Cite as: Dow & Duggan Prefabrication Ltd. v. Smithers, 1991 NSSC 8
1986
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NOVA SCOTIA
TRIAL DIVISION
BETWEEN:
DOW & DUGGAN PREFABRICATION LIMITED,
a body corporate
-
and
JOSEPH LUKE SMITHERS
HEARD:
At Halifax, Nova Scotia, before the Honourable
Mr. Justice David W.
on January 15, 1991
DECISION:
February 8, 1991
COUNSEL:
Mr. Michael F. LeBlanc, Solicitor for the Appellant
Mr. Robert G.
Belliveau, Q.C., Solicitor for the
S.H. No.
74813
APPELLANT/PLAINTIFF/
DEFENDANT
BY
COUNTERCLAIM
RESPONDENT/DEFENDANT/
PLAINTIFF BY
COUNTERCLAIM
Gruchy, in Chambers,
Respondent
1986
IN THE
SUPREME
COURT
TRIAL DIVISION
BETWEEN:
DOW
& DUGGAN PREFABRICATION LIMITED,
a body corporate
-
and
JOSEPH
LUKE
SMITHERS
GRUCHY,
J.
THE
The
Appellant
("Dow
( "Smi thers")
were
the parties to an action in this Court, s. H.
No.
57549.
The sUbject matter was a dispute concerning the design
and
construction
of a' log
pretabricator of the house and Smithers was the owner-constructor.
The trial
was
held
on
November
and
23,
1988,
before
Mr.
Justice
was filed
on
February
10,
1989,
& Duggan was liable to Smithers for
assessed.
The final order provided that Smi thers should recover
against
Dow
&
Duggan
75'f,
of $10,725.00 plus interest and further
t h at;
he
should
recover
"75'1<,
of
of the costs of
(Dow
1:1
Duggan) when taxed".
S. H.
No.
74813
OF
NOVA SCOTIA
APPELLANT/PLAINTIFF/
DEFENDANT
BY
COUNTERCLAIM
RESPONDENT/DEFENDANT/
PLAINTIFF BY
COUNTERCLAIM
FACTS
&
Duggan")
ind
the
Respondent
house.
Dow
&
Duggan
was
the
29,
30,
December
1,
2,
21,
22
Richard.
A written decision
wherein it was
found that
Dow
75% of the amount of damages
his costs
when
taxed,
less
25%
-
The
matter
of
costs
the
Taxing
Master,
Arthur
Hare,
contention
before
Mr.
Hare,
including
of experts'
fees.
Mr.
Hare filed
3,
1990, wherein he dealt specifically with the accounts of J.W.
Cowie
Engineering
Limited,
the
Dorey
Engineering
Limited,
the engineer
Hare
reduced
the
Dorey bill
from
allowed the Cowie bill as presented in the amount of $15,739.23.
Mr.
Hare 's dispos i tion of costs is now
which appeal is the subject matter of this proceeding.
The
appeal
against
taken pursuant to Civil Procedure Rule 63.38; the subject matter
of
the
appeal
is
limi ted
by virtue of
powers are set forth in Rule 63.40.
"Time and contents of appeal
63.38.
(1)
A person pecuniarily interested in the result
of
a
taxation may,
not later than ten days after he has
received
notice
of
a
certification
the taxation as herein provided.
(2)
An
appellant
shall
chambers
by
filing
with
the
prothonotary a notice of appeal and serving it upon every
opposite party.
(3)
A
notice
of
appeal
ob jected to,
the grounds of the
of the hearing of the appeal.
(4)
A notice of appeal shall be,
(a)
returnable
within
fifteen
it with the prothonotary; and
( b )
served
on
all parties directly affected
the
appeal
not
less
than
2
-
.
proceeded
to
taxation
before
Q.C.
Various
items
were
in
particularly
the
matter
a written decision on October
engineer for
Smithers,
and
D.B.
for
Dow
&
Duggan.
Mr.
$21,581.57
to
$16,000.00
and
under appeal,
the
taxing
mas ter' s
decis ion is
Rule
63.39;
the Courts'
Those rules are as follows:
on
taxation,
appeal
appeal· to
a
judge
ln
taxing
officer
and
the
shall specify
any
item
ob jection,
and
the -d a te
days
from
filing
by
three
days
before
the
-
date
set
for
the
hearing
[E.62/33/35]
(5)
Notwithstanding
Part,
an
appeal
from
a
taxing officer's
of
a party's entitlement to disbursements in a proceeding
in which
the costs
between
by
a
court shall
be
to
the
the costs between the parties, unless the court otherwise
orders.
