Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

B. F. Goodrich Company (Plaintiff) v.
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company (Respond- ent)
and
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company (Plaintiff)
v.
B. F. Goodrich Company (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Thurlow J. and Cameron D.J.—February 15, 1973.
Patents—Conflict proceeding—Plaintiff ordered to implead certain patent claims—Appeals by plaintiff and defendant— Motion to consolidate appeals refused.
In a conflict proceeding under section 45 of the Patent Act in which the F Co. was plaintiff and there were four defendants, Noël A.C.J. gave an interlocutory judgment ordering the plaintiff to implead certain patent claims. One of the defendants filed an appeal against that judgment and some days later the plaintiff filed a separate appeal against the same judgment.
Held, a motion to consolidate the two appeals should not be granted on the material before the Court.
APPEAL from Trial Division.
COUNSEL:
Federal Court Rule 324 for plaintiff and respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Ogilvy, Cope, Porteous, Hansard, Marler, Montgomery and Renault, Montreal, for Fire- stone Tire & Rubber Co.
Herridge, Tolmie, Gray, Coyne and Blair, Ottawa, for Phillips Petroleum Co.
Gowling and Henderson, Ottawa, for B. F. Goodrich Co.
G. H. Riches, Q.C., Toronto, for Mon- tecatini, Societa Generale per l'Industria Mineraria e Chimica.
JACKETT C.J.—There are on these two files two applications in writing under Rule 324, viz:
(a) an application to consolidate the appeals, and
(b) an application for a consent judgment disposing of the consolidated appeal.
The appeals are in respect of an interlocutory judgment in a conflict proceeding under section 45 of the Patent Act. In that proceeding, Fire- stone Tire and Rubber Company, by whom the proceeding was initiated, appears as the plain tiff, and B. F. Goodrich Company, Montecatini, Societa Generale per l'Industria Mineraria e Chimica, and Phillips Petroleum Company appear as defendants.
On December 23, 1971, pursuant to an application made by Phillips Petroleum Compa ny, the Trial Division ordered the plaintiff to "implead in the action applications covering Claims C-6 and C-1 which claims were granted to it".
On December 24, 1971, the predecessor of Goodrich filed a notice of appeal from that judgment in this Court (A-166-71) and on December 30, 1971, the plaintiff filed a separate notice of appeal against the same judgment (A-4-72). All four parties appear as parties in both appeals.
There must be considerable doubt as to the right of a party in a proceeding in another court to launch an appeal from a decision in that court once an appeal has been launched from that decision by another party. In any event, how ever, there can be no doubt, in my mind, that it is an abuse of the process of the Court to have two appeals from the same judgment running along side by side. Any party whose rights could not have been protected by merely opposing or supporting the appeal could have protected his rights in the first appeal by an appropriate notice under Rule 1203. In my view, proceed ings should have been instituted to quash the second appeal under section 52(a) of the Feder al Court Act or, at the least, to stay it. The present application to consolidate would bring the matter back to where it should have been but I am not satisfied that the Court should, even on consents of all the parties, give its seal
of approval to such an awkward and confusing method of proceeding without being shown that there is some possible reason for it when all that is necessary to solve the matter is to quash or to stay the second appeal.
For the above reason, I am of opinion that the application to consolidate should not be granted subject to the right of the applicant to bring the motion on before the Court on notice to all the other parties. I might add that on any such renewal of the application, the applicant will have to show more than an approval as to "form" if it is relying on a consent from a party to the making of the order. As far as Phillips and Montecatini are concerned, I can find no consents to this order among the material but only approvals of the "form" of the order.
The application for consent judgment is an application for a judgment
that the Judgment of the Trial Division ... be and is hereby reversed, the whole without costs so that following such reversal The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company be not required to implead applications covering claims C-6 and C-4 in the action between the parties ... .
I have two difficulties with this proposed order. It would not seem to me that, the Trial Division, on the application outlined at the beginning of the Reasons of the Associate Chief Justice, could have ordered that "Firestone Tire and Rubber Company be not required to implead applications covering claims C-6 and C-4" and, if the Trial Division could not have so ordered on that application, I have grave doubts that this Court can make such an order on an appeal from the order made pursuant to that applica tion. Secondly, even if the application were merely for a judgment of this Court on consents setting aside the order of the Trial Division, I should have thought that it would have been necessary to make it clear that it was a consent order and that it did not relieve the Trial Divi sion from considering whether the omission of the claims in question from the action in some way make it impossible to grant relief sought by one or other of the parties. It must be remem bered that a section 48 proceeding is not an
ordinary action. I do not, however, wish to be taken as expressing any opinion about the merits of the order made by the Trial Division except to say that it obviously raises a question of difficulty on which the Court will require full argument when it does come on for decision.
The remarks that I made about an approval to form not being a consent apply equally to the application for judgment.
The application for judgment should not, in my view, be granted but the application may be renewed in Court.
An application for judgment must be made before a Court consisting of three judges. The applicant may consult the Registry to obtain a date and place when the motions may be renewed.
It is, finally, to be noted that the conflict action in the Trial Division has, presumably, been held up, since December, 1971, by this appeal from an interlocutory order. Unless steps are taken to have these appeals disposed of without further delay, the Court will have to consider initiating proceedings with a view to quashing the appeals under Rule 1100.
* * *
THURLOW J.—I agree that the orders sought should not be granted on the material before the Court but that the applicant be at liberty to bring them on for hearing.
* * *
CAMERON D.J.—I agree.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.