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Textron Canada Limited (Plaintiff) v.
Rodi & Wienenberger Aktiengesellschaft (Defendant)
Trial Division, Kerr J.—Ottawa, June 12 and 19, 1973.
Practice—Discovery—Witnesses—Patents—Action for annulment of patents—Allegation that patent assigned to defendant in Japan and Germany—Application to examine assignors for discovery abroad—Procedure—Rules 465(12), 477.
Plaintiff brought action against defendant to annul certain patents alleged to have been assigned to defendant by persons resident in Japan and in Germany, and applied for an order under Rule 477 to examine the assignors for discovery on commission.
Held, an order for a commission to examine persons for discovery in a foreign country cannot be made under Rule 477, but an order to examine them for discovery in a foreign country can be made under Rule 465(12) on proof that such an examination would likely be effective under the laws of Japan and Germany.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
David Scott for plaintiff.
Jim Kokonis for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Scott and Aylen, Ottawa, for plaintiff. Smart and Biggar, Ottawa, for defendant.
KERR J.—In this action the plaintiff seeks annulment of Canadian Patents No. 527990 and No. 623916, both of which are alleged to have been assigned to and are owned by the defend ant, and now the plaintiff applies to this Court for an order for leave to examine for discovery Isao Yamada, the inventor and assignor of Patent No. 527990, in Japan, and Ludwig Kunz- mann, the inventor and assignor of the other Patent No. 623916, in Germany, pursuant to Rule 465(5) of this Court, and for the issue of commissions for the said examinations for dis covery, pursuant to Rule 477, directed to named persons as special examiners in Japan and Ger-
many, respectively, and for an order for the issuance of writs of commission therefor.
Clearly, what the plaintiff seeks is an exami nation of the assignors for discovery under Rule 465(5), (6) and (12) and counsel for the plaintiff submits that the appropriate machinery for such examinations is commissions under Rule 477(1).
The purposes of discovery are well known, and in my opinion, Rule 477 is designed for very different purposes. That Rule provides for depositions to be filed with the Court and the use of them in evidence at the trial by any party, whereas the use of examination for discovery is very limited and under Rule 494(9) it is the party examining who may use in evidence at trial the examination for discovery of the adverse party. In the present case neither of the assignors sought to be examined is a party in the action and neither is an employee or under the control of the defendant.
However I think that, in the absence of spe cific provisions governing the manner of the examination for discovery of patent assignors out of Canada, Rule 465(12) permits the Court to make orders for discovery analogous to the kind of order provided for in Rule 477(1), or even, but less preferably, to issue commissions for the examination with appropriate modifica tions. I need not at this stage decide what use may be made of the examination if it takes place, conceivably it may be useful, even if only informative to the plaintiff. Nor need I specu late as to whether the assignors will attend for examination, or what recourse the plaintiff may have if they do not attend.
However at the hearing of the motion counsel for the plaintiff was not able to say whether there are conventions or treaties between Canada and Japan and Germany under which the requested examination may be held in those countries, or whether the examination is permit ted by their laws. A paper published in Volume
13 of International and Comparative Law Quar terly in 1964 states at page 271 that there are in force certain treaties between Canada and Euro- pean countries on legal proceedings and that the conventions were negotiated by the United Kingdom and were extended to Canada by exchange of notes. The 1973 English Supreme Court Practice, Vol. 1, gives a list at page 587 of European countries that have entered into con ventions with the United Kingdom in that respect; at page 586 it is said that the taking of evidence before a special examiner under the English Rule (O. 39(r).2) is not an available method in Japan; and at page 588 it is said that under the convention with Germany the special examiner must be a Consular officer. Hinton's Evidence and Service Abroad, published in 1930, may well be useful in this connection.
I would be willing to make an appropriate order for the requested examination for discov ery of the assignors in Japan and Germany or as the case may be, but before making an order I would want to be satisfied that there would be a reasonable probability that it would be effective under the laws of those countries. Consequently I will reserve judgment on the application for one month in order to give counsel for the plaintiff time meanwhile to enquire in that respect and if the application is pursued he may propose the terms to be incorporated in any order sought, and I will hear the parties on further notice of motion therefor.
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