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A-53-72
Mark G. Smerchanski (Appellant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J.—Ottawa, May 24, 1977.
Practice — Costs — Application under Rule 350(3) for the Court to tax costs and Rule 344(7) for application that increase be allowed for certain solicitors' fees — Federal Court Rules, 337(5), 344(7), 350(1),(3).
The respondent, by motion, applies for an order that costs of $8,626, with interest, be paid. The Court of Appeal had ordered that costs be paid. Counsel, nevertheless, was permitted to address the Court as though there were an application under Rule 344(7), (and as contemplated by Tariff B), to increase certain amounts for solicitors' services, and as though there were an application under Rule 350(3) that the Court tax the costs allowed by the judgment disposing the appeal.
Held, the application is dismissed. The Court is bound by Crabbe v. Minister of Transport: where this Court gives judg ment for costs to be taxed, it cannot subsequently substitute a lump sum except for a reason falling within a class of case found in Rule 337(5) or (6). The application under Rule 350(3) that the Court tax the costs allowed in the judgment is dismissed because there is no material establishing that "there would otherwise be a delay in taxation". The application under Rule 344(7) is dismissed because it is not made within the time contemplated and no application for extension of time has been made. Very special reasons warranting a lengthy extension of time and a reasonably arguable case for an exercise of judicial discretion increasing the fees for services must support such an application. Party and party costs are not designed to constitute full compensation to a successful party for his solicitor and client costs and the volume of work in preparation, considered alone or in conjunction with such factors as the difficulty or the importance of the case, does not constitute an adequate basis for the exercise of judicial discretion to increase tariff cost items.
Crabbe v. Minister of Transport [1973] F.C. 1091, followed.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
J. T. Thorson, Q.C. for appellant.
G. J. Kroft and Cy Fien for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
J. T. Thorson, Q.C., Ottawa, for appellant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered by
JAcKETT C.J.: This is a motion by the respond ent for an order that costs be paid to the respond ent in the amount of $8,626 with interest thereon.'
The proceeding in this Court is an appeal from the Trial Division. This Court's judgment, ren dered on March 13, 1974, dismissed the appeal with costs. An appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada was dismissed on June 29, 1976.
At the end of the submissions of counsel for the respondent, I intimated that I did not find it necessary, as I then appreciated the matter, to call on counsel for the appellant but I adjourned the hearing of the matter so that counsel for the respondent might consider whether he wished to make further submissions in writing.
A letter has now been received by the Registry indicating that counsel for the respondent has no further submissions to make.
In my view, I am bound, by this Court's decision in Crabbe v. Minister of Transport, 2 to dismiss this application. In that case an application to fix costs that, by a prior judgment of the Court, had been ordered to be paid "when taxed" was dis missed on the ground that is set out at pages 1091-2, as follows:
Such a judgment is final (Rule 337(4)) except that
(a) its terms may be reconsidered on the ground that they do not accord with the reasons or that there has been an accidental omission (Rule 337(5)), and
(b) clerical mistakes and accidental slips, etc., may be cor rected (Rule 337(6)).
' In fact, the motion was made pursuant to a notice of motion bearing the style of cause in this appeal and also the style of cause on A-54-72. I know of no authority for such procedure and, as there were two separate appeals and two separate judgments, I do not understand what order is really being sought. Having regard to my conclusion, this becomes immaterial.
2 [1973] F.C. 1091.
That judgment establishes, in my view, that, where this Court gives judgment for costs to be taxed, it cannot subsequently substitute a lump sum unless by way of reconsideration of the judgment for a reason that falls within one of the classes of case to be found in Rule 337(5) or (6). This is not such a case. 3
I do not overlook the fact that the notice of motion indicates an intention to make the applica tion for an order fixing the total amount of the costs "pursuant to paragraph 3 of Tariff B and Rules 344(7) and 350(3)". In my view this cannot change the nature of the order that may be sought as set out in the notice of motion without the acquiescence of the opposing party and the Court and it cannot be said that there was any acquies cence on the part of the opposing party during the hearing of this application.
Nevertheless, counsel for the respondent was permitted to address the Court as though there were before the Court
(a) an application to increase certain of the amounts for services of solicitors and counsel set out in section 2 of Tariff B to the Rules as contemplated by section 3 of Tariff B and Rule 344(7), 4 and
(b) an application under Rule 350(3) that the Court tax the costs allowed by the judgment disposing of the appeal.
