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Quebec Case Law
Quebec Case Law
Quebec E-Discovery Legislation and Case Law Digests
(Civil Law)
See below Disclaimer
Updated July 3, 2008
This digest is maintained by the members of the
Sedona Canada Working Group
(WG7); it was originally created by the members of
the eDiscovery sub-committee of the
Task Force on the Discovery Process in Ontario and is a supplement to the
eDiscovery Guidelines. It is available at
The Discovery
Task Force E-Discovery Guidelines and Resources Page and the
Canadian eDiscovery Portal
webpage on the LexUM
website.
Definition of a
technology-based document
Integrity of the document
Proportionality
Requirements of good faith
Production
of documents in the possession of a third party
Preservation of evidence
NEW
Power to punish for contempt of court
Destruction of evidence
Labour and employment cases
Anton Piller orders -
initial, extensions and problems
NEW
Quashing an Anton Piller order or a
seizure before judgment
NEW
Form of Production
An act to
establish a legal framework for information technology, R.S.Q., chapter C-1.1
(2001, c-32) states the following:
Document:
Information
inscribed on a medium constitutes a document. The information is delimited and
structured, according to the medium used, by tangible or logical features and is
intelligible in the form of words, sounds or images. The information may be
rendered using any type of writing, including a system of symbols that may be
transcribed into words, sounds or images or another system of symbols.
Database:
For the purposes of
this Act, a database whose structuring elements allow the creation of documents
by delimiting and structuring the information contained in the database is
considered to be a document.
One of the objects of the act is to ensure "the coherence of
legal rules and their application to documentary communications using media
based on information technology, whether electronic, magnetic, optical, wireless
or other, or based on a combination of technologies".
Bill c-32 also amended the
Code of
Civil Procedure to insert a provision for technology-based documents in
s89.4:
"the contestation of a
technology-based document on the ground of a violation of integrity ; in such a
case the affidavit must state precisely the facts and reasons suggesting a
probable violation of the document's integrity.
Failing such affidavit, the writings are held to be admitted or the formalities
to have been fulfilled, as the case may be."
Paragraph 12 of
An act to
establish a legal framework for information technology, R.S.Q., chapter C-1.1
(2001, c-32) states the following:
"A technology-based document may fulfil the functions of an
original. To that end, the integrity of the document must be ensured and, where
the desired function is to establish
1) that the document is the source document from which copies
are made, the components of the source document must be retained so that they
may subsequently be used as a reference ;
2) that the document is unique, its components or its medium must be structured
by a process that makes it possible to verify that the document is unique, in
particular through the inclusion of an exclusive or distinctive component or the
exclusion of any form of reproduction ;
3) that the document is the first form of a document linked to a person, its
components or its medium must be structured by a process that makes it possible
to verify that the document is unique, to identify the person with whom the
document is linked and to maintain the link throughout the life cycle of the
document."
Section 4.2 of the
Code of
Civil Procedure reads:
"In any proceeding, the parties must ensure
that the proceedings they choose are proportionate, in terms of the costs and
time required, to the nature and ultimate purpose of the action or application
and to the complexity of the dispute; the same applies to proceedings authorized
or ordered by the judge." (2002, c. 7, s. 1.)
Section 4.1 of the
Code of
Civil Procedure reads:
"Subject to the rules of procedure and the time limits
prescribed by this Code, the parties to a proceeding have control of their case
and must refrain from acting with the intent of causing prejudice to another
person or behaving in an excessive or unreasonable manner, contrary to the
requirements of good faith.
The court sees to the orderly progress of the proceeding and intervenes to
ensure proper management of the case" (2002, c.
7, s. 1.)
Section 402 of the
Code of
Civil Procedure reads:
If, after defence filed, it appears from the record that a document
relating to the issues between the parties is in the possession of a third
party, he may, upon summons authorized by the court, be ordered to give
communication of it to the parties, unless he shows cause why he should not do
so.