Appeal confined to items specified
63.39.
(1)
Unless the court otherwise orders,
from a taxation shall be confined to the items and grounds
specified and shall be heard on the evidence before the
taxing officer.
(2)
The
decision
be
final
and
conclusive
on all matters
been appealed from.
Powers of judge on appeal
63.40.
On an appeal from a taxation, the court may
(a1 exercise all the powers of a taxing officer;
(bl
review any discretion exercised by the taxing
officer
as
fully
as
if the
by the court in the first instance; and
(cl grant such order on the application, including
the costs of appeal and taxation, as is just."
This
matter
should ordinarily
Justice
Richard
pursuant
to
Rule
in regular Chambers and was then scheduled for a special Chambers
matter.
No objection was
made to my hearing the matter and both
parties have proceeded before me.
this appeal will be heard and disposed of by myself.
The
items
under appeal,
in
my
consideration,
are the account of A.B.
3
of
the
appeal.
anything
contained
in
this
determination
the parties
were
determined
same
judge' who
determined
an appeal
of
the
taxing
officer
shall
which
have
not
taxation
were
made
have
come
before
Mr.
63.38 (5) .
It
came
before
me
I will, therefore, order that
and to which
I
am restricted
Dorey,
the account
-
of
J.W.
Cowie,
Kempton
Appraisals
The
grounds
to
which
I
am
similarly restricted are as set out
in the notice of appeal as follows:
"1.
The
Learned
Taxing
Master
that
the
costs
for
the
Defendant/Plaintiff by Counterclaim,
should not be reduced.
2.
The
Learned Taxing Master erred in finding that the
Learned Trial
Judge
did not
in
error
and
accordingly that
was justified.
3.
The Learned Taxing Master erred in finding that costs
are
payable
on
Cowie's
account despi te that they remain
unpaid.
4.
The Learned Taxing Master erred in failing to adjust
for
that
portion of
Cowie's
Three
Thousand Dollars
($3,000.00)
Judge.
5.
The Learned Taxing Master erred in allowing the costs
for
expert opinion evidence given
Limi ted,
where
the
evidence
the proceeding.
6.
The Learned Taxing Master erred in allowing the costs
for
Brian Burnell,
provincial actuary,
Burnell did not file a report or give evidence at trial.
7.
The
Learned
Taxing
Master
Dorey's
Bill
should
be
reduced.
Tr ial
Judge
had
accepted
his
Respondent's expert engineer.
8.
Such other errors and grounds as may appear."
Mr.
Jus tice
Richard
experts
in
an
unequivocally
appreciate fully
Mr.
Justice Richard's sense of frustration
the
engineering
evi<Jence
ad<Juced
extensively those parts of his decision bearing on that subject.
4
Limited
and
Brian
Burnell.
erred
in
law
in holding
expert
witness
for
the
J.W.
Cowie
("Cowie")
find
Cowies
evidence to
be
a
reduction
in the Bill
account
which
was
fixed at
by the Learned Trial
by
Kempton Appraisals
had
no
probative
value
in
despite that
Mr.
erred
in
holding
that
Although
the
Learned
opinion
over that of
the
dealt
wi th
the
two
eng ineer ing
critical
manner.
In
order
to
w i th
before
him,
I
set
forth
-
observed condition of the Smithers residence,
up
with
so widely divergent
cause of
the
problems but also as
occurred
to
me
during
the trial that
who
apparently
respected
one
rapport
ought
to
have
consul ted with
effort
to
at
least
rationalize,
differences in the interests of their respective clients.
Such a
consultation was suggested by Dorey.R. Murrant,
who
had
previously
acted
for
said
he
was
"adverse"
to
engineers
talking!
That counsel was concerned about the two experts
talking
and
advised
against
Because of this the two experts did not consult but merely
maintained, if not hardened, their adversarial positions.
In
my
view,
this is carrying the adversarial
the
extreme,
rendering
the
their respective clients or to the court."
But the difficulty was not restricted to the engineers
themsel ves.
At least one of the parties, Smithers, did not even
follow his own engineer's advice.
