Date: 20110502
Docket: A-255-10
Citation: 2011 FCA 147
BETWEEN:
JAMES T. GRENON
Appellant
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT
SHARLOW J.A.
[1]
The
appellant James Grenon is appealing an interlocutory order of Justice Campbell
Miller of the Tax Court of Canada (2010 TCC 364). The order dismissed Mr.
Grenon’s motion to compel answers to certain questions posed in his examination
for discovery of a Crown witness, and to require the Crown to present a
different person for further examination. For the reasons that follow,
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Standard of
review
[2]
The
standard of review of a decision granting or dismissing a motion to compel
answers on discovery is well explained by Justice Dawson, writing for the Court
in Canada v. Lehigh Cement Ltd., 2011 FCA 120, at paragraphs 24 and 25:
24. The scope of permissible discovery
depends upon the factual and procedural context of the case, informed by an
appreciation of the applicable legal principles. See Bristol-Myers Squibb
Co. v. Apotex Inc., 2007 FCA 379, 162 A.C.W.S. (3d) 911 at
paragraph 35. In the words of this Court in Eurocopter v. Bell Helicopter
Textron Canada Ltd., 2010 FCA 142, 407 N.R. 180 at paragraph 13, while
“the general principles established in the case law are useful, they do not provide
a magic formula that is applicable to all situations. In such matters, it is
necessary to follow the case-by-case rule.”
25. It
follows from this that the determination of whether a particular question is
permissible is a fact based inquiry. On appeal a judge’s determination will
be reviewed as a question of mixed fact and law. Therefore, the Court will
only intervene where a palpable and overriding error or an extricable error
of law is established. See Housen v. Nikolaisen, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235,
2002 SCC 33; Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Apotex Inc., as cited above,
at paragraph 35.
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[3]
This
is essentially the standard of review proposed by Mr. Grenon in this case. The
Crown, on the other hand, relies on Kossow v. Canada, 2009 FCA 83. In
that case Justice Létourneau, writing for the Court, said this at paragraph 24:
Before proceeding to a review of the
questions submitted for discovery, the judge laid down the legal principles
that should govern this review, supported by the applicable legislation and jurisprudence.
I see no error in her approach. It is not the role of this Court to second
guess her appreciation of the relevancy of the questions, the appropriateness
of allowing follow-up questions and the adequacy of the answers given unless
there has been a misuse of her discretion or an error in principle on her
part: Beloit Canada Ltd. v. Valmet Oy (1992), 45
C.P.R. (3d) 116, (F.C.A.).
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[4]
I
do not read Kossow as stating a different standard of review than Lehigh
or the cases cited in Lehigh. A decision on a motion to compel an answer
to a discovery question usually requires a determination of relevance (a question
of mixed fact and law), but it may also involve the exercise of the judge’s
residual discretion not to order a question to be answered even if the
relevance test is met. This is also explained by Justice Dawson in Lehigh,
at paragraphs 34 and 35:
34. The jurisprudence establishes that a
question is relevant when there is a reasonable likelihood that it might
elicit information which may directly or indirectly enable the party seeking
the answer to advance its case or to damage the case of its adversary, or
which fairly might lead to a train of inquiry that may either advance the
questioning party’s case or damage the case of its adversary. Whether this
test is met will depend on the allegations the questioning party seeks to
establish or refute. See Eurocopter at paragraph 10, Eli Lilly
Canada Inc. v. Novopharm Ltd., 2008 FCA 287, 381 N.R. 93 at
paragraphs 61 to 64; Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Apotex Inc. at
paragraphs 30 to 33.
35.
