para. 60).
91
I agree with the Court of Appeal that this constituted a critical error,
justifying disturbing the chambers judge’s order for interim costs.
92
The standard for an appellate court setting aside an order for interim
costs is stated succinctly by LeBel J. in Okanagan (at para. 43):
An appellate court may and should intervene where it finds that the
trial judge has misdirected himself as to the applicable law or made a palpable
error in his assessment of the facts. As this Court held in Pelech v.
Pelech, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 801, at p. 814-15, the criteria for the exercise of
a judicial discretion are legal criteria, and their definition as well as a
failure to apply them or a misapplication of them raise questions of law which
are subject to appellate review.
93
Major J., at para. 82, agreed and added:
I also agree that a misapplication of the criteria relevant to an
exercise of discretion constitutes an error of law.
Here, as the
Court of Appeal held, the chambers judge misapplied the criteria relevant to
the exercise of her discretion by failing to consider whether the case was
special enough to justify the extraordinary measure of ordering the respondents
to pay the appellant’s interim costs. That constitutes an error of law,
attracting appellate review.
94
For the reasons that follow, I conclude, as do my colleagues Bastarache
and LeBel JJ., that the third pre-condition of an order for interim costs is
not met in this case, not because the case entirely lacks public interest, as
they assert, but because it does not rise to the level of the special
circumstances required to give the court jurisdiction to make the order. In my
view, this case does not fall into the narrow class of cases where one party
may be ordered to pay the interim costs of the other party. If this case
qualifies for advance costs, so will many other cases involving constitutional
issues and other issues of public importance. This Court’s decision in Okanagan
was not intended to provide a general funding mechanism for important cases.
1. Inability to Pay
95
Under Okanagan, the first question is whether Little Sisters
“genuinely cannot afford to pay for the litigation, and no other realistic
option exists for bringing the issues to trial — in short, [whether] the
litigation would be unable to proceed if the order were not made” (para. 40).
This involves an examination of the cost of the projected litigation and the
appellant’s ability to meet those costs.
96
The scope of the case is central to this issue. Customs argued that an
appeal regarding four of the books may determine whether a broader review of
systemic practices is necessary, and that therefore the question of whether
Little Sisters could afford the Four Books Appeal should be determined first.
The Court of Appeal found that Bennett J. erred in failing to consider whether
Little Sisters could afford to pursue the appeal of the four books, rather than
the broader systemic appeal.
97
Like my colleagues, I am content to proceed on the basis of the Four
Books Appeal. However, I disagree with the Court of Appeal’s conclusion that
it was “speculati[ve]” for Bennett J. to find the cost of that appeal exceeded
Little Sisters’ financial resources. The high cost of appealing specific
prohibitions was noted by this Court in Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69 (“Little
Sisters No. 1”): the “cost of challenging [prohibitions] through the
various levels of administrative review” make it difficult — if not “completely
impracticable” to contest them (per Iacobucci J., at para. 230). More
importantly, Little Sisters presented extensive evidence of the resources required
to advance this appeal, and established to the motion judge’s satisfaction that
the cost was beyond its means.
98
The intervener Attorney General of Ontario submitted that, much like the
test for public interest standing, the test for advance costs should consider
whether there are other parties capable of bringing the issue before the
courts. It proposes this as a way of ensuring that interim costs orders only be
issued where absolutely necessary, while also reducing the risk of plaintiff
shopping. Bastarache and LeBel JJ. adopt this submission, while Binnie J.
rejects it. I agree with Binnie J. on this point. As LeBel J. stated in Okanagan,
the “party seeking the order must be impecunious to the extent that, without
such an order, that party would be deprived of the opportunity to
proceed with the case” (para. 36 (emphasis added)). The fact that other
plaintiffs are actually pursuing similar claims might impact the overall
assessment of the public importance of the case, but it does not negate
impecuniosity. To hold otherwise would place on the applicant the impossible
task of proving no one else could or would pursue the litigation.
99
I conclude that the evidence supports the chambers judge’s finding of
inability to finance the litigation.
2. Prima Facie Merit
100
Both the chambers judge and the Court of Appeal concluded that this
threshold is relatively low, and that it is met on the facts of the instant case.
101
I agree that the threshold set by the prima facie merit criterion
is relatively low. Imposing too high a threshold at this stage risks engaging
courts in the very exercise of pre-determining the merits that it is supposed
to avoid. What is required at this stage, on the test for interim costs,
applying Okanagan, is that “[t]he case is of sufficient merit that it
should go forward” (per LeBel J., at para. 46). The chambers judge
correctly considered this requirement and found it to be met. In my view, her
finding on this issue should not be disturbed.
3. Special Circumstances
102
As already discussed, for more than 250 years, courts have insisted
that a pre-condition of an order for interim costs is a finding that the case
fulfills the requirement of “special circumstances”. More precisely, “there
must be special circumstances sufficient to satisfy the court that the case is
within the narrow class of cases where this extraordinary exercise of its
powers is appropriate”: Okanagan, at para. 36. LeBel J. cited with
approval the statement of Macdonald J. in Organ v. Barnett (1992), 11
O.R. (3d) 210 (Gen. Div.), at p. 215, that the jurisdiction to award interim
costs is “limited to very exceptional cases and ought to be narrowly applied”
(para. 32). Similarly, La Forest J. in B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of
Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, stated that an interim costs
award against the Attorney General was “highly unusual” and something that
should be permitted “only in very rare cases” (para. 122).
103
The reasons for this stricture are apparent. They lie in the general
rule that parties must bear the costs of their litigation, subject to
post-judgment costs orders. It is an extraordinary and unusual thing to make a
defendant pay not only its own litigation expenses, but to assist the plaintiff
in bringing the case against him. Cases raising issues that transcend the
plaintiff’s individual interest, are of public importance and are unresolved,
are legion. The Court in Okanagan did not intend interim costs to be
available in all such cases, as confirmed by the requirement of “special
circumstances” and the emphasis on a “narrow class of cases” and the
“extraordinary” nature of the order (para. 36).
