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T-3439-76
Robert W. Alexander (Applicant)
v.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada (Respondent)
Trial Division, Walsh J.—Ottawa, November 9 and 23, 1976.
Patents—Crown liability Hardship caused by interruption of postal services—Whether applicant took reasonable steps to comply with time limit allowed by Patent Act Whether application for relief made without undue delay Postal Ser vices Interruption Relief Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-15, ss. 2 and 3—Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4, ss. 3, 28(2), 29(1).
Applicant seeks relief under sections 2 and 3 of the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act, claiming that a postal strike prevented him from filing an application for a patent within the time limit allowed by sections 28 and 29 of the Patent Act. He seeks further relief under section 3 of the Patent Act which empowers the Court to waive the time requirement.
Held, the application is dismissed. The relief sought comes within the ambit of the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act, but the applicant failed to take reasonable steps to comply with the requirements of section 3(b) of the Patent Act and further failed to apply for relief without undue delay pursuant to section 3(c) of the Act.
Knapsack Actiengesellschaft v. Deputy Attorney General of Canada [1968] 2 Ex.C.R. 59, discussed.
APPLICATION for declaratory judgment. COUNSEL:
Theodore P. Metrick, Q.C., for applicant. R. Côté for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Theodore P. Metrick & Associates, Ottawa, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for himself.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
WALSH J.: This is an application under the provisions of the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act' for relief in respect of Canadian
' R.S.C. 1970, c. P-15.
Patent Application No. 241949. The motion as originally drawn and produced on September 2, 1976, was presented for oral hearing on November 9, 1976. It was supported by two affidavits of Allan Newman who describes himself as Realtor and Consul-General for Peru residing in Burnaby, British Columbia, dated respectively July 9 and September 24, 1976, and by an affidavit by the inventor who describes himself as a citizen of the United States presently residing at Britannia Beach, British Columbia, which affidavit was taken in the State of California on January 22, 1976. The motion as originally drafted seeks an order:
(a) declaring that the applicant has suffered loss or hardship as .a result of an interruption of normal postal services;
(b) declaring that the twelve month time requirement con tained in Section 29(1) of the Patent Act within which Canadian Patent Application Serial No. 241,949 can be filed in the Canadian Patent Office in order to be entitled to protection under the term of any treaty or convention relat ing to patents to which Canada is a party be waived;
(c) declaring that the 18th day of November, 1975 be and the same is hereby fixed as the day on or before which Canadian patent application Serial No. 241,949 should have been filed in order to be entitled to protection under the term of any treaty or convention relating to patents to which Canada is a party;
(d) declaring that the twelve month period described in Section 29(1) of the Patent Act within which Patent Application Serial No. 241,949 must be filed in order to be entitled to protection under the terms of any treaty or convention relating to patents to which Canada is a party be and the same is hereby extended to expire on the 18th day of December, 1975;
(e) declaring that Canadian Patent Application Serial No. 241,949 may be prosecuted by the applicant in the Canadian Patent Office as an application filed within the said twelve month period referred to in Section 29(1) of the Patent Act;
(f) granting such other relief as may be appropriate.
At the hearing of the motion, with consent of counsel for the respondent who opposed the motion orally and had also made written representations on October 12, 1976, opposing it pursuant to the provisions of Rule 324 by virtue of which the motion had originally been presented, an amend ment was made so as to add an additional para graph (f), with the paragraph (f) in the original motion now becoming paragraph (g). The new paragraph (f) which was added at the suggestion
of counsel for respondent so that petitioner could also seek relief under section 28(2) of the Patent Act reads as follows:
(f) declaring that the applicant shall be entitled to relief under Section 28(2) of the Patent Act permitting him to file his patent notwithstanding the lapse of time within which he was prevented from so filing.
The sections of the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act which are relevant read as follows:
2. Where as a result of the interruption of normal postal services that occurred between the 22nd day of July and 7th day of August 1965 or where as a result of any subsequent interruption of normal postal services in Canada of more than forty-eight hours duration however caused, a person has suf fered loss or hardship by reason of his failure to comply with any time requirement or period of limitation contained in any law of Canada, he may, on fourteen days notice in writing to the Deputy Attorney General of Canada and to any other person who he has reason to believe may be affected by any order made pursuant to section 3 as a result of an application by him under this section, apply to a judge of the Exchequer * Court of Canada for relief.
