Category Archives: Vexatious Litigants

Challenge to the Queen’s Bench Vexatious Litigant Procedure

Posted on December 5, 2018; revised June 10, 2019.

By: Jonnette Watson Hamilton

PDF Version: Challenge to the Queen’s Bench Vexatious Litigant Procedure

Case Commented On: Lymer (Re), 2018 ABCA 368, Lymer (Re), 2018 ABQB 859

On November 16, in Lymer (Re), 2018 ABCA 368 (Lymer CA), Justice Frederica Schutz granted Neil Alan Lymer permission to appeal two orders, one declaring him to be a vexatious litigant, and a second imposing 30 days’ imprisonment as the sanction for an earlier finding of contempt. Both of those orders were granted by Lymer’s case management judge, Justice Donald Lee, on October 22, 2018 in Lymer (Re), 2018 ABQB 859 (Lymer QB). It is unusual for the Court of Appeal to grant permission to appeal a finding that a litigant’s access to the courts must be restricted because they have abused court processes (although it happened with an earlier vexatious litigant order imposed by Justice Lee on Mr. Lymer: see Lymer v Jonsson, 2016 ABCA 32). However, the relative scarcity of successful applications for leave to appeal is not the sole reason why Justice Schutz’s decision is of interest. More important to the Court of Queen’s Bench current approach to vexatious litigants are the first three of the four issues Justice Schutz identified as the grounds of appeal (at para 9):

(1) Did the case management judge err in finding that the applicant was a vexatious litigant?

(2) Did the case management judge err in failing to ensure a full and fair hearing in respect of the vexatious litigant motion, in breach of natural justice?

(3) Did the case management judge err in imposing an overly broad vexatious litigant order?

(4) Did the case management judge err in imposing as a sanction for contempt a period of incarceration, without conducting a full and fair viva voce hearing, and in breach of the requirements of s 7 of the Charter and the principles of natural justice?

Leave to appeal was granted on the basis that Mr. Lymer met the general test for permission to appeal, as well as the additional burden imposed on a litigant found to be vexatious (Lymer CA, at para 8). The general test requires an important question of law or precedent, a reasonable chance of success on appeal, and no undue prejudice due to the delay caused by an appeal (Lymer CA, at para 6). The additional element requires someone like Mr. Lymer to show his case does not amount to an abuse of process (Lymer CA, at para 7). The only indication of what the important questions of law are in this case are the four issues Justice Schutz set out as the grounds of appeal. She did not discuss them any further. Nor did she say anything about why or how the “reasonable chance of success on appeal” element was fulfilled.

In the balance of her order, Justice Schutz stayed the custodial sentence of imprisonment which Mr. Lymer had been serving at the Edmonton Remand Centre since Justice Lee’s October 22 order (Lymer CA, paras 10-12).

First Issue

The scope of the first question – whether the case management judge erred in finding that the applicant was a vexatious litigant – is unclear. Is it the law cited and applied by Justice Lee that is being called into question, or merely whether that law was properly applied in Mr. Lymer’s case? Given the apparent breadth of the challenges to the Queen’s Bench procedure in questions 2 and 3, it seems more likely than not that it is the law that was cited and applied that is to be scrutinized.

Justice Lee’s court access restriction order was issued under the Court’s claimed inherent jurisdiction, rather than under the vexatious litigant provisions of the Judicature Act, RSA 2000, c J-2 Part 2.1. Justice Lee had adopted and applied what the Court of Queen’s Bench calls the “modern” approach to “court access restriction orders,” introduced two years ago in Hok v Alberta, 2016 ABQB 651 and applied in more than thirty subsequent cases.

I first discussed the unusual nature of the two-step process adopted in Hok in “The Vexing Question of Authority to Grant Vexatious Litigant Orders.” Interestingly, the two-step process was the Court of Queen’s Bench’s response to the Court of Appeal decision in Lymer v Jonsson– the same Neil Alan Lymer.

Second Issue

The second question on the Lymer appeal is whether the rules of natural justice have been complied with, specifically in ensuring a full and fair hearing on the vexatious litigant motion brought by the court on its own motion. The issue of a full and fair hearing was the issue on which the Court of Queen’s Bench pre-pre-Hok process had faltered in Lymer v Jonsson.

