Docket: A-293-15
Citation: 2015 FCA 268
Present: STRATAS
J.A.
BETWEEN:
|
THE CANADIAN
COPYRIGHT LICENSING AGENCY
(OPERATING AS
ACCESS COPYRIGHT)
|
Applicant
|
and
|
HER MAJESTY
THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF THE PROVINCE OF ALBERTA, HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT
OF THE PROVINCE OF MANITOBA, THE PROVINCE OF NEW BRUNSWICK, HER MAJESTY IN
RIGHT OF NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR, HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF THE
PROVINCE OF NOVA SCOTIA, THE GOVERNMENT OF NUNAVUT, HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN
RIGHT OF THE PROVINCE OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT
OF THE PROVINCE OF SASKATCHEWAN, GOVERNMENT OF YUKON AND HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN IN RIGHT OF THE PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
|
Respondents
|
REASONS FOR ORDER
STRATAS J.A.
A.
Introduction
and the basic facts giving rise to this motion
[1]
Access Copyright has brought an application for
judicial review in this Court. It seeks to quash the decision dated May 22,
2015 of the Copyright Board. The respondents have now brought a motion seeking
the removal of certain material Access Copyright has included in its
application record.
[2]
At the outset, some brief description of the
material in issue is necessary.
[3]
In its notice of application, Access Copyright
included a request under Rule 317 that the Board supply it with “material relevant to [the] application that is in the
possession of [the Board]…and not in [Access Copyright’s] possession.” In
response to the Rule 317 request, the Board informed the parties that it did
not have in its possession any relevant material not already in the possession
of the applicant.
[4]
The motion before this Court concerns how Access
Copyright dealt with the material that was before the Board and in its
possession, i.e., the material that it did not obtain under Rule 317. Access
Copyright simply placed that material into its application record. It was not
under an affidavit describing the provenance of the material.
[5]
The respondents move to strike this material
from the applicant’s record. They say that the documents should have been
supplied under affidavit. For the reasons below, I agree with the respondents.
[6]
The failure to place the documents under
affidavit sounds like a technical deficiency of no moment. As I shall explain,
it is not—in some instances, that failure can cause procedural unfairness, and
it offends a basic principle concerning the admissibility of evidence.
B.
Analysis
(1)
The applicable
principles
[7]
At the root of this motion is a question: on a
judicial review, how does one bring the materials that were before the
administrative decision-maker before the reviewing court?
[8]
The frequency with which this question comes
before the Federal Courts shows that many do not know the answer. There is little
case law on point, perhaps because we regard the relevant rules as being clear.
Indeed, the rules are clear but they are intricate and interrelated and, in
some cases, stand against a common law backdrop. Now is the time to provide
some more general guidance.
[9]
As is the case with every procedural question in
the Federal Courts system, the starting point must be the Federal Courts
Rules.
[10]
We begin with Rule 317, the rule that Access
Copyright invoked in its notice of application. Rule 317 permits a party to
obtain certain material from the administrative decision-maker. The administrative
decision-maker responds in accordance with Rule 318.
[11]
Rule 317 stands against a common law backdrop.
Over six decades ago, the writ of certiorari—the writ used to quash decisions
of an administrative decision-maker—was available in the case of an error on
the face of the record. That sort of error was quite limited and in no way
bears relation to the concept of unreasonableness as we know it today. As a
result, the material before the administrative decision-maker that could be
placed before the reviewing court was extremely limited: R. v.
Northumberland Compensation Appeal Tribunal. Ex Parte Shaw, [1952] 1 K.B.
338 at pages 351-52.
[12]
Northumberland
stood for the proposition that the particular evidence before the administrative
decision-maker was not to be produced to the reviewing court. But since Northumberland,
the availability of certiorari has dramatically expanded and with that
expansion has come the need for more materials to be placed before the
reviewing court. Today, certiorari is available for substantive
unreasonableness of the sort contemplated in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190. Review of that nature may require the
reviewing court to have before it large portions of the material or even all of
the material the administrative decision-maker considered in making its
decision.