The court may also, at any time after defence filed, order a party or a
third person having in his possession any real evidence relating to the issues
between the parties to exhibit it, preserve it or submit it to an expert's
appraisal on such conditions, at such time and place and in such manner as it
deems expedient.
Groupe
TVA Inc. c. Bell Expressvu, s.e.c., 2005 IIJCan 18670 (QC C.S.) Date :
2005-05-26 Dossier : 500-17-022586-047. Claudette Picard, j.c.s. Plaintiff
sought to preserve evidence in the form of backup tapes,
held by Iron Mountain, of the Master Customer Database, the Management
Information System and the subscription database and anything else needed to
determine the number of decoders at any given address in early 2000.
Section 438 of the
Code of
Civil Procedure reads:
Anyone who, expecting to be a party to a legal proceeding, has reason to
fear that some evidence that he will need may become lost or more difficult to
present may, by motion, ask:
(a) that the witnesses whose absence or incapacity he fears be heard before
the hearing;
(b) that anything movable or immovable, the condition of which may affect
the outcome of the expected legal proceeding, be examined by a person of his
choice.
Section 752 of the
Code of
Civil Procedure reads:
In addition to an injunction, which he may demand by a motion to
institute proceedings, with or without other conclusions, a party may, at
the commencement of or during a suit, obtain an interlocutory injunction.
An interlocutory injunction may be granted when the applicant appears to
be entitled to it and it is considered to be necessary in order to avoid
serious or irreparable injury to him, or a factual or legal situation of
such a nature as to render the final judgment ineffectual.
1965 (1st sess.), c. 80, a. 752; 2002, c. 7, s. 102.
NEW
Bouchard c. Société industrielle de décolletage et d'outillage (SIDO) ltée,
2007 QCCS 2272 (CanLII) Date : 2007-05-16 Dossier : 460-17-000736-066. François
Tôth j.c.s. Wrongful dismissal. Allegations of collusion. Concerned about
destruction of evidence. Plaintiff was in possession of backup tapes and wanted
to turn them over to an expert for preservation and to search for evidence.
Court rejected motion to retain the backup tapes, but required defendant to
preserve them against alteration or destruction. "[22] Il existe un intérêt
cependant à ce que le contenu d’un serveur soit conservé afin de démontrer qu’un
document a déjà existé et qu’il a été détruit." (However, there is interest
in preserving the contents of a server in order to show that a document has
existed and that it has been destroyed.) (Translation P.D.) Quotes
Celanese on the role played by Anton Piller orders in preventing
unscrupulous defendants from destroying evidence.
Bombardier inc. c. Davies, 2007 QCCS 1771 (CanLII) 2007-4-2 Pierre-C
Gagnon, j.c.s. Plaintiff's motion for a safeguard order following the execution
of an Anton Piller order. Nice description of the role of the custodian of the
seized material and that of the supervising solicitor in extraction of relevant
information. Based on
Celanese.
K8E K8E
(KUEI) Productions artistiques et culturelles inc. c. Thivierge, 2006
QCCS 6034 (IIJCan) Date : 2006-12-21 Dossier : 200-17-007780-067. Suzanne
Ouellet, j.c.s. Request for a seizure before judgment under article 733 of CCP
and an interim injunction against the destruction of information stored on
computers, as well as any copies on backup media or other off-line device. The
plaintiff is a producer of two television series and the defendant is a former
employee who has refused to return the devices until he receives remuneration,
which is in dispute. The seizure before judgment was rejected, but the Court
ordered the defendant not to modify, alter, copy, transfer, erase or otherwise
affect the integrity of the files in any way. Decision based on the balance of
inconvenience - the tapes are essential to the plaintiff and without them, the
company would be unable to sell the series internationally or pay back the
investment made by provincial and federal governments. Therefore the request met
the test of "irreparable damage" since there would be no remedy. The second test
is urgency - the defendant might destroy the goods when served with the notice
for the interlocutory injunction.