In response to Lymer v Jonsson, the Court of Queen’s Bench adopted a two-step process when dealing with persons against whom court access restrictions are being considered (Hok at para 10). A judge who observes problematic conduct by a litigant is to first assess that conduct to determine if it is an abuse of court process or a sign of vexatious conduct that might require restrictions on court access. If the judge does decide that restrictions are potentially required, the judge makes an order that sets a deadline for the litigant whose conduct is called into question to make written submissions. Only this written submission is allowed. At the same time, the court issues an interim order that immediately prohibits the litigant from continuing or commencing further court proceedings in any court in Alberta without leave. These interim orders are prepared by the court, without the need of approval by any party. In the second step, the same judge reviews the written submission, if there is one, and assesses the litigant’s conduct against the still-expanding list of the indicia of abusive litigation, before determining whether court access restrictions are appropriate and, if so, how broad they should be. If a court access restriction order is granted, it is prepared and filed by the court.

The two-step, Alberta-specific process is discussed in more detail in my September 2018 post, “The Increasing Risk of Conflating Self-Represented and Vexatious Litigants.”

Third Issue

The question about whether the order in this case was overly broad is a question that has been raised about vexatious litigant orders before, by both the Minister of Justice and the Court of Appeal.

In Hok, the Minister of Justice had raised concerns about the proper scope or breadth of vexatious litigant orders. The Minister submitted that such orders should be narrowed to a defined group of targets where that group can be identified by the litigant’s history. The Minister also argued that these orders should normally be restricted to future actions brought before the court making the order, unless there is evidence that the litigant has acted or would likely act in a vexatious manner in some other court.

The Court of Appeal previously expressed its reservations about the breadth of vexatious litigant orders granted under the Judicature Act in RO v DF, 2016 ABCA 170. That case held that vexatious behaviour confined to one case or one respondent will not justify the broad response of a typical vexatious litigant order under section 23.1 of the Judicature Act, which requires “persistent” improper conduct.

The Court of Queen’s Bench’s current approach is to focus on anticipated future abuses when determining the scope of their orders. The future is predicted based on the litigant’s past conduct.

For example, in this particular case, Justice Lee’s order required Mr. Lymer be represented by a lawyer if he sought permission from a court to bring a new or continue an old court action (at paras 48-50, and 138).

Conclusion

As is evident from the fact that the Minister of Justice raised the same three issues in Hok as the first three issues in justice Schutz’s order, these questions have lingered for the past two years. This is the first time that the two-step Hok process will be scrutinized by the Court of Appeal.

This post was revised on June 10, 2019 to delete all reference to the Court of Queen’s Bench Civil Procedure Note 7.  


This post may be cited as: Jonnette Watson Hamilton, “Challenge to the Queen’s Bench Vexatious Litigant Procedure” (June 10, 2019), online: ABlawg, http://ablawg.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Blog_JWH_Lymer.pdf

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The Increasing Risk of Conflating Self-Represented and Vexatious Litigants

By: Jonnette Watson Hamilton

PDF Version: The Increasing Risk of Conflating Self-Represented and Vexatious Litigants

Case Commented On: Alberta Treasury Branches v Hawrysh, 2018 ABQB 475 (CanLII) (Hawrysh #1) and Alberta Treasury Branches v Hawrysh, 2018 ABQB 618 (CanLII) (Hawrysh #2)

The August 20th decision of Justice Peter Michalyshyn in Hawrysh #2 was step two of the now usual two-step process adopted by the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench in Hok v Alberta, 2016 ABQB 651 (CanLII) to deal with vexatious litigants. Step one was taken two months earlier in Hawrysh #1. The two decisions are interesting for at least three reasons. First, they show just how quickly the Court of Queen’s Bench of Alberta now acts to restrict access to the courts by someone whose litigation behaviour is judged to be vexatious. Second, very little of the behaviour found to be abusive in these cases occurred in the courtroom or in documents filed with the court. Third, and most importantly, the litigant’s use of Pintea v Johns, 2017 SCC 23 (CanLII), [2017] 1 SCR 470 and the Canadian Judicial Council “Statement of Principles on Self-represented Litigants and Accused Persons (2006)” was held to be an independent indicia of abusive litigation justifying the imposition of court access restrictions.

