Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-550-92
Labatt Brewing Company Limited (Appellant) (Defendant)
V.
Molson Breweries, a Partnership, and Miller Brewing Company (Respondents) (Plaintiffs)
INDEXED AS: ifOLSON BREWER/ES V. LABATT BREW/NG CO. (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and MacGuigan JJ.A.—Ottawa, May 22 and June 3, 1992.
Practice — Discovery — Production of documents — Confi dential or secret information — In trade mark case concerning passing off and infringement, Court granting ex parte interloc utory protective order allowing respondents to designate confi dential industrial information (concerning production, market ing, advertising, sales, bookkeeping and auditing) as secret, to be disclosed to Court only — Appellant contending order con trary to rules of natural justice, bringing administration of jus tice into disrepute — Appeal from protective order allowed — General rule: parties and counsel should not be denied access to material relevant to Court's decision — However, in excep tional cases, openness curtailed to protect confidentiality of documents by diclosing documents to parties' counsel on undertaking counsel will maintain confidentiality even with respect to clients — Blanket order of secrecy as well as confi dentiality, granted ex parte, far from minimum trenching on principle of openness required by law — Order unjustified — Moreover, Motions Judge in effect creating new, more rarefied category of secret, as opposed to confidential documents, for which special considerations apply — No precedent for new "secret" category and no need to establish one.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 337(5).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED APPLIED:
Scott v. Scott, [1913] A.C. 417 (H.L.); Attorney General of Nova Scotia et al. v. Maclntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; (1985), 49 N.S.R. (2d) 609; 132 D.L.R. (3d) 385; 96 A.P.R. 609; 65 C.C.C. (2d) 129; 26 C.R. (3d) 193; 40 N.R. 181; C.D. v. M.N.R., [1991] 2 F.C. 412; (1991), 91 DTC 5210 (C.A.); Hunter v. Canada (Consumer and Cor porate Affairs), [1991] 3 F.C. 186; (1991), 29 C.P.E. (3d) 321; 35 F.T.R. 75 (C.A.); Official Solicitor v. K., [1963] 3 All E.R. 191 (H.L.); Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attor- ney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326; (1989), 103 A.R. 321; 64 D.L.R. (4th) 577; [1990] 1 W.W.R. 577; 71 Alta. L.R. (2d); 45 C.R.R.I; 102 N.R. 321; Pacific Press Ltd. v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1991] 2 F.C. 327; (1991), 127 N.R. 325 (C.A.); Deprenyl Research Ltd. v. Canguard Health Technologies Inc., T-3003-91, Strayer J., order dated 17/2/92, F.C.T.D., not yet reported.
DISTINGUISHED:
Kimberly-Clark Corp. v. Proctor & Gamble Inc. (1990), 31 C.P.R. (3d) 207 (F.C.T.D.).
APPEAL from an interlocutory order (T-724-92, Cullen J., order dated 22/4/92, F.C.T.D., not reported) made by the Motions Judge allowing the respondents to designate documents as "secret", to be disclosed to the Court only. Appeal allowed.
COUNSEL:
James D. Kokonis, Q.C. and Thomas R. Kelly for appellant (defendant).
John S. Macera and Elizabeth G. Elliott for respondent (plaintiff) Molson Breweries, a Part nership.
Gordon F. Henderson, Q.C. for respondent (plaintiff) Miller Brewing Company.
SOLICITORS:
Smart & Biggar, Ottawa, for appellant (defen- dant).
Macera & Jarzyna, Ottawa, for respondent
(plaintiff) Molson Breweries, a Partnership.
Cowling, Strathy & Henderson, Ottawa, for respondent (plaintiff) Miller Brewing Company.
The following are the reasons for judgment ren dered in English by
MACGUIGAN J.A.: This is an appeal from a portion of an interlocutory order of April 22, 1992.
The action, for passing off and trademark infringe ment, was brought by the respondents as plaintiffs on March 30, 1992. In the action, the respondents seek injunctions and monetary relief against the appellant arising from its introduction of "Labatt Genuine Draft", a beer allegedly similar in packaging and labelling to a "Genuine Draft" beer product of the respondents.
By order of April 14 [T-724-92, per Cullen J.], all proceedings were stayed pending production by the respondents of certain documents of title that formed the basis of certain pleas in their statement of claim. By notice of motion of April 22, the respondents made application for a protective order, which was heard and decided the same day on the ground that written agreements between the two respondents con tained confidential information which does not in any way relate to the subject of the present action. This confidential information was said to consist of beer recipes and protection techniques, marketing and advertising strategies and expenditures, sales per formance objectives and projections, bookkeeping and auditing provisions, and product research mat ters.
The appellant appeals against paragraph 1 of the April 22, 1992, order made by the Motions Judge, which reads as follows (Appeal Book, at pages 74- 75):
1 (a) In this Order, the term "secret" information or "secret document" means any information or documents or por tion of document respectively, which is designated by any party as secret.