"
The engineers were equally divergent in their opinions
as
to
the
appropriate
resolution
weaknesses
at
the
Smithers
a temporary wire cable and turnbuckle system on the second
floor
which
would
prevent
any
roof
system
and
avoid
total
This
temporary
solution
was
wea ther
moderated
and
the
diminished.
As
a
permanent
rather
intricate
network
of
support mechanisms to be superimposed upon the roof beams
and
outside
walls.
It
recommending
a
heavy
steel
walls,
which would support the roof by
pieces
emanating
out
from
an
of
the
inter ior roof
beams.
suggested
by
Cowie
was presented to Smithers.
without
consultation,
amended
had
the
steel
erected
in
a
at
a
cost
of
some
$8642.00.
Smithers placed the supporting "I"
of
the building against the
he
hoped to preserve the exterior appearance of the house.
6
could
come
views,
not
only
as
to the
to the solution.
It
two
such
people
another
and
had
a
good
each other in an
if
not
resolve
their
Smithers
in
this
matter
( si t ting )
down
and
any
such
consultation.
system to
experts
of little value
to
Mr. Justice Richard continued:
of
the
structural
residence.
Cowie
proposed
further
spreading
of
the
collapse
from
snow
load.
not
acted
upon
since
the
threat
of
a
snow
'load
solution
Cowie
designed
a
steel
"I"
beams
and steel
appeared
that
Cowie
was
frame,
independent
of
the
a
number of steel
"I"
beam
attached to
one
The
permanent
solution
as
Smi thers,
the
Cowie
proposal
and
somewhat
different
manner
In revising the
proposal,
beams
on the interior
two
end walls.
In this way
-
In appearance,
these structural modifications range
unsightly
to
almost
grotesque,
true
reflection
of
appearance.
accentuated
by
Mr.
Smithers I
brown or black, which, on a natural pine background served
only
to
highlight
the
structure.
professional
services
in
$8516.37
as reflected in invoices
and
January
26,
1988.
Cowie
variation of his
recommendations
the structur~l
problems
and
expenditures are necessary."
While
dissatisfied
Mr.
Justice
Richard
ultimately
and testimony of Dow & Duggan's expert, Dorey.
"
In
any
event,
I
am
of the
matter as well as the practicality of the solutions fall
somewhere between the
two posi tions taken by the parties
t .
and
their
experts.
Although
accept either
v i ew
in its entirety,
the
more
practical
and
common
Dorey
and
I
adopt that approach in favour of that taken
by
Cowie.
At
the risk
of
simply because it makes better common sense."
The
learned
trial
to liability is as follows:
I
find that
Dow
and
Duggan is respons ible, ei ther
in
breach
of
contract
or
losses
suf fered
by
Smi thers
the
structural
deficiencies:"
ordered to pay
75% of the costs of Smithers, said cost
to be taxed on a party and party basis."
But
Mr.
Justice
Richard's
expert evidence did
not
end with his finding
7
from
if
the
pictures
are
a
The
unsightliness
was
painting
the steel
a
dark
Cowie's
charges
for
this
regard
appears
to
be
dated
March
31,
1987
said
that
the
Smithers
does
not fully resolve
further
modifications
and
with
both
engineering
experts,
favoured,
in
part,
the
advice
He said:
view that fault
in this
I
am
constrained
not
to
I
find
favour
wi th
sense
approach
taken
by
repeating myself,
I
do
that
judge's
conclusion
with
respect
negligence
for
75%
of
the
which
directly relate to
Dow
and
Duggan
is also
dissatisfaction
with
the
on liability.
The
-
9
Kempton further estimated that the potential increase
in
value
would
be
based
upon
the
lower,
rather
than the higher value
first year along (alone) this could be an added loss
of $1725.
It is unfortunate that Smithers has suffered,
and
wi 11
continue
to
suf fer
result of the structural and aesthetic characteristics
of his dwelling.
I
am of the view that Dow and Duggan
ought
only
be
held
liable
flowed
reasonably
from
its
I
have
already
found
that
unreasonable and therefore, logically,
ought not
be liable for
any costs or losses flowing
from
that
treatment.
This
of the Cowie survey, the cost of the steel fabrication
and
installation
and
the
loss
Kempton.
Although
I
am not entirely satisfied with Dorey's
estimated
cost
for
completing
I
find it
more
realistic
of.
Cowie
wi th
which
I
have
no
other
figures
before
me
to accept the estimate of Dorey of $2725.00.
