https://www.blacklocks.ca/
In an unusually trenchant costs award,
Justice Barnes of the Federal Court has ruled that Blacklock’s must pay the
taxpayers of Canada an “all-inclusive amount of $65,000 plus interest….” This
follows decisively upon Blacklock’s clear loss in the first case
of what I have called a “litany of litigation” of 11 lawsuits against the
Government of Canada and/or its agencies, not to mention several other cases
against other parties in the Federal and Ontario courts
I went
on to quote from the Court’s ruling:
[7] …I also reject the Plaintiff's argument that this case raised
"strong public interest considerations". Rather, this case was about
the Plaintiff's attempt to
recover disproportionate damages without any apparent consideration to the
legal merits of the claim or to the costs that it imposed on the taxpayers of
Canada.
[8] Any reporter
with the barest understanding of copyright law could not have reasonably
concluded that the Department's limited use of the subject news articles
represented a copyright infringement. Indeed, the fair dealing protection
afforded by section 29 of the Copyright Act, RSC, 1985, c C-42, is so obviously
applicable to the acknowledged facts of this case that the litigation should
never have been commenced let alone carried to trial.
[9] I am also troubled by
Plaintiff's attempt to claim an excessive amount of damages beginning with its
demand for compensation completely divorced from the Department's limited use
of the two articles. In no circumstances would Blacklock's losses have exceeded
the cost of individual subscriptions by the six officials who read the
articles; yet Blacklock's demanded a license fee equivalent to its bulk
subscription rate of over $17,000.00. This practice appears to be consistent with Blacklock's
usual approach which is to hunt down, by Access to Information requests,
alleged infringers and then demand compensation based on an unwarranted and
self-serving assertion of indiscriminate and wide-spread infringement. The
record discloses that in several instances government departments acquiesced
for business reasons and paid the full amounts demanded. In this instance the
Department appropriately took a hard line and succeeded in its defence.
(highlight added)
In the
latest of many unusual twists and turns in Blacklock’s “litany of litigation”, as I have called it, Blacklock’s has chosen to
appeal the December 21, 2016 $65,000 costs ruling, while notably not attempting
to appeal the underlying judgment itself.
Here is
Blacklock’s Notice of Appeal – the
content of which is unusual in certain respects, not least of which is the
inclusion of a quote from a blog. I will
refrain from further comment on this document at this time.
As I
indicated in blog of December 21, 2016:
Costs awards are usually very
hard to appeal successfully – especially one such as this where Justice Barnes
has provided ample reasoning and a detailed calculation in Annex “A”.
The
appeal process will likely take several months at least to unfold. Meanwhile,
Blacklock’s has commenced four additional actions in the Federal Court in 2017. I
shall update on these shortly.
HPK
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