Tobacco Products Control Act Trial
Document 007C
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thirty-eight thousand, five hundred and forty-five
dollars and sixty-two cents ($35,338,545.62), correct?
Yes.
And its -- that's relatively close to the number for the
year nineteen eighty-seven (1987) as reflected in the
Exhibit RJR-3 that you've previously filed?
Yes.
Correct. Now, when you turn the page in the document
I'm showing you, you see sponsorships, an entire page is
reflective of sponsorships for the years nineteen
seventy-six (1976) through nineteen eighty-seven (1987),
correct?
Yes.
And it goes so on and so forth. So for the year
nineteen eighty-seven (1987), your company spent one
million, three hundred and forty-five thousand dollars
($1,345,000) in sponsorships. We turn the page, we get
to point of sale, it's one million, seven hundred and
thirty-five thousand dollars ($1,735,000). Page for
print advertising, page for signs of six million eight
hundred and thirty-nine thousand dollars ($6,839,000).
Production on media signs, two million and ninety-one
thousand dollars ($2,091,000) and the last page is
agency fees. Now, when you look at this document, Mr.
Hoult, you see, for example, Export is always reflected
AUDIOTRANSCRIPT, D~v~,~o~ de Pierre Viloire & Associgs Lt~e

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as a unique family. So, total spendings for nineteen
eighty-seven (1987), I'm looking at the first (ist) page
now, My Lord, nineteen million, seven hundred and
seventy-three thousand, six hundred and nine dollars and
thirty-one cents ($19,773,609.31). There is, of course,
no way that one could, by looking at any of the pages in
this document, determine what the breakdown is or was
between the line extensions in the Export family?
A- That's correct.
Q- Right. I'd ask you, Mr. Hoult, to file -- we'll produce
this document as AG-18 and ask you to obtain...
THE COURT:
This is Mr. Irving's copy. You'll file that.
Me BAKER:
We're going to file this document.
THE COURT:
We'll make a copy later on.
Me BAKER:
Can we hold it back and make a copy, and then we can
file it.
Would you undertake to provide for the Court the
information that will allow us for the eleven (ii) year
period, that is nineteen seventy-six (1976) through
nineteen eighty-seven (1987), to get a breakdown of the
expenses within the brand families and the areas of
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Canada that you designated a few days ago, that is to
say the five (5) areas, to the extent that it is
possible.
So, for example, I understand, Mr. Hoult, that when
you're advertising in a national magazine, you can't
distinguish between Ontario and Quebec, we understand
that. But, for example, with billboards, you can
distinguish with the point of sale costs from one
province to another, to the extent that it is possible.
That is the kind of information that we seek and, with
the Court's permission, I now demand that that
information be provided to us.
Me IRVING:
My Lord, it's all very well for my friend to demand, but
surely that is exactly the kind of request that ought to
have been made at the time of the discoveries; that's
what discovery is for. The document which has just been
handed in was a document which was prepared by the
company at the request of Mr. Baker for the purposes of
discovery. If the information now asked was considered
essential, I don't know why it wasn't asked for then.
Mr. Hoult's cross-examination is virtually finished. I
have no idea how long it would take to obtain that kind
of information and I have no idea if it is available and
what kind of time and trouble would be required to put
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it together.
I have no objection, in principle, to any piece of
information being given to my friend, I simply say that
in the cross-examination of a witness, once the trial
has begun and once the Plaintiff, wisely or unwisely,
has decided as part of its case to put in general
figures concerning advertising, this witness is not in a
position to answer the questions my friend wants.
Surely it's up to Mr. Baker as part of his own case then
to obtain the information he wants.
I haven't heard anything which shows why it's
relevant and why, at this stage, after six (6) days of
discovery and a great many undertakings fulfilled,
filing' cabinets filled with documents filed, my friend
asks where is stuff advertised and in what things.
He
has documents, in that huge mass, that show every
newspaper and every magazine in Canada in which these
ads are carried, and he has had them in his hands for
months and months and months. He knows all this
information. It is all in the documents.
Now, I don't say that the breakdown between the
brand family is, because I don't believe it is. But my
friend wants to know where do you advertise, it's all
there. I was just looking at one of the documents a
moment ago, it goes right across the country, it shows
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every newspaper, every magazine. We have provided so
much information now that I'm most reluctant at the
conclusion of a cross-examination to make undertakings
which are properly discovery undertakings, and that
said, let me just check, My Lord, and see what we
might...
My Lord, perhaps we can hold it and come back to it
-- my understanding, and Mr. Thibaudeau is reminding me,
Mr. Baker may recall too, I'm not sure, I think that Mr.
Baker was told at the time of the discoveries that we
were not able to get that kind of breakdown and what we
were able to get is what is was given in the document
now just filed. And if I could just take notice of the
request and at the adjournment we will see what further
material could be made available and if there is any,
then -- and if it doesn't take weeks of effort, because
I would object if the company was going to have to be
put to, you know, to recreating a whole lot of records
at great time and expense. But if it would be
available, I have no objection to them getting it. But
I think we're to have to take a few minutes to find out
whether in fact there is any such information available.
