Muldoon,
J:—In
this
matter,
Ilio
Mauro
is
a
judgment
debtor
under
and
by
virtue
of
Minister’s
certificates
registered
in
this
court
and
having
the
same
force
and
effect
as
if
they
were
judgments.
Subsequently,
the
judgment
creditor
moved
to
effect
garnishment
of
the
judgment
debt
to
the
extent
possible
and
its
motion
was
supported
by
the
filed
affidavit
of
David
John
Kimball.
He
swore
that
demands
had
been
made
upon
the
judgment
debtor
for
the
amounts
owning
pursuant
to
those
certificates,
but
that
they
remain
unsatisifed,
and
that
a
balance
of
$506,062.08
remains
outstanding
as
of
the
15th
day
of
December,
1983,
pursuant
to
the
certificates
relative
to
the
said
Ilio
Mauro.
Mr
Kimball
further
swore
that
as
a
result
of
his
investigations,
which
he
detailed,
he
concluded
that
the
garnishee
owes
money
to
“Franco
Mauro
[also
a
judgment
debtor]
and
Ilio
Mauro
operating
as
F
Domanico
&
Company”
in
the
approximate
amount
of
$987,105.
Whether
or
not
such
is
the
case
remains
to
be
determined
in
further
proceedings
between
the
judgment
creditor
and
the
garnishee.
Such
further
proceedings
were
directed
by
a
show-cause
order
of
the
Associate
Chief
Justice
pronounced
ex
parte
on
December
19,
1983.
Those
proceedings
have
been
adjourned
to
take
place
in
Toronto
on
March
5,
1984.
It
would
appear
from
the
representations
made
to
the
court
by
the
garnishee’s
counsel,
that
the
garnishee
does
and
will
dispute
liability
to
pay
the
debt
claimed.
The
affidavit
of
Harold
V
White,
filed
by
the
garnishee,
indicates
that
a
very
thorough
and
determined
dispute
will
be
mounted
as
to
its
liability.
In
the
meanwhile,
the
judgment
debtor
has
been
seeking
to
cross-examine
Mr
Kimball
on
his
affidavit,
even
though
the
judgment
debtor
has
thus
far
made
no
move
to
set
aside
the
Associate
Chief
Justice’s
ex
parte
order.
Having
failed
to
have
Mr
Kimball
produced
voluntarily
for
cross-examination,
the
judgment
debtor’s
solicitors
resorted
to
having
a
subpoena
duces-tecum
issued
on
January
9,
1984,
directing
Mr
Kimball
to
appear,
with
a
plethora
of
documents,
before
one,
Paul
Rosenberger,
a
special
examiner,
to
testify.
Although
this
subpoena
in
Form
8
does
not
mention
Mr
Kimball’s
affidavit,
it
is
understood
by
the
parties
that
its
purpose
is
to
enable
the
judgment
debtor
to
cross-examine
Mr
Kimball
on
his
affidavit.
The
motion
now
before
the
court
is
brought
by
the
judgment
creditor
for
an
order
that
the
cited
subpoena
be
set
aside,
or
for
such
other
order
as
seems
just.
The
judgment
creditor
proffers
in
support
of
its
motion
only
the
show-cause
order
given
by
the
Associate
Chief
Justice,
last
December.
The
notice
of
motion
was
directed
to
the
respective
solicitors
for
the
judgment
debtor
and
the
garnishee.
Counsel
for
the
garnishee
did
make
some
respresentations
to
the
court,
which
will
be
noted
herein,
but
he
averted
that
basically
his
was
a
“watching”
role.
It
appears
that
the
only
matter
now
afoot
in
this
matter
is
the
post-
registration,
that
is
to
say
post-judgment,
proceedings
in
which
the
garnishee
will
be
entitled
to
show
cause,
if
it
can,
why
it
should
not
pay
an
alleged
debt,
allegedly
due
from
it
to
the
judgment
debtor
allegedly
operating
under
the
name
and
style
of
F
Domanico
&
Company.
Since
it
also
appears
that
the
judgment
debtor
has
not,
and
is
not,
moving
to
attempt
to
set
aside
the
judgment
in
the
form
of
the
registration
of
the
Minister’s
certificates,
any
issues
between
the
judgment
debtor
and
the
judgment
creditor
are
now
determined
and
crystallized.
The
outstanding
issue
in
this
proceeding
which
remains
to
be
determined
arises
now
between
the
garnishee
and
the
judgment
creditor.
