Date: 20060911
Docket: T-237-02
Citation: 2006 FC 1084
BETWEEN:
BAUER
NIKE HOCKEY INC.
Plaintiff/
Defendant by Counterclaim
and
EASTON
SPORTS CANADA INC.
Defendant/
Plaintiff by Counterclaim
REASONS FOR
ORDER
MORNEAU P.
[1]
On July 21, 2005 this Court issued a decision in connection essentially
with motions brought by each party in this patent infringement case following
the second round of discovery.
[2]
In January of 2006, a third round of discovery was held. In addition,
the Defendant and Plaintiff by Counterclaim (Easton) proceeded at the same time
with the examination of a Mr. Chenevert, the inventor of the patent in suit.
Mr. Chenevert was examined though under rule 237(4) of the Federal Courts
Rules (the Rules). As an inevitable result of said further discovery, the
Court has now before it two motions, to wit one motion by each party to
adjudicate on objections raised during the third round of discovery of the
parties’ representatives. In the case of the Plaintiff and Defendant by
Counterclaim (Bauer), its motion also seeks various other relief.
Background
[3]
As indicated in my decision of July 21, 2005, Bauer’s action concerns
Canadian Letters Patent No. 2 302 953 (the ‘953 patent) relating to a one-piece
quarter for a skate boot and a skate boot comprising such a quarter.
[4]
Bauer alleges in its current pleadings that Easton has infringed claims
1, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of the ‘953 patent by the manufacture and sale of different
models of skate boots in Canada.
[5]
Easton has denied that any claims of the patent in suit have been
infringed, and has filed a counterclaim alleging that the ‘953 patent is
invalid on a number of grounds, including obviousness, lack of inventiveness,
prior public disclosure, lack of utility and misleading statements in the
background section of the alleged invention made, according to Easton, to
attempt to characterize the uninventive structure of the skate as inventive.
[6]
Central to this case are claims 1 and 7 of the ‘953 patent.
[7]
Claim 1 provides as follows:
1. A
skate boot comprising a sole, a front portion for enclosing a wearer’s
toes, a rear portion for enclosing a wearer’s heel and ankle, and a medial and
lateral portion for enclosing the sides of a wearer’s foot, said rear portion
and said medial and lateral portions comprising:
- a
quarter medial portion and a quarter lateral portion integrally connected
together in a one piece construction and being folded at a symmetry line
to form a U-shaped skate boot structure, each said quarter portions extending
upwardly along said symmetry line defining a heel and ankle portion of said
skate boot structure and extending outwardly from said symmetry line in a
narrowing profile for defining both sides of said skate boot structure; and
- a
tendon guard secured to said quarter medial portion and quarter lateral
portion at a junction line in a side-by-side fashion thereby resulting in
said rear portion of said skate boot having an angular profile defined by
said tendon guard and said quarter medial and lateral portions at said
junction line.
[8]
Claim 7 provides as follows:
7. A method of fabricating a skate boot
comprising the steps of:
-
cutting a one-piece element comprising a quarter medial portion, a
quarter lateral portion, a medial foxing portion and a lateral foxing portion,
said quarter medial portion and said quarter lateral portion, together defining
an upper edge of said one-piece element;
- cutting
a tendon guard having a lower edge;
- folding
said one-piece element at a symmetry line to form a U-shaped structure;
- sewing
said lower edge of said tendon guard to said upper edge of said one-piece
element end to end to form a butt point at a junction line, such that said
tendon guard defines an obtuse angle with said one-piece element;
- sewing
together said medial foxing portion and lateral foxing portion to form a curved
heel profile.
(My
emphasis.)
[9]
I shall deal first with Bauer’s motion, then with Easton’s.