Groupe
TVA Inc. c. Bell Expressvu, s.e.c., 2005 IIJCan 18670 (QC C.S.) Date :
2005-05-26 Dossier : 500-17-022586-047. Claudette Picard, j.c.s. Order to
preserve the information, including "la copie de sauvegarde des données
permettant à Groupe TVA Inc. de déterminer le nombre d'abonnés de Bell ExpressVu
Société en commandite, recevant le service spécialisé LCN, incluant ceux
s'identifiant comme abonnés de type francophone, les redevances mensuelles et
les rapports mensuels s'y rattachant, pour la période du 1er octobre 2001
jusqu'au jour du prononcé du jugement et la copie de sauvegarde des données
nécessaires à la détermination du nombre de décodeurs assignés à une même
adresse pour la période du 5 décembre 2000 jusqu'au jour du prononcé du jugement."
(the data backup copies that would permit TVA to determine the number of
ExpressVu subscribers receiving special services, particularly in the French
language, the monthly royalties and the relevant monthly reports, for the period
from October 1, 2001 until judgement, as well as the backup copy of the data
necessary to determine the number of decoders assigned to the same address for
the period from December 5, 2000 to the date of judgment.)
Multiculturel Alpha c. Guay, 2005 IIJCan 35281 (QC C.Q.) Date :
2005-09-23 Dossier : 200-22-033428-053. Charles C. Grenier, j.c.q. A petition
for preservation that was not granted because the action had already started.
Section 49 of the
Code of
Civil Procedure reads:
The courts or judges may condemn any person who is guilty of
contempt of court.
Directory
Management America.COM Inc. c. Mondoux, 2003 IIJCan 28979 (QC C.S.)
2003-04-04 Dossier : 505-05-007825-026. Jacques R. Fournier, J.C.S. Motion
concerning contempt of court. Respondent had not turned over materials,
including a hard disk from the computer, within the 10 days proscribed in the
order. Moreover, when the disk was finally received it had been wiped and Linux
operating system installed. Experts could not determine for sure that the
defendant had been the agent of the destruction.
Echostars
Satellite Corp. c. Lis, 2004 IIJCan 16270 (QC C.S.) 2004-05-28 Dossier :
500-17-018292-030;500-17-018293-038;500-17-018294-036. Motion for an accusation
of contempt of court in a TV piracy case. Under an Anton Piller order, the
defendants' premises were searched. Four laptop computers were found, each
without a hard drive, and a fifth brand-new computer with the hard disk intact.
Supposition that the hard disks had been removed in effort to destroy evidence.
Syndicat
des spécialistes et professionnels d'Hydro-Québec c. Hydro-Québec, 2003
IIJCan 20475 (QC A.G.) 2003-09-02. Arbitral tribunal. Appeal of a
dismissal for cause related to inappropriate use of email and internet services
including conducting private business and browsing pornography. Petitioner had
lied under oath.
Centre local
de développement des Etchemins c. Conseil de développement économique des
municipalités bilingues du Manitoba, 2004 IIJCan 40388 (QC C.S.)
2004-10-22 Dossier : 200-17-004620-043. Jean Bouchard, j.c.s. Motion to make documents (including
computers and emails) seized under an Anton Piller order available to the
plaintiff so they can make their case to the Labour Relations Board.
NEW
Gennium Pharmaceutical Products inc. c. Rioux, 2007 QCCS 5471 (CanLII)
2007-11-05 Dossier : 500-17-038049-071 Marc-André Blanchard, j.c.s. The judge
rejects the defendant's motion (s. 165 (4) Ccp) to dismiss the "special rule to
appear before the court to hear proof of the acts with which he is charged and
to urge any grounds of defence that he may have" (s.53 Ccp), on the basis that
it is unfounded in law, even if the facts alleged are true. The facts are as
follow. An Anton Piller order was rendered against the defendant in accordance
with the terms quoted in the judgement. On the day of the execution of the
order, the defendant was asked if he had any other electronic material,
including USB key, to which he answered negatively. A couple days later, the
defendants counsel sent a USB key to the plaintiff's counsel which, in turn,
sought a contempt order. (summary by Dominic Jaar)
Lixo Investments Ltd. c. Acmon inc., 2006 QCCS 5535 (IIJCan) Date
: 2006-12-08 Dossier : 500-11-029257-066. Maurice Laramée J.C.S. Plaintiffs, who
are the minority shareholders of Defendant, failed to prove some of the
essential requirements of an Anton Piller order: which are, firstly; that
Defendant has elements of proof or documents relevant to the litigation in his
possession and, secondly; that there is any reason to suspect or fear that
Defendant may destroy such proof or documents. Court concluded that it was a
fishing expedition and denied the extension of the Anton Piller.