[13]
Rule 317 reflects the
reality today that the permissible grounds for judicial review are broader than
they once were. It entitles the requesting party to receive everything that was
before the decision-maker at the time it made its decision and that the
applicant does not have in its possession: Access Information Agency Inc. v.
Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FCA 224, 66 Admin. L.R. (4th) 83 at paragraph 7.
This allows parties “to
effectively pursue their rights to challenge administrative decisions from a
reasonableness perspective” and “have the reviewing court [that is engaged in reasonableness
review] consider the evidence presented to the tribunal in question”: Hartwig v. Saskatchewan (Commission of Inquiry), 2007
SKCA 74, 284 D.L.R. (4th) 268 at paragraph 24 (commenting on a rule similar to
Rule 317).
[14]
This excerpt from Hartwig recognizes the
relationship between the record before the reviewing court and the reviewing
court’s ability to review what the administrative decision-maker has done. If
the reviewing court does not have evidence of what the administrative
decision-maker has relied upon, the reviewing court may not be able to detect reviewable
error. In other words, an inadequate evidentiary record before the reviewing
court can immunize the administrative decision-maker from review on certain
grounds. See Slansky v. Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FCA 199, 364 D.L.R. (4th) 112 at paragraph 276 (dissenting reasons,
but not opposed on this point).
[15]
Rule 317 can fulfil another purpose that is less
lofty but still important. Parties before the administrative decision-maker
will often have in their possession all of the material the administrative
decision-maker considered in making its decision. But not always. And sometimes
parties may be unsure whether they do. Sometimes they wish to confirm exactly
what the administrative decision-maker actually considered in making its
decision. Rule 317 of the Federal Courts Rules provides a means by which
parties can achieve those ends.
[16]
The administrative decision-maker responds to a
Rule 317 request by following Rule 318. Under that Rule, it delivers to the
requester the material that was before the
decision-maker (and that the applicant does not have in its possession) at the
time the decision at issue was made. Under Rule 318, the administrative
decision-maker can also object to disclosure, for example on the basis of
public interest privilege or legal professional privilege: see Slansky,
above at paragraphs 277-283 on the issue of how to litigate a Rule 318
objection involving confidential material.
[17]
Materials produced by the administrative
decision-maker in response to a Rule 317 request can simply be placed in the
applicant’s record or the respondent’s record: see Rule 309(2)(e.1) and
Rule 310(2)(c.1). When that is done, the material is in the evidentiary
record before the reviewing court and may be used by the parties and the court.
No affidavit is necessary.
[18]
For completeness, I should note two other
things. First, the portions of any transcript of oral evidence before a
tribunal may also be filed in the applicant’s or respondent’s record without an
affidavit: see Rule 309(2)(f) and Rule 310(2)(d). Second, Rule
318 provides that in addition to delivering the material to the party that made
the request under Rule 317, the administrative decision-maker must also “transmit” a certified copy of the material to the
reviewing court. Note that the Rule uses the word “transmit,”
not “file.” The material is not formally before
the reviewing court in the sense of being a part of the reviewing court’s
evidentiary record: Canada (Attorney General) v. Lacey, 2008 FCA 242.
Instead, the Registry is given the material in order to authenticate that
materials contained in an application record under Rule 309(2)(e.1) or
Rule 310(2)(c.1) are indeed those supplied by the administrative
decision-maker: Canada (Attorney General) v. Canadian North Inc., 2007
FCA 42 at paragraph 11.
[19]
I turn now to material that the party has in its possession and that was before the administrative
decision-maker at the time it made the decision in issue. This material is
potentially relevant to the judicial review, but is not produced by a
decision-maker in response to a Rule 317 request. Rules 309 and 310 do
not permit this material to be filed into the applicant’s record or the
respondent’s record. Thus, the parties must take affirmative steps to place
that material before the reviewing court.
