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Édouard Bourque and Paul Bourque (Appel- lants)
v.
National Capital Commission (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Cameron and Sweet D.JJ.—Ottawa, April 25, 1972.
Practice—Costs—Jurisdiction—Judgment of Exchequer Court—Taxation of—Application of Federal Court Rules.
On June 9, 1970, the Exchequer Court gave judgment with costs for defendants in an expropriation action. On June 1, 1971, the Federal Court Act came into force. In August 1971 defendants applied to the Trial Division of this Court for an order for taxation of the costs on the Exche quer Court scale. The Trial Division dismissed the application.
Held, dismissing an appeal, there is no authority for this motion before the costs have been taxed.
Semble, there is no apparent difference in the scale of fees payable to expert witnesses under the Exchequer Court Rules (Tariff A, item 42, par. 3) and the Federal Court Rules (Tariff A, par. 4(2) and Tariff B, par. 2(2)).
Semble also, those parts of the Federal Court Rules as to amounts and procedure on a taxation of costs are retrospec tive, being matters of procedure.
Wright v. Hale (1860) 30 L.J.Ex. 40, referred to.
APPEAL from Trial Division. H. Soloway, Q.C. for appellants.
George Ainslie, Q.C., and Eileen Mitchell Thomas, Q.C. for respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
JACKETT C.J. (orally)—In an expropriation case, judgment was delivered by the Exchequer Court of Canada on June 9, 1970, which judg ment provided inter alfa that, "The defendants are entitled to recover their costs after taxa tion". The defendants in that action are the appellants in this appeal. When the Federal Court Act came into force on June 1, 1971, those costs had not been taxed. In August, 1971, the appellants made a motion before the Trial Division for an order directing that the defendants' party and party bill of costs, includ ing fees to expert witnesses, be taxed on the scale of fees allowed in the Exchequer Court of
Canada on June 9, 1970, when judgment was pronounced. That motion was dismissed "sub- ject to a reference of the taxation to the desig nated officer of the Court ..." by a judgment of the Trial Division delivered on August 23, 1971. This is an appeal from that judgment.
The motion made in the Trial Division was apparently designed to raise, and have deter mined, the question of law as to whether the Rules of Court adopted under the Federal Court Act or those previously in force apply to the taxation of the costs awarded by the judgment in this expropriation case. We know of no authority for such a motion and, on that ground alone, we are of the view that the motion was rightly dismissed.
Whether the Exchequer Court Rules or the Federal Court Rules are applicable to the taxa tion of costs awarded to the appellants, the procedure is substantially the same. The party entitled to costs may proceed to taxation of his costs before a taxing officer and, if dissatisfied with the taxation, he is entitled to a review of the taxation by the Court. This appears from Rule 263 of the Exchequer Court Rules, which reads as follows:
263. All costs between party and party shall be taxed pursuant to Tariff A contained in the Appendix to these Rules. Such costs shall be taxed by the Registrar or by his Deputy, and they shall be the Taxing Officers of the Court, exercising exclusive authority in respect of such taxation; subject, however, to review by the Court.
and from Rule 346(2) of the Federal Court Rules, which reads as follows:
Rule 346. (2) Costs shall be taxed by
(a) a prothonotary, each of whom is a taxing officer, or
(b) an officer of the Registry designated by order of the Court as a taxing officer,
subject to review by the Court upon the application of any party dissatisfied with such a taxation.
Not only are we unaware of any provision in either set of Rules for an application to the
Court for a decision on some question of princi ple before proceeding to taxation but we are of opinion that such a step is not advisable. Nei ther the parties nor the Court should be put to the expense and trouble of having questions of principle determined unless it becomes neces sary to do so to determine the rights of the parties. Whether any such question is of any practical significance in this case cannot be ascertained until the appellants' costs have been taxed by a taxing officer.
In this case, the notice of motion makes spe cial mention of "fees to expert witnesses", apparently on the basis that less will be taxable in respect of such fees under the new Rules than under the Exchequer Court Rules. It is not apparent to us that this is so. The applicable provision in Tariff A of the Exchequer Court Rules, which provides for fees to be allowed "in the taxation of costs between party and party", would seem to be the third paragraph of item 42, which reads as follows:
In expropriation cases, witnesses called upon to give opinion evidence as to the values of the land expropriated, in lieu of the per diem fee allowed to witnesses under Items 40, 41 and the first paragraph of Item 42, may be granted a special per diem fee for attendance in Court, plus an allow ance for the time necessarily and usefully spent by them in viewing the property in question, for necessary searches at Registry Offices and for other necessary work done by them to assist them in arriving at their valuation of the expropriated property, such allowances to be fixed by the Taxing Officer subject to review by the Court.
