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T-2749-78
Franz Giacomelli Colet (Plaintiff) v.
The Queen, David L. Hierlihy, Lavinia D. Finni- gan, Frank Easton, Henry L. (Gail) Jensan (Defendants)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Vancouver, January 15 and 18; Ottawa, February 21, 1979.
Practice — Motion to strike pleadings — Application to strike out granted, but application by way of ordinary notice of motion, for order that plaintiff not institute action in this Court except with leave, dismissed — Second motion to be brought by way of originating application or action because motion without relevance to issue between parties, and hence dismissed on procedural grounds — Further, power to make order requested not conferred on Court by Federal Court Act.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
No one appearing for plaintiff.
H. J. Wruck for defendant the Queen.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant the Queen.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
COLLIER J.: The plaintiff resides in Prince Rupert, British Columbia. This matter arises in one of the many actions brought by the plaintiff against Her Majesty the Queen and other defend ants. I am unable to summarize the plaintiff's statement of claim or the relief he requests. The pleading is incomprehensible.
The defendant, Her Majesty the Queen (Feder- al), and for the remainder of these reasons "the Crown", brought a motion in this action. The order sought is as follows:
... pursuant to Rule 5 of the Federal Court Rules and Section 84 of the Supreme Court Act of British Columbia R.S.B.C. 1960 Chap. 374 that no legal proceedings shall, without leave of the Court, be instituted by the plaintiff, Franz Giacomelli Colet, in either that name or any other name against Her Majesty the Queen in the Federal Court of Canada on the
grounds that the plaintiff has habitually and persistently and without any reasonable ground instituted vexatious legal pro ceedings against Her Majesty the Queen in the Federal Court of Canada, Trial Division, and for an Order that the Statement of Claim filed herein be struck out pursuant to Rule 419 of the Federal Court Rules on the grounds that it discloses no reason able cause of action; it is immaterial and redundant; it is scandalous, frivolous or vexatious; it may prejudice, embarrass or delay the fair trial of this action; and it is otherwise an abuse of the process of the Court or on any of these grounds and for costs.
I permitted the Crown to delete, from the fifth and sixth lines above, the words
against Her Majesty the Queen in the Federal Court of Canada.
The Crown filed two affidavits. The substance of those documents is that the plaintiff, under various names, has commenced in this Court, beginning in 1971, over 90 actions. Seventy-six have been, at various times and pursuant to Rule 419, struck out.
The plaintiff has been barred from suing, except with leave, in the Supreme Courts of Alberta and British Columbia.
The plaintiff did not appear when this motion was heard.
At the conclusion of argument on behalf of the Crown I said the motion would be dismissed on two grounds, and written reasons would follow. These are the reasons.
The first ground for dismissal is procedural.
The Crown seeks the order, barring the plaintiff from instituting any legal proceedings in this Court (except with leave), by way of ordinary notice of motion in this one action. The motion is pursuant to Rule 319(1).
Rule 319. (1) Where any application is authorized to be made to the Court, a judge or a prothonotary, it shall be made by motion.
The Crown justifies proceeding by way of applica tion in this action, as distinguished from a separate originating application or an action for a declara tion, because of Federal Court Rule 5 and section
84 of the British Columbia Supreme Court Act.' I reproduce those two provisions:
Rule 5. In any proceeding in the Court where any matter arises not otherwise provided for by any provision in any Act of the Parliament of Canada or by any general rule or order of the Court (except this rule), the practice and procedure shall be determined by the Court (either on a preliminary motion for directions, or after the event if no such motion has been made) for the particular matter by analogy
(a) to the other provisions of these Rules, or
(b) to the practice and procedure in force for similar pro ceedings in the courts of that province to which the subject matter of the proceedings most particularly relates,
whichever is, in the opinion of the Court, most appropriate in the circumstances.
84. If, on an application made by any person under this section, the Court is satisfied that any person has habitually and persistently and without any reasonable ground instituted vexatious legal proceedings, whether in the Supreme Court or in any other Court, and whether against the same person or against different persons, the Court may, after hearing that person or giving him an opportunity of being heard, order that no legal proceedings shall, without leave of the Court, be instituted by him in any Court.
Counsel says the practice and procedure in Brit- ish Columbia, in a matter of this kind, is to make an "application"; in this Court applications can be made by notice of motion in an action; the Crown's procedure here is, therefore, authorized.
I cannot agree. That is too giant a step, even for the gap rule.
The Crown seeks here to take from the plaintiff an untrammeled right accorded to all: the right to bring suit, without permission, in this Court. It seems to me the proceeding to establish such a ruling must emerge from a lis, directed to that issue only, between the Crown and the plaintiff. The motion before me, in this particular action, has no relevance to the issue between the parties (assuming the plaintiff to have a reasonable cause of action).
' R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 374, as amended by S.B.C. 1967, c. 53, s. 3 and S.B.C. 1976, c. 33, s. 148.
If this Court has the power to make the order sought, then a proceeding by way of originating application, or an action, must be brought by the Crown against this plaintiff. The parties would then be entitled to all the pre-trial procedures the Rules of Court contemplate. If a judgment were obtained, it would operate in rem against the plaintiff in all present and attempted future litiga tion. An order, or declaration, in the present law suit could not, in my opinion, have that legal effect.
Further, I do not see how an order made in the present action could be enforced against the plain tiff, in other present actions, or in future attempt ed actions.
The second ground for dismissal is that this Court does not have, in my view, the power to make the order requested.
Counsel again goes to the gap rule and section 84 of the Supreme Court Act of British Columbia. I do not subscribe to the submission that section 84 is "practice and procedure in force for similar proceedings" in B.C. The section is, to my mind, not a matter of practice and procedure. It is a matter of substantive law. The cases cited by counsel 2 uphold the inherent right and jurisdiction of a court to stay or dismiss proceedings which are an abuse of the process, quite apart from specific rules such as Rule 419 in this Court. But none of those cases holds that a court has the right, in the absence of empowering authority, to refuse a person, except with leave, access, in the first place, to the court processes.
The power of this Court to grant the order sought, must, in my opinion, be found in statute. Only the legislators have the right to make sub stantive law authorizing a court to forbid a would- be litigant from commencing action. The Federal
2 Attorney-General v. Vernazza [1960] A.C. 965 (H.L.). Royal Typewriter Agency v. Perry [1928] 3 W.W.R. 173. Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of Canada, Limited v. Canadian Car and Foundry Company, Limited (1918) 18 Ex. C.R. 241. Lord Kinnaird v. Field [1905] 2 Ch. 306. Grepe v. Loam (1888) 37 Ch.D. 168.
Court Act does not have any provision akin to section 84 of the British Columbia Act. 3
I add this. If I had found this Court to have the power to grant the remedy asked for, I would, on the material before me, have made the barring order.
The Crown is, however, entitled to the alterna tive order requested. The plaintiff's action against the defendant Her Majesty the Queen, is, there fore, pursuant to Rule 419, dismissed, with costs.
3 For similar staturory powers, see:
In Alberta, The Judicature Act, R.S.A. 1970, c. 193, s. 22.1
(as enacted by S.A. 1975, c. 43, s. 3(5)).
In England, the Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolida-
tion) Act, 1925, 15 & 16 Geo. 5, s. 51.
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