These cases also appear to provide further examples of what Dr. Julie Macfarlane of the National Self-Represented Litigants Project (NSRLP) wrote about in her September 6th blog post, “Inequality and Discrimination in the Justice System” – that, in her words, “SRLs are “the other” in the justice system.” Specifically, Dr. Macfarlane noted that the NSRLP Research Reports show that most self-represented litigants “[a]re penalized for errors that are seen as intentional mischief-making,” and “[p]ushback is regarded as bad behaviour that must be punished.”

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Vexatious Habeas Corpus Applications Contribute to Delayed Access to the Courts

By: Jonnette Watson Hamilton

PDF Version: Vexatious Habeas Corpus Applications Contribute to Delayed Access to the Courts

Case Commented On: Ewanchuk v Canada (Attorney General), 2017 ABQB 237 (CanLII)

This vexatious litigant case is interesting for five reasons. First, it was tied to an application for habeas corpus and in the process of the decision we learn something about the Court of Queen’s Bench’s procedure for hearing such applications. Second, there is an emphasis on vexatious litigation’s cost to other litigants. Third, Justice D.R.G. Thomas’ order explicitly followed Hok v Alberta, 2016 ABQB 651 (CanLII) by making the vexatious litigant order under the court’s inherent jurisdiction, rather than under the Judicature Act. Fourth, this order also follows Hok in extending the protection of the order to the Provincial Court of Alberta but omitting the Alberta Court of Appeal from its scope. And finally, yes, the Stephen Brian Ewanchuk who is the applicant in this case is that Ewanchuk. He is the individual who was convicted of sexually assaulting a 17-year-old female by the Supreme Court of Canada in R v Ewanchuk, [1999] 1 SCR 330, 1999 CanLII 711 (SCC), in a case made infamous by the exchange between Justice McClung of the Alberta Court of Appeal and Justice L’Heureux-Dubé of the Supreme Court of Canada – the “bonnet and crinolines” case. These days Ewanchuk is a prisoner at the Bowden Institution, serving a 16.5-year sentence for sexually assaulting an 8-9 year old female, his fifth conviction for sexual assault. His habeas corpus application essentially complained about the conditions of his detention at the Bowden Institution and some readers might experience schadenfreude in reading about his complaints (i.e. pleasure derived from the misfortune of others when the other person is perceived to deserve the misfortune, the misfortune is relatively minor, and we ourselves did not generate the other’s misfortune). Continue reading

Granting a Vexatious Litigant’s Application for Leave to Appeal

By: Jonnette Watson Hamilton

PDF Version: Granting a Vexatious Litigant’s Application for Leave to Appeal

Case Commented On: Belway v Lalande-Weber, 2017 ABCA 108 (CanLII)

In the case law on vexatious litigation, it is occasionally noted that a vexatious litigant order does not bar that litigant’s access to the courts. Instead, a vexatious litigant must apply for and obtain leave from the court before starting or continuing a proceeding. In other words, access to the courts is regulated, not prohibited. But the distinction between regulated access and no access depends to a large extent on what the test is for granting leave. This decision by Justice Sheilah Martin is a rare example of an application for leave being granted. As such, it is interesting to see how high or low it sets the bar for obtaining leave. And because the self-represented applicant in this case had vexatious litigant orders made against him under both the Family Law Act, SA 2003, c F-4.5 and the Judicature Act, RSA 2000, c J-2, it is also interesting to note the contrast between the two regimes on this issue and how Justice Martin deals with the two tests by combining them into one. Continue reading

Vexatious Litigants: An Interpretation of Section 40 of the Federal Courts Act

By: Jonnette Watson Hamilton

PDF Version: Vexatious Litigants: An Interpretation of Section 40 of the Federal Courts Act

Case Commented On: Canada v Olumide, 2017 FCA 42 (CanLII)

In this March 2017 decision, Justice David Stratas encouraged Federal Court of Appeal litigants who find themselves up against litigants engaged in vexatious proceedings to apply more quickly and with less evidence for vexatious litigant orders under section 40 of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7. Believing that uncertainty over what is required by section 40 to bring such an application has been holding these parties back, this decision is intended to take away that uncertainty. Because that was the focus of the judgment, it will be the focus of this post. However, there are some rhetorical flourishes in the judgment that are worth mentioning. In describing his understanding of the purpose of section 40, Justice Stratas relies on a metaphor analogizing courts to scarce natural resources, as well as the moralizing language of desert. Continue reading