I. Bauer's
Motion
[10]
By its motion, Bauer seeks the following six (6) remedies:
1. An
order granting it leave to serve and file a further amended statement of claim,
in terms of the pleading attached as Schedule “A” to its notice of motion;
2. An
order granting it leave to examine Mr. Marc Gagnon, the former President of
Rock Forest Footwear Inc., one of the manufacturers of the Defendant’s skates
in issue in this action;
3. An
order providing Bauer with leave to examine an alternate witness, if necessary,
in the event that Marc Gagnon identifies a more appropriate witness at his
examination;
4. An
order providing for the protection and maintenance of confidentiality of
certain documents, information and transcripts to be produced by the parties
during the course of this proceeding, in terms of the draft confidentiality
order attached as Schedule “C” to its notice of motion;
5. An
order requiring Mr. Ned Goldsmith, the representative of Easton, to:
(a) provide
answers to the outstanding questions which were ordered answered by the Court
on July 21, 2005;
(b) provide
answers to the outstanding questions from his examination for discovery on
January 20, 2006; and
(c) re-attend
a further examination for discovery at Smart & Biggar’s office in Montréal
at his own expense to answer all proper follow-up questions regarding the
answers provided in respect of (a) and (b) above;
6. Its
costs of the motion, and its costs of the examination for discovery on January
20, 2006 and the examination for discovery referred to in paragraph 5(c) above,
on a solicitor and client basis, to be payable forthwith.
[11]
I shall deal with the remedies sought by Bauer in the order in which they
are introduced above.
1. Leave
to serve and file a further amended statement of claim
[12]
As alluded to in my July 21, 2005 decision, in terms of the rules
applicable to amending pleadings, the following passage from Canderel Ltée
v. Canada, [1994] 1 F.C. 3 (C.A.), at 10, clearly reflects the liberalism
which the Court must exercise in such matters:
[. . .] while it is impossible to enumerate all the factors
that a judge must take into consideration in determining whether it is just, in
a given case, to authorize an amendment, the general rule is that an amendment
should be allowed at any stage of an action for the purpose of determining the
real questions in controversy between the parties, provided, notably, that the
allowance would not result in an injustice to the other party not capable of
being compensated by an award of costs and that it would serve the interests of
justice.
[13]
The Plaintiff’s requested amendments relate to the following:
(a) the
assignment of the ‘953 patent from the Plaintiff to NIKE International Limited
(Nike International);
(b) the
change of name of the Plaintiff to NIKE Bauer Hockey Inc. and the addition of
Nike International as a Plaintiff;
(c) the
addition of two additional models of the Defendant’s skates that are alleged to
infringe the ‘953 patent, namely the Typhoon and Synergy; and
(d) an
allegation that the Defendant has induced and procured its manufacturers Rock
Forest Footwear Inc. (Rock Forest) and Sakurai Sports also known as Try On Industries
(Sakurai) to infringe the ‘953 patent.
[14]
Bauer’s proposed amendments (a) and (b) are based on the alleged facts,
which appear undisputed, that by an assignment effective October 31, 2002,
Bauer assigned the ‘953 patent to the proposed plaintiff Nike International.
Bauer would be the exclusive licensee of Nike International under the patent
since November 1, 2002. Bauer would be a person claiming under the current
patentee Nike International.
[15]
Although, as pointed out by Easton, the assignment took place some years
ago, and Bauer’s representative has not been questioned on it during the
previous rounds of discovery, I am not satisfied, as claimed by Easton, that
the allowance of said late amendments would occasion significant and
unjustifiable delays. I am more inclined to believe that the amendments sought
would serve the interests of justice in clarifying who the real stakeholders
are with respect to the patent in suit. Therefore said amendments will be
allowed.
[16]
At the re-attendance of Bauer’s representative for a fourth, and in all
likelihood, final round of discovery, Easton shall be allowed to ask relevant
questions in relation to said assignment and any further amendment allowed
herein.
[17]
As to Bauer’s proposed amendment (c), since Easton does not oppose, per
se, the amendment due to my order of July 21, 2005 where a similar
amendment was allowed, proposed amendment (c) shall also be allowed.
[18]
As to proposed amendment (d), Bauer seeks by it to allege that Easton
has induced and procured its manufacturers Rock Forest and Sakurai to infringe
the ‘953 patent.