THE COURT:
Anyways it's not available today for sure.
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Me IRVING:
No, it certainly isn't. And my recollection is that
it's simply not available at all because we weren't able
to find it.
THE COURT:
So you'll reserve your objection, if any?
Me IRVING:
Well, I'll reserve, may I just reserve my objection for
the moment until I see what we can do and...
Me BAKER:
I understand my friend's reservation in respect of the
objection, in respect of the request, My Lord. I merely
would like to tell you that when he points to the filing
cabinets and says it's all there, my observation is that
the documents that my friends provided us with last
Christmas, yes, there were a lot of them, and yes, they
weighed a lot, and yes, they came in eight (8) very
large boxes. I would defy my friend with a team of
accountants and a team of lawyers to go through those
boxes and those documents that they have provided us
with -- and I'd give him six (6) months to do it in --
and I don't think he'd be able to give you the kind of
information or give us the kind of information that he
has just suggested that we should have available now
from those documents. That is...
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Me IRVING:
I'm not saying that.
THE COURT:
I think what he's suggesting is that you should have
asked that information before.
Me BAKER:
My Lord...
THE COURT:
But I do realize there are a number of documents...
Me BAKER:
Let us understand something, My Lord. There were
objections put in the course of a hearing before you
last fall by Mr. Potter of Imperial Tobacco. I made
requests for certain kinds of financial data; that those
requests were denied on the basis of relevance. I took
that to be a cue that there were certain things that I
could only ask for in the course of a trial after the
relevance was set up. There was no point in asking
questions and trying to get information in the course of
discoveries and going to you and then going to the Court
of Appeal. I was content to wait until the trial for
certain kinds of information, taking my cue from Your
Lordship's decision of last December, nineteen
eighty-eight (1988).
So I think it's improper and unfair for my friend
AUDIOTRANSCRIPT, Divislon de Pierre Vilalre & Asso¢i~s Ltge

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to say the time to get this stuff was at discovery.
We've had a lot of informal telephone conversations in
the course of the last six (6) or seven (7) or eight (8)
or nine (9) months. I knew what they were prepared to
make available and what they were not prepared to make
available.
Now he's opened up the door to the questions,
because it is he who has filed the document, not I.
I have no further questions for Mr. Hoult at this
time, subject to the information being forthcoming.
THE COURT:
So, Mr. Irving, your objection is reserved.
Me IRVING:
Yes, for the moment, My Lord. I will re-examine Mr.
Hoult and...
But may I point out in response to Mr. Baker that,
from our side, as far as RJR was concerned, we provided
all the documents that Mr. Baker requested and that all
the documents which are there are ones which he did, in
fact, request. And I'm looking, just for example, I
mean he has the nineteen eighty-seven (1987) Media Plan.
THE COURT:
But what's the point of arguing all this?
Me IRVING:
Well, it's just simply that this request is very
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untimely and unnecessary in my submission. Mr. Hoult...
THE COURT:
But I don't have an objection in front of me. You're
reserving your objection. If you have something to say,
you'll tell me as if and when you have something to say.
RE-EXAMINATION BY Me COLIN IRVING
on behalf of Petitioner RJR-Macdonald Inc.
Q- Mr. Hoult, would you look at Exhibit AG-2, please.
Could I have AG-2?
THE COURT:
What was it?
Me IRVING:
AG-2 -- it was the big cardboard. I think it's on
the
left of your...
Me TREMBLAY:
It's the canoeist.
Me IRVING:
Q- Now, Mr. Hoult, Mr. Baker asked you about one side of
that document. And that is a point of sale
advertisement, is it?
A- Yes, it is.
Q- And how would it be displayed?
A- This particular display would either be hung from the
ceiling or it would be free-standing or it would be held
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in a frame in a retail store.
Q- Would both sides always be visible?
A- Yes, they would.
Q- Yes. Now, would you look at the side that Mr. Baker
didn't refer you to. Is that a brand family ad, Mr.
Hoult?
A- Yes, it is.
Q- In the sense that it shows virtually the whole of the
Export line?
A- It does show the whole of the Export line. There are
five (5) -- five (5) individual brands.
Q- All right. So that anybody who saw one side would be in
a position to see the other side as well, would they
not?
A- They would be in a position in terms of their normal
shopping behaviour in a store, yes.
Q- Thank you.
Me BAKER:
You mean if he walked around and looked at them?
A- If he walked around the store.
Me IRVING:
Mr. Baker, I'm re-examining right at the moment. I
think you can take it that one could only look at one
side at a time.
AUDIOTRANSCRIPT, olvisioo de Pierre Vilaire & Associ6s Lt4e