That
remaining
issue,
which
is
quite
within
the
competence
of
judgment
creditor
and
the
garnishee,
respectively,
to
litigate
excludes
the
judgment
debtor
as
a
party
to
it,
although
the
judgment
debtor
might
well
be
able
to
provide
testimony
or
other
evidence
in
and
for
that
litigation.
Counsel
for
the
judgment
debtor
told
the
Court
that
it
is
his
client’s
right
to
protect
his
suppliers
and
others
with
whom
he
has
commercial
relationships.
It
is
in
this
purportedly
protective
role
that
the
judgment
debtor
then
seeks
to
cross-examine
the
deponent
Kimball.
But,
since
matters
between
the
creditor
and
the
debtor
stand
crystallized
in
law,
the
approbate
avenue
for
effecting
the
judgment
debtor’s
avowed
purpose
is
to
provide
truthful
testimony
under
oath
or
otherwise
admissible
evidence
if
required
to
do
so
at
the
instance
of
one
or
both
of
the
interested
parties
to
the
outstanding
litigation,
to
wit:
the
judgment
creditor
or
the
garnishee.
In
his
brief
presentation
to
the
Court,
counsel
for
the
garnishee
maintained
that
he
and
his
client
are
quire
capable
of
litigating
the
garnishee’s
dispute
with
the
judgment
creditor.
He
also
allowed,
that
as
a
rule,
no
garnishee
in
this
situation
would
care
to
have
a
judgment
debtor’s
intervention
in
such
proceedings
risk
losing
the
garnishee’s
case
for
him.
Some
authorities
were
cited
in
support
of
the
judgment
debtor’s
side
of
the
argument,
of
which
one
or
two
are
really
germane
to
the
issue
here.
In
the
Thomson
case
a
solicitor
had
sworn
an
affidavit
in
support
of
a
motion
to
strike
out
a
counterclaim.
That
was
a
situation
of
the
kind
contemplated
by
Federal
Court
Rules
419(1)(a)
and
(2).
Accordingly,
Gale,
J
in
his
reasons
twice
expressed
difficulty
in
appreciating
why
the
affidavit
had
been
filed
at
all,
but
since
it
had
been
filed
and
cross-examination
effected
he
ordered
two
unanswered
questions
to
be
answered.
That
case
is
not
relevant
here.
In
both
the
Volckmar
and
the
Bunker
Ramo
case
Mr
Justice
Cattanach
made
two
observations
which
loom
significant
when
one
purports
to
apply
those
reasons
to
the
situation
here.
First,
Cattanach,
J
notes:
Thus
it
would
appear
that
what
is
sought
to
be
contested
is
the
jurisdiction
of
this
Court
over
the
subject
matter
of
the
action
pleaded
in
the
statement
of
claim
as
against
the
defendant
TRW
Inc,
and
not
the
Court’s
jurisdiction
over
the
person
of
TRW
Inc.
That,
of
course,
is
the
most
fundamental
kind
of
preliminary
objection,
for
if
there
were
no
jurisdiction
over
the
subject
matter
what
would
have
been
the
point
of
service
ex
juris!
Here,
of
course,
the
court’s
jurisdiction
of
the
subject
matter
is
not
disputed
by
the
judgment
debtor.
That
is
an
important,
if
not
conclusive,
distinction
to
be
noted
between
the
Bunker
Ramo
case
and
the
proceedings
at
bar.
Second,
in
that
case,
Cattanach,
J
came
to
this
conclusion
which
surely
is
the
ratio
of
his
judgment
in
the
matter
which
he
was
then
adjudicating:
I
therefore
conclude
that
in
the
judgment
of
Gushue,
JA
and
that
in
Volckmar
v
Krupp
are
authority
for
the
proposition
that
there
is
the
right
to
order
cross-
examination
on
the
affidavit
submitted
in
support
of
the
ex
parte
order
for
service
out
of
the
jurisdiction
in
a
subsequent
application
to
rescind
that
order.
The
case
now
before
the
court
is
not
concerned
with
an
ex
parte
order
for
service
out
of
the
jurisdiction.
It
is
a
garnishment
proceeding
in
which
the
party
primarily
concerned
—
the
garnishee
—
has
emphatically
disputed
liability
pursuant
to
Rule
2300(8)
of
this
court.
In
the
Sherman
case
an
affidavit
was
filed
by
a
defendant,
Seaway
Multi-Corp
Limited
in
support
of
an
application
by
Seaway
for
an
order
permitting
Seaway
to
file
a
counterclaim
against
the
plaintiffs.