3. If the judge to whom an application under section 2 is made is satisfied
(a) that the applicant has suffered loss or hardship as a result of any interruption described in that section,
(b) that the applicant took such reasonable steps as were open to him to comply with the time requirement or period of limitation without avail, and
(c) that the application was made without undue delay,
the judge may, after affording to any person who may be affected by any order made pursuant to this section as a result of the application an opportunity to be heard on the application or to make representations in connection therewith, and subject to such conditions, if any, as to him seem just,
(d) make an order waiving the time requirement or period of limitation in relation to the applicant and fixing such other time requirement or period of limitation in relation thereto as in his opinion the circumstances warrant, and
(e) make such further order as, in his opinion, is necessary to permit the applicant effectively to do any thing or exercise any right that he would have been able to do or exercise if he had not failed to comply with the time requirement or period of limitation, including, where the time requirement or period of limitation with which the applicant failed to comply relates to the commencement or carrying on of any proceed ing authorized or provided for under any law of Canada, such order as he considers necessary to enable the proceeding to be commenced and continued or to be carried on as though the applicant had not failed to comply with that time requirement or period of limitation.
* Now Federal Court—see R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.) c. 10, s. 64(2).
The sections of the Patent Act 2 from the operation of which relief is sought are as follows:
28. (2) Any inventor or legal representative of an inventor who applies in Canada for a patent for an invention for which application for patent has been made in any other country by such inventor or his legal representative before the filing of the application in Canada is not entitled to obtain in Canada a patent for that invention unless his application in Canada is
filed, either ,
(a) before issue of any patent to such inventor or his legal representative for the same invention in any other country, or
(b) if a patent has issued in any other country, within twelve months after the filing of the first application by such inventor or his legal representative for patent for such inven tion in any other country.
•
29. (1) An application for a patent for an invention filed in Canada by any person entitled to protection under the terms of any treaty or convention relating to patents to which Canada is a party who has, or whose agent or other legal representative has, previously regularly filed an application for a patent for the same invention in any other country that by treaty, conven tion or law affords similar privilege to citizens of Canada, has the same force and effect as the same application would have if filed in Canada on the date on which the application for patent for the same invention was first filed in such other country, if the application in this country is filed within twelve months from the earliest date on which any such application was filed in such other country or from the 13th day of June 1923.
The facts as disclosed by the affidavits in the file are as follows.
In Mr. Alexander's affidavit of January 22, 1976, he states that he is the inventor of patent covered by United States Patent No. 3913004 issued on October 14, 1975, at which time he resided in California. Although his affidavit refers to a copy of the patent as being attached and marked as Schedule "A", this copy is not in the record and there is no indication in the affidavit or elsewhere as to the date on which he applied for the patent in the United States. Nevertheless he states that he was aware that the time within which to register the patent within Canada had to be on or before the 14th day of November, 1975. During the hearing counsel for respondent indicat ed that actually the date for filing the Canadian application did not expire until November 18, 1975. Mr. Alexander continues in his affidavit
2 R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4.
stating that he was advised by Mr. Newman on or about October 26, 1975, that a postal strike was in process in Canada and that he therefore could not apply for registration in Canada by way of post. He travelled to British Columbia arriving in Van- couver on or about October 24, 1975, at which time he states the mail strike was still in progress. (There would appear to be some contradiction here if he was only first advised of this on October 26 but the difference in date is not significant since it was common ground at the hearing that the postal strike lasted from October 21 until December 4, 1975.) His affidavit continues that he could not take the time nor incur the expense to travel to Ottawa at the time and was not aware of any means by which an application for registration of a patent in Canada could be delivered. On Novem- ber 25, 1975, Mr. Newman advised him that he would be travelling to Ottawa on December 3, 1975, so he requested and authorized him to make the application on his behalf. Mr. Newman attend ed at the office of the Registrar of Trademarks [sic] at Ottawa and filed an application for regis tration although the time within which it had to be made had expired. He concludes that he would have applied to file the patent with the Registrar of Trademarks [sic] at Ottawa within the time limit if the mail strike had not made it impossible to do so.