[20]
Here, we must look at Rules 306-310. But before
doing so, we must appreciate that those rules sit alongside a fundamental
general principle: facts must be proven by admissible evidence. There are
exceptions to this, such as the availability of judicial notice, the presence
of legislative provisions speaking to the issue, and an agreed statement of
facts (including an agreement that certain documents shall be admissible).
Putting those exceptions aside, documents by themselves, not introduced by an
affidavit authenticating them, are not admissible evidence. Documents simply
stuffed into an application record are not admissible.
[21]
Under Rule 306 and Rule 307, applicants and
respondents, respectively, can serve upon each other an affidavit that appends
the material. Parenthetically, for completeness, I note that material that was not
before the administrative decision-maker can potentially be placed
before the reviewing court by way of affidavit. However, there are restrictions
and admissibility requirements unique to judicial review proceedings that must
be obeyed: see, e.g., Bernard v. Professional Institute of the Public
Service of Canada, 2015 FCA 263 and cases referred to therein.
[22]
Under Rules 306 and 307, parties need not
include all of the material that was before the administrative decision-maker. To
save costs and to simplify the record, they need only include the material
necessary for their application. So under Rule 306, an applicant may serve an
affidavit appending only some of the material. In response, a respondent might
regard other parts of the material as being necessary. That respondent may use Rule
307 to serve an affidavit appending additional material. See generally
Canadian North, above at paragraphs 3-5.
[23]
Cross-examinations may be conducted on the
affidavits: Rule 308. Why might cross-examinations be necessary? Sometimes there
is uncertainty about whether certain material appended to the affidavits was in
fact before the administrative decision-maker at the time it made its decision.
The parties are entitled to test each other’s positions on that. Down the road,
a reviewing court might have to determine the content of the evidentiary record
before proceeding further, and in some cases it may be assisted by the cross-examinations.
[24]
Any affidavits under Rules 306-307 are placed in
the applicant’s record or the respondent’s record: see Rule 309(2)(d)
and Rule 310(2)(b). Cross-examination transcripts are also to be
included: see Rule 309(2)(e) and Rule 310(2)(c).
(2)
Applying the
principles to this case
[25]
In this case, Access Copyright simply included
in its application record material it had in its possession that it says was
before the Board at the time it made its decision. It did not introduce the
material by way of an affidavit.
[26]
The foregoing analysis shows that this was an error.
Access Copyright should have served an affidavit explaining that the material
was before the Board when it made its decision, appending the relevant material
to that affidavit. After receiving that affidavit, the respondents might have
exercised their right to cross-examine. As explained in paragraph 23, above,
the right to cross-examine can be important in some circumstances. In this
case, I cannot tell whether or not the respondents would have exercised their
right to cross-examine. The fact they might have underscores the need for
Access Copyright to have served an affidavit. Finally, following any
cross-examinations, Access Copyright should have included the affidavit (with
exhibits) and any cross-examination transcripts in its application record: see
Rule 309(2)(d) and Rule 309(2)(e).
[27]
I am satisfied that Access Copyright’s error was
an innocent one. The candid and professional affidavit of senior counsel shows
that Access Copyright had good intentions and was looking for a fast, easy way
to place the material before the Court. Unfortunately, the way Access Copyright
went forward offended the Rules, ran contrary to the general rule that facts
before the reviewing court must be proven by evidence, and might have worked
procedural unfairness.
[28]
The Federal Courts Rules can accommodate good
intentions that give rise to creative and practical solutions that simplify
things. At the outset of this matter, Access Copyright and the respondents
could have discussed the evidentiary record needed by the Court and could have agreed
on a list of material to be placed in that record. Then, by informal letter
before at or the same time as the filing of the application record, Access
Copyright could have requested, on consent, an order allowing for the agreement
and the material covered by it to be placed into the application record without
an affidavit: see paragraph 20 above regarding agreed statements of fact.
[29]
Given that Access Copyright mistakenly included
materials in its application record, what should now happen?