(b) Secret documents will be disclosed only to the Court unless otherwise ordered by the Court and portions of the documents designated as secret will be deleted by the designating party from all documents produced or ten-
dered in evidence. No document shall be accepted as secret until it has been so designated by an Order of the Court, said application to be made ex parte.
The appellant also appeals against paragraph 12, but only to the extent that it makes reference to "secret documents" ("Secret documents and confi dential documents").
On April 23 [T-724-92, per Cullen J.] an applica tion was made before the same Motions Judge to vary the order of April 22, pursuant to Rule 337(5) [Fed- eral Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663]. This application was dismissed.
The Motions Judge gave no reasons for his order of April 22, but his reasons for the order of April 23, when the appellant sought reconsideration of the first order, throw some light on his approach to it (Appeal Book, at pages 85-86) [at pages 2-3 of the reasons]:
The defendant has, in my view, failed to bring himself within the provisions of Rule 337(5) in that paragraph (a) is not appli cable as no reasons had been given and paragraph (b) would require that some matter should have been dealt with and had been overlooked or accidentally omitted. That was not the case. Given the fact that I was allowing certain documents to be called "secret" and to be filed in a file labelled with that word, it seemed that the determination should not be made by counsel simply declaring documents secret and putting them in the file but rather that counsel would be required to establish to the satisfaction of the Court that such a document or docu ments be labelled "secret". Counsel for the plaintiffs argued most strenuously at the hearing on April 22, 1992 that their clients should not be required to produce documents that were clearly irrelevant and cited, for example, that the recipe for the product made by their clients was clearly irrelevant to the issues at hand. However, I was satisfied that other reasons might be advanced why a document should be placed in the secret file and I did not wish to fetter colleagues who may be called upon to make these determinations.
For the reasons stated above I do not feel that the defendant has brought himself within the requirements of Rule 337(5)(b). In my view, deleting the phrase dealing with ex porte applica tions would be changing my Order which I arrived at after a somewhat lengthy hearing and a good deal of thought follow ing the hearing. Also, incorporating the phrase sought here by counsel for the defendant would have changed the intention, and yes, the meaning of my Order.
It was argued by counsel for the defendant that counsel for the plaintiffs had not argued in favour of an ex parte applica tion but it was clear to me at least that certainly counsel for Miller Brewing Company emphasized that very point, namely that his clients would not wish the irrelevant material such as the recipe to be given even to counsel for the other side.
On April 28 [T-724-92, per Cullen J.] the respon dents obtained an ex parte order designating docu ments or portions of documents as secret. On April 29, in compliance with the orders of the Motions Judge, the appellant was provided with copies of all documents of title referred to in paragraphs 5, 6 and 16 of the statement of claim, with those portions des ignated as secret deleted. The stay of proceedings was thus lifted as of April 29.
The appellant contended before us that the ex parte procedure provided for in the order of April 22 is contrary to the rules of natural justice and would bring the administration of justice into disrepute. It also argued that the evidence was insufficient to jus tify the granting of the order.
The leading English authority on confidentiality at common law is Scott v. Scott, [1913] A.C. 417 (H.L.), where Viscount Haldane L.C. laid down the broad principle that the courts must administer justice in public. He qualified this general principle by nar rowly defined exceptions based on "a yet more fun damental principle that the chief object of Courts of justice must be to secure that justice is done" (at page 437). The relative priorities of the two principles have been somewhat differently stated in Canada, where Dickson J. (as he then was) wrote in Attorney General of Nova Scotia et al. v. Maclntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175, at pages 186-187:
In my view, curtailment of public accessibility can only be justified where there is present the need to protect social values of superordinate importance.
Hence Décary J.A. for this Court in C.D. v. M.N.R., [1991] 2 F.C. 412, at page 417 declared that Scott is
the law in Canada only to the extent that it has been adopted in Maclntyre.
Décary J.A., in reviewing confidentiality at com mon law for the majority of this Court in Hunter v. Canada (Consumer and Corporate Affairs), [1991] 3 F.C. 186, at pages 202-203 put the relevant principles this way:
Confidentiality at common law
It can be safely said that three fundamental premises on which our judicial system is based, are (1) that trials take place in open court, (2) that the procedure followed is an adversarial one, and (3) that rules of natural justice apply, amongst which is the rule that each party is entitled to see everything which is relevant to the Court's decision.
It is a combination of these three principles which is at the source of the rule that hearing should not be conducted in cam era, even less in private, that representations should not be made ex parte and that parties and their counsel should not be denied access to the material that is relevant to the Court's decision.
That rule, as most rules, is not an absolute one. The courts, albeit reluctantly, have softened it "in exceptional cases, where the administration of justice would be rendered impracticable by the presence of the public" [Dickson J. in Maclntyre, at p. 188] and, in some cases, one may add, by the presence of all the parties. One of these exceptional cases, most certainly, is proceedings where the confidentiality of a document is pre cisely what is at stake. To allow the public and the parties to see the document before the question of its disclosure is decided might well render the whole process utterly useless and frustrate the end result of the proceedings.