[19]
In Dableh v. Ontario Hydro (1996), 68 C.P.R. (3d) 129, at 148-149, the Federal Court of Appeal has reminded that the test with respect
to induced infringement entails:
(a) the
act of infringement must be completed by the direct infringer;
(b) completion
of the act of infringement must be influenced by the acts of the inducer;
without said influence, infringement would not otherwise take place; and
(c) the
inducer knows that his influence will result in the completion of the act of
infringement.
[20]
It would seriously appear that it is through previous rounds of
discovery that Bauer has gathered or extracted relevant information under each
head of the Dableh test which brings it now to sustain that Easton has
induced Rock Forest and Sakurai to infringe. Since Easton denies that any
infringing activity has ever taken place, proposed amendment (d) must be seen as
relating to a serious issue between the parties.
[21]
Even if one was to accept Easton’s position that Bauer has learned all
essential elements of information as early as during the first discovery round
of August 2003 and not through clarifications obtained progressively over the
years, this lateness on the part of Bauer to react could not be used to deny the
proposed amendment since Easton has not evidenced nor otherwise established its
allegation that the amendment would really occasion significant, unjustifiable
delays or would clearly prejudice the fair trial of the action herein.
[22]
In addition, it is not clear and obvious at this juncture that, based on
a limitation period argument, the Court could limit proposed amendment (d) to Easton
skate models manufactured and/or sold after May 31, 2000. In addition, Easton’s
counsel misread the decision of this Court of July 21, 2005 when he sustained
that the Court therein clearly established that all Easton’s models
manufactured or sold in and after 2004 cannot possibly infringe.
[23]
Finally, I cannot agree with Easton that the additional cause of action
of infringement by inducement would add nothing to the direct infringement
accusation put against Easton since it could place an additional burden on
Easton’s shoulder if and when comes the reference on damages.
[24]
Therefore, at the end of the day, I do not consider that it would be
unjust to allow proposed amendment (d). Almost to the contrary, this issue
merits to be tried in the interests of justice.
[25]
Proposed amendment (d) shall therefore be allowed.
[26]
Consequently, by an order accompanying these reasons, Bauer shall be granted
leave to serve and file a further amended statement of claim in terms of the
further amended statement of claim attached as Schedule “A” to its notice of
motion, save for the inclusion of HK Sports.
[27]
The Defendant Easton shall be granted leave in consequence to serve and
file a further amended statement of defence and counterclaim, and to discover
Bauer with respect to amendments brought to Bauer’s claim.
2. Leave
to examine Mr. Marc Gagnon, the former president of Rock Forest
[28]
The fundamental test to be met by a party for an order to examine a
non-party person is prescribed by rule 238. This rule reads:
|
238. (1)
A party to an action may bring a motion for leave to examine for discovery
any person not a party to the action, other than an expert witness for a
party, who might have information on an issue in the action.
(2) On a motion under subsection (1), the notice
of motion shall be served on the other parties and personally served on the
person to be examined.
(3) The Court may, on a motion under subsection
(1), grant leave to examine a person and determine the time and manner of conducting
the examination, if it is satisfied that
(a) the
person may have information on an issue in the action;
(b) the
party has been unable to obtain the information informally from the person or
from another source by any other reasonable means;
(c) it
would be unfair not to allow the party an opportunity to question the person
before trial; and
(d)
the
questioning will not cause undue delay, inconvenience or expense to the person
or to the other parties.
|
238. (1) Une partie à une action peut, par voie
de requête, demander l’autorisation de procéder à l’interrogatoire préalable
d’une personne qui n’est pas une partie, autre qu’un témoin expert d’une
partie, qui pourrait posséder des renseignements sur une question litigieuse
soulevée dans l’action.
(2) L’avis de la
requête visée au paragraphe (1) est signifié aux autres parties et, par voie
de signification à personne, à la personne que la partie se propose d’interroger.
