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T-12-75
Alda Enterprises Limited (Plaintiff) v.
The Queen, Commissioner of the Yukon Territory, Government of the Yukon Territory, and Town of Faro (Defendants)
and
Cyprus Anvil Mining Corporation (Third Party)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Vancouver, September 12 and 29; Ottawa, October 20, 1977.
Jurisdiction — Crown — Torts — Motion for judgment by default — Action for damages and plea in nuisance against Federal Crown, Territorial Commissioner and Government and Municipality incorporated under Territorial Ordinance Whether or not Court has jurisdiction to entertain claim against Town — Federal Court Rule 433(2) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 17(1),(2),(3)(a) — Crown Liability Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-38.
Plaintiff applies for judgment against the Town of Faro as that defendant had not filed a defence within the specified period. The action involves claims for general and specific damages, loss of revenue, diminution of value, and a plea in nuisance. The ground under the plaintiff's hotel had subsided after water from burst sewage and water pipes melted the underlying permafrost. The four defendants, it is asserted, are the owners and operators of the water system. It is alleged that the design and construction of the system was faulty, and the Town of Faro's operation of it, negligent. The issue is whether or not the Court has jurisdiction to entertain the claim against the Town of Faro, and to grant the judgment sought.
Held, the motion is dismissed. If the allegations of the statement of claim are true, the claim advanced against the federal Crown is properly within the Court's jurisdiction. The plaintiff, however, has not shown its proceedings against the Town of Faro to be supported by "existing and applicable federal law." A sometimes useful test to apply in approaching the question of jurisdiction is to see whether this Court would have jurisdiction if the claim advanced against one particular defendant stood alone and was not joined in an action against other defendants over whom there properly is jurisdiction.
McNamara Construction (Western) Limited v. The Queen [1977] 2 S.C.R. 654, applied. Quebec North Shore Paper Co. v. Canadian Pacific Limited [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054, applied. McGregor v. The Queen [1977] 2 F.C. 520, applied. The "Sparrows Point" [1951] S.C.R. 396, distinguished.
APPLICATION.
COUNSEL:
John Parker for plaintiff.
No one for defendants, The Queen, Commis
sioner of the Yukon Territory, and Govern
ment of the Yukon Territory.
No one for defendant, Town of Faro.
No one for Third Party.
SOLICITORS:
Parker & Wylie, Vancouver, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendants, The Queen, Commissioner of the Yukon Territory, and Government of the Yukon Territory.
Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy, Vancou- ver, for Third Party.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
COLLIER J.: The plaintiff applies, pursuant to Rule 433(2), for judgment against the defendant Town of Faro for damages to be assessed. That defendant has not filed a defence within the period specified by the rules.
At issue is the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain the claim asserted against the Town of Faro and to grant the judgment sought.
The original statement of claim was filed on January 2, 1975. An amended statement of claim was filed on August 25, 1976. The plaintiff owns a hotel in the Town of Faro. The town is a municipal corporation created under the Municipal Ordi nance of the Yukon Territory, R.O.Y.T. 1975, c. M-12. The plaintiff claims special and general damages because of subsidence of the land on which the hotel was built.' The plaintiff, by agree ment for sale entered into with the Government of the Yukon Territory, bought the lot in question. The lot is underlain with permafrost. In 1969 the defendant Commissioner ". .. caused a sewer and water system to be designed and installed on the Faro townsite. ..." It is alleged the design and
1 Damages for loss of revenue and diminution of value are also claimed.
construction of the system were faulty; that many of the pipes failed, causing water to escape into the permafrost. This water melted the permafrost, causing subsidence of the hotel and the damages complained of. Ownership and operation of the water system is asserted to be in the Government of Canada, Government of the Yukon Territory, Commissioner of the Yukon Territory and the Town of Faro. The town is alleged to have been negligent in its operation of the system by running it at too great pressure (contributing to the ruptur ing of pipes) and increasing the flow into the permafrost. It is further said that the town, by paving roads near the hotel property without installing storm sewers, thereby diverted additional water into the plaintiff's property, all of which again affected the permafrost.
In paragraph 16 of the amended statement of claim, the case against all defendants is pleaded in nuisance.
Mr. Parker, counsel for the plaintiff, submits there is, in all the circumstances, jurisdiction in respect of the suit against the town. It is said the claim advanced here against the Federal Crown is properly within the jurisdiction of the Court; that this is the only court having jurisdiction in respect