Where relevance is established the Court retains discretion to disallow a
question. The exercise of this discretion requires a weighing of the
potential value of the answer against the risk that a party is abusing the
discovery process. See Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Apotex Inc. at
paragraph 34. The Court might disallow a relevant question where responding
to it would place undue hardship on the answering party, where there are
other means of obtaining the information sought, or where “the question forms
part of a ‘fishing expedition’ of vague and far-reaching scope”: Merck
& Co. v. Apotex Inc., 2003 FCA 438, 312 N.R. 273 at paragraph 10; Apotex
Inc. v. Wellcome Foundation Ltd., 2008 FCA 131, 166 A.C.W.S. (3d) 850 at
paragraph 3. These are the principles to be applied to determine the
propriety of the appellant’s requests.
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[5]
In
this case, Justice Miller refused to order the disputed questions to be
answered because he concluded that the answers would not meet the test of
relevance. Therefore, his decision must stand unless it is based on an error of
law or a palpable and overriding error of fact.
Background
[6]
In
1999 and 2000, Mr. Grenon incurred legal expenses in litigation about child
support obligations arising after the breakdown of his marriage. In computing
his income for those years under the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1
(5th Supp.), he deducted those legal expenses. The deductions were disallowed
on reassessment. Mr. Grenon objected to the reassessment without success, and in
2002, he appealed to the Tax Court.
[7]
There
is no specific provision in the Income Tax Act permitting the deduction
of legal expenses incurred in child support litigation. A claim for such a
deduction is based on the combined operation of general charging provisions of
the Income Tax Act, sections 2, 3 and 9.
[8]
Broadly
speaking, the effect of those provisions is that in determining a taxpayer’s
income for income tax purposes, any income from a business or property must be
included, but any loss from a business or property may be deducted. Income is
the amount by which revenue exceeds the expenses incurred to earn it. If
expenses exceed revenue, the difference is a loss.
[9]
The
Income Tax Act contains numerous rules governing the computation of income
or loss from property. Many limitations on the deductibility of expenses are
found in section 18 of the Income Tax Act. For example, the provision in
issue in this case, paragraph 18(1)(a), establishes a purpose test for the
deductibility of expenses. It reads as follows:
18. (1) In computing the income of a business or property no
deduction shall be made in respect of
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18. (1) Dans le calcul du revenu du contribuable tiré d’une
entreprise ou d’un bien, les éléments suivants ne sont pas déductibles :
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(a)
an outlay or expense except to the extent that it was made or incurred by the
taxpayer for the purpose of gaining or producing income from the business or
property….
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a)
les
dépenses, sauf dans la mesure où elles ont été engagées ou effectuées par le
contribuable en vue de tirer un revenu de l’entreprise ou du bien […].
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[10]
According
to the pleadings filed in the Tax Court, the Crown accepts that Mr. Grenon
incurred the legal expenses in issue in the amounts and in the years claimed,
and also accepts that the legal expenses were incurred to pay for litigation
involving child support. However, the Crown maintains that the legal expenses
were not incurred by Mr. Grenon for the purpose of gaining or producing income
from property, with the result that paragraph 18(1)(a) bars his claim.
[11]
The
pleadings disclose a dispute as to purpose of the child support litigation. In
the 3rd Amended Notice of Appeal dated May 14, 2008, Mr. Grenon
alleges that he is the joint custodial parent of his children and that he
incurred the legal expenses in obtaining a court order for child support. Paragraph
11 of the 3rd Amended Notice of Appeal sets out Mr. Grenon’s
allegation of a factual connection between the child support litigation and the
Federal Child Support Guidelines, SOR/97-175, enacted under the Divorce
Act, R.S.C.,
1985, c. 3 (2nd Supp.):
11. The Appellant was required to incur
these legal fees to establish the proper amount and obtain an order for child
support in relation to the joint financial obligation of the Appellant and
his former spouse to financially support their children both generally and
under the provisions of the Divorce Act and the Federal Child
Support Guidelines (the “Guidelines”). The Order granted by the
Court provided for an amount less than that sought by the Appellant’s spouse.
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[12]
In
paragraph 7 of the Crown’s Reply to the 3rd Amended Notice of Appeal
dated July 10, 2008, the Crown alleges that the Minister assumed when issuing
the disputed reassessments that Mr. Grenon was the non custodial parent of the
children, and that he incurred the legal expenses to defend an action commenced
by his former spouse in which she sought spousal and child support.
