Docket: T-646-15
Citation:
2016 FC 387
Ottawa, Ontario, April 7, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Manson
BETWEEN:
|
CANADIAN
STANDARDS ASSOCIATION
|
Applicant
|
and
|
P.S. KNIGHT CO. LTD. AND GORDON KNIGHT
|
Respondents
|
SUPPLEMENTAL JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
In my earlier Judgement and Reasons in this
matter, dated March 8, 2016, reported at 2016 FC 294, I requested further
submissions from the parties concerning costs. These are my Supplemental
Judgement and Reasons on that outstanding issue.
[2]
On March 8, 2016, in Canadian Standards
Association v PS Knight Co Ltd , 2016 FC 294, I decided that: (1) Canadian
Standards Association [CSA] owns the copyright in the 2015 CSA Code, and that
there is valid copyright in the 2015 CSA Code; (2) the Defendant, P.S. Knight
Co. Ltd. [P.S. Knight] infringed CSA’s copyright in the 2015 CSA Code; (3) CSA
is entitled to an injunction restraining reproduction, publication and sale of
any infringing works by P.S. Knight, as well as delivery-up of any such infringing
works; (4) CSA is entitled to statutory damages in the amount of $5000, with
pre-and-post judgment interest, and (5) costs should be awarded to CSA.
[3]
The parties were to submit their positions in
writing to the Court on the issue of costs by March 22, 2016.
[4]
The Applicant, CSA, served and filed its
submissions on time; the Respondents, P.S. Knight and Gordon Knight, filed
their written submissions late on April 1, 2016.
[5]
The Court does not treat lightly the
Respondents’ failure to comply with the court-ordered deadline to submit their
written position on costs. Nonetheless, the Respondents’ submissions will be
taken into account.
[6]
The Applicant requests a lump sum costs award
for fees and disbursements in the amount of $120,000. The total fees incurred
by the Applicant exceeded $238,000, including $100,000 spent on prosecuting
CSA’s quia timet injunction, which was adjourned on agreement by the
parties pending an attempt at mediation (which was unsuccessful) and which
subsequently resulted in an expedited hearing, and my judgment on March 8,
2016.
[7]
The Applicant requests $80,000 in fees, or about
one third of the total fees incurred. It also requests disbursements in the
amount of $40,000, for a total of $120,000 for fees and disbursements.
[8]
The Applicant submitted a summary of invoices
for fees charged, as well as a summary of disbursements covering: (i)
photocopying, binding and scanning services ($2,000); (ii) filing fees,
couriers and process services ($250); (iii) legal research services ($2,000);
(iv) travel and accommodation re: cross-examinations in Calgary ($3,500); (v)
transcript fees ($2,000); (vi) David Teece expert fees in the injunction motion
($25,000).
[9]
The Applicant submits that its costs request is
reasonable for the following reasons:
- CSA succeeded on
the substantive issues involving copyright ownership and validity of the
2015 CSA Code and infringement of that code by P.S. Knight;
- CSA’s injunction
motion was contested up to the eve of the hearing on the merits, until
P.S. Knight agreed to effectively abide by an injunction up to the hearing
of the application by giving an undertaking not to sell any alleged
infringing copies until a decision of this Court was rendered;
- The CSA Code is
one of CSA’s most important and valuable publications;
- P.S. Knight and
Gordon Knight advanced complex theories and issues, including a
substantial number of authorities for their defences;
- P.S. Knight and
Gordon Knight admitted that the purpose of their Knight Code was to
inflict harm in the marketplace to their competitor, the CSA, and to
create a litigation war chest; and
- Gordon Knight’s
post hearing conduct, suggesting that the CSA’s disreputable organization
colluded with government actors, and that any appeal from my decision
should be an easy win.
[10]
The Respondents argue that the Applicant should
be entitled to costs in the mid-point of Column III of Tariff B, given that:
- There are no
principled reasons to depart from the normal Rule that a successful party
is entitled to costs in the mid-point of Column III of Tariff B;
- The matter was
not complex;
- The Applicant
was not completely successful:
- Personal
liability of Gordon Knight was denied;
- The section 53
presumption of ownership was denied;
- The issue of
punitive and exemplary damages was denied;
- Schedule B of
the Applicant’s costs submissions merely lists invoices, without detail;
- The Respondents
should be awarded costs of the abandoned injunction application of the
Applicant under Rule 402 of the Federal Courts Rules;
- The revenue of
the CSA Code only represents 1.7 to 2.1% of its total revenue; and
- The post
hearing conduct of Gordon Knight is irrelevant.
[11]
While this case may not fall squarely within the
decision in Air Canada v Toronto Port Authority, 2010 FC 1335, I find
that a lump sum award in excess of standard costs assessed in accordance with
the middle of Column III, Tariff B, is warranted.
[12]
In reviewing the evidence and my reasons for
judgment, I have no doubt that the Applicant’s injunction application had merit
and was made necessary by the threatened activities of the Respondents to
infringe the Applicant’s copyright in the 2015 CSA Code. The fact that the
Respondents gave an undertaking not to sell any infringing copies until a
determination by this Court on the merits of the proceeding was instrumental in
the injunction application being held in abeyance – it was not abandoned, as
suggested by the Respondents.
[13]
Moreover, in my view, the novel and unusual
defences raised by the Respondents concerning ownership and validity of the
copyright in the 2015 CSA Code made this matter unnecessarily complex.
[14]
However, I do agree with the Respondents that
the post hearing conduct of Gordon Knight, however scornful and derisive, is
not a factor to be considered in determining the costs award to the Applicant.
[15]
I have also considered the Respondents’
arguments regarding the Applicant’s split success in this matter. However,
given the bulk of the evidence tendered, and the Applicant’s substantive
success on the real merits of this case, I agree with the Applicant’s position
that success weighs heavily in the Applicant’s favour.
[16]
The matter is complex, and the award of a lump
sum is preferred for its simplicity, time and effort savings, and will properly
compensate the Applicant (Philip Morris Products SA v Marlboro Canada
Limited, 2015 FCA 9 at para 4).
[17]
Accordingly, in my discretion, I award costs
based on a percentage of one third (1/3) of the Applicant’s actual fees and
disbursements in the amount of $96,336 (or 1/3 of $289,009).
[18]
Finally, while the conduct of the Respondents
was certainly questionable and showed little or no regard for CSA’s copyright
in the 2015 CSA Code, I do not find that in the limited context of this
proceeding it amounts to conduct so reprehensible, scandalous or outrageous as
to justify solicitor-client costs - such conduct is in fact the subject matter
of concurrent proceedings in the Ontario Court, to be decided in a different
forum.