104
What identifies the rare case where “special circumstances” permit an
order for interim costs? Some cases emphasize the importance of the subject
matter of the suit. This is different from the question of prima facie
merit at issue in the second requirement, discussed above. The issue is not
whether the case has prima facie merit — that has already been
established — but whether it is of such great importance that justice requires
it to go forward. The importance may be private, public, or both. The “profound
importance” of the case to the litigants in Okanagan was explicitly
noted by LeBel J. (para 46). A similar analysis entered the equation in B.
(R.) where the Ontario Court of Appeal, upholding the award of costs
against the intervening Attorney General, noted that the case was one in which
“parents rose up against state power because of their religious beliefs”
((1992), 10 O.R. (3d) 321, at pp. 354-55). Other cases find unfairness not so
much in the special subject matter of the suit, as in the circumstances of the
parties. For example, it may appear fair that a trustee who is sued bear some
of the cost of settling an issue relating to a trust, or that a husband who
controls the assets of the marriage pay something toward the cost of resolving
how they are to be divided. Often, considerations of subject matter and
circumstances intertwine. The ultimate question is whether the order for
interim costs is required to prevent systemic unfairness or injustice.
105
What elevates a case to the special and narrow class where advance
costs may be ordered cannot be determined by precise advance description.
Generally, however, an award should be made only if the court concludes that
issues raised are of high importance and are unlikely to proceed in the absence
of an advance costs order, thereby producing a serious denial of justice. The
injustice at stake here is not denial to the appellant of an anticipated
remedy, nor denial to the public of a desired outcome, but the injustice of
denial of an opportunity to have a vital private and/or public issue judged and
resolved by the courts. If the statement is confined to systemic injustice in
this sense, I agree with the conclusion of Bastarache and LeBel JJ. that “[a]n
advance costs award should remain a last resort” (para. 78).
106
Against this background, I turn to whether the evidence adduced before
the chambers judge establishes a special case in this sense. The chambers
judge did not address this question. The Court of Appeal, per Thackray
J.A., did consider it, and concluded that the case, while raising issues of
public importance, did not meet the third requirement of being “special” enough
to permit an order for interim costs:
Freedom of expression is of public interest at any
time, as is compliance with court orders. However, it is only the “special”
case that will engage the extraordinary step of requiring the public purse to
contribute funds, through advanced costs, to the prosecution or defence of a
case. I am of the opinion that the case at bar has not been shown to be
special as to its circumstances as compared to Okanagan Indian Band nor
to be “special” by its very nature as a public interest case. [para. 61]
107
I agree with the Court of Appeal. It cannot be denied that the present
case raises issues of some public importance. Free expression, as
Thackray J.A. states, is always of public importance. And as Binnie J. points
out, inferences may be drawn from the decision-making process for these books
to the processes used for other material. This may be important to other
booksellers relying on imports and, more broadly, to citizens concerned with
how Customs defines obscenity and the contest between state power and freedom
of expression. The public also has an interest in compliance with court
orders.
108
I note the suggestion of both the Court of Appeal and Customs that
Little Sisters’ difficulty in collecting money to fund this case indicates that
the lesbian and gay community does not regard this issue as particularly
important. In my view, this argument should be rejected. First, this reasoning
appears to penalize an applicant for not being able to raise money and flies in
the face of the requirement to show that it genuinely cannot afford to pay for
the litigation. Second, lack of concern is not the only inference that can be
drawn from lack of financial support from the community. For example, other
issues may be competing for its pecuniary attention. Finally, the question of
public importance is not about popularity; indeed, the issues of greatest
importance may sometimes be the least popular and hence the least supported.
It is true, as the Court of Appeal noted, that the main issues concerning free
speech were resolved in Little Sisters No. 1. However, the evidence
supports residual issues of public importance in this litigation.
109
The real question is whether the issues of public importance raised by
the present case rise to the level of being special enough to justify an order
for interim costs. Is this one of those rare cases where justice demands that
the questions raised be litigated? Here again, I agree with the Court of
Appeal. At stake is the prospect of not learning how Customs proceeded on the
Four Books Appeal and, in the event it proceeded wrongly, not having a remedial
order. In my view, the possible insight that may be gained into Customs’
practices through the prosecution of this case and the limited remedy, while of
interest to Little Sisters, do not rise to the level of compelling public importance
or demonstrate systemic injustice.
110
It is argued that the history of the litigation raises “special
circumstances” elevating this case to the narrow and exceptional category
where advance costs may be ordered. The intervener EGALE puts it thus:
“[h]aving effectively invited the Bookstore to return to court in the
event of further problems with Customs [in Little Sisters No. 1], it
would be contrary to the interests of justice to now deny the Bookstore the
funding it requires to pursue its prima facie meritorious claims” (I.F.,
at para. 58 (emphasis in original)). In my view, the words of the majority of
the Court in Little Sisters No. 1, in declining to order a more
structured remedy, do not move the case beyond the general rule that litigants
must finance their litigation, subject to post-judgment costs awards. Referring
to the findings of the Court, Binnie J. wrote: “These findings should provide
the appellants with a solid platform from which to launch any further action in
the Supreme Court of British Columbia should they consider that further action
is necessary” (para. 158). This is a comment on the legal foundation of future
claims, not a statement that they should be supported by advance costs.
111
Notwithstanding some sympathy for the appellant, I find nothing in this
case which establishes the special circumstances necessary to support the
extraordinary remedy of an order that the respondents pay the appellant advance
costs to defray the interim expense of its litigation. If advance costs are
justified here, they will be justified in a host of other cases. I cannot read Okanagan
as requiring this result.
112
I wish to add a note on the scale of costs. The chambers judge said
nothing about the scale of costs. My colleagues appear to endorse a capped
limit on spending, having regard to the projected costs of the litigation and
litigation strategy. It is not clear to me that interim costs, where
justified, should be awarded on the basis of indemnification or partial
indemnification. In the seminal case of Jones v. Coxeter, the court
spoke of directing the defendant “to pay something to the plaintiff in the mean
time” (p. 642). In Okanagan, the costs were explicitly stated to be
“‘costs’ in the way it is usually used in the Supreme Court Rules [B.C.
Reg. 221/90] and in litigation parlance — i.e., taxable costs described in R.