I
fix
damages
suffered
for repairs to the dwelling house;
damages
for
the inconvenience which these structural
problems
caused
to
Smithersj
determination of
cost of
the services
to
advise
Smithers
fixed
at .$3,000.
rejected
much
of
Cowie's
the
opinions
expressed
I
which relate to the rejected professional opinion."
Based upon Mr. Justice Richard's decision, the parties
then
proceeded
to
tax
costs.
written
decision
dealt
only
engineers.
The
Taxing Master's disposi tion of the accounts
as
set
out
above.
According
to
Dorey 's
b i 11
was
challenged for var ious reasons,
too
much
time
was
spent
on
preliminary matters
arid
he
ha d
e ppa r e n t Ly
stayed
in court during
a
factor
of
7.5%
of
and in the
f inahcial
losses
as
a
for
those
cost (s)
which
breach
or
negligence.
the
Cowie
treatment
was
Dow and Duggan
will includ~
the
cost
of
value
as
set
by
the
required
repairs
and
practical
than
that
already dealt.
Having
I
am
therefore
forced
by
Smithers
at
2725.00
$5,000 as general
a
somewhat
arbitrary
of
an
expert
Since
I
have
professional
report
and
cannot
allow
those
fees
Essentially the
taxing
master's
with
the
accounts
of
the
two
was
the
taxing
mas ter' s
decis ion I
inc luding that
and
preparation
the
whole
course
-
10
of the trial.
Dow
& Duggan's position, as reported by the Taxing
Master,
was that Dorey had found errors in Cowie's work,
necessitating
lengthy
recalculations.
continued
presence
in
court
throughout
by the Taxing Master or advanced before me.
With regard to the quality of the engineer's evidence,
Mr.
Hare concluded:
"
Neither
the
evidence
decision
make
any
reference
Mr.
Cowie 1 s
presentation.
wrote
extensively
about
the
I
think it is
fair
to
say that neither
the
resolution
of
the
matter
no
reference to the quality of
Dorey's evidence was accepted because it made more common
sense than Cowie's."
I
respectfully
disagree
Haster's
conclusion.
There
is
Richard
as
to
the
quality
of
engineers,
but
the
criticism
and
of both is very clear.
Mr.
Hare then referred to the assertion that Cowie's
bill should be reduced as Smithers'
refused
to
co-operate
in pre-trial discussions
been
of
assistance
to
the
parties
tha t
whi le
the
judge
"was
aware
witnesses"
and
made
specific
provisions
did
not
indicate
that
there
should
of
the
fa i 1ure ref erred to."
The
referred,
In this context,
to
ORKIN,
I take this to be tile 1968 Edition as I
a
196~
Edition.
It
appears
that
thereby
No
reason
for
Dorey's
the trial
was
reported
presented
nor
the
Judge's
to
the
incorrect state
of
The
Judge,
in
his
Decis ion,
evidence
of
the
engineer.
engineer
made
easy.
However,
there
is
the evidence other than
with
the
Learned
Taxing
no
express
finding
by
Justice
the
evidence
of
either
of
the
disapproval
of
the
evidence
former counsel had allegedly
which
may
have
and
to
the
Court.
He . said
of
the costs
of
having
these
concerning
same
" ... he
be
a
disallowance
because
taxing master's dec ision also
1969
Edition,
at page
19.
have been unable to locate
the
reference
is
to
those
-
11
sections of the text wherein the author sets forth those grounds
for
which
a
successful
party
may
current version of
ORKIN
(2nd
para.
205.2(2).)
The
taxing master did
of
"misconduct of the parties"
concluding
that
the trial
judge
should be a disallowance because of the failure referred to."
The
taxing
master's
the fees in question must be reasonable and he referred to certain
principles which he
found helpful.
of which is not identified, are as follows:
"The Board finds that the general principles to be followed
in
determining
such
reasonable
as follows:
1.
Full
costs
of
and
incidental
!
properly
made
pursuant
should
be
paid
by
the
The costs should however reflect such reasonable,
economical
and
straight-forward
presentation as is necessary to properly present
the owner's case to the Board.
2.
The
owner
should
not
unnecessary wor~
or
other
incurred through over-caution or over preparation..
3.
The
owner
should
not
be
the
result
of
misconduct,
by the owner.
4.