In so far as the motion might be regarded as seeking taxation of costs by a judge under Rule 350(3), 5 I am of opinion that it should be dis missed because there is no material establishing that "there would otherwise be a delay in the taxation". (In my view, the paragraph in question is obviously intended for a case where a judge is
3 See Appendix.
There has been no suggestion of an application for a direction under any of the Rules that contemplate directions to increase tariff amounts.
5 Rule 350(3) reads as follows:
(3) Where, for any reason, there would otherwise be a delay in the taxation of a bill of costs, if a judge finds that he can do so without interfering with his judicial duties, he may tax the bill of costs as if he were a prothonotary.
sitting at a place where there is no authorized taxing officer available or for some comparable exceptional case and does not entitle a party as of right to taxation of costs by a judge instead of taxation by a regular taxation officer.) Further more, if a judge were to act as taxing officer, the provisions of Rule 350(1) should be complied with. 6
In any event, in my view, special court directions changing the tariff amounts, such as are contem plated by section 3 of Tariff B and certain of the Rules, should be obtained before the taxation procedure is proceeded with so that such directions will be available to support the amounts claimed in the bill of costs at the time of the taxation. (There may be circumstances justifying a departure from such course of events but they do not occur to me.)
In so far as the motion might be regarded as seeking directions from the Court under section 3 of Tariff B, the motion was not made within the time contemplated by Rule 344(7), which reads:
(7) Any party may
(a) after judgment has been pronounced, within the time allowed by Rule 337(5) to move the Court to reconsider the pronouncement, or
(b) after the Court has reached a conclusion as to the judgment to be pronounced, at the time of the return of the motion for judgment,
whether or not the judgment includes any order concerning costs, move the Court to make any special direction concerning costs contemplated by this rule, including any direction con templated by Tariff B, and to decide any question as to the application of any of the provisions in Rule 346. An application under this paragraph in the Court of Appeal shall be made before the Chief Justice or a judge nominated by him but either party may apply to a Court composed of at least 3 judges to
6 Rule 350(1) reads as follows:
(1) A party whose costs are to be taxed shall, unless the opposing party consents to the amount to be taxed, or arrangements for the taxation can be made informally, obtain from a taxing officer an appointment for taxation and, not less than 2 days before the day appointed for taxation, serve on every other party interested in the taxation, a copy of his bill of costs, any supporting affidavit and a copy of the appointment.
review a decision so obtained. 7
and there has been no application for an extension of such time.
I might add that, as seems clear to me from a reading of Rule 344(7) with Rule 337(5), it is contemplated that any such application for a direction increasing costs should be made while the matter is sufficiently fresh in the mind of the Court that the Court is in a position to appreciate whether there were present in the particular case circumstances justifying a departure from the normal tariff amounts; and it would, in my view, require very special reasons to warrant a lengthy extension of the time contemplated by Rule 344(7) such as would be required here.
Finally, I should say on this point that the material submitted in support of this application does not, in my opinion, provide a reasonably arguable case for an exercise of judicial discretion increasing the fees for services of solicitors and counsel in connection with this appeal. Such a direction must be based on relevant considerations and must not be made on an arbitrary basis. All that has been established here is that the respond ent incurred a very large solicitor and client bill in connection with the appeal, which would have been relevant if costs had been awarded on a solicitor and client basis but is not ordinarily rele vant to the determination of costs on a party and party basis. Nothing has been put forward to suggest that there was anything in the conduct of the appeal to warrant any increase in the party and party tariff. While there is no principle with reference to the basis for ordinary party and party costs that is apparent to me from a study of the relevant Rules, it does seem to be clear that party
7 Rule 337(5) reads:
(5) Within 10 days of the pronouncement of judgment under paragraph (2)(a), or such further time as the Court may allow, either before or after the expiration of that time, either party may move the Court, as constituted at the time of the pronouncement, to reconsider the terms of the pro nouncement, on one or both of the following grounds, and no others:
(a) that the pronouncement does not accord with the reasons, if any, that may have been given therefor,
(b) that some matter that should have been dealt with has been overlooked or accidentally omitted.
and party costs are not designed to constitute full compensation to the successful party for his solici tor and client costs. (This must certainly be so in a case such as this where the successful party has chosen to instruct counsel whose base of operations is elsewhere than the appropriate place for the hearing of the appeal.)