57 [party and party costs]”: see para. 10 of Newbury J.A.’s reasons in Okanagan
((2001), 95 B.C.L.R. (3d) 273, 2001 BCCA 647), which were approved by this
Court, at para. 47, when it dismissed the appeal. It seems reasonable that an
advance costs award cannot give the applicant more than it would receive were
it successful at trial.
III. Conclusion
113
I would dismiss the appeal, with the parties bearing their own costs.
The reasons of Binnie and Fish JJ. were delivered by
114
Binnie J.
(dissenting) — I differ from my colleagues about what is truly
at stake in this appeal and this leads to our disagreement about the
appropriate outcome. In my view, the earlier case of Little Sisters Book
and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120,
2000 SCC 69 (“Little Sisters No. 1”), provides more than “important
context” (as my colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. describe it at para. 54).
The ramifications of that decision go to the heart and soul of the appellant’s
present application. Were it not for the findings of serious abuses on the
part of Customs authorities in Little Sisters No. 1, I doubt if the
appellant’s request for advance costs in the present follow-up case would have
had the legs to make it this far. This case is not the beginning of a
litigation journey. It is 12 years into it.
A. What the Court Decided
in Little Sisters No. 1
115
In the earlier proceedings, the appellant (a book and art shop described
by the trial judge in Little Sisters No. 1 as the “nerve center for the
homosexual community” in Vancouver ((1996), 18 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241, at para. 90))
challenged the constitutional validity of provisions of the Customs Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), and the Customs Tariff, S.C. 1987,
c. 49, Schedule VII, that provide for border screening and prohibition of entry
into Canada of:
9956 Books, printed paper, drawings,
paintings, prints, photographs or representations of any kind that
(a) are deemed to be obscene under subsection 163(8) of the Criminal
Code ;
The Customs
legislation was challenged in Little Sisters No. 1 as an unlawful prior
restraint on freedom of expression, and its administration by Customs officials
as targeting the lesbian and gay community contrary to principles of fair
procedure in administrative law and the freedom of expression and equality
provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (ss. 2 (b)
and 15(1) ).
116
Based on the findings of the trial judge, and after examining the ample
evidentiary record, our Court concluded unanimously that systemic
discrimination by Customs officials and unlawful interference with free
expression were clearly established. As it was put in the majority reasons:
Government interference with freedom of expression
in any form calls for vigilance. Where, as here, a trial judge finds that such
interference is accompanied “by the systemic
targeting” of a particular group
in society (in this case individuals who were seen as standard bearers for the
gay and lesbian community), the issue takes on a further and even more serious
dimension. Sexuality is a source of profound vulnerability, and the appellants
reasonably concluded that they were in many ways being treated by Customs
officials as sexual outcasts. [para. 36]
More
specifically, the majority attributed the numerous Charter violations to
systemic problems in the administration of the Customs legislation as follows
(at para. 154):
2. The rights of the appellants under s. 2 (b) and
s. 15(1) of the Charter have been infringed in the following
respects:
(a) They have been targeted as importers of obscene materials
despite the absence of any evidence to suggest that gay and lesbian erotica is
more likely to be obscene than heterosexual erotica, or that the appellants are
likely offenders in this regard;
(b) In consequence of the targeting, the appellants have suffered
excessive and unnecessary prejudice in terms of delays, cost and other losses
in having their goods cleared (if at all) through Canada Customs;
(c) The reasons for this excessive and unnecessary prejudice
include:
(i) failure by Customs to devote a sufficient
number of officials to carry out the review of the appellants’ publications in a timely way;
(ii) the inadequate training of the officials
assigned to the task;
(iii) the failure to place at the disposal of
these officials proper guides and manuals, failure to update Memorandum D9-1-1
and its accompanying illustrative manual in a timely way, and the failure to
develop workable procedures to deal with books consisting mostly or wholly of
written text;
(iv) failure to establish internal deadlines
and related criteria for the expeditious review of expressive materials;
(v) failure to incorporate into departmental
guides and manuals relevant advice received from time to time from the
Department of Justice;
(vi) failure to provide the appellants in a
timely way with notice of the basis for detention of publications, the
opportunity to make meaningful submissions on a re-determination, and
reasonable access to the disputed materials for that purpose; and
(vii) failure to extend to the appellants the
equal benefit of fair and expeditious treatment of their imported goods without
discrimination based on sexual orientation.
117
The Court divided on the issue of remedy. The majority (McLachlin C.J.
and L’Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier, Major, Bastarache and Binnie JJ.) concluded that
the Customs legislation was valid but its administration by Canada Customs was
deeply flawed. Systemic problems within the bureaucracy could and should, it
was held, be addressed at the bureaucratic level. However, the fact that it
had taken six years for the case to reach our Court meant the evidence before
us was already six years out of date. The Minister of Justice assured the
Court that the systemic problems had been properly addressed as of the date of
our hearing. Because of the staleness of the evidence, the majority declined
at para. 157 to grant a structured s. 24(1) remedy:
We are told that in the past six years, Customs has addressed the
institutional and administrative problems encountered by the appellants. In
the absence of more detailed information as to what precisely has been done,
and the extent to which (if at all) it has remedied the situation, I am not
prepared to endorse my colleague’s conclusion that these measures are “not
sufficient” (para. 262) and have offered “little comfort” (para. 265). . . .
118
It was anticipated, however, that there could well be follow-up
litigation if, in fact, the systemic problems condemned by all three levels of
court continued. According to the majority:
A more structured s. 24(1) remedy might well be helpful but it would
serve the interests of none of the parties for this Court to issue a formal
declaratory order based on six-year-old evidence supplemented by conflicting
oral submissions and speculation on the current state of affairs. The views of
the Court on the merits of the appellants’ complaints as the situation stood at
the end of 1994 are recorded in these reasons and those of my colleague
Iacobucci J. These findings should provide the appellants with a solid platform
from which to launch any further action in the Supreme Court of British
Columbia should they consider that further action is necessary. [para. 158]
119
The minority (Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ.) joined in the
condemnation of Customs’ practices but proposed a more drastic remedy, namely
to declare the relevant Tariff Item to be of no force and effect (para. 283)
and thereby to eliminate the statutory authority of Customs officials to detain
at the border any material they allege to be obscene:
Particularly in a case like the one before us, where there is an
extensive record of the improper detention of non-obscene works, the only
choice to ensure full protection of the constitutional rights at stake is to invalidate
the legislation and invite Parliament to remedy the constitutional
infirmities. [Emphasis added; para. 167.]