Practice with respect to the protection of confidentiality
In proceedings where there is a need to protect the integrity of confidential information, one of the means developed by the courts to preserve to the greatest possible extent the openness and the adversarial nature of the judicial system and to enable the parties to properly argue their case, is to provide counsel for the parties with access to the information subject to various conditions including the provision by counsel of undertakings to maintain the confidentiality of the information even with respect to their clients.
I might add that while this practice has generally been justi fied in terms of natural justice and advantage to counsel, it has also proved most useful to judges. Issues in which confidential documents are at risk tend to be rather complex, either techni cally, as in commercial matters, or legally, as in public interest matters, and it is not always fair to the Court to force it to
make important decisions when having heard one side of the argument only.
It seems clear, from these enunciations of it, that the law leans against any fetter on the openness of pro ceedings, and that the normal way of reconciling the conflicting demands of openness and confidentiality, where required with respect to documents, is to dis close to parties' counsel any confidential informa tion, on their undertaking that they will maintain that confidentiality even from their clients.
What is of capital importance is that disclosure should be limited as minimally as possible. This was emphasized by Lord Devlin in Official Solicitor v. K., [1963] 3 All E.R. 191 (H.L.), at page 210, where he said, quoting the Trial Judge, "when full disclosure is not made, it should be limited only to the extent essential ... and no further." Cory J. made a similar point in Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney Gen eral), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326, at page 1347:
The importance of freedom of expression and of public access to the courts through the press reports of the evidence, arguments and the conduct of judges and judicial officers is of such paramount importance that any interference with it must be of a minimal nature.
That principle was applied by this Court in Pacific Press Ltd. v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1991] 2 F.C. 327 (C.A.).
In a case somewhat analogous to that at bar, Deprenyl Research Ltd. v. Canguard Health Technol ogies Inc., T-3003-91, F.C.T.D., decided February 17, 1992, where the defendants sought to have declared confidential certain information (to be dis closed only to the plaintiff's solicitors and two outside independent experts), Strayer J. said, at page 2, in refusing the order:
An order preventing counsel from showing relevant evidence to his client in order to get instructions, while not unknown, should only be granted in very unusual circumstances. The onus is on the defendants to establish the need for such a restriction on the ordinary disclosure of materials which may
be relevant to the issues in the case, and the evidence so far is not compelling.
Strayer J. found that at the very least such an order was premature, since the defendants had not yet (as is also true in the case at bar) filed a statement of defence.
The Motions Judge in the case at bar not only granted an order of secrecy as well as of confidential ity, but did so ex parte, and not only for the docu ments required to be produced by the order of April 14, but apparently for all subsequent documents in the proceedings. This is far from the minimum trenching on the principle of openness required by law.
The only precedent that is of any comfort to the respondents is Kimberly-Clark Corp. v. Proctor & Gamble Inc. (1990), 31 C.P.R. (3d) 207 (F.C.T.D.), where, in a patent action, the Court allowed the plain tiffs to produce licence agreements referred to in the statement of claim with certain paragraphs deleted. Joyal J., after examining unexpurgated copies of the licence agreements, held that substantially all the deletions were warranted on the basis that they dealt with matters irrelevant to the issues in the action. However, even apart from the fact that the patent claim was a more defined type of action than is that brought by the respondents here, the matter there did not arise on an ex parte motion.
It is in my view no answer to the appellant's case for the respondents to point out that it is always pos sible for the appellant to contest the ex parte order subsequent to its being made. The appellant has already been placed at a needless disadvantage by the fact that it has been made ex parte,' forcing him to bring a global motion without information as to the documents protected or as to the Motions Judge's reasons for granting such an order. Moreover, the
I While it is true that the motion in Kimberly - Clark had to be brought after the fact, because the plaintiffs simply prod uced the licence agreements in expurgated form, both parties were on a level playing field on the motion in that no protec tive order had been made.
Motions Judge has in effect created a new, more rar efied category of secret, as opposed to merely confi dential documents, for which special considerations apply. We were shown no precedents for such a cate gory, and I can find no necessity in the present facts for establishing one.
II
Merely to strike out paragraph 1 and to amend para graph 12 of the order of April 22, as the appellant seeks, possibly would leave the order somewhat unbalanced, especially in the light of the concerns expressed by the respondent Miller Brewing Com pany with respect to its secret formula. Nevertheless, since there is no cross-appeal before us, there is no way to rectify that situation on the present appeal. The order, being interlocutory, is entirely amenable to revision by the Trial Division. It might be wise, before pleadings have closed and the issues been defined, not to try to deal with situations that can arise only during pre-trial discovery.
The appeal must be allowed with costs. Paragraph 1 of the order dated April 22, 1992, should be struck out as should be the reference to "secret documents" in paragraph 12.
HEALD J.A.: I agree. MAHONEY J.A.: I agree.
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