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T-722-75
Imperial Marine Industries Ltd. (Plaintiff) v.
Fireman's Fund Insurance Company and Ameri- can National General Agencies (Defendants)
Trial Division, Mahoney J.—Vancouver, Novem- ber 1 and 2, 1976.
Procedure—Application for order for examination for dis covery pursuant to Rule 465(19)—Whether special reason or exceptional case—Federal Court Rule 465(19).
Plaintiff seeks an order to compel first defendant to produce its underwriter for examination for discovery. The said defend ant's claims officer was examined for discovery on three occa sions. On the first occasion he was asked to provide answers to the questions now put but was unable to do so since they related to the underwriting of the policy in issue. On the last occasion he was not asked to inform himself and reply to these questions.
Held, the application is dismissed. Under Rule 465(19) "special reason" must mean that the information sought is material to the issue and an "exceptional case" would be one where the Court is satisfied that the usual procedure of the individual being questioned informing himself of matters not within his personal knowledge would not satisfy the ends of justice. Neither of these factors is present.
Donald Applicators Ltd. v. M.N.R. [1966] Ex.C.R. 481, applied.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
A. Szibbo for plaintiff. M. J. Bird for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Bull, Housser & Tupper, Vancouver, for
plaintiff.
Owen, Bird, Vancouver, for defendants.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MAHONEY J.: The plaintiff seeks an order, pur suant to Rule 465(19), compelling the defendant, Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, to produce one Peter Wright for examination for discovery. This is an action by an insured, under a written contract of insurance, against its insurers who are
alleged not to have paid all of the monies payable in respect of two losses incurred by the insured. An officer produced by the said defendant, Richard Henry Bodfield, was examined for discovery on December 10, 1975 and again on March 10, 1976. On May 11, 1976, on the plaintiffs application, an order of this Court issued requiring Bodfield to answer certain questions which he had refused to answer when being examined. The questions which have led to this application were not subject of the May 11 order nor of the application therefor, nor were there undertakings sought from Bodfield that he inform himself and provide answers to them. His examination for discovery has been concluded.
Bodfield is engaged in the claims side of the said defendant's business; Wright is engaged in the underwriting side. The questions, and Bodfield's failure or inability to answer them, all appear in the transcript of the December 10, 1975 examina tion; all relate to underwriting generally or to the underwriting of the policy in issue: to things that occurred, to the underwriter's state of mind, to what he thought prior to the making of the policy. The defendants, however, admit making the policy; the issue is its interpretation.
Rule 465(19) provides:
(19) The Court may, for special reason in an exceptional case, in its discretion, order a further examination for discovery after a party or assignor has been examined for discovery under this Rule.
That is strong language. The party seeking further examination for discovery must establish that it does so for "special reason in an exceptional case" before the Court is called upon to exercise its discretion. It seems to me that one of the elements of a "special reason" must be that the information sought is clearly material to the issue before the Court. One "exceptional case" is, I take it, the situation where the Court is satisfied that the usual procedure of the individual being questioned informing himself of matters not within his person al knowledge, would not likely satisfy the ends of
justice'. I am not satisfied that this is such an exceptional case nor, if it were, that the indicated element of a "special reason" is present.
ORDER
The application is dismissed.
1 Donald Applicators Ltd. v. M.N.R. [1966] Ex.C.R. 481.
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