[13]
The
Crown relies on a line of jurisprudence, most recently summarized in Nadeau
v. M.N.R., [2004] 1 F.C.R. 587; 2003 FCA 400,
establishing that a deduction
for legal expenses incurred to defend against a claim for child support is
barred by paragraph 18(1)(a) because such legal expenses are not
incurred for the purpose of earning income from property. Mr. Grenon challenges
the Crown’s application of paragraph 18(1)(a), and in the alternative
asserts a number of constitutional arguments stated in his pleadings (every
element of which is contested by the Crown).
[14]
Before
describing Mr. Grenon’s constitutional arguments, it is necessary to mention a
previous Tax Court decision in relation to this matter. In June of 2006,
Justice Beaubier disposed of three motions by Mr. Grenon relating to the
conduct of the Tax Court appeal (2006 TCC 342). One motion was for “advice and
directions respecting the Court's jurisdiction as to the constitutionality of
the Federal Child Support Guidelines.” Justice Beaubier’s
comment on that point is as follows:
This is answered by stating that in
this appeal of an assessment under the Income Tax Act
("the Act"), this Court may rule as to
matters affected by that assessment under the Act.
But in and of themselves, the Federal Child Support
Guidelines ("the Guidelines") are
outside of the jurisdiction of this Court as set forth in the Tax Court of Canada Act.
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[15]
The
second motion was for an adjournment of the Tax Court proceedings until Mr.
Grenon could have another court determine the constitutionality of the Guidelines.
That motion was dismissed, in part on the basis that the deductibility of the
legal expenses in issue would be determined by the Income Tax Act, not
the Guidelines. The third motion was for leave to file the 3rd
Amended Notice of Appeal, which was granted in part.
[16]
Mr.
Grenon appealed Justice Beaubier’s decision on a number of grounds, including
reasonable apprehension of bias. The Crown also cross-appealed. The appeal was
dismissed and the cross-appeal was allowed to correct an obvious mistake in the
form of the 3rd Amended Notice of Appeal approved by Justice Beaubier
(2007 FCA 239). Mr. Grenon’s application for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Canada was dismissed on December 6, 2007 (S.C.C. Bulletin, 2007,
p. 1795).
[17]
I
note parenthetically that Mr. Grenon commenced an action in the Alberta Court
of Queen’s Bench to challenge the constitutionality of the Guidelines.
His action was dismissed on the basis that he had no standing, and also on the
basis that his action was a collateral attack on his divorce judgment and was an
abuse of process because Mr. Grenon could have raised his constitutional
challenge in his divorce proceedings but chose not to do so: Grenon v.
Canada (Attorney General), 2007 ABQB 403. He did not appeal that decision.
[18]
What
remains of Mr. Grenon’s constitutional argument after the decision of Justice
Beaubier is stated at length in the 3rd Amended Notice of Appeal.
Mr. Grenon argues that if paragraph 18(1)(a) is applied to bar the
deduction of the legal expenses in issue, then that provision, or its
application in the circumstances of this case, infringes Mr. Grenon’s right to
equal protection and equal treatment under the law pursuant to subsection 15(1)
of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms because it imposes
differential treatment on him based on an enumerated ground (sex) or an analogous
ground (marital or custodial status), or creates an unconstitutional effect by
subsidizing the legal fees of one sex in child support disputes, but not the
other. I summarize as follows the key arguments in support of Mr. Grenon’s
constitutional challenge (from paragraph 25 of the 3rd Amended
Notice of Appeal):
a. A deduction permitted
for a legal expense is a public subsidy of that expense. The tax authorities
have adopted a policy of applying paragraph 18(1)(a) of the Income Tax Act
in a manner that permits a deduction for the legal expenses incurred by a
person asserting a claim for child support (the vast majority being women) but
not by a person defending such a claim (the vast majority being men). That
differential treatment is contrary to subsection 15(1) of the Charter,
and it is not saved by section 1 of the Charter because it is not a
reasonable limit prescribed by law that is demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society.