At
this
point
another
defendant,
Manley,
served
an
appointment
to
cross-examine
on
that
affidavit.
Seaway
then
sought
to
have
Manley’s
appointment
to
cross-examine
set
aside
and
struck
out.
The
learned
Master
held:
In
my
opinion,
the
right
of
those
entitled
to
cross-examine
is
to
be
decided
on
the
basis
of
the
issues
on
the
motion
in
relation
to
which
the
supporting
affidavit
is
filed.
If
it
is
clear,
as
I
feel
it
is
in
this
case,
that
the
issues
upon
the
motion
do
not
reflect
in
any
way
upon
a
party
to
the
main
action,
then
that
latter
party
is
excluded
from
the
right
of
cross-examination.
The
Master’s
opinion
was
surely
correct,
and
it
bears
instructively
upon
the
issue
here
at
bar.
It
seems
clear
that
the
garnishee,
if
it
succeed[s]
in
disputing
liability,
will
have
set
matters
at
rest
just
as
effectively
as
if
it
had
successfully
moved
to
set
aside
the
garnishing
order.
It
is
equally
clear
that
the
judgment
debtor
may
participate
in
the
garnishment
proceedings,
if
only
in
order
to
attempt
to
demonstrate
in
opposition
to
the
garnishee’s
disputing
of
liability
that
the
garnishee
owes
him
something,
or
more
than
the
garnishee
acknowledges
owing.
But
it
is
not
clear
that
the
judgment
debtor
possesses
any
right,
either
accorded
by
text
of
law
or
ex
debito
justitiae,
to
cross-examine
the
deponent
Kimball
in
these
proceedings.
In
the
Miles
case,
the
Senior
Master
of
the
Ontario
High
Court
dealt
with
the
jurisdiction
of
the
court
to
restrict
the
scope
of
a
cross-examination
under
Ontario
Rule
227.
He
held
that
the
rule
gave
a
party
a
right
to
cross-examine.
But
it
never
divested
the
court
of
its
inherent
power
to
control
its
own
proceedings
and,
in
cases
where
it
appeared
to
be
in
the
interests
of
justice
to
do
so,
to
refuse
such
cross-examination
or
to
restrict
its
scope.
That
power
can
be
exercised,
also,
when
it
appears
that
there
will
be
an
opportunity
to
explore
the
matter
at
a
more
appropriate
time,
or
one
notes,
by
an
appropriate
party
with
a
direct
interest
in
the
issue
to
be
litigated.
As
earlier
noted,
the
issue
to
be
litigated
lies
between
the
judgment
creditor
and
the
garnishee,
perhaps
also
between
the
garnishee
and
the
judgment
debtor
depending
on
whether
the
garnishee
admits
owing
anything,
and
if
so,
how
much.
The
issue
to
be
litigated
does
not
lie
between
the
judgment
creditor
an
the
judgment
debtor.
Accordingly,
the
judgment
debtor
has
no
right
to
subject
the
deponent
Kimball
to
cross-examination
on
the
affidavit.
Therefore,
the
subpoena
duces-tecum
ad-
dressed
to
David
John
Kimball,
dated
the
9th
day
of
January,
1984,
is
without
foundation
in
these
proceedings
at
the
instance
of
the
judgment
debtor
and
it
must
be
quashed
and
set
aside.
The
judgment
creditor,
the
applicant
herein,
is
awarded
taxable
costs
of
an
incidental
to
this
motion
against
the
judgment
debtor.
No
costs
are
awarded
for
or
against
the
garnishee.
ORDER
UPON
MOTION
on
behalf
of
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
the
judgment
creditor
herein,
for
an
order
that
the
subpoena
duces-tecum
hereinafter
mentioned
be
set
aside,
and
UPON
hearing
read
the
garnishee
order
to
show
cause
made
by
the
honourable
the
Associate
Chief
Justice
dated
the
19th
day
of
December,
1983,
and
hearing
what
was
alleged
by
counsel,
1.
IT
IS
ORDERED
that
the
subpoena
duces-tecom
addressed
to
David
John
Kimball,
dated
the
9th
day
of
January,
1984,
be,
and
it
is
hereby
quashed
and
set
aside;
and
2.
IT
IS
FURTHER
ORDERED
that
the
judgment
creditor
is
awarded
her
taxable
costs
of
and
incidental
to
motion
against
the
judgment
debtor,
and
no
costs
are
awarded
for
or
against
the
garnishee.