[30]
The respondents say that they have suffered “irredeemable prejudice” from this “egregious” irregularity. They say that they have
served an affidavit responding to Access Copyright’s affidavit without realizing
that Access Copyright intended to include many more documents into the
application record. As will be seen below, this minor irregularity can be
easily fixed.
[31]
On the issue of remedy, the respondents’ primary
position is basically “too bad, so sad”: Access
Copyright should be barred from including in the application record an
affidavit appending the materials, regardless of how relevant the materials
might be to the Court’s determination of the judicial review.
[32]
This is remedial overreach. Rule 3 requires us
to apply the rules to secure a just determination on the merits, not to punish a
party that has made a mistake—here, a relatively benign one—that can be fixed.
[33]
To that end, this Court will order the
following:
(a)
Within ten days of the Court’s order, the
materials mistakenly included in Access Copyright’s application record (to be
detailed in this Court’s order) should be removed from that record and Access
Copyright’s memorandum of fact and law, drafted on the basis of the improper
record, should be removed from the record or the court file, as the case may
be;
(b)
Within twenty days of this Court’s order, in
accordance with Rule 306, Access Copyright may serve an affidavit appending
materials it says were before the Board and in its possession, including the
materials mistakenly included in Access Copyright’s application record;
(c)
In accordance with Rule 307, the respondents may
serve affidavits responding to the affidavit served under (b);
(d)
In accordance with Rule 308, cross-examinations
may take place concerning the affidavits served under (b) and (c);
(e)
The time limits for (c) and (d) are those set
out in Rules 307 and 308;
(f)
Within the time specified under Rule 309, Access
Copyright shall prepare a supplementary application record containing the
materials specified under Rule 309 that do not appear in its corrected
application record; also at that time, Access Copyright shall file its
memorandum of fact and law;
(g)
The respondents (comprised of two
separately-represented groups) shall file their records and memoranda of fact
and law in accordance with Rule 310; for clarity, those records should include
all of the respondent’s affidavits, whether filed in response to Access
Copyright’s new affidavit or filed in response to Access Copyright’s original
application record;
(h)
Time thereafter shall run in accordance with the
Federal Court Rules.
[34]
This motion was about a minor, fixable mistake.
As long as humans are involved in litigating cases, no matter how much they try
to prevent mistakes, mistakes like this will sometimes happen, even by excellent
counsel. Happily, most procedural mistakes, like the one in this case, do not
seriously implicate clients’ rights. Mistakes of this sort should be nothing
more than a minor inconvenience during the drive to the ultimate destination—a
judicial determination on the merits that to all is proper and fair.
[35]
But here, the parties pulled over to the side of
the road and stopped to fight, forgetting the destination. After Access
Copyright made its mistake, the respondents wrote, pointing out the mistake.
Despite the clarity of the relevant rules, Access Copyright dug in its heels,
maintaining its position rather than reassessing it. In reaction to that, the respondents
brought their motion. But they too showed inflexibility, forcefully asserting their
position that Access Copyright should be prevented in the judicial review from
using any of the material it improperly included in its application record, whether
or not it was needed by the Court. In counter-reaction to that, Access
Copyright brought a counter-motion—one that in the end is unnecessary for this
Court to determine—proposing a lesser, more practical remedy. In that
counter-motion, it laudably advanced submissions showing an awareness of its
mistake. But that changed nothing: everyone has remained stuck on the side of
the road.
[36]
All have acted in good faith, representing their
clients’ interests vigorously, advocating their positions with characteristic
excellence. But here initial intransigence begat a motion with remedial overreach,
and remedial overreach begat a counter-motion. Forgotten was the destination:
this Court, as a practical problem-solver, simply wants to determine the judicial
review properly and fairly on the merits, using a proper and fair evidentiary
record. The focus should have been on a fix, not a fight.
[37]
An order shall issue in accordance with these
reasons. There shall be no order for costs.
"David Stratas"