b. The discriminatory
application of paragraph 18(1)(a) in the context of legal expenses
incurred in child support litigation is based on incomplete, biased and
ill-informed assumptions with no basis in fact or appropriate analysis.
c. The Guidelines
are a central contextual factor in the systematic discrimination against men in
the field of family law. They create an inherent inequality between women as
support recipients and men as support payers, creating an unconstitutional
discriminatory effect on men. The particular deficiencies in the Guidelines
leading to this unconstitutional discrimination include:
i.
failing
to implement the principle in section 26.1 of the Divorce Act that
spouses have a joint financial obligation to support their children;
ii.
arbitrarily
focusing on the income of the paying parent without an actual or reasonable
assessment of the needs or actual costs of children;
iii.
failing
to account for the costs of having custody at any level less than 40%;
iv.
imposing
onerous factual presumptions and financial reporting obligations on paying
parents only;
v.
applying
an unfairly simplistic linear formula connected to the paying parent’s income
without recognizing that the actual cost of raising children does not rise
proportionally as income increases;
vi.
arbitrarily
dictating that a non-custodial parent (or a parent with less than 40% custody
in terms of time) is the paying parent, even where financial circumstances
indicate that the opposite should be ordered.
[19]
Mr.
Grenon’s income tax appeal is governed by the Tax
Court of Canada Rules (General Procedure), SOR/90-688a. Those rules
require Mr. Grenon to submit to an examination for discovery conducted by the
Crown. They also give him the right to conduct an examination for discovery of
a Crown witness who is, in the words of Rule 93(3), a “knowledgeable current or
former officer, servant or employee” (« un officier, un fonctionnaire ou un employé
– actuel ou ancien – bien informé ») chosen by the Deputy
Attorney General of Canada.
[20]
The
scope of the examination for discovery is described in Rule
95(1)
as follows:
95. (1) A person examined for discovery shall
answer, to the best of that person’s knowledge, information and belief, any
proper question relevant to any matter in issue in the proceeding or to any
matter made discoverable by subsection (3) and no question may be objected to
on the ground that
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95. (1) La personne interrogée au préalable répond,
soit au mieux de sa connaissance directe, soit des renseignements qu’elle
tient pour véridiques, aux questions pertinentes à une question en litige ou
aux questions qui peuvent, aux termes du paragraphe (3), faire l’objet de
l’interrogatoire préalable. Elle ne peut refuser de répondre pour les motifs
suivants :
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(a) the information sought is evidence or
hearsay,
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a) le renseignement demandé est un
élément de preuve ou du ouï-dire;
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(b) the question constitutes
cross-examination, unless the question is directed solely to the credibility
of the witness, or
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b) la question constitue un
contre-interrogatoire, à moins qu’elle ne vise uniquement la crédibilité du
témoin;
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(c) the question constitutes cross-examination
on the affidavit of documents of the party being examined.
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c) la question constitue un
contre-interrogatoire sur la déclaration sous serment de documents déposée
par la partie interrogée.
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[21]
In
Mr. Grenon’s examination, the Crown witness was asked to undertake to provide
certain information and documents. The witness objected to 16 of those requests
on the advice of Crown counsel. The disputed questions are as follows (with
numbering added for ease of reference):
1.
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Inquire of the Department of Justice
and inquire into any records kept of the federal\provincial territorial
family law committee regarding the development of the child support Guidelines,
to what extent that this concept was considered, in terms of Martin Browning’s
position that child support costs were not linear.
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-
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Produce
the document or documents relating specifically to the delivery of this mandate
to the family law committee or the FLC.
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-
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Advise
why the assessment or inclusion of section “Subsequent Family Situations” was
not included in the child support Guidelines.
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-
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Advise
why this consideration of subsequent spouses was not included in the eventual
child support Guidelines.
