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A-372-76
Rivtow Straits Limited (Appellant) (Plaintiff) v.
B.C. Marine Shipbuilders Limited (Respondent) (Defendant)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Urie and Le Dain JJ.— Vancouver, December 2 and 3, 1976.
Practice—Examination for discovery—When questions asking for expressions of opinion may be put—Practice of provincial courts not followed.
Appellant is seeking an order directing an officer of the respondent company to answer certain questions on discovery.
Held, the judgment of the Trial Division is set aside in part. Questions asking for the expression of an opinion during an examination for discovery are not permissible unless the exper tise of the witness is put in issue by the pleadings.
The Queen v. Irish Shipping Ltd. [1976] 1 F.C. 418, followed. Westcoast Transmissions Co. Ltd. v. Canadian Phoenix Steel and Pipe Limited [1971] 1 W.W.R. 241, disagreed with.
APPEAL on examination for discovery.
COUNSEL:
J. B. Molson for appellant (plaintiff).
John R. Cunningham for respondent (defendant).
SOLICITORS:
Bull, Housser & Tupper, Vancouver, for appellant (plaintiff).
Macrae, Montgomery, Spring & Cunning- ham, Vancouver, for respondent (defendant).
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
PRATTE J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division dismissing an application made by the appellant for an order directing Robert W. Brown to answer certain questions that were put to him when he was examined for discov ery as an officer of the respondent.
Most of the questions that Mr. Brown refused to answer, namely questions 132, 156, 250, 252, 253 and 254 asked for Mr. Brown's opinion on matters within the field of his expertise. In The Queen v. Irish Shipping Ltd. ([1976] 1 F.C. 418), this Court has decided that questions asking for the expression of an opinion were not permissible during an examination for discovery unless, per haps, the witness is an expert whose expertise is put in issue by the allegation of the pleadings. Counsel for the appellant acknowledged that the questions put to Mr. Brown did not come within the possible exception mentioned in that decision. He argued, however, that the exception to the rule had been expressed too narrowly in that decision and that it should be widened so as to coincide with the exception recognized by the British Columbia Court of Appeal in Westcoast Trans missions Co. Ltd. v. Canadian Phoenix Steel and Pipe Limited [1971] 1 W.W.R. 241. I do not agree. Whatever be the practice in the courts of the various provinces, I am of opinion that, during an examination for discovery held under the Rules of the Federal Court, questions asking for a mere expression of opinion, if permissible at all, are permissible only if they are put to a witness whose expertise is put in issue by the allegation of the pleadings. It follows that, in my view, the Trial Division was right in refusing to direct Mr. Brown to answer questions 132, 156, 250, 252, 253 and 254.
As to questions 229 and 239 that Mr. Brown also refused to answer, they probably could have been more aptly worded. However, I am of opinion that the respondent has failed to show any valid reasons why they should not have been answered.
For these reasons, the judgment of the Trial Division will be set aside and Mr. Robert W. Brown will be directed to answer questions 229 and 239. The respondent will be entitled to his costs both in this Court and in the Trial Division.
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