Refplus
inc. c. Kehar, 2006 QCCS 2452 (IIJCan) Date : 2006-05-04 Dossier :
500-17-017038-038. Michel Déziel j.c.s. Defendant sought to annul and quash an
Anton Piller order, declare the search and seizure illegal, declare all evidence
seized pursuant to the order excluded from evidence in all civil proceedings,
and to declare all proceedings estopped due to the alleged abusive and illegal
manner in which the Plaintiff has acted. The court determined that the original
order met the three conditions for an Anton Piller order, pointing out that the
defendant had lied about whether he had plaintiff's information and appeared to
be in the act of removing it when the order was exercised, vindicating the
allegation that there was a serious risk of destruction and the need for an
ex parte order.
The process conformed to the order - the defendant had the right to seek counsel
(which he did) and although the lawyers said they would contest the Anton Piller
order, they did not ask for it to be suspended while they sought a judge; they
consented to the execution of the order; an independent lawyer isn't an absolute
requirement, according to existing jurisprudence, although it is recommended;
the use of a locksmith was ordered by the court and was not following a refusal;
the order did not require an inventory of the seized material, although one
should be produced as soon as possible; it was appropriate to seize boxes of
documents from the defendant's car; the order needed to be executed as soon as
possible, which happened to be Friday night; and, although there were two
representatives from the plaintiff, there were present one at a time. The motion
was rejected.
Transport
Canmer inc. c. Morel, 2006 QCCS 1061 (IIJCan) 2006-02-23 Dossier :
500-17-029625-061. Roger E. Baker j.c.s. The court quashes the Anton Piller
based on the new information provided by the defendants in an affidavit.
Nadeau c.
Nadeau, 2004 IIJCan 49666 (QC C.S.) 2004-12-23 Dossier :
200-05-010444-987.Claudette Tessier-Couture j.c.s. Issuance of an Anton
Piller order during the proceedings based on the fact that the defendants
did not collaborate to the examinations and the production of exhibits and
because the defendants had destroyed documents that might have been pertinent.
Centre local
de développement des Etchemins c. Gagnon, 2004 IIJCan 16204 (QC C.S.)
2004-06-09 Dossier : 200-17-004620-043. Frank G. Barakett j.c.s. Extension of
original
Anton Piller order of May 31st, 2004, issued by Gérald Boivert j.c.s.
Julien Inc.
c. Québec métal recyclé (F.N.F.) Inc., 2002 IIJCan 37829 (QC C.S.)
Citations parallèles : [2002] R.J.Q. 1079 2002-02-26 Dossier :
200-05-016578-028. Julien inc. (Julien) présente au juge en son cabinet une
demande d’émettre une injonction provisoire ex parte de type « Anton
Piller ». Request for an Anton Piller order to retrieve information from a
computer based on the belief that the defendant will delete or destroy the
information.
NEW (addition from Dominic Jaar) The Court also
ordered the plaintiff to notify the defendant before the execution of the order
to give the defendant the opportunity to file a motion to quash the
order...judgment gave a good overview of the Canadian and Quebec case law re
Anton Piller orders.