120
The present application for advance costs comes before us precisely
because the appellant says that the Minister’s assurances proved empty in
practice, that the systemic abuses established in the earlier litigation have
continued, and that (in its view) Canada Customs has shown itself to be
unwilling to administer the Customs legislation fairly and without
discrimination. Of course there are two sides to the story. Although for good
reason the majority declined to strike down the legislation, it was never doubted
that Customs has been given a difficult job to do by Parliament, and that
solutions to entrenched problems would take time to put in place. The question
of public importance is this: was the Minister as good as his word when his
counsel assured the Court that the appropriate reforms had been implemented?
The chambers judge, from whose decision the present appeal has been taken,
concluded that Little Sisters had established a prima facie case that
the promised reforms had not been implemented.
B. The Appellant’s Four Books Appeal
121
As noted by my colleagues, the present application arises out of the
detention by Canada Customs of four books sought to be imported by the
appellant. By originating Notice of Appeal dated February 13, 2002, the
appellant sought the following orders pursuant to s. 67 as modified by
s. 71 of the Customs Act :
1. A declaration pursuant to s. 24 of the
[Charter that relevant provisions of the Customs Tariff and Customs
Act ] have been construed and applied in a manner contrary to s. 2 (b)
and [s.] 15(1) of the Charter ;
2. An injunction restraining Customs from
applying and administering [these provisions] to goods of Little Sisters Book
and Art Emporium permanently or until such time as there is no risk that the
unconstitutional administration will continue;
3. Damages, including aggravated and punitive
damages;
4. Special or increased costs;
5. Such further relief . . . .
The Charter
and “systemic” issues were therefore part of the proceedings from the
outset. Little Sisters says that in the course of examinations for discovery
it became convinced that the banning of the four books showed little had
changed in the Customs treatment of gay and lesbian literature. It then sought
to broaden greatly the scope of the inquiry by way of the so-called “Systemic
Review”.
122
The four books remain banned. Other books sought to be imported by
Little Sisters have been detained and released only after the cost and delay of
a challenge. Some of the banned material consists of comics but at least one
of the books is described as “a paperback compilation of short stories
originally published in Bound & Gagged magazine between 1993-1997” (Of
Men, Ropes & Remembrance (1997), on copyright page). As counsel for
the appellant acknowledges, much of this material is “not . . . for the faint
of heart” (A.F., at para. 95). In the end, a court may conclude that the books
are obscene within the meaning of s. 163(8) of the Criminal Code,
R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 . The result cannot be pre-judged either way. But the
chambers judge concluded that the Little Sisters’ complaint has prima facie
merit, stating:
. . . an administrative review to determine if the systemic changes as
identified by [Little Sisters No. 1] have, in fact been made, is
appropriate. There is a prima facie case to suggest they have not been
sufficiently addressed.
((2004), 31 B.C.L.R. (4th) 330, 2004 BCSC 823, at para. 59)
123
Book censorship has long been considered particularly offensive to civil
liberties:
The freedom to write books, and thus to disseminate
ideas, opinions, and concepts of the imagination — the freedom to treat with
complete candour of an aspect of human life and the activities, aspirations and
failings of human beings — these are fundamental to progress in a free
society. In my view of the law, such freedom should not, except in extreme
circumstances, be curtailed. . . .
(R. v. C. Coles Co., [1965] 1 O.R. 557 (C.A.), at p. 563,
dismissing obscenity charges in relation to Fanny Hill — Memoirs of a
Woman of Pleasure)
124
The majority said in Little Sisters No. 1 in relation to banning
books at the border:
The evidence is that Customs officials failed in
general to deal properly with books. Few, if any, were read in their entirety.
The usual procedure was for a Customs official to thumb through the pages of a
book and as soon as three passages replicating material considered to be
obscene under Memorandum D9-1-1 were identified in the text the book was deemed
obscene and prohibited. The procedure would be clearly inadequate in all but
the most egregious cases. No attempt was made to gain an impression of the book
as a whole on which “artistic merit” could be assessed. [Emphasis in
original; para. 96.]
125
The minority also expressed particular concern about the apparent
unwillingness or inability of Customs officials to deal responsibly with books,
per Iacobucci J., at para. 196:
I also wish to make it absolutely clear that a book
must be read in its entirety when determining whether or not it is obscene. . .
.
126
The appellant’s position is that while the books are different the
problems are the same problems that have troubled every court that dealt with Little
Sisters No. 1. There is no doubt that the Customs legislation, while
valid, is open to abuse. The appellant contends that the pattern of
discrimination and abuse of freedom of expression documented in Little Sisters
No. 1 has continued and that the ban of the four books in issue
demonstrate that Little Sisters won the battle but is losing the subsequent
bureaucratic war. My colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. write that “Simply
put, the appellant’s direct interest in this litigation disappears if its books
are released — something that it seeks to achieve uniquely through the Four
Books Appeal” (para. 58). I do not agree. The four books in question here
will be followed by other importations of gay and lesbian erotica and no doubt
other book bans. A flawed procedure can from time to time produce a correct
result just as a good procedure can produce mistakes. For that reason, as will
be seen, the Crown agreed that the Notice of Appeal under the Act properly initiated
an enquiry into the Customs process that was followed as well as the result and
the reasons arrived at for the ban in these cases. As counsel for the Crown
acknowledged at the hearing before us, “it would make sense, given the breadth
of the powers of the court [under s. 67 ], that it is possible to look past
simply the end result” (transcript, at p. 82).
127
Canada is committed to freedom of expression, to non-discrimination and
to government conducted according to law. The issues raised by Little Sisters
are of pressing public interest.