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-
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Advise
why this particular issue of costs associated with the noncustodial parent
was not addressed in the child support Guidelines and if it is, to
what extent it is.
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-
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Advise
to what extent the child support Guidelines take into consideration
the nonmonetary costs of custodial parents.
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-
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Advise
why the issue of the age of children in respect to child support orders was
not addressed in the child support Guidelines.
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-
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Advise
as to why a national study to determine the cost of children was not
undertaken by the federal government and to produce any documentation with
respect to a decision not to proceed with any type of survey on what the
actual cost of children are.
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-
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Produce
the minutes that may exist with respect to the proceedings of the
federal/provincial territorial family law committee on the development of the
child support Guidelines.
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-
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Provide
the three proposals referenced on page 3 that were received by the economists
who are identified in Footnote Number 1.
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-
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Advise
what the Department of Justice document referred to is in this paragraph 4 in
Document 38. Also, provide the documents which might have been received from
these consultants that the Department of Justice sought opinions from and any
additional analysis of those opinions by the Department of Justice.
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-
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Provided
any documents related to the point you’ve referenced in the possession of the
Crown and whether there was any related analysis by the family law committee.
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-
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Produce
the background information documentation regarding the analysis of this and
other models regarding the issue of linearity.
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-
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Advise
what information the Crown had with respect to developing the child support Guidelines
that suggested that child costs remain constant over their lifetime or over
their childhood.
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-
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Advise
what information or analysis was done on that issue and a production of any
written documentation with respect to that issue.
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-
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Advise whether or not the Crown conducted any analysis
with respect to the proportionality of child costs in relation to income. And
if it did, produce any analyses or any associated documents with that, including
any expert opinions provided to the Crown on that issue.
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[22]
The
committee mentioned in question 1 and in some of the other questions is the “Federal/Provincial/Territorial
Family Law Committee,” comprised of representatives of the federal Department
of Justice and the equivalent departments of the provinces and the territories.
In 1995, the Committee prepared a report entitled “Federal/Provincial/Territorial
Family Law Committee’s Report and Recommendations on Child Support”, which was
published by the federal Department of Justice. Mr. Grenon alleges that this
report was the basis for the Guidelines. Most of the disputed questions
relate in one way or another to the 1995 Committee report, or related research
reports and other documents.
[23]
An
underlying premise of Mr. Grenon’s constitutional argument is that because women
are far more likely than men to be the recipients of child support, any legal advantage
they are given in asserting a claim for child support necessarily results in a
disadvantage to men, who are far more likely to be the payers of child support.
One objective of the disputed questions was to elicit evidence or admissions
that support that premise, directly or indirectly, because such evidence could
help establish the “contextual factors” that are an essential element of any
allegation of discrimination on an analogous ground. Another objective was to
arm Mr. Grenon against any attempt by the Crown to adduce evidence that the Guidelines
are not discriminatory, or that they can be justified under section 1 of the Charter.
Decision of Justice Miller
[24]
Justice
Miller characterized the disputed questions as relating to the development,
comprehensiveness and adequacy of the Guidelines. Based on his
understanding of the pleadings, he concluded that the alleged deficiencies in
the Guidelines are not facts in issue, and therefore Mr. Grenon is not
entitled to an order compelling the production of evidence tending to prove or
shed light on those alleged deficiencies. He also concluded that Mr. Grenon’s
attempts to discover the evidentiary foundation of the Guidelines, even
in the context of supporting his allegation of pre-existing disadvantage or
stereotyping, would effectively put in play the constitutionality of the Guidelines,
contrary to the decision of Justice Beaubier.
[25]
Justice
Miller did not determine that the Guidelines themselves are irrelevant
to the constitutional challenge in this case. On the contrary, he confirmed
that it is open to Mr. Grenon to discover and adduce evidence that the Guidelines
have the alleged discriminatory effect. However, he concluded that Mr. Grenon’s
attempt to discover evidence relating to the development of the Guidelines
was a step too far, because the pleadings do not make a clear connection
between the evidentiary foundation for the Guidelines, which is the
subject of the disputed questions, and the disallowance of the legal expense
deduction pursuant to paragraph 18(1)(a) of the Income Tax Act.