Shermag Inc.
c. Zelnicker, 2004 IIJCan 21212 (QC C.S.) Date : 2004-08-04 Dossier :
450-17-001218-040. Paul-Marcel Bellavance j.c.s. Litigation following notice of the termination of an
employment contract. The plaintiff believed that the defendant had started
forming a future partnership while still in the employ of the plaintiff, yet
after being advised of the termination. Confronted by the plaintiff, the
defendant threatened to use the information at his disposal to harm the
plaintiff's business. In the request for the Anton Piller order, the plaintiff
asked "qu'il soit ordonné au défendeur, sous peine d'outrage au Tribunal, de
laisser entrer chez lui un représentant de la demanderesse, un technicien
informatique, tout huissier de justice, de leur donner plein accès à ses
filières et équipement informatique, de fournir tout mot de passe ou code,
d'extirper les informations pertinentes aux dossiers et enfin, et c'est ce qui a
principalement provoqué la prise en délibéré de la requête, d'enlever les
documents pertinents." (that the defendant give full access to all files and
IT equipment, providing all passwords or codes and to eradicate all pertinent
documents (from his systems) and remove all pertinent documents") Only the
originals and copies removed by the bailiff would remain after the
destruction. In other words, prevent the defendant from using the documents by
erasing them from his computers and removing any other copies. Prima facie
evidence involved an email sent by the defendant to a competitor of the
plaintiffs, along with visual designs sent to a company in China.
This case also touches on the problem of private information
that may be disclosed in the course of the Anton Piller search of the
defendant's residence. "Il y a aussi un danger que l'on retrouve dans
l'appartement ou dans les ordinateurs des documents personnels ou des éléments
de vie privée. Pour le même motif expliqué au paragraphe précédent, ce fait ne
doit pas empêcher la présente procédure. Si on place dans un même ordinateur
des éléments privés et professionnels, au cas de mauvaise foi dans sa vie
professionnelle, on expose aussi sa vie privée. Toutefois, les personnes qui
exécuteront le présent jugement, prendront soin de ne retenir et photocopier que
ce qui est pertinent à la cause. Elles ont l'obligation d'ignorer et de garder
confidentielle, toute autre information qu'elles pourraient apprendre. Une
obligation générale de bonne conduite leur incombe". Essentially, if one
mixes private and professional elements on the same computer and shows bad faith
in professional life, one exposes one's personal life. However, those executing
the order will take care only to retain or photocopy documents pertinent to the
case and are obliged to ignore and keep confidential anything else they might
learn. It is incumbent on them to behave properly.
Shermag Inc.
c. Zelnicker, 2004 IIJCan 45775 (QC C.S.) Date : 2004-11-25 Dossier :
450-17-001218-040. Pierre C. Fournier j.c.s. Applicant granted access to the
documents seized under the Anton Piller order to prepare for the trial. (addition from Dominic Jaar) The judge
considered that the seized goods were deemed pertinent due to the fact that the
defendants did not seek to quash the Anton Piller order.
Groupe AST
(1993) Inc. c. Ross, 2002 IIJCan 32689 (QC C.S.) Date : 2002-05-28
Dossier : 200-05-016954-021. Georges Taschereau, j.c.s. Application for the
reversal of an Anton Piller type injunction for two of the defendants. The
applicants were not advised of the search and seizure in contravention of their
rights under the Civil Code and the Quebec Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The
search and seizure was reversed, but for the other defendants the court:
"ORDONNE
à Jean-Yves Ross et Raymond Chabot SST inc., et à toutes personnes raisonnables
en charge de leurs établissements ou domicile, de ne pas effacer, altérer,
détruire, mutiler ou cacher tous programmes informatiques, fichiers, courriers
électroniques, disques durs, CD Rom, disquettes, imprimés, notes, listes de
clients, livres, manuels ou autres écrits provenant d'AST ou reproduisant des
écrits provenant d'AST et de les remettre à la demanderesse, à ses représentants
et procureurs ainsi qu'à tous huissiers de justice qui en feront la demande".
Raymond
Chabot SST Inc. c. Groupe AST (1993) Inc., 2002 IIJCan 41255 (QC C.A.)