Mr. Newman's first affidavit of July 9, 1976, states that he has known Mr. Alexander for approximately one year and that in May, 1975, he visited him in California and was advised that he had applied to the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks for the United States for the patent which was eventually issued under No. 3913004 and he states that Mr. Alexander told him that when the patent was issued in the United States he intended to register it in Canada. He states that on or about October 24, 1975, he was requested by Mr. Alexander to make the application on his behalf in Canada and advised him that a postal strike was in process so that the application for registration could not be submitted by regular post. On November 25, 1975, he advised Mr. Alexander that he would be attending Ottawa on or about December 3, 1975, and Mr. Alexander then requested him to make application for regis tration while he was there. He states that on December 3, 1975, he attended at the Patent
Office and made application to register the patent and was advised that there would be technical difficulties in completing it and that he should seek legal advice which he then did. Application to file the patent was made in Ottawa under No. 241949. He states that he believes that the application would have been made within the time limit but for the labour dispute in the postal service. He states that he has read Mr. Alexander's affidavit and confirms the statements therein.
Mr. Newman's second affidavit on September 24, 1976, states that he was consulted on or about October 26, 1975, by Mr. Alexander respecting the patent and informed that it would have to be registered in Ottawa on or before November 18, 1975. He personally attended at the main Post Office in Burnaby, British Columbia, Victoria, British Columbia, and Vancouver, British Columbia, and was advised by the officials there not to attempt to post any documents as mailable matter was being vandalized and in any event no mail was moving because of the strike but he states that he then attempted to find someone who would be going to Ottawa but was unable to find some one who would undertake to file the application with the Patent Office. After personally discussing the matter with the postal officials at Burnaby, Victoria and Vancouver who refused to accept the documents he was left with no alternative but to arrange to go to Ottawa and the earliest he could do so was on December 3, 1975. He states that had the postal service been in operation on or about October 26, 1975, the application would have been mailed in the normal way and would have been received by the Commissioner of Patents in good time to effect the registration.
Application was opposed by counsel for respond ent on several grounds. First he states that since the postal services were not in fact used in this case but an alternative method of delivery was in fact adopted the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act can have no application. I do not accept this argument, since the wording of the Act is sufficiently broad to cover any case of loss or hardship resulting from the interruption of normal postal services and should not I believe be confined to cases where a letter has actually been placed in the mail and then has not been delivered within a
normal delay as the result of interruption of such services. This is all the more true in the present case where it was on the advice of postal officials that the application was not placed in the mail as they refused to accept same. The second argument is however far stronger, respondent contending that applicant failed to provide satisfactory evi dence that either he or his agent, Mr. Newman, took such reasonable steps as were open to him to comply with the time requirement or period of limitation. It is clear that an alternative method of delivery was not only considered but in fact even tually was carried out although not until Decem- ber 3, 1975, long after the expiration of the delay.
The Postal Services Interruption Relief Act was carefully examined and interpreted in the judg ment of Chief Justice Jackett (then President) in the case of Knapsack Actiengesellschaft v. Deputy Attorney General of Canada'. After expressing some doubts as to whether the twelve-month period in section 29(1) of the Patent Act is a "time requirement or period of limitation" within the meaning of those words in the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act and also whether section 3 of that Act authorizes the Court to make an order that waives the "time requirement" and substitutes as a "time requirement" a time that has already gone past he finally concludes that, giving the widest possible sense to the language employed, it may have been intended to apply the statute to both classes of case, especially since a judge acting under the statute is persona designata and there may therefore be no appeal from a refusal to make an order sought under the statute. He was careful to point out (at page 64) that in construing the statute he was without the advantage of argument by counsel for a party who might be adversely affected and that in the event of being met with such an argument in some other case in future he would not consider himself bound by the decision he was making. He still insisted, moreover, on the fulfilment of the requirement that the application should be made without undue delay as required by section 3(c) of the Act and required the filing of material to satisfy him as to that question. Earlier in the judgment (at page 61) he had
3 [1968] 2 Ex.C.R. 59.
indicated that he was satisfied that, if it had not been for the interruption in postal service, the application would have been filed in time to have made section 29(1) of the Patent Act applicable to it, that he was satisfied that being deprived of whatever advantages that provision confers is a hardship within the meaning of the Postal Services Interruption Relief Act, and that the applicant took such reasonable steps as were open to it to file its Canadian application within the twelve-month period referred to in section 29(1).