(3) Par suite de la
requête visée au paragraphe (1), la Cour peut autoriser la partie
à interroger une personne et fixer la date et l’heure de l’interrogatoire et
la façon de procéder, si elle est convaincue, à la fois :
a) que la personne peut posséder des renseignements
sur une question litigieuse soulevée dans l’action;
b) que la partie n’a pu obtenir ces
renseignements de la personne de façon informelle ou d’une autre source par
des moyens raisonnables;
c) qu’il serait injuste de ne pas
permettre à la partie d’interroger la personne avant l’instruction;
d) que l’interrogatoire n’occasionnera pas
de retards, d’inconvénients ou de frais déraisonnables à la personne ou aux autres
parties.
|
[29]
Mr. Gagnon is the former president of Rock Forest. He was identified at
the previous examinations for discovery as one of Easton’s main contacts at Rock
Forest in relation to the skates in issue.
[30]
I am satisfied based on the motion records of the parties that Mr.
Gagnon might very well have information relevant to a number of issues between
the parties in this action including information as to why and at whose
suggestion the skates manufactured by Rock Forest allegedly had a one-piece
quarter as opposed to a two-piece quarter.
[31]
I am also satisfied, based on Bauer’s motion record, that Bauer has been
unable in the past to obtain the relevant information it sought informally from
Mr. Gagnon or from any other source including the Defendant Easton by any other
reasonable means. In this case, I agree with Bauer that Mr. Gagnon is admirably
situated to have information relevant to the issues in this action, even more
so now that Bauer is allowed to plead that Rock Forest was material in
assisting Easton to commit induced infringement.
[32]
Bauer’s motion record brings me also to conclude that it has also met
the requirements of subparagraphs 238(3)(c) and (d) of the rules.
[33]
Finally, I do not agree with Easton’s position that rule 238 cannot be
relied on to examine a person where said person is to be interrogated not in
his individual personal capacity strictly but, as here, as a corporation’s
representative.
[34]
To bolster its position, Easton referred the Court to the decision of my
late colleague Hargrave in Bayside Towing Ltd. v. C.P.R. (2000), 187 F.T.R. 247, affirmed 194 F.T.R. 158 (hereinafter Bayside). However, even if in Bayside
the peculiar request by the Defendant therein to examine a local tug boat
operator under rule 238 brought my colleague to discuss at one point whether
rule 238 should receive a similar interpretation as rule 28 of British Columbia
which appears to have been interpreted as not allowing the examination of a
person in her capacity of corporative representative, I do not read Bayside
as conclusive authority that rule 238 should receive a similar restriction. In other
words, I do not read Bayside as preventing a rule 238 examination of Mr.
Gagnon as former president of Rock Forest.
[35]
Consequently, Bauer shall be granted leave to examine Mr. Gagnon, the
former president of Rock Forest. It is interesting to note that although
personally served with Bauer’s motion under subsection 238(2) of the rules, Mr.
Gagnon, who is now apparently represented by counsel, did not appear on the
motion to argue against Bauer’s request.
3. Leave
to examine an alternate witness
[36]
By this request, Bauer seeks leave from this Court to examine an
alternate witness, if necessary, in the event that Mr. Gagnon identifies a more
appropriate witness at his examination.
[37]
I intend to deny Bauer such remedy since I consider that it is
premature, and to proceed otherwise would be to grant Bauer a certain blanket authorization
where under rule 238 for each specific person, whether identified by Mr. Gagnon
or otherwise, the step-by-step approach of subsection 238(3) must be satisfied.
4. The issuance of
a confidentiality order in terms of the draft confidentiality order attached as
Schedule “C” to Bauer’s notice of motion
[38]
Said Schedule “C” provides for a “counsel’s eye only” order. Although
Bauer in the recent past thought it had or was close to get the agreement of Easton
for the issuance of such an order, and therefore did not expect, in putting up
its motion record, that Easton would challenge such remedy, it appears it is
now clearly the case.
[39]
In order to resolve this impasse, I intend to deny Bauer’s request for a
confidentiality order but with leave to reapply with a proper motion record in
that regard. This, Easton must realize, is not instrumental in moving the case
forward and could cause additional delay regardless of whether Bauer gets or
not the confidentiality order it is seeking.