C. The Appellant’s Application for Advance
Costs
128
It is against this background that the appellant’s current application
must be addressed. This case, as the chambers judge (who is also the case management
judge) correctly observed, is about Charter compliance. I therefore do
not agree with the assertion of my colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. that the
appellant’s case should be analysed in business terms. They write:
Yet, the Four Books Appeal is extremely limited in scope. The
appellant has advanced no evidence suggesting that these four books are
integral, or even important, to its operations; furthermore, . . . book sales
represent only 30 to 40 percent of its operations. [para. 52]
It can be
stated with absolute confidence that there is no “business case” that could
possibly justify Little Sisters’ continuation of its battle with Canada
Customs. The chambers judge noted that the Four Books Appeal involves only a
few dozen individual copies. The profit on the sale of those books would not
pay for half an hour of the appellant’s lawyer’s time. The Four Books Appeal
necessarily comprises four obscenity cases in one combined with an examination
of how those obscenity determinations came to be made by Canada Customs. This
fight is not just about four books. As was the case in Little Sisters No. 1,
the real fight is about alleged systemic discrimination exemplified by
the Four Books Appeal. As stated, the Crown concedes that the systemic issues
are to be explored to some extent in the Four Books Appeal. The chambers
judge’s order of February 6, 2003 noted the concession:
6. The Appellant’s application for an order
compelling answers on examination for discovery is adjourned generally, save
for the part of the application with respect to “the process that was
followed and the reasons that the Comic Books (Meatmen, Volume 18,
Special S&M Comics Edition and volume 24, Special SM Comics Edition) were
determined to be obscene” which is granted by consent; [Emphasis added.]
The Crown has
deep pockets and there is no reason to think the present contest will be any
less fiercely fought than the last. Both parties have already advised the case
management judge of their intention to call extensive expert evidence, which is
itself a major expense.
129
The government is in effect being accused of fighting a war of
attrition. Today four books, tomorrow another four books. Litigation follows
litigation until the rational businessperson is forced to throw in the towel.
This is how civil liberties can be eroded, little by little, yielded in small
increments that case by case are not worth the cost of the fight. It takes an
unbusinesslike litigant like Little Sisters to elbow aside purely financial
considerations (to the extent it can) and carry on what it sees as unfinished Charter
business against the government. Having done so successfully and at its own
expense in Little Sisters No. 1, it asks the court for an exceptional
order of advance costs to make good the victory it thought it had won in Little
Sisters No. 1. Little Sisters may be right or it may be wrong in its
allegations, but its motive can hardly be financial, and its claim to advance
costs should not be assessed on that basis.
D. The “Four Books Appeal” Versus the
“Systemic Review”
130
It is difficult to assess the scope of the appellant’s proposed
“Systemic Review” because there are no pleadings. This is so, at least in
part, because the Crown insists that Little Sisters must utilize the appeal
procedures under the Customs Act rather than proceeding by way of an
ordinary action. However, as described by appellant’s counsel, the proposal
for a “Systemic Review” seems to approximate a privately initiated public
enquiry into the workings of Canada Customs, not only with respect to the
appellant’s problems, but with respect to those of other importers in similar
lines of business as well. The appellant’s attempt to assume the role of a
private Attorney General operating on public funds, or to escalate the Four
Books Appeal into a sort of informal class action without bothering to certify
the class, was rightly rejected by the B.C. Court of Appeal. Courts exist to
resolve defined issues between litigants. Public enquiries are initiated
elsewhere. Nevertheless, the appellant’s allegations, if shown to be true,
mean that it has suffered special damage as a result of a systemic failure of
Canada Customs to respect the constitutional rights of readers and writers as
well as importers. The public has an interest in whether or not its government
respects the law and operates in relation to its citizens in a
non-discriminatory fashion. That is where the interest of this litigation transcends
the interests of the appellant.
131
I agree with Thackray J.A. that the so-called Systemic Review is an
impermissible expansion of the Four Books Appeal, but I think the courts are
quite capable of keeping the Four Books Appeal within proper bounds. I also
agree with him that what is of importance to the public now are the procedures
that were used to evaluate obscenity at the time these books were banned, not
the history of the speed at which those procedures were modified following Little
Sisters No. 1.
132
My colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. state that:
It is the Four Books Appeal that lies at the heart of the appellant’s
claim against Customs; the Systemic Review is simply an attempt by the
appellant to investigate Customs’ practices independently of this context.
[para. 58]
133
Strictly speaking, of course, there is no such proceeding as the
“Systemic Review” outside the wish list of appellant’s counsel. There is only
one proceeding before the Court and it is for the relief claimed in the
originating Notice of Appeal dated February 13, 2002 (as expanded from two to
four books). The Four Books Appeal provides the appellant with an opportunity
to explore, within a limited context, the process under which the importation
of these four books was banned, and to that extent provides an opportunity for
the systemic issues to be canvassed. The floating by appellant’s counsel of a
more ambitious idea for a Systemic Review does not empty the originating Notice
of Appeal of its original content or in any way restrict or expand its ambit.
The Notice of Appeal stands unamended. That is the only application for which
advance costs can properly be sought.
E. The Requirements for Advance Costs
134
The courts have always exercised a broad discretion in the matter of
costs. Although the appellant made its application pursuant to (and apparently
because of) this Court’s decision in British Columbia (Minister of Forests)
v. Okanagan Indian Band, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 371, 2003 SCC 71, Okanagan is
illustrative rather than exhaustive of a broader costs jurisdiction.
135
It is true that an order for advance costs should not be made where a
lesser costs order would suffice, such as protective costs orders, which ensure
that plaintiffs or applicants in public interest litigation do not have costs
orders made against them at the conclusion of proceedings. Here the immediate
problem is not the possibility of a calamitous post-trial award of costs. The
problem is to get the case to trial in the first place.
136
It is also true that a party seeking advance costs must provide evidence
that it has exhausted all realistic alternative avenues to fund its case
including, where appropriate, legal aid, pro bono representation,
contingency fees, private fundraising efforts and class action certification.
137
Further, I agree with my colleagues that an award of advance costs must
be rare and exceptional and granted only in “special cases” where it is
necessary in the public interest. In light of Little Sisters No. 1, I
consider this to be a special case.