Citations parallèles : [2002] R.J.Q. 2715 2002-10-25
Dossier : 200-09-004085-020;200-05-016954-021. Seeking to reverse the order in
the above case in the Court of Appeal. Granted in part, with some modifications
to the safeguard order. In the course of the decision, the judge quotes Me
Jacques A. Léger in an article appearing in 1989, in Les Cahiers de propriété
intellectuelle: "Les ordonnances Anton
Piller ont déjà été décrites comme « l’arme nucléaire » du droit;
cela explique sans doute la fréquence de leur utilisation par les titulaires de
droits exclusifs en matière de propriété intellectuelle, tels les brevets, les
marques de commerce, droits d’auteurs, dessins industriels et secrets de
commerce. En effet, en ces domaines où la réputation commerciale juxtapose
l’intérêt économique en jeu, la partie plaignante aura facilement tendance à
faire le maximum pour assurer le respect et la protection de ses droits."
(i.e. Anton Piller orders have already been described as law's "nuclear bomb";
this undoubtedly explains the frequency of their use by those with exclusive
rights to intellectual property, such as patents, trademarks, copyright,
industrial design and trade secrets. In effect, in these areas where commercial
reputation intersects economic interests, the applicant will tend to do the
utmost to assure the protection of his rights.)
Tamec Inc.
c. Publications Infosearch Inc., 2003 IIJCan 43244 (QC C.S.) Date :
2003-11-06 Dossier : 500-17-017077-036. Marie St-Pierre J.C.S. Extension on an
Anton Piller order and an injunction. At the time of the original order the
defendants had not been represented by counsel. Modified into a preservation
order. The first part of the order reads: "de ne pas effacer, altérer,
détruire, mutiler ou cacher quelques informations ou documents que ce soit
relativement à ...collectivement « les documents » que ces documents soient :
sur support papier, logiciels, disques durs, accessoires, supports, programmes
informatiques, fichiers, courriers électroniques, disques durs, CD Rom,
disquettes ou autre forme" (i.e. not to erase, alter, destroy, mutilate or
hide information relative to the matter, collectively "the documents", whether
these documents are in paper, software, hard disk, accessory, support, programs,
files, electronic mail, CD ROM, diskette or other form). The court also orders
the seized materials to stay under the control of the bailiff for the additional
period of time.
Admaco
Business Machines Ltd. c. Zeichmeister, 2005 IIJCan 11741 (QC C.S.) Date
: 2005-04-08 Dossier : 500-17-024655-055. Marie St-Pierre J.C.S. An extension of
an Anton Piller order and interim injunction again related to information
technology. Added to demonstrate the continuing use of Anton Piller orders.
Financement
Calico Inc. c. Sauro Plante, 2002 IIJCan 19836 (QC C.S.) Date :
2002-02-04 Dossier : 500-05-070329-022. Jacques Dufresne J.C.S. "ORDONNE que
tous les biens enlevés en vertu de la présente ordonnance soient gardés et
entreposés par le ou les huissiers instrumentant et ORDONNE au ou aux huissier(s)
instrumentant de mettre sous scellé lesdits documents ou biens, de ne pas donner
l'accès aux documents et autres biens saisis en vertu de la présente ordonnance
à qui que ce soit et de quelque manière que ce soit jusqu'à ce qu'une ordonnance
de la Cour vienne préciser les modalités d'accès aux divers documents et/ou
biens saisis;" (i.e. orders that all goods removed under this order be
guarded and stored by the bailiff(s) and orders the bailiff(s) to seal the
documents and goods, and not to give anyone access to the documents or goods
until the Court has defined what kinds of access will be given to the seized
goods.)
