Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2004] 3 S.C.R. 323, 2004 SCC 62
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Appellant/Applicant
v.
Léon Mugesera, Gemma Uwamariya,
Irenée Rutema, Yves Rusi,
Carmen Nono, Mireille Urumuri
et Marie‑Grâce Hoho Respondents/Respondents
on the motion
Indexed as: Mugesera v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
Neutral citation: 2004 SCC 62.
File No.: 30025.
2004: October 1.
Present: Deschamps J.
motion to strike
Practice — Supreme Court of Canada — Motion to
strike — Documents on appeal — Motion to have certain documents struck from
respondents’ record — Whether factums from courts below, directions of Court
of Appeal, motion to file fresh evidence and written representations on costs
in Court of Appeal should be excluded from Part II of respondents’ record —
Whether these documents constitute “pleadings” or “orders” within meaning of
Rule 39(1)(b) of Supreme Court Rules — Whether correspondence between parties
regarding establishment of record in Supreme Court and table of concordance
should be excluded from Parts III and IV of respondents’ record — Rules of the
Supreme Court of Canada, SOR/2002-156, r. 39(1).
Cases Cited
Applied: Public
School Boards’ Assn. of Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1999]
3 S.C.R. 845.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Rules of
the Supreme Court of Canada, SOR/2002-156,
r. 39(1).
MOTION to strike certain documents from the
respondents’ record. Motion granted in part.
Written submissions by Michel F. Denis and Normand
Lemyre, for the appellant/applicant.
Written submissions by Guy Bertrand, for
the respondents/respondents on the motion.
English version of the order delivered by
1
Deschamps J. — The
respondents have included documents in their record that the appellant contends
should be struck out. Also, the appellant submits that the respondents’
written argument contains passages that should be struck out. The contested
documents are the factums from the courts below, directions of the Federal
Court of Appeal, a motion to file fresh evidence, the written representations on
costs in the Court of Appeal, correspondence between the parties regarding the
establishment of the record in this Court and a table of concordance.
2
Rule 39(1)(b) of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Canada,
SOR/2002‑156, requires that Part II of the respondent’s record
include, inter alia, “pleadings” and “orders”. In the French version,
the terms used are actes de procédure and ordonnances. These
expressions are general enough to include the factums from the courts below,
the directions of the Court of Appeal, the motion to file fresh evidence and
the written representations on costs. In fact, the Court established in Public
School Boards’ Assn. of Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1999]
3 S.C.R. 845, that factums from the courts below are part of the
record to which the parties may refer.
3
The correspondence and the table of concordance have been included by
the respondents in Parts III and IV of their record. Rules 39(1)(c)
and 39(1)(d) of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Canada require
that these parts include:
(c) Part III: evidence,
including transcripts and affidavits; and
(d) Part IV: exhibits, in
the order in which they were filed at trial.
The
correspondence and the table of concordance are neither evidence nor exhibits
included in the record at trial. Nor may these documents be included in
Part II of the respondents’ record.
4
These documents constitute fresh evidence. They should be considered to
have been struck out. Likewise, the passages of the respondents’ factum
referring to them should be considered not to have been written.
5
Rather than ordering the filing of a new factum and a new record, I
order the respondents to refrain from referring to these documents and these
passages from the factum in their oral argument.
6
For these reasons, the motion is granted in part, without costs in light
of its mixed result. The correspondence and the table of concordance shall be
considered to have been struck out and the respondents are ordered not to refer
to them.
Motion granted in part.
Solicitor for the appellant/applicant: Deputy Attorney
General of Canada, Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondents/respondents on the
motion: Guy Bertrand & Associés, Québec.