5. An order
requiring Mr. Ned Goldsmith, the representative of Easton, to:
(a) provide
answers to the outstanding questions which were ordered answered by the Court
on July 21, 2005;
(b) provide
answers to the outstanding questions from his examination for discovery on
January 20, 2006; and
(c) re-attend
a further examination for discovery at Smart & Biggar’s office in Montréal
at his own expense to answer all proper follow-up questions regarding the
answers provided in respect of (a) and (b) above;
5(a) Schedule
“A” questions
[40]
The outstanding questions which were ordered to be answered by the Court
on July 21, 2005 have been listed by each party as a schedule “A” to their
respective written representations.
[41]
As discussed at the hearing, in order to satisfy this part of the motion,
Easton shall futher answer question (vi) found at paragraph 30 of Bauer’s
written representations on this motion.
[42]
As to the outstanding questions from the examination of Easton’s representative
on January 20, 2006, the parties have listed in their schedule “B” the
questions for which the response provided is seen by Bauer as incomplete or non
responsive and, in their schedule “C” the questions for which no response,
according to Bauer, has been provided.
5(b) Schedule
“B” questions
[43]
In this category, I am satisfied that Questions R-151(a) and (b) have
now been satisfactorily answered. No further answer is required.
[44]
As for Question R-152, it has been answered only partially. Easton shall
in addition provide the name of the supplier of the Texcore material and the
supplier’s description and specifications.
[45]
Question R-153 has now been sufficiently answered. As for Question
R-175, Easton shall comply with its commitment when possible.
[46]
Question R-177 (or perhaps R-178) deals partially with Easton’s
estimated market share in 2005. This information is relevant to Bauer’s
allegation of commercial success in this action. As recognized by Bauer at the
hearing, it has now been satisfactorily answered. No further answer is
required.
5(b) Schedule
“C” questions
[47]
“Unanswered question (page 51, lines 5-17)” has now been answered to the
best of Easton’s ability. No further answer is required.
[48]
As for Question R-176, it shall be answered as phrased - minus its first
three words – since it is relevant to Bauer’s allegation of commercial success,
more particularly with Bauer’s assertion that Easton skates that embodied the
invention disclosed by the ‘953 patent met commercial success upon their
introduction on the market. I do not see this question, therefore, as a fishing
expedition and Bauer in its approach needs some leeway as to the extent of the
information it requires to demonstrate commercial success.
[49]
In order to fully protect Easton’s answer to this question pending the
outcome of Bauer’s confidentiality motion, Easton shall convey its answer to
Bauer’s counsel under confidential seal and for his eyes only.
5(c) Re-attendance
for further examination
[50]
Consequently, the representative of Easton will be ordered to answer the
questions herein ordered to be answered and shall re-attend at a further
examination for discovery at Smart & Biggar’s offices in Montréal, and at
his own expense, to answer all proper follow-up questions arising from the
questions ordered to be answered.
[51]
As to the different costs headings claimed by Bauer in its notice of
motion and eleborated upon in paragraphs 84 to 87 of its written
representations and at the hearing, I am satisfied that the whole situation is
adequately addressed by granting Bauer its costs on this motion under Column
III of Tariff B. The other costs remedies are dismissed.
[52]
I shall now turn to Easton’s motion.
II. Easton's Motion
[53]
By its motion, Easton requires this Court to order Bauer to answer
questions allegedly improperly refused, on the one hand, at the third round of
discoveries of Mr. Ken Covo, Bauer’s representative (the Covo questions,
Schedule “A” to Easton’s motion), and, on the other hand, at the examination of
the inventor of the ‘953 patent, Mr. Chenevert (the Chenevert questions,
Schedule “B” to Easton’s motion).
[54]
At the outset, and although this Court is puzzled as to why Easton has
not accompanied its motion with an affidavit, the Court will not follow Bauer’s
suggestion to dismiss altogether Easton’s motion on that basis. This approach
would reflect too drastic a measure. In addition, this Court is not at all
convinced that such a lack of affidavit has in the circumstances of this case
really prejudiced or hindered Bauer’s ability to respond to Easton’s motion.