Reference was made to some four or five deci sions of the Trial Division where Tariff B items were increased apparently "having regard particu larly to the great volume of work done in prepara tion ...". I have difficulty in accepting volume of work in preparation considered alone, or in con junction with such factors as the difficulty or importance of the case, as constituting a basis for exercising the judicial discretion to increase Tariff B costs items. It must be obvious that such items are so low in relation to what is involved in a very substantial proportion of the matters that come before the Court that they are not designed to provide complete compensation to the successful party for the costs incurred by him in the litiga tion. (Indeed, what is sought in this case is an increase that would still leave the successful party largely uncompensated for solicitor and client costs.) If Federal Court party and party costs are not designed to provide full reimbursement, as it seems to me, what is intended is that they be made up of the completely arbitrary amounts fixed by or in accordance with the rules subject to variations (where authorized) based on factors arising out of the conduct of the particular proceeding. As it seems to me, the vague basis put forward on behalf of the respondent would put the Court in the position, in a very substantial proportion of pro ceedings, of weighing imponderable factors, or fac tors that are not capable of determination, with a view to making an allowance of an undefined portion of solicitor and client costs. In my view, such an approach is not acceptable as a basis for exercising a judicial discretion under Tariff B and would open the way for an unseemly complication of our practice. 8
8 In so far as the disbursement items of $201 and $3,050 are concerned, under section 4 of Tariff B, such disbursements are to be dealt with in the first instance "upon taxation". If an issue develops on taxation with regard thereto, it may be referred to the Court.
For the above reasons, I am of opinion that the application should be dismissed even if it could be regarded as being for one, of the other orders indicated above that are not set out in the notice of motion.
I am further of the view that the motion should be dismissed with costs.
APPENDIX
On reading the reasons in the Crabbe case, I find a sentence therein in which there is, in my opinion, a patent error, which might well cause confusion. That sentence reads [at page 1093]:
In the present case since the judgment was pronounced in open court the matter of awarding a fixed amount in lieu of costs to be taxed might have been spoken to before the judg ment was pronounced or it might have been raised on an application under Rule 344(7), within the time limited by Rule 337(5), to reconsider the pronouncement on any ground falling within Rules 337(5) and 337(6), that is to say, on the ground (1) (Rule 337(5)) that the terms of the judgment did not accord with the reasons of the Court or that there had been an accidental omission or (2) (Rule 337(6)) that there had been a clerical or accidental slip which required correction.
Having regard to the last portion of that sentence and reading the reasons as a whole, it is, in my view, clear that what it was intended to convey was that an application after judgment to fix an amount in lieu of costs to be taxed would have to be made under Rule 337(5) or (6). I can only conclude that the words "it might have been raised on an application under Rule 344(7) .. , to recon sider the pronouncement" found their way into the sentence by error. Rule 344(7) authorizes applica tions for special directions to be carried out on the taxation of costs. It does not authorize applications to change a "pronouncement" of judgment or a judgment after it has been signed. The sentence from the Crabbe reasons that I have quoted should, in my opinion, have read as follows:
In the present case, since the judgment was pronounced in open court, the matter of awarding a fixed amount in lieu of costs to be taxed might have been spoken to before judgment was pronounced or it might have been raised on an application under Rule 337(5) or (6), that is to say, on the ground (1) (Rule 337(5)) that the terms of the judgment did not accord with the reasoning of the Court or that there had been an accidental omission, or (2) (Rule 337(6)) that there had been a clerical or accidental slip which required correction.
This error seems to have played a part in leading Walsh J., in his reasons for judgment of January 27, 1976, in Crelinsten Fruit Company v. Mari time Fruit Carriers Co. Ltd. [1976] 2 F.C. 316, to the conclusion that, on a review of a taxation, directions might be made under Rule 344(7), a view that also seems to have been taken by Kerr J. in Aladdin Industries Inc. v. Canadian Thermos Products Ltd. [1973] F.C. 942. I can only say that the view expressed by Thurlow and Pratte JJ. and myself in the Crabbe case was that, on a review of a taxation under Rule 346(2), the Court decides whether the taxing officer erred in performing his duty and can neither change the Court's judgment nor make a direction or order contemplated by Rule 344 or section 3 of Tariff B.
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