The
tariff
of
costs
prescribed
li tigation
may
be
accepted
but where,
in the opinion of the Board,
fixed
by
'that tariff
are
inordinately high to compensate for
necessarily
and
reasonably
is not bound
by
such tariff and should not follow
it. "
be
deprived
of
costs.
(The
Ed. )
deals
with this
subject at
not address
the matter
beyond
making that reference
and
"did
not
indicate
that
there
decision
then
concluded
that
Those principles,
the source
costs
may
be
summarized
to
an
application
to
the
Act
by
the
owner
expropriating
authority_
preparation
and
be
allowed
the
cost
of
experises
or
costs
allowed costs which are
omission
or
neglect
for
ordinary
as
a
general
guide;
the fees
either
inadequate
or
the services
rendered
the
Board
.
-
12
(I
note
in
r3,:,;sj_ng
apparently
those
enunicated
by
Board
and that accordingly,
an
body
which is
by the nature of the proceeding vastly different
from
ordinary
litigation.)
The
by
the
Taxing
Master
and
he ruled implici tly that
account was in part for unnecessary work and reduced the account
from
$21,581.57
to
$16,000.00,
account of Cowie.
The
other
items
at
mentioned
by
the
Taxing
Master.
below.
COURT'S POSITION ON
AN APPEAL FROM A TAXING MASTER
There
is
no
question
jurisdiction to hear
an
appeal
63.40.
But the jurisdiction of the Court is somewhat restricted.
I
refer
to
Rent
Review
Commission
et al
(1983),
56
N.S.R.
(2d)
309,
said:
" [3]
At
first
blush,
it would· appear
before
the
judge
on
appeal
a
hearing de novo.
This is so, subject to the following
comments.
I
refer
to
the
(1979),
35
N.S.R.
(2d)
435;
Justice
Glube,
as
she
then
taxation
and
applications
taxations.
I
subscribe to the learned justice's comments
on p , "438:
decision
of
a
Taxing
overturned,
except .where
proceeded
on
a
wrong
principle,
been a gross error.
that
these
principles
are
an
Expropriations
Compensation
approach
must
be
taken
by
that
second
principle
was
invoked
Mr.
Dorey's
or
to
equal
approximately
the
issue
in
this
appeal
were
not
I
will deal
wi th each of
them
but
that
the
Court
has
the
of this nature pursuant to Rule
v :
Rawdon
Realties
Limited
wherein
Mr.
Justice Richard
that
the
hearing
would
be
in
the
nature
of
case
of
Gillan
v.
Latimer
62
A.P.R.
435,
where
Madam
was,
reviewed principles
of
involving
appeals
from
Master
will
not
be
the
Taxing
Master
has
or
there
has
-
(4]
The trial judge in the Gillan case, supra, referred
wi th approval to the
following passage
(1920),
47 O.L.R.
45:
It is settled practice that
interfere in matters
left to
the
Taxing
Officer
on
To
interfere
here
my discretion for that of
it is
to
pass
on
the
and
whose
discretion
touchstone.
Had
any
pointed out,
I might have interfered.
(5]
It would appear then to be well settled that a
sitting
on
appeal
of
a
taxing master's bill ought
to
interfere
except
where
principle or other gross error."
with
respect,
I
have
Master
when
he
said,
regarding
herein, that "there is no reference to the quality o~
other
than
Dorey's
evidence
was
common
sense
than
Cowie' s v
"
extensively
above,
I
conclude
on the part of the Taxing Master.
I
might· have
beeh
the Taxing Master's decision than· I
decision
of
Kelly,
J.,
of
this
Marine
Limited
v.
Blair
et
aI,
decision
.is dated October 17,
1990,
herein
on
taxation.
I
hazard
had
the
benefit
of
Mr.
Justice
of
the
taxation
may
we 11
have
specifically
to
the
following
decision:
I
have sometimes reflected that some expert testimony
seems
to arise more
from
the results desired
13
from
R.
v ;
Curry
the
court will
not
the discretion of
any
question
of
quantum
would
be
to
substitute
an officer whose duty
quantum
of
counsel
fees,
is
by
the
law
made
the
error
of
principle
been
judge
not
there
is
a
patent
error
in
to
disagree
with
the
Taxing
Mr.
Justice Richard's
decision
the evidence
accepted
because it made
more
Having
reviewed
the
decision
that
this
was
a
palpable
error
more
hesitant
to
interfere
wi th
am,
had it not been for the
Court
in
Webster
and
Nauticus
1987,
S.H.
