Docket: T-1391-14
Citation:
2016 FC 1400
Ottawa, Ontario, December 21, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
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1395804 ONTARIO
LTD., OPERATING AS BLACKLOCK'S REPORTER
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Plaintiff
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and
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CANADA
(ATTORNEY GENERAL)
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Defendant
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SUPPLEMENTARY JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
On November 10, 2016, I dismissed this action and
reserved Judgment on the issue of costs pending further written submissions
from the parties. Those submissions have now been received and considered.
[2]
The Defendant was wholly successful in its
defence to this breach of copyright case and is, accordingly, entitled to its
costs. The parties are, however, substantially apart in terms of the
appropriate quantum of recovery. The Defendant asserts alternative claims
based, firstly, on its actual costs to defend the action and, secondly, on the
Court’s Tariff for costs. The Plaintiff argues for a minimal award of $5,000.00
based on a number of policy-based considerations.
[3]
The Defendant seeks costs in the amount of
$115,702.30, based on 70% of the actual value of professional hours expended in
the defence of the claim and including disbursements of $7,020.98. In the
alternative, the Defendant seeks costs at the upper end of Column IV of the
Tariff plus disbursements, for a total of $84,584.98.
[4]
The Defendant’s primary justification for
seeking elevated costs is the failure by the Plaintiff to accept an early
settlement offer in the amount of $2,000.00. This amount represents more than
double the cost of individual subscriptions for each of the Department of
Finance officials who received and read the subject articles over which
Blacklock’s claimed copyright protection.
[5]
I have considered the Defendant’s claim based on
its solicitor-client Statement of Account but I decline to apply it. There are
too many unexplained or insufficiently particularized entries to permit me to
assess the reasonableness of this reference and, in any event, this is not a
case where the application of the Tariff would leave the Defendant inadequately
compensated.
[6]
This was not an unduly complex case in terms of
evidence or the law. In these circumstances tariff-based costs assessed at the
mid-point of Column III are appropriate. In principle the Plaintiff seems to
accept this as a starting point for recovery but it provides little
justification for the “nominal costs of $5,000”
it proposes.
[7]
The Plaintiff argues that the Defendant unduly
complicated and lengthened the case by pleading abuse of copyright. This,
however, provides no legal comfort to the Plaintiff. The fact that I chose not
to decide that issue is not an indication that the plea lacked merit. This
amendment was properly allowed by Prothonotary Mireille Tabib with costs of the
motion. There is no sound basis for discounting the Defendant’s claim to costs
because the outcome turned instead on the issue of fair use. A reduction in an
award of costs on this ground is only warranted where the successful party has
advanced a frivolous or specious position: see Bristol-Meyers Squibb Canada
Co v Mylan Pharmaceuticals ULC, 2013 FC 48 at para 4, [2013] FCJ No
1201 (aff’d. 2014 FCA 231), [2013] FCJ No 1139, and Sanofi-Aventis Inc v
Apotex Inc, 2009 FC 1138 at para 10, [2009] FCJ No 1626. I also
reject the Plaintiff’s argument that this case raised “strong
public interest considerations”. Rather, this case was about the
Plaintiff’s attempt to recover disproportionate damages without any apparent
consideration to the legal merits of the claim or to the costs that it imposed
on the taxpayers of Canada.
[8]
Any reporter with the barest understanding of
copyright law could not have reasonably concluded that the Department’s limited
use of the subject news articles represented a copyright infringement. Indeed,
the fair dealing protection afforded by section 29 of the Copyright Act,
RSC, 1985, c C-42, is so obviously applicable to the acknowledged facts of this
case that the litigation should never have been commenced let alone carried to
trial.
[9]
I am also troubled by Plaintiff’s attempt to
claim an excessive amount of damages beginning with its demand for compensation
completely divorced from the Department’s limited use of the two articles. In
no circumstances would Blacklock’s losses have exceeded the cost of individual
subscriptions by the six officials who read the articles; yet Blacklock’s
demanded a license fee equivalent to its bulk subscription rate of over
$17,000.00. This practice appears to be consistent with Blacklock’s usual
approach which is to hunt down, by Access to Information requests, alleged infringers
and then demand compensation based on an unwarranted and self-serving assertion
of indiscriminate and wide-spread infringement. The record discloses that in
several instances government departments acquiesced for business reasons and
paid the full amounts demanded. In this instance the Department appropriately
took a hard line and succeeded in its defence.
[10]
In my view the award of costs in this case
should reflect the Court’s concern with Plaintiff’s litigation strategy. It
must also reflect Blacklock’s failure to accept the Department’s very
reasonable settlement offer in the amount of $2,000.00. Having failed to
conclude this case on those favourable terms Blacklock’s has imposed on the
taxpayers of Canada substantial additional legal costs.
[11]
In accordance with subsection 420(2) of the Federal
Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, the Defendant is entitled to a doubling of its Tariff
costs after the date of its offer including attendances by counsel for the
trial. Although the Defendant’s settlement offer expired at the commencement of
trial the Rule provides for double recovery “to the
date of judgment” provided the offer to settle is not withdrawn and does
not expire before the commencement of trial. Recovery for the attendances of
two counsel for the trial is appropriate, but for all pre-trial attendances, I
allow for only one counsel.
[12]
I decline to allow for multiple attendances to
prepare supplementary affidavits of documents. Except in special circumstances
it is the aggregate event of discovery that is compensable under the Tariff,
and not each event in that process: see Janssen Inc v Teva Canada Limited,
2012 FC 48 at para 19, [2012] FCJ No 44. Because the amended Statement of Defence
was not necessitated by an amendment to the Statement of Claim by the
Plaintiff, as required by the Tariff, I will not allow recovery for that step.
[13]
I have also made adjustments to the unit values
claimed by applying the mid-point value of Column III or by rounding-up to the
nearest whole number where necessary. Taking account of the Plaintiff’s
concerns about disbursements, I have also made a downward adjustment. For
greater clarity I have attached as Annex “A” a summary of the amounts allowed
for costs plus disbursements of $6,000.00, all of which is rounded to
$65,000.00.