Settled Property And The Issue Of Photocopying Money

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Alexander Holburn Beaudin + Lang LLP

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Alexander Holburn is a leading full-service, Vancouver-based law firm providing a wide range of litigation, dispute resolution and business law services to clients throughout Canada and abroad. We have a proud 45-year history, with 85+ lawyers providing thoughtful, practical legal advice to governments and municipalities, regional, national and international companies, and individuals in virtually all areas of law.
Photocopying money risks criminal and civil sanctions. So what to do if making file copies of a trust settled with a $10, $20, $50, or $100 dollar bill? Can you copy or scan the settled property?
Canada Criminal Law
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Did you know...1

Photocopying money risks criminal and civil sanctions. So what to do if making file copies of a trust settled with a $10, $20, $50, or $100 dollar bill? Can you copy or scan the settled property?

Reproducing images of banknotes, by photocopying or scanning money or otherwise, could constitute an offence under the Criminal Code, and the Copyright Act and could also give rise to a cause of action entitling the Bank of Canada to bring a civil action.

To avoid criminal sanctions, any reproduction must meet the following criteria2:

  1. the reproduction be printed less than ¾ or greater than 1½  times the size of the banknote; and
  2. be in black and white or only one-sided.

It may be unlikely that photocopying money to record settled property would constitute counterfeiting money or possession of counterfeit money, contrary to ss. 449 or 450 of the Criminal Code, unless the reproduction "resembles or is apparently intended to resemble or pass" for real money. However, photocopying money and printing copies of banknotes may constitute printing or making something in the "likeness" of banknotes, contrary to s. 457 of the Criminal Code.

In addition, the Bank of Canada is the registered copyright owner of all design elements of Canadian banknotes, including the portraits, vignettes and numerals. Reproducing a banknote image without the Bank's permission may lead to civil action by the Bank of Canada (for infringement of the copyright or reproducing copyrighted material without the permission of the copyright holder) risking an action for recovery of the infringing copies, as well as an injunction and the awarding of damages.

To seek permission of the Bank of Canada, see https://www.bankofcanada.ca/banknotes/use-bank-note-images-gallery/. In a request we made recently to the Bank of Canada, the Bank imposed restrictions further to those in the legislation, requiring the reproduction be a one-side only black and while copy at 50% of the size of the banknote with the word "specimen" overprinted on the copy.

Footnotes

1 This is the second entry in our blog mini-series entitled "Did You Know", providing practical tips for navigating a variety of wills, estates, and trust micro-issues.

Thank you to Mathew Crowe, Articled Student, for his directed research on this issue.

2 This criteria meets one of the two exceptions to the general prohibition on reproducing banknotes provided for under section 457 of the Criminal Code. The other is that a reproduction of a banknote may be produced with the permission of the Bank of Canada.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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Settled Property And The Issue Of Photocopying Money

Canada Criminal Law

Contributor

Alexander Holburn is a leading full-service, Vancouver-based law firm providing a wide range of litigation, dispute resolution and business law services to clients throughout Canada and abroad. We have a proud 45-year history, with 85+ lawyers providing thoughtful, practical legal advice to governments and municipalities, regional, national and international companies, and individuals in virtually all areas of law.
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