No.
61691.
That
two weeks after the decision
to
speculate
that
had
Hr.
Hare
Kelly's
decision,
the
outcome
had dif f erent results.
I
re fer
passages
in
Mr.
Justice
Kelly's
by
a
party
-
14
or
by his or
her
counsel,
opinion of a situation.
Surely counsel and experts chosen
by counsel must be aware that courts place less or little
weight
on opinion evidence which inappropriately favours
the client, or is improperly based on sUbjective opinions
of
the
client.
The
duty
of
the
court
with
an
objective
to assist the
court
in areas
professional
or
special
assistance.
the expert is to advance,
not necessarily
but one that is substantially grounded on fact and valid
professional assumptions.
I
must
determine
here whether
services
are
"just
and
reasonable"
the charged
time
of
the expert was necessarily incurred
for the purpose of procuring evidence.
considers
many
elements
in
the
appropriateness
of
an
propose to list all of
those elements
would be as follows:
(1) the time and the responsibility
involved in the expert function;
in the litigation;
( 3 )
the complexity of the expert's
function;
(4)
the
extent
of
to
form
the
basis
of
the
relevance of the opinion to the issues in question;
the
professional quality of
the
training,
degree
of
skill
expert;
(8)
hourly
rates
in
The ability of the party to pay and the results achieved
are
also
sometimes
appropriate
not always
be heavily weighed
on factors-outside of the control of the expert.
The
trial
in
this
matter
and took place over nine days.
projected
a
five
day
trial.
difficult to predict the time for the attendance of this
particular expert at trial.
as well was
required longer than his actual time on the
witness
stand,
as
counsel
court I s
concurrence,
allowed
for
the
purpose
of
allowing other witnesses
their
evidence
when
they
were
find
that
the
expert
witness
evidence
of
a
number
of
wi tnesses
than
from
a
purely objective
the
expert is to
provide
professional
analysis
and
where
the court requires
The
obligation
of
a
best case,
the
charges
for
the
and
whether all
of
A court frequently
determining
the
adequacy
or
expert's billing.
I
do
not
but
some
of them
(2) the amount involved
the
information available
expert's
opinion;
(5)
the
(6)
the expert's
opinion;
( 7 )
and
competence
of
the
the
trade
or
profession.
considerations
but
may
by
the court as they rely
was
somewhat
complicated
The parties had originally
To
some
extent,
it
was
His attendance at the trial
by
agreement
and
with
the
his
evidence
to
be
broken
to present
available.
However,
I
was
present
during
the
who
had
Li,ttle or
no
-
16
had
Smithers,
through
his
former
engineer
to
have
attempted to resolve their differences.
were,
after all,
dealing
with
Instead,
the
matter
was
permitted
trial.
The Court, in this appeal, cannot and will not comment
on
the
contractual
arrangement
experts.
When the fees
of the expert of one party unreasonably
impact
on
the other party,
the
the duty to intervene.
Keeping
in
mind
that
$3,000 to Smithers for an unreasonable design and which eventually
resul ted in a
grotesque appearance of the bui lding,
particularly in mind the eventual result of the trial,
the Cowie account, for the purposes of taxation, to $7,500.
2.
This ground is included in Ground 1
and I merely refer to the above.
3.
Accounts not Paid
The
Cowie
account
had
the
time of taxation or at the time of taxation or at the time
of
the
appeal
before
me.
The
appellant
that only accounts which have in fact been paid should be allowed
on
taxation.
The
appellant
has
Desourdy
Construction
Ltee.
(1973),
Chemicals Ltd. v. Canadian Westinghouse Co. Ltd.
(2d)
649, and various texts in support of their proposition.
counsel,
have
permitted
the
They
a
finite
and
concrete
subject.
to
escalate to
a
seven
day
between
the
parties
and
their
Court
has
the
jurisdiction and
Richard,
J.,
already
allowed
and keeping
I
reduce
not
been
.pa i d
by
Smithers at
has
taken the posi tion
cited
J.D.
Irving
Ltd.
v.
5
N.S.R.
(2d)
350,
Canso
(1974),
10 N.S.R.
-
Rule 63.30 is as follows:
"63.30
Disbursements,
other
of the court, shall not be allowed unless the
therefor is established either by the solicitor conducting
the matter, or by affidavit."