[55]
As to the law on questions on discovery, in addition to what the
Court said in its July 20, 2005 decision, it is appropriate here to remember at
this juncture that Mr. Justice Hugessen, in Eli Lilly and Co. v. Apotex Inc.
(2000), 8 C.P.R.
(4th) 413 (upheld on appeal, at 12 C.P.R. (4th) 127), stated the following at
pages 414-15 concerning the relevance of the inventors’ knowledge about the
obviousness of an invention:
I am not prepared to order the plaintiffs to produce
documents relating to the state of knowledge of prior art on the part of the
inventors or of the patentees at the time of the issue of the patents in suit.
Such knowledge can only be relevant to the pleaded issue of obviousness. The
test for obviousness is, in my view, and there is ample authority to this
effect, an objective test. The touchstone is the person skilled in the art,
whether or not the invention would have been obvious to that person. The actual
knowledge of the inventor or inventors is irrelevant.
(Emphasis added.)
(See also the decision of the
Supreme Court of Canada in Free World Trust v. Electro Santé Inc.,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 1024, at page 1061.)
[56]
In addition, a party may not be required, on an examination for
discovery, to answer a question that forces it to express an opinion, whether
it is an expert opinion, its interpretation of a patent or its beliefs. In Philips Export B.V. v. Windmere Consumer Products Inc.
(1986), 8 C.P.R. (3d) 505, it
is stated, at page 508:
Question 467, which must be read with Q. 466, asks for the
belief of the plaintiff. In both the Smith, Kline & French case and
in Sperry Corp. v. John Deere Ltd. and al. (1984), 82 C.P.R. (2d) 1, it
is stated that opinion cannot be asked, as a rule, of a person being
examined who is not an expert and that a party cannot be asked to express its
position in terms of mental attitudes.
(Emphasis added.)
(See also Rivtow Straits
Ltd. c. B.C. Marine Shipbuilders Ltd., [1977] 1 F.C. 735, at page 736.)
[57]
As a preliminary remark concerning these two categories, the Court will
not adjudicate on questions which are not in issue anymore under this motion because,
inter alia, Bauer has undertaken to answer, the question has been
withdrawn or both parties agreed that a question has been sufficiently
answered.
[58]
That having been established, we can now turn our attention first to the
Covo questions. Then, we shall address the Chenevert questions. Given that the
parties have not followed the same categorization in dealing with the Covo and
Chenevert questions, I have elected to follow Bauer’s categorization in that
regard.
A. The
Covo Questions
[59]
The Covo questions are distributed into the following five (5)
categories:
1. Questions alleged to be relevant to
validity
(i) Profile/angle
(ii) Obtuse angle
(iii) Tendon guard
2. Question alleged to be relevant to
validity/misleading statements
3. Questions alleged to be relevant to
invalidity/prior disclosure
4. Questions alleged to be relevant to
validity/commercial success
5. Question alleged to be relevant to
validity/existence of documents
Subcategory 1(i)
[60]
Question 7 in my appreciation has been fully answered including whether
the press gives form to the skate boot upper. No further answer is required.
[61]
Question 32 has been answered as phrased. It need not be answered
further. However, question 30 as found at page 27 of Easton’s written
representations shall be answered since it is in the same category of
questions.
[62]
Question 37 as framed calls for the representative to speculate and
provide an opinion. It need not be answered.
[63]
Questions 49 and 50 call for Bauer to essentially perform an exercise in
the nature of an experiment using its back part moulder. It is irrelevant and
improper a demand. The question need not be answered.
[64]
As for questions 337-338, Bauer shall further answer the questions put
by Easton at paragraph 30 of its written representations.
Subcategory 1(ii)
[65]
Question 123 under this category shall be answered by Bauer. By this
exercise, I do not consider that Bauer falls directly or indirectly into the
interpretation per se of a term of the patent.
