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A-492-75
IBM Canada Limited-IBM Canada Limitée (Appellant)
v.
Xerox of Canada Limited, and Xerox Corporation (Respondents)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Urie and Ryan JJ.— Ottawa, April 1 and 12, 1976.
Practice—Appeal from taxation of costs—Bills for motion in Trial Division and appeal therefrom combined—Whether taxation premature—Discretion of taxing officer—Review of decision in allowing certain items—Federal Court Rules 3(1)(c), 344(1)—Tariff B, s. 2(2)(6).
Appellant applied under Rule 346(2) to review the taxation of costs for an interlocutory motion and appeal therefrom. The bills were combined in this application. Respondents argued that appellant was out of time, whether this proceeding be seen as an appeal from a judgment, from an order of a prothonotary or from an interlocutory order. Appellant challenged respond ents' right to tax its bill at this stage, arguing that taxation was premature. The Trial Division dismissed appellant's motion "with costs", as did the Court of Appeal, and appellant argued that "with costs" means "with costs to the plaintiff in the cause". Claiming that if this were not so, the Trial Judge would have made some other disposition, appellant submitted that costs must follow the final action of the litigation, and, since the action has not yet come to trial, there has been no determi nation of the issues, and the bill cannot yet be taxed.
Held, while no formal application was made to enlarge the time under Rule 3(1)(c), the matters raised are sufficiently important to extend the time.
Appellant's argument that the taxation was premature is not supported by Rule 344(1), regardless of the meaning of "with costs". Rule 344(1) does not exclude an interlocutory proceed ing and since the word "action" was not used, the phrase "shall follow the event unless otherwise ordered" must mean here "shall follow the result of each interlocutory proceeding unless otherwise ordered". If correct, since in neither order was there a contrary disposition of costs, they were to follow the result of the interlocutory motion and appeal. Appellant lost in each case; respondents were thus entitled to tax the bill following dismissal of the motion, and subsequently, their costs on appeal.
As to the propriety of allowing the disbursements for prepa ration of certain affidavits made by U.S. attorneys in answer to those filed by appellant in support of its motion, the authority for allowing such disbursements derives from Tariff B, section 2(2)(6). The affidavits in question were essential for respond-
ents to rebut opinions of attorneys in affidavits filed for appel lant, and the accounts were paid. The taxing officer's discretion in allowing specific items ought not to be interfered with unless the amounts are so inappropriate or his decision so unreason able as to suggest that an error in principle was the cause. The District Administrator erred, in that, while apparently accept ing the essentiality of the affidavits, he did not examine the quality of the proof submitted to justify each disbursement as one which could be chargeable to an adverse party as being reasonable. The proof falls short of that necessary to justify the considerable variations in expenditures of time and fees charged. On the face of inadequate proof, it was clear that the problems confronting each depondent were identical, yet widely different sums were allowed. Since there was a common denominator in the nature of the opinion sought, there should be, in fairness, at least some relationship between the fees. The principle may be different on a solicitor-client taxation, but in a party and party bill, acceptance without inquiry of the proprie ty of the disbursements is wrong, and the Court can, in such case, review the allowance.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
W. R. Edgar for appellant.
R. T. Hughes for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Smart & Biggar, Ottawa, for appellant. Donald F. Sim, Q.C., Toronto, for respondents.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is an application pursuant to Rule 346(2) to review the bill of costs for an interlocu tory motion before the Trial Division and an appeal to this Court therefrom, taxed by the Dis trict Administrator at Toronto on the 24th day of February 1976. The bills of costs from the Trial Division and this Court were combined and in hearing this application we do not wish it to be taken that we consider that combining bills of two different divisions of the Federal Court is proper procedure. In fact, we seriously question the pro priety of proceeding in that way.
Counsel for respondents in a preliminary objec tion argued that the appellant was out of time in bringing the present applicatiorr to review, whether such a proceeding is viewed as an appeal from a trial judgment, or from an order of a prothonotary or one from an interlocutory order, since it was brought after a period of time had elapsed which was longer than the time limit applicable for an appeal from any of the orders made in any one of those proceedings. While no formal application was made by the appellant to enlarge the time pursuant to Rule 3(1)(c) of the Rules of this Court, I am of the opinion the matters raised on the application are of sufficient importance that time to bring the application should be extended. The preliminary objection should be, therefore, dismissed.
Counsel for the appellant indicated from the outset that he was not attacking the quantum of the bill as taxed or any particular item or items therein, but was challenging the right of the respondents to tax its bill at this stage of the proceedings or, in other words, he argued that the taxation was premature. The order of the Trial Division dismissed the appellant's motion "with costs". Similarly, the appellant's appeal from that order was dismissed "with costs". Counsel's argu ment, as I understand it, was that the expression "with costs" must mean "with costs to the Plaintiff in the cause". He argued that if this were not so the learned Trial Judge who heard the motion would have made some other disposition of the costs such as "costs to the Plaintiffs in any event of the cause" or "costs forthwith after taxation there of". Since no such direction was given, he submit ted that the costs must follow the final outcome of the litigation and since the action has not yet come to trial, there has been no determination of the issues between the parties and thus the bill cannot yet be taxed.