Analysis
[26]
The
root of this appeal is Mr. Grenon’s assertion that Justice Miller misconstrued the
pleadings when he found that the Guidelines are not facts in issue, and
when he concluded that paragraphs 25 and 26 of the 3rd Amended
Notice of Appeal contain only argument, and not factual allegations that are relevant
and material to the appeal.
[27]
As I
read Justice Miller’s reasons, he did not find that the Guidelines are
not “facts in issue”. Indeed, he said that “the Guidelines themselves
are a fact”, but the alleged deficiencies in the Guidelines
referred to in paragraph 25 of the 3rd Amended Notice of Appeal are
argument (see paragraph 13 of his reasons). I see no error in Justice Miller’s
interpretation of the pleadings, or in his specific finding that the pleadings
do not allege a connection between the scope and application of paragraph
18(1)(a) and the analytical foundations of the Guidelines.
[28]
I
have not disregarded Mr. Grenon’s criticism of the part of Justice Miller’s
reasons in which he seems to favour the Crown’s argument that, in interpreting
pleadings, one looks to the section on facts to discern the material facts, and
to the section on submissions to discern the legal arguments. Mr. Grenon argues
that an allegation of a material fact should be so recognized even if it is imbedded
within a submission, and that including factual allegations within the
submissions is at most an error of form that can be cured by amending the
pleadings. In my view, Justice Miller’s interpretation of the pleadings is not
based merely on a preference for form over substance in pleadings. As I read
Justice Miller’s reasons, he considered the pleadings in their entirety in an
attempt to discern whether the disputed questions met the test of relevance. Mr.
Grenon cannot complain if what he now says is a material factual allegation was
not clearly identified as such in the pleadings (wherever they appear). That is
especially so where the factual allegations, on any reasonable analysis, are many
steps removed from the main issues in the appeal, which are necessarily limited
by the decision of Justice Beaubier.
[29]
Mr.
Grenon challenges Justice Miller’s characterization of paragraph 26 of the 3rd
Amended Notice of Appeal as argument only. He suggests that such a
characterization could preclude Mr. Grenon from adducing at trial evidence
about the factual allegations imbedded within paragraph 26 (such as, for
example, the allegation that men are the payees of child support in 92.8% of
cases before the courts). In my view, that concern is unfounded. I reach that
conclusion for two reasons. First, the disputed discovery questions do not
involve anything stated in paragraph 26, so that whatever Justice Miller said
about paragraph 26 is obiter. Second, Justice Miller clearly accepted
the propriety of Mr. Grenon’s attempts to determine whether the Guidelines
have had discriminatory effects. For example, in paragraph 16 he noted with
approval that the Crown did not object when Mr. Grenon asked the Crown witness
whether the Crown accepts that in 92.8% of cases men are the payers of child
support.
[30]
For
these reasons, I conclude that there is no basis for appellate intervention in
Justice Miller’s refusal to order answers to the disputed questions. As for Mr.
Grenon’s motion to compel the Crown to produce a more knowledgeable Crown
witness, Mr. Grenon does not contest Justice Miller’s conclusion that this
motion cannot succeed in the face of the dismissal of the motion to compel
answers.
Conclusion
[31]
The
Crown has asked for costs in this Court and in the Tax Court. In the Tax Court,
Justice Miller dismissed Mr. Grenon’s motion with “costs in the cause”. The
record discloses no basis for the intervention of this Court in Justice Miller’s order on costs in the
Tax Court, and the Crown has suggested none.
[32]
I
would dismiss the appeal and award costs to the Crown in this Court only.
“K. Sharlow”
“I agree
Pierre
Blais C.J.”
“I agree
David
Stratas J.A.”