Subcategory 1(iii)
[66]
None of the questions are allowed based on the written representations
submitted in response by Bauer.
Category 2
[67]
This category need not be addressed here as Bauer undertook to answer.
Category 3
[68]
Question 80 has been satisfactorily answered. No need to answer further.
Category 4
[69]
Bauer has acknowledged that it shall answer Questions 266, 268, 273,
286, 288, 294, 295, 296, 368, 403, 415 to 417 should the Court order, at
Bauer’s request, an answer to Question 176 (see supra, paragraph 48).
Since the Court did order said Question 176 to be answered, the questions
listed herein shall be answered.
[70]
As done for Easton’s answer, Bauer shall convey its answers to Easton’s
counsel under confidential seal and for his eyes only. Questions 421 and 422
shall be answered following the same process.
[71]
Other outstanding questions under this category need not be answered
based on the written representations submitted in response by Bauer.
Category 5
[72]
Question 141 in this category shall be answered.
[73]
Consequently, the representative of Bauer will be ordered to answer the
questions ordered herein to be answered and shall re-attend at a further
examination for discovery, at his own expense, to answer all proper follow-up
questions arising from the questions ordered to be answered.
B. The
Chenevert Questions
[74]
As alluded to earlier, Mr. Chenevert is the named inventor of the patent
in suit and he did assign said patent to the present plaintiff. He was examined
pursuant to rule 237(4) as the assignor of the patent. As held by the Federal
Court of Appeal in Richter Gedeon Vegyészeti Gyar Rt v. Merck & Co.
(1995), 62 C.P.R. (3d) 137, at 143-144, the purpose of examination of an
assignor is to enable the examining party to obtain facts (not opinions or
speculations) that are relevant to issues in an action.
[75]
The Chenevert questions can be divided, as done by Bauer, into the
following two categories:
1. Questions
alleged to relate to the construction of prior art, skates/inventiveness of the
patent in suit; and
2. Questions
alleged to be related to misleading statements/inventiveness.
Category
1
[76]
As for all questions identified by Bauer at paragraph 67 of its written
representations, I agree with this party that, as elaborated at said
paragraph 67 (see also paragraphs 69 and 70), said questions are questions
which call for Mr. Chenevert’s interpretation of various terms of the patent in
suit or require his opinion as to whether elements of said patent are found in
the patents or products alleged by Easton to be prior art. These issues are to
be addressed by expert witnesses at trial. Therefore these questions need not
be answered.
[77]
Question 66 shall be answered since it goes to in-line skates prior art
on which Easton intends to rely.
Category
2
[78]
The outstanding questions under this category require Mr. Chenevert,
much like under category 1, to speculate regarding a hypothetical situation and
to provide his opinion as to the possible result. Therefore, for the reasons
provided by Bauer at paragraphs 73 to 77 of its written representations, they do
not need to be answered.
[79]
In consequence, Mr. Chenevert’s examination has come to an end and there
is no need to order him to answer any outstanding questions or to order his
re-attendance.
[80]
As to costs, the remedies sought by Easton are denied and costs on this
motion are granted to Bauer under Column III of the Tariff since Bauer is more
than largely successful on this motion.
“Richard
Morneau”
Montréal, Quebec
September
11, 2006
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-237-02
STYLE OF CAUSE: BAUER
NIKE HOCKEY INC.
and
EASTON
SPORTS CANADA INC.
PLACE OF
HEARING: Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF
HEARING: July
31, 2006
REASONS FOR ORDER: MORNEAU P.
DATED: September
11, 2006
APPEARANCES:
|
François Guay
|
FOR THE PLAINTIFF/
DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM
|
|
Gordon J.
Zimmerman
|
FOR THE DEFENDANT/
PLAINTIFF BY COUNTERCLAIM
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
|
Smart &
Biggar
Ottawa, Ontario
|
FOR THE PLAINTIFF/
DEFENDANT BY COUNTERCLAIM
|
|
Borden Ladner
Gervais
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR THE DEFENDANT/
PLAINTIFF BY COUNTERCLAIM
|