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ONTARIO COURT (GENERAL DIVISION) (DIVISIONAL
COURT)
IN THE MATTER OF a decision of the
Commissioner under the Freedom of Information and Protection of
Privacy Act
BETWEEN:
THE MINISTRY OF CONSUMER AND COMMERCIAL
RELATIONS
Applicant
- and -
TOM MITCHINSON and JOHN DOE
Respondents
ENDORSEMENT
This is an application by the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial
Relations to stay Order P-1114 of Assistant Information and Privacy
Commissioner Mitchinson issued Feb. 1/96 pending the final disposition of the
within application for judicial review.
The order in question requires the applicant Ministry to provide
to the respondent certain microfilmed records which were kept by the Ministry
until Feb. 1/96. These records had been provided to the respondent from early
in 1993 to March 5, 1995 for a prescribed fee. The Ministry refused to provide
the records after March 5, 1995 and the respondent then sought their production
under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.3 1. The Ministry still refused production and hence
the appeal to the Commissioner who in reasons released Feb. 1/96 ordered that
the Ministry provide the information requested.
The Ministry has sought judicial review of the decision of the
Commissioner and pending the outcome thereof seeks to stay the order of the
Commissioner.
I must be satisfied that there is a serious issue to be
determined, there is a likelihood of harm to the applicant if the stay is not
granted and that the balance of convenience favours the applicant.
I am satisfied that there are serious issues to be tried here from
the Ministry's perspective - the statutory interpretation of sections 22 and 18
of the Act and whether by virtue of seemingly inconsistent findings in
relation to the nature of the product - whether the decision is patently
unreasonable. My view of the likely success of the Ministry is irrelevant. If
the stay is not granted, I am persuaded that the judicial review application
will be rendered moot and the balance of convenience here favours the
applicant.
I am not persuaded that any irreparable harm will result to the
respondent Datacor; the information they seek has not been available to them
since March, 1995 - a year. I am told dates are available when this judicial
review application could be heard as early as the middle of this month (March
1996) in April and in May of 1996. In view of the delay already incurred and
the fact that the application can be heard by the Court very soon, I am not
persuaded that Datacor will be hurt by a further delay which could be as short
as two weeks.
There is no evidence to satisfy me that there has been any bad
faith on the part of the Ministry in relation to this matter.
Although Ms. O'Donoghue appeared on behalf of the Assistant
Commissioner, she took no part in the argument and did not seek costs.
In result an order will issue granting a stay of Order P-1114 as
requested. This order is granted on condition that the Ministry co-operate with
Datacor in an effort to have the judicial review application heard at the
earliest available dated convenient to counsel.
Cost reserved to the panel which hears the judicial
review.
| March 5, 1996 |
"MacFarland J." |
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