In other words, it allows "a special per diem fee for attendance in Court, plus an allowance for the time necessarily and usefully spent ... to assist them in arriving at their valuation .. . such allowances to be fixed by the Taxing Offi cer subject to review by the Court". In the Federal Court Rules, we find that paragraph 4(2) of Tariff A provides as follows:
(2) In lieu of making a payment under section 3, there may be paid to a witness who appears to give evidence as an expert a reasonable payment for the services performed by the witness in preparing himself to give evidence and giving evidence.
and that Tariff B, which regulates the amounts that may be allowed in a party and party taxa tion, provides (paragraph 2(2)) as follows:
2. (2) Disbursements
(a) all disbursements made under Tariff A may be allowed, except that payments to a witness under para graph 4(2) may only be allowed to the extent directed by the Court under Rule 344(7),
(b) such other disbursements may be allowed as were essential for the conduct of the action.
(It is true that this provision contemplates a direction from the Court within a time that has expired in this case but we have no doubt that such time would be extended, in the circum stances of this case, under Rule 3(c)). It is not apparent that the amounts that would be allowed for expert witnesses in an expropriation case under the Federal Court Rules are either more or less than they would be under the Exchequer Court Rules.
In the circumstances, it is preferable not to express an opinion on the question of principle that was argued on the motion in the Trial Division. That should be left until it arises in an appeal where it is not merely an academic ques tion and after the parties whose rights will be affected have had an opportunity to be heard. It is not an easy question upon which to reach a conclusion. We are particularly impressed by certain of the decisions cited by the parties, such as: Delap v. Charlebois (1899) 18 P.R. 417; Earle v. Burland (1904) 8 O.L.R. 174; Des Brisay v. Canadian Government Merchant Marine Ltd. [1940] 4 D.L.R. 171; and Gar Wood Industries v. Sicard Ltée [1950] Ex.C.R. 136. On the other hand, the principle estab lished as long ago as 1860 in Wright v. Hale 30 L.J.Ex. 40, was not discussed in those cases and is still regarded, by at least one authority, as good law. See Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes 12th ed., p. 224, where it is said that "Statutes affecting costs are of a procedural nature for the purposes of the rules about retrospectivity". In Wright v. Hale, Pollock C.B. said at p. 42:
I have always understood that there is a considerable difference between laws which affect the vested rights and interests of parties, and those laws which merely affect the proceedings of Courts; as, for instance, declaring what shall be deemed good service, what shall be the criterion of the right to costs, how much costs shall be asked, the manner in which witnesses shall be paid, or what witnesses the party shall be entitled to, and so on. For instance, if an act of parliament were to say that in matters of mere opinion and judgment, no person shall be allowed to call more than three witnesses, I think that would apply to all actions, whether then pending or thereafter to be brought. It would be a matter regulating the practice; and I think you could not with any propriety say, "I had the right to call as many witnesses as I thought necessary to establish my case, and I wished to have called ten surveyors, ten brokers, ten ship's husbands, and so on." I do not think that a matter of that sort can be called a right, nor do I think the title to costs can be called a right in any sense in which Lord Coke in his Institutes, or my Lord Chief Justice Truro, in the case referred to by Mr. Chambers, has spoken of rights. I think that where an act of parliament alters the proceedings, which are to obtain in the administration of justice, and does not specially say that it shall not apply to any action already brought, but merely causing the operation to pause for a certain time, and giving an opportunity for parties to retire from suits, it applies to actions already brought.
We should have thought that, at the very least, those parts of the new rules that lay down the procedure for taxing costs are retrospective in nature and it would seem difficult, in many cases, to separate the rules for determining amounts from the procedure. This is particular ly so where there has been a change from having the discretion as to amounts vested in the taxing officer to vesting it in the Court, which is one of the most important changes resulting from the substitution of the Federal Court Rules for the Exchequer Court Rules. When the matter finally comes to be determined it may well be that the conclusion of the Associ ate Chief Justice that the matter is settled by section 62(6) of the Federal Court Act will be adopted. It may also be that provisions of the Interpretation Act, such as sections 35, 36 and 37, will have some bearing on the matter.
In our view the appeal should be dismissed but, as it was not resisted, without costs.
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