138
Okanagan established a three-part threshold, each of which must
be demonstrated to give the trial judge the discretion to make the award in
“special” cases, per LeBel J., at para. 40:
1. The party seeking interim costs genuinely
cannot afford to pay for the litigation, and no other realistic option exists
for bringing the issues to trial — in short, the litigation would be unable to
proceed if the order were not made.
2. The claim to be adjudicated is prima
facie meritorious; that is, the claim is at least of sufficient merit that
it is contrary to the interests of justice for the opportunity to pursue the
case to be forfeited just because the litigant lacks financial means.
3. The issues raised transcend the individual
interests of the particular litigant, are of public importance, and have not
been resolved in previous cases.
139
Although Thackray J.A. seemed to doubt whether an entity that seeks to
earn a profit could qualify for advance costs ((2005), 38 B.C.L.R. (4th) 288,
2005 BCCA 94, at para. 41), I agree with the intervener Canadian Bar
Association that “there is no principled reason to find that public and private
interests cannot co-exist in a case that is deserving of advance costs” and
that “the public interest must be clearly served by the litigation, but it does
not have to operate to the exclusion of other interests” (factum, at para. 5).
The Attorney General of British Columbia seems to agree (factum, at para. 11).
In Okanagan itself, the band had a private financial interest in the
assertion of its claimed logging rights.
140
As did my colleagues, I will address each of the three conditions
precedent.
1. The Appellant Genuinely Cannot Afford to
Pay for the Litigation, and No Other Realistic Option Exists for Bringing the
Issues to Trial — In Short, the Litigation Would Be Unable to Proceed if the
Order Were Not Made
141
Whether or not an applicant “genuinely cannot afford to pay for the
litigation” is a question of fact. After a four-day hearing and consideration
of extensive financial material, the chambers judge made the following
observation:
I propose to deal with the financial aspect of the
litigation first. The Commissioner submits that I should limit this case to
the appeal. If I do that, then says the Commissioner, Little Sisters can
afford to bring that aspect of the litigation.
I disagree. Appeals from prohibitions are
rarely brought to court, no doubt because the cost is prohibitive. Little
Sisters intends to call expert evidence, as does the Commissioner, to establish
the factual foundation for their respective arguments. [Emphasis added; paras.
18-19.]
She concluded
that Little Sisters, with its resources in part depleted by the earlier
litigation, could not afford to bring even the Four Books Appeal to trial. The
appellant says that it realized it could not afford the litigation when Customs
filed six expert affidavits in the Four Books Appeal itself. The chambers
judge made strong findings of fact on the issue of lack of means:
Having reviewed the evidence, it is clear that
Little Sisters cannot genuinely afford to pay for this litigation, or any
reasonable aspect of it.
.
. .
I conclude that Little Sisters meets the first
requirement of Okanagan Indian Band, regardless of the scope of the
litigation. [Emphasis added; paras. 22 and 25.]
As does our
Chief Justice (at para. 99), I accept the chambers judge’s finding that the
impecuniosity requirement is met. The chambers judge was satisfied that
sources of alternate funding had been explored. This is not a case where a
contingency fee is attractive to lawyers. Even an optimistic view of the
damages that might be recovered is insufficient to justify the risk to a law
firm of time and disbursements. Nor is this a case where settlement is
possible. Customs has given as much ground as it is prepared to give.
Thackray J.A. speculated that if this case were of general importance, members
of the gay and lesbian community would support it financially, and so they
have, but not enough. Speculation of at least equal value is that the
supporters are suffering donor fatigue. If Little Sisters is correct that
Customs has not changed its ways despite Little Sisters No. 1 rational
people may well conclude that “you can’t fight City Hall” and put their money
into more productive activities. Disillusionment with the capacity of the
legal system to remedy Charter wrongs effectively is of public concern.
142
My colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. assert that the impecuniosity
requirement cannot be satisfied where “other litigation is pending [which] may
be conducted for this same purpose, without requiring an interim order of
costs” (para. 41). This is a legitimate consideration, but Customs is in the
best position to know of such litigation, and has not disclosed any such
cases. I do not believe the appellant should be called on to prove a negative
when the party in the best position to raise such a concern — Customs — has not
done so. In any event, on these particular facts, Little Sisters has taken on
what it refers to as “Big Brother” for the past 12 years and I think it has
earned the right to complete what the chambers judge considered to be a work in
progress.
143
Over more than a decade, Little Sisters has borne the brunt of the
battle on this branch of expression and equality rights. In 1996, it financed
a two-month trial and two subsequent successful appeals to establish the
existence of systemic Charter violations at Canada Customs. That case
vindicated (at least in principle) the rights generally of the lesbian and gay
community, not just Little Sisters. We are told that the costs award in Little
Sisters No. 1 covered only 60 percent or so of actual costs (A.F., at para.
51). The present issue is whether the rights established in principle have (or
will) become rights in reality. In the circumstances, Little Sisters should
not have to prove that there is no one else in Canada with a potential interest
in the subject matter with pockets deep enough to take up the cause.
2. The Claim To Be Adjudicated Is Prima
Facie Meritorious; That Is, the Claim Is at Least of Sufficient Merit That
It Is Contrary to the Interests of Justice for the Opportunity To Pursue the
Case To Be Forfeited Just Because the Litigant Lacks Financial Means
144
The courts below, while not prejudging the outcome, considered that the
appellant had easily met this requirement. The chambers judge noted that
Customs did not “strenuously oppose the granting of costs” on the ground of
whether the claim is prima facie meritorious (para. 28). Similarly, the
Court of Appeal said that Customs “raised, but did not press” this issue (para.
