Michael Crichton
Partner
Patent Agent
Article
7
On June 24, 2015, the Federal Court issued a practice notice providing new measures that seek to improve case management of complex litigation, including IP litigation. The new measures, designed to achieve increased proportionality in proceedings before the Court, streamline certain aspects of IP litigation matters and should result in savings of both time and costs for litigants.
While many of the recommendations in the notice are necessarily general, they are intended to make it easier for an action to be tried within at most two years, an objective the Federal Court communicated in an earlier practice notice in May 2009. The recommendations will also make litigation more cost-effective for litigants due at least in part to a cap on the duration of oral examinations for discovery and new limitations for motions to compel answers refused during examinations for discovery. Historically, such refusals motions have frequently been time-consuming and costly, and have resulted in delays in proceedings.
Specifically, the notice, titled “Notice to the Parties and the Profession – Case Management: Increased Proportionality in Complex Litigation before the Federal Court”, is briefly summarized as follows:
In addition, any follow up discovery will be limited to 1 day per party. It remains to be seen how, practically, these new limitations will be implemented and enforced. For example, where a single plaintiff brings an action against multiple defendants, variations from the durations set out above may be necessary depending on the circumstances of each case;
In sum, the new measures provided in the Federal Court’s practice notice streamline certain aspects of IP litigation matters and should result in savings of both time and costs for litigants. In particular, the new requirements related to document and oral discovery, as well as motions for resolving discovery-related refusals, are significant and should result in a noticeably shorter and more focused discovery phase of an action. Given that document and oral discovery, and resulting refusals motions represent a substantial amount of the time and costs associated with an IP court action, this practice notice will be a welcome development for litigants interested in timely and cost-effective resolution of IP disputes in Canada.
Click here for the Federal Court’s “Notice to the Parties and the Profession – Case Management: Increased Proportionality in Complex Litigation before the Federal Court.”
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