This argument is not supported by what I deem to be the correct interpretation of Rule 344(1), irrespective of the meaning attributed to the phrase "with costs". The applicable portion of that Rule reads as follows:
(1) The costs of and incidental to all proceedings in the Court shall be in the discretion of the Court and shall follow the event unless otherwise ordered. [The emphasis is ours]
Clearly this definition does not exclude an inter locutory proceeding and since the word "action" was not . used in Rule 344(1), the phrase "shall follow the event unless otherwise ordered" must mean in this instance, "shall follow the result of each interlocutory proceeding unless otherwise ordered". If I am correct in this view, since in neither the order of the learned Trial Judge nor the order of this Court was there a disposition of the costs in a contrary manner, the costs were to follow the result of the interlocutory motion and subsequent appeal. In each case the appellant lost and thus the respondents were entitled to tax their bill of costs following the dismissal of the motion and subsequently their costs on the appeal.
While the appellant's counsel did not seek to contest any of the items in the bill of costs as taxed, the Court invited both counsel to argue the propriety of allowing the disbursements for the preparation of certain affidavits made by attorneys in the United States in answer to affidavits filed by the appellant in support of its motion. An analysis of the attorneys' statements of account annexed to the affidavit of Paul Bourque filed on behalf of the respondents, reveals a wide disparity between the hours spent in legal research and in the hourly rates charged in the research as to how section 1782(a) of Title 28 of the United States Code respecting assistance to foreign and international courts is applied in the Districts in which the various deponents practised. Each attorney had to express his opinion on exactly the same problem yet the hours spent in such research varied from as little as 8 1 / 2 hours for an attorney in Northern California to 43 hours for the deponent from the State of New York.
The authority for allowing such disbursements is derived from Tariff B, section 2(2)(b) which states:
(b) such other disbursements may be allowed as were essen tial for the conduct of the action.
There is no doubt that the affidavits in question were essential to enable the respondents to rebut the opinions of attorneys expressed in the affida vits filed on behalf of the appellant. Furthermore, there is no question that the accounts were in fact paid. The jurisprudence on the question of the extent to which a taxing officer's discretion in
allowing specific items on a taxation is reviewable clearly indicates that the discretion ought not to be interfered with unless the amounts allowed are so inappropriate or his decision is so unreasonable as to suggest that an error in principle must have been the cause. (see: Rickwood v. Aylmer'; Kauf- man v. New York Underwriters Insurance Co. 2 ) The sole question thus remaining to be settled in this appeal is whether or not the District Adminis trator proceeded on a wrong principle in allowing the disbursements made for the affidavits to which reference has previously been made without regard to the wide differences in the amount of the fees paid or, to put it another way to allow such disbursements simply because those were the amounts in fact paid, apparently without question, by the respondents.
In my opinion, the District Administrator erred in two ways. Firstly, while apparently accepting the essentiality of the affidavits, he did not exam ine the quality of the proof submitted to him in support of the submission that each disbursement itself was justified in the sense that it was one which could be chargeable to an adverse party as being reasonable, on a taxation of a party and party bill of costs. The nature of the proof submit ted to him in this case falls substantially short of that which should be submitted to justify • or explain the necessity for the considerable varia tions in expenditure of time and fees charged (in one case four lawyers were involved each with different billing rates).
Secondly, on the face of the inadequate proof here submitted it was clear that the legal problem with which each deponent was confronted was identical, the only differences being in the ascer- tainment of how the United States federal courts in each of several districts applied the same provi sions of the United States Code. Notwithstanding this the taxing officer allowed widely different sums for their respective opinions. In my view, since there was a common denominator in the nature of the opinion sought, as a matter of princi ple there ought to be at least some relationship between the fees allowed in payment for them, if fairness is to be accorded the adverse party liable for their payment. The principle may be different
' [1954] O.W.N. 858. 2 [1955] O.W.N. 496.
in the taxation of a solicitor-client bill of costs but in a party and party bill, acceptance without inqui ry of the propriety of the disbursements is wrong in principle and this Court is entitled to review the taxing officer's allowance in such case.
The statements of account for the affidavits of the deponents from northern California district and the southern California district show roughly the same amount of time expended in research so that in the absence of any explanation as to the necessity for the much greater time spent by the deponent from New York, I would reduce the sum allowed on the bill of costs for the statement of account of Kenyon and Kenyon, Reilly, Carr and Chapin to $650 which was the amount billed in the higher of the two California deponents.
While we were informed that, in the case of the account of Kaufman and Kramer, from the State of Connecticut, it covered not only the legal research and preparation of the affidavit but also attendances on the cross-examination of the depo- nent on his affidavit, there is absolutely no indica tion in any of their three statements of account as to what portion thereof relates to that cross-exami nation. I would, therefore, also reduce the amount allowed for their accounts to $650 for fees plus the disbursements made by that firm in the sum of $78.35 or a total allowance of $728.35.
Due to the failure of the appellant to bring its motion for review within the time limited by the Rules there ought not to be any costs allowed on this application.
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HEALD J.: I concur.
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RYAN J.: I concur.
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