NEW
Saphie
Number One Ltd. c. 6091636 Canada Inc., 2008 QCCS 2233 (CanLII) Date:
2008-05-28 Docket: 500-17-033937-064. A. Derek Guthrie J.S.C. Defendants motion
to quash a provisional Anton Piller order. "[44] Although today, more and more
business (and even personal) records and information are retained in computer
memories rather than on paper format, and even if huge chunks of information can
evaporate at the click of a key, the stringent jurisprudential standards
developed over the last 30 years for obtaining an Anton Piller order must not be
relaxed. [45] Many of Plaintiff's allegations turned out to be not only
incomplete, but often misleading and sometimes false. Confronted by the many
facts and admissions extracted from Mr Peña during his examination, Plaintiff's
only argument was that those facts were not material. The Court disagrees. In
the Court's opinion, the examination of Mr Peña as well as his Undertaking
responses demonstrate that Plaintiff violated the doctrine of full and frank
disclosure!"
Duchesneau c. Bureau canadien d'investigation et ajustement (CBIA) inc.,
2006 QCCQ 1474 (IIJCan) Date : 2006-02-15 Dossier : 500-22-110204-057. Jacques
Paquet j.c.s. Reversal of an order for seizure before judgment. Article 734 not
conceived with the intent of seizing the contents of a computer.
Transport Canmer inc. c. Morel, 2006 QCCS 1061 (IIJCan) Date :
2006-02-23 Dossier : 500-17-029625-061. Roger E Baker j.c.s. Defendant produced
an affidavit declaring that Morel "brought to the Plaintiff a freight forwarding
business that the Plaintiff did not conduct in any form prior to Morel joining
the firm." further, Morel and his group brought it "from their old and former
employer prior to the joining Canmer Inc, the present Plaintiff". the court
concluded "The information and the material in the file before me now, does not
merit nor warrant the issuance of a provisional injunction or an Anton Piller
order." (para 22).
Nadeau c.
Nadeau, 2005 IIJCan 12478 (QC C.S.) 2005-04-18 Dossier :
200-05-010444-987. Normand Gosselin j.c.s. The court quashed the AP order and
ordered the plaintiffs to return the seized documents to their owner because the
plaintiffs waited 5 years after they learned about the documents’ cleaning that
was performed by the defendants before filling their motion. Moreover, since
then, there was no evidence of documents spoliation or destruction. For that
reason, the court found that there was no grave danger that vital evidence would
be destroyed.
3469859
Canada Inc. c. St-Ours, 2004 IIJCan 39703 (QC C.S.) Date : 2004-09-24
Dossier : 500-17-022362-043. Jean-Pierre Senécal, j.c.s. The applicant seeks a
further injunction in addition to the Anton Piller order given on 16 Sep 2004.
Now that the respondent has counsel, they have vigorously denied the allegations
made during the request for the original injunction and the court concludes that
indeed the grounds were inadequate for the Anton Piller. The respondent's
business is totally paralyzed by the seizures. The Court rephrases the order to
say "refrain from altering, erasing, destroying, damaging, hiding or
transferring any and all items referred to in paragraph ii) above". The disposal
of the seized materials would be dealt with in court on 29 Sep 04.
Posesorsky c. 9076-3905 Québec Inc., 2003 IIJCan 566 (QC C.S.) Date :
2003-11-25 Dossier : 500-17-017994-032. Clément Gascon j.c.s. Reversal of an
order to preserve evidence under Article 438 because procedures as described in
Article 441 were not followed.
Citadelle,
Cie d'assurance générale c. Montréal (Ville), 2005 IIJCan 24709 (QC C.S.)
Date : 2005-07-11 Dossier : 500-05-000385-953. Nicole Morneau j.c.s. The parties
didn't agree on the form of production, in paper or digitized. Sixteen suits
against the city of Montreal were combined. A number of the plaintiffs would not
accept electronic production of the more than 10,000 pages. Counsel for the
defendants content that the two CDs rigorously conform to the requirements in
Articles 2841 and 2842 of the
Code civil
du Québec. The applicants don't meet the conditions for paper discovery.
Proportionality test. The Court declared that the production on CDs was
sufficient, and noted that Montréal agreed to make the original documents
available to the plaintiffs for inspection.
Peg Duncan & Dominic Jaar
December 7th, 2007
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