28). The chambers judge nevertheless addressed it in some detail, noting that
the determinations of obscenity in issue are those of Ms. Anne Kline, who at
the relevant time was the Customs official in Ottawa ultimately in charge of
the obscenity determinations. Ms. Kline acknowledged on discovery that she
does not recall ever having allowed an appeal based on artistic merit
(A.R., at p. 2935, Q 3167). The chambers judge stated:
With respect to the appeal, there is prima facie
evidence that Ms. Kline may not be applying the Butler test correctly [R.
v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452]. For example, there is some evidence that
Ms. Kline uses a “dirt for dirt’s sake” approach (cross-examination on
affidavit Q. 516-517, 526-7) which was rejected by Butler at
p. 492, para. 79. There is some evidence to suggest she may not be
correctly applying the risk of harm test: See her Examination for Discovery
Questions: 2107-2110. Further, there is evidence that Ms. Kline may not be
correctly applying the “artistic merit” test. For example, she may not be
considering some or all of the factors which define artistic merit: See R.
v. Sharpe, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45, 2001 SCC 2. [para. 29]
Further, the
chambers judge added:
Unbeknownst to Little Sisters, Ms. Kline did not look at anything that
was before the s. 58 arbitrators, including Little Sisters’ written
submissions. [para. 30]
145
The Chief Justice agrees that the “prima facie merit” condition
is met (para. 101) but our colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. say that to
establish prima facie merit an applicant must “prove that the interests
of justice would not be served” were the action to fail to proceed for want of
resources (para. 51). With respect, this conflates a prima facie merit
test with the “interests of justice” test. A prima facie merit test
avoids the need for prejudgment and in my view is to be preferred. The
potential for injustice should be addressed under the other factors,
particularly at the residual discretion stage.
3. The Issues Raised Transcend the Individual
Interests of the Particular Litigant, Are of Public Importance, and Have Not
Been Resolved in Previous Cases
146
The appellant’s position of course is that the issues ought to
have been resolved in Little Sisters No. 1 but in the end were not. It
seeks a structured s. 24(1) remedy on updated material which would operate
as a set of detailed instructions binding on Customs officials, only this time
accompanied with ongoing judicial supervision. As appellant’s counsel put it,
we will be pressing very hard for the kind of structural reform that
this Court I think has opened up in . . . Doucet-Boudreau v. Nova Scotia
(Minister of Education) [[2003] 3 S.C.R. 3, 2003 SCC 62]. [Transcript, at
p. 4]
147
On the issue of public interest, the chambers judge concluded:
Clearly, if the Commissioner, via Ms. Kline, is not
correctly applying the legal test for obscenity, that issue transcends the
interests of Little Sisters and touches all book importers, both commercial and
private. . . . [para. 43]
148
The importance of the obscenity issue also affects potential readers.
Section 2 (b) of the Charter protects not only writers and
artists, but also readers, who are denied access to books they may wish to
peruse. The impact of discrimination may start with the appellant but it
reaches “through them to Vancouver’s gay and lesbian community” (Little
Sisters No. 1, at para. 123) and beyond.
149
Underpinning her conclusion, the chambers judge noted several
circumstances she regarded as significant:
Since 1996, 57 titles imported by Little Sisters
have been detained. Nineteen titles have been detained since the decision by
the Supreme Court of Canada in Little Sisters No. 1 . . . (affidavit of
Ms. Kline, para. 17). It is not clear if these four titles are part of the
nineteen. Numerous titles have been seized from other book sellers, and in
particular, gay and lesbian book sellers. [para. 35]
.
. .
There is evidence that Customs is detaining
hundreds, if not thousands of titles. [para. 37]
Ms. Kline has the final say, prior to court review,
on the detentions of all titles imported into this country. . . . [para. 38]
.
. .
The legislation prohibiting obscene material violates [the Charter ],
but is saved by s. 1 . . . on the understanding that certain safeguards to
protect citizens are in place. One of these safeguards is the defence of
artistic merit. [paras. 40-41]
Little Sisters has filed evidence to show that
Customs has detained 190,000 items and prohibited 67,000-68,000 items in the
past five years. This does not equate to titles, but the statistics
demonstrate a large magnitude of detentions. [para. 48]
Further, the statistics demonstrate that 70% of
detentions are gay and lesbian material. This is some evidence of continual
targeting. [para. 49]
150
While I agree with Thackray J.A. that raw numbers of detained books are
not necessarily significant, nevertheless the high percentage of gay and
lesbian material detained is significant (70 percent of all items
seized). In Little Sisters No. 1, our Court observed that “[w]hile
homosexuals are said to form less than 10 per cent of the Canadian population,
up to 75 per cent of the material from time to time detained and examined for
obscenity was directed to homosexual audiences” (para. 113). We noted then
that there was no evidence that gay and lesbian erotica was more likely to be
obscene than heterosexual erotica (para. 121). If the systemic problems had
been resolved since our decision in 2000, one would expect the percentage of
gay and lesbian material detained to now be less than 70 percent of the total.
An explanation for this lack of proportionality may lie in “the process that
was followed and the reasons [the books] were determined to be obscene” as
agreed to by the Crown in the February 6, 2003 consent order. I accept the
view of the chambers judge that the 70 percent detention rate six years after Little
Sisters No. 1 is a statistic that taken together with the other evidence
seems to signal an ongoing problem.
151
In short, on the issue of public importance, I read the chambers judge
as saying she is satisfied on a prima facie basis that there is
unfinished business of high public importance left over from Little Sisters
No. 1. She goes on to say:
There is a strong public interest at stake, and
that is ensuring that government does not interfere with the s. 2 (b)
rights of citizens. Further, whether the government has complied with a court
order. [para. 61]
152
My colleagues Bastarache and LeBel JJ. further narrow Okanagan by
observing that “the litigation would not be of exceptional public importance if
Customs were shown to be acting in accordance with its constitutional duties”
(para. 65). With respect, I cannot agree that the public importance of a case
depends on whether the government loses it. The issue of public importance is
whether Canada Customs learned the lessons of Little Sisters No. 1, and
now performs its mandate without discrimination on grounds of sexual
orientation, and has lived up to its assurances given to the Court. A positive
answer to those questions would have as much significance as a negative one.
153
My colleague the Chief Justice formulates the third criterion
differently than Bastarache and LeBel JJ. She writes that her
formulation differs from that used by my colleagues . . . in that the
third condition is not merely that the matter be one of public interest, but
that it constitute special circumstances in the sense indicated. . . . [P]ublic
importance is not enough in itself to meet the third requirement. The ultimate
question is whether the matter of public interest rises to the level of
constituting special circumstances. . . . [para. 88]
.
. .
How the third requirement of the test is formulated
makes a difference in this case. Indeed, it makes a critical difference.