Each case must depend on its own facts and in the present case I am also satisfied with the first point, namely, that if there had been no postal strike it is likely that the application would have been mailed and received in time to have made
section 29(1) of the Patent Act applicable that is to say before November 18, 1975. I am also satisfied that applicant will suffer hardship if he cannot obtain the advantages of that provision as well as of section 28(2) of the Patent Act. I am far from satisfied however that the applicant took all reasonable steps open to him to file his Canadian application before November 18, 1975, nor that the present application has been made without undue delay. While such an application for a patent in Canada would probably most frequently be made by mail, especially in the case of a non-resident applicant or of an applicant residing in Canada at some considerable distance from Ottawa, it can, of course, also be made by personal attendance of the applicant or a representative at the office of the Commissioner of Patents in Ottawa, as was in fact done in this case although after the time period had expired. During postal services interruptions which have become all too frequent in this country it is a matter of common knowledge that businessmen requiring delivery of important documents have been forced to adopt alternative methods. Air express is frequently used as well as various courier services. It would also not have been impossible for applicant to have done as many people did and take the application to a point in the United States near the British Columbia border such as Seattle from where it could have been mailed to an attorney or agent in some place not too distant from Ottawa such as Massena or Syracuse with instructions to deliver it
in person from there to the Commissioner of Pat ents in Ottawa. The applicant did not even see fit to employ an attorney or patent agent experienced in these matters in order to make the application but instead relied on Mr. Newman who appears to be a friend and did what he could to help Mr. Alexander, but who does not appear to have any special qualifications or experience in this field. A very substantial period elapsed between October 24 or 26, as the case may be, and November 18, during which arrangements might have been made for delivery of the application to Ottawa by other means than by post, but while both Mr. Newman and Mr. Alexander appear to have been aware that it should have been filed by November 18, 1975, neither appears to have been greatly con cerned about the consequences of not filing it until December 3, 1975.
I cannot conclude therefore that the applicant took "such reasonable steps as were open to him to comply with the time requirement or period of limitation without avail" as is required by section 3(b) of the Act. Applicant's contentions give little weight to this section and seem to be based on his having concluded at the time that the only reason able method of filing the application in time was by use of the Canadian postal service. The situa tion in the present case differs entirely from those cases where an application was in fact mailed in time to arrive before the expiration of the deadline if normal delivery had taken place, but is in fact not so delivered, because of interruption in the postal service, the delay in delivery being beyond the control of the sender. In the present case where the application had not been mailed and in fact that applicant's agent was prevented from mailing it, there was still a period of some 25 days in which to take reasonable steps "to comply with the time requirement or period of limitation" within the meaning of section 3(b) of the Act. In fact no steps whatsoever were taken within this period.
Furthermore, although this conclusion is suffi cient to justify the dismissal of the application there is another ground for doing so, since the present application was clearly not made without undue delay within the meaning of section 3(c) of the Act as it was not produced until September 2,
1976, some nine months after the time when it should have been made if it had been made with out "undue delay".
In view of the conclusion which I reached on these points it is unnecessary to deal with the further objection which was raised that there is nothing to indicate that notice was given to "any other person who he has reason to believe may be affected by any order made pursuant to section 3 as a result of an application by him under this section" as required by section 2 of the Act nor is there any statement in any of the affidavits that applicant has no knowledge of any such person. Section 3 of the Act requires the judge to afford "to any person who may be affected by any order made pursuant to this section as a result of the application an opportunity to be heard on the application or to make representations in connec tion therewith". Such representations were in fact made on behalf of the Deputy Attorney General of Canada when the application was served and while it may be correct to conclude that there is no other person who might be interested, the judge should not be expected to so conclude if the affidavit of applicant does not contain a statement to this effect as has been done in connection with previous applications under this statute. In dismissing the application however I prefer not to rely on this somewhat technical ground, but to base the dis missal on the failure to take reasonable steps to comply with the time requirement or period of limitation, in the Patent Act, and, subsequently to make the present application without undue delay. The application will therefore be dismissed with costs.
ORDER
The application is dismissed with costs.
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