The
affidavit
filed
costs was not produced before me, but it was discussed by counsel.
It is
my understanding that the liability of
for
the
account
was
established.
to Smithers' counsel were produced.
The
liability
for
established in accordance with Rule 63.30.
reason
only,
disallow
the
Cowie
I will, however, deal with the experts' accounts more fully below.
I
make
mention of
the cases ci ted to
of the proposition that accounts had to be paid before they could
be
allowed
on
taxation.
There
practices
p r i o r
to
the
present
payment
of
accounts
prior
to
taxation.·
view,
lS
no
longer
necessary
as
and intent of Rule 63.30.
4.
Failure to Adjust Cowie's Account to Reflect
the Amount Fixed by Mr. Justice Richard
The
amount
of
$3,000
Richard to Smithers as an item of damage related to the Smithers'
accoun t
for
the
des ign
of
a
"f ix"
a
figure
reduced
from $8,516.37.
of
cJ.ccounts
LS
before
rno.
The
arc:
17
than
fees
paid
to officers
1 iabi li ty
in
support
of
the
taxation
of
Smithers to Cowie
The
Cowie
accounts
addressed
the
Cowie
disbursement
has
been
I
will· not, for that
account
in
whole
or
in part.
me
in support
is
no
question
but
that
the
Civil
Procedure
Rules
required
That
practice,
in
my
a
result of the clear. wording
was
allowed
by
Mr.
Justice
for
the
bui lding .
That
was
No such account or combination
Cowie
accounts
presented. to
me
-
18
July 7, 1988
-
# 979C
Nov.
22, 1988 -
#9790
Sept. 6,
1989 -
# 979E
TOTAL
Since Mr.
Hare had before him Cowie accounts totalling
$15,739.23,
I
am,
therefore,
missing
$3,135.75.
I
conclude,
therefore,
the amount of $8,516.37 which were reduced by Mr. Justice Richard
do not form any part of my consideration.
have been reviewed by Mr. Hare.
In order to
make this matter clear
may be,
with the mater ial presented to me), it does not appear
to me that any of the Cowie accounts as presented to me require
adjustment.
Mr.
Justice Richard allowed $3,000 for the account
of
$8,516.37,
as
a
head of
damage.
allowing $7,500 for the account of $15,739.23.
5.
Kempton Appraisal Ltd.
This
account
appears
reasonably
incurred.
The
devaluation
issue and the obvious method of determining the quantity of that
devaluation
was
to
have
a
"before
trial
judge
remarked
upon it and,
I allow the account.
6.
Brian Burnell Account
This
account,
while
does
not
appear
to
have
been necessary.
produced
for
the trial
and
was
disallow the Brian Burnell account.
$ 3,328.75
1,887.23
7,387.50
$12,603.48
accounts in the
amount
of
that
the
Cowie
accounts
in
Nor could that amount
(or
as clear as
In addition to that,
I
am
to
be
reasonable
and
was
of
the
building
was
in
and
after"
appraisal.
The
to
a
degree,
relied upon it.
it
may
have
been
reasonable,
It was
apparently not
not relied
upon
in
my
view.
I
-
7.
Dorey's Account
Dow
&
Duggan
retained
Smi thers'
demand.
In
many
respects
were dictated by. the demands which proved to be so unreasonable.
But
it
must
have
been
apparent
engineer
that
the
accounts,
eventually
were out of line with the real is tic poten ti al exposure.
I
may
speculate that competent professionals
Dorey
may
well
have
reported
accordingly
received
instructions
to
proceed as
costs,
however,
reflect
reasonableness
and
do
not relate
to
the relationship between
their consultants.
I
also have
to keep in mind that Mr.
criticized,
but to a
lesser extent, as was Cowie,
Richard.
I
have
reviewed
the
with respect to it and I
confirm Mr. Hare's decision.
As
the
success
in this
I
allow no costs herein to either party.
Halifax, Nova Scotia
February 8,
1991
19
Dorey
in
response
to
the
Dorey I s
services
and
fees
to
a
competent,
professional
totalling
$21,581.57,
Indeed,
such
as
Cowie
and
to their clients
and·
they did.
Party
and party
as
between
the
parties
the parties
and
Dorey
was also
by Mr. Justice
account
and
Mr.
Hare I s
decision
is
somewhat
divided;
You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.