[para. 89]
Having found
that Little Sisters demonstrated both impecuniosity (para. 99) and prima
facie merit (para. 101), the Chief Justice nevertheless rejects the Little
Sisters application on the basis that its case is not “special enough” and the
potential “insight” to be gained by its pursuit “do[es] not rise to the level
of compelling public importance or demonstrate systemic injustice” (para.
109).
154
Whether a case, though special, is not “special enough” or fails to
“rise to the level” of compelling public importance is a subjective test whose
outcome will inevitably depend to a significant extent on the eye of the
beholder. The discretionary nature of the order was, of course, recognized in Okanagan,
although in that case it was identified as a residual discretion rather than as
part of the “public importance” criterion. More significantly, Okanagan
recognized that the discretion is given to the trial court. LeBel J. wrote for
the majority that:
It is for the trial court to determine in each instance whether
a particular case, which might be classified as “special” by its very nature as
a public interest case, is special enough to rise to the level
where the unusual measure of ordering costs would be appropriate. [Emphasis
added; para. 38.]
It is ironic
that in both cases to reach this Court on the advance costs issue, the trial
court has been reversed.
155
My view is that the “sufficiently special” test is essentially the same
as the
“rare and
exceptional circumstances” test set out in Okanagan, which was dutifully
applied by the chambers judge in this case, as I will address in the next
section.
F. The Exercise of Discretion in “Rare and
Exceptional Circumstances”
156
The chambers judge properly directed herself on the “sufficiently
special circumstances” test under the rubric of “rare and exceptional
circumstances”, as follows:
Advanced costs are ordered in “rare and exceptional
circumstances.” The jurisdiction to make such an order in British Columbia was
confirmed in Okanagan Indian Band. [para. 8]
.
. .
[Okanagan] held . . . that even if all the
conditions are met, that opens the “narrow jurisdiction” to consider an order
for advanced costs. Even if all three criteria are met, it is still within the
judge’s discretion to make such an order. The order is made in “rare and
exceptional circumstances”. [para. 10]
.
. .
Having met the threshold test for advanced costs, I
would exercise my discretion in favour of ordering advanced costs to fund these
appeals. The issues raised are too important to forfeit this litigation
because of lack of funds. [para. 44]
In other
words, the chambers judge did what Okanagan asked of her, namely to
determine whether this case is “special enough to rise to the level where the
unusual measure of ordering costs would be appropriate” (LeBel J., at para.
38). She held that it did, and absent a demonstration that she erred in her
appreciation of the facts or the law, her assessment on this point should be
upheld, in my view.
157
Only one error in principle has been identified, and it goes to the
scope of the proceeding, not the appropriateness of its advanced funding. For
the reasons stated earlier, I accept that the chambers judge erred in principle
in ordering advance costs for the “extended” Systemic Review because there is
no such action pending. The taxpayers cannot be ordered to finance a piece of
litigation that is neither pending nor defined in any concrete form in a
proposed statement of claim. All that is before the court is the originating
Notice of Appeal under ss. 67 and 71 of the Customs Act . The scope
of the statutory appeal will have to be determined by the Supreme Court of
British Columbia, although the chambers judge (who is also the case management
judge) gave some indication of its elasticity. But in terms of scope, that is
as much elbow room as the law permits.
158
No such error affects the chambers judge’s exercise of discretion in
relation to the Four Books Appeal. Having found the Little Sisters’
allegations to have prima facie merit, and considering everything that
has gone on in the last 12 years as creating “rare and exceptional”
circumstances, she concluded this case justified an order for advance costs.
We have been shown no basis on which to interfere with the exercise of her
discretion in that respect.
G. A Structured Costs Order
159
The chambers judge properly insisted that “This order does not mean the
government must write a blank cheque.” (para. 93) I agree. In this Court,
appellant’s counsel estimated the costs of the Four Books Appeal at $300,000
(A.F., at para. 66). It seems to me reasonable to cap the maximum
potential public contribution to the Four Books Appeal at that amount, subject
to further order of the trial court. It is perfectly possible that, properly
supervised, the required state contribution to the costs of Little Sisters will
be less than $300,000. A cap is fair to the public and fair to the appellant
because it gives notice of the $300,000 upper limit to which the public purse
will potentially finance the litigation. The appellant will have to budget
accordingly.
160
The chambers judge repeated the stricture set out in Okanagan, at
para. 41:
Such orders should be carefully fashioned and reviewed over the course
of the proceedings to ensure that concerns about access to justice are balanced
against the need to encourage the reasonable and efficient conduct of
litigation, which is also one of the purposes of costs awards.
Hence, she
concluded, “Further submissions are needed on the structure of the order and
quantum” (para. 94). Subsequent to her order, the parties entered into a
funding agreement which requires Little Sisters to submit budgets to a Costs
Administrator appointed by Customs, to have all budgets and payments approved
by the Costs Administrator and which limits Little Sisters to hourly and daily
rates agreed to by the parties (A.R., at p. 2106). To the extent Little
Sisters can make a contribution to the costs, it should be required to do so.
The case management judge can ensure that the public is getting value for
money. It seems to me that this was the proper way to proceed and I would not
interfere with it.
H. Impact of the Claim for Damages
161
The appellant seeks substantial damages. The award of such damages
would, if made, alleviate the impecuniosity. It would be entirely fair to both
the public and the appellant to order that the appellant is obligated to repay
the entire amount of the advance costs plus interest at the usual prejudgment
rate as a first charge on any such award of damages. Such arrangements are not
uncommon in cases of legal aid in civil matters (to the extent that legal aid
is still available in such matters) and would be appropriate here.
I. Conclusion
162
I would allow the appeal and reinstate the award of advance costs for
the Four Books Appeal only, with a maximum potential limit of $300,000. The
appellant should have its costs of the advanced costs motion and appeals on the
regular scale throughout.
Appeal dismissed, Binnie and
Fish JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Arvay Finlay, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondents: Deputy Attorney General of
Canada, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Ontario: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of British
Columbia: Ministry of Attorney General of British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Bar
Association: Camp Fiorante Matthews, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener Egale Canada Inc.: Sack
Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitor for the interveners the Sierra Legal Defence Fund and the
Environmental Law Centre: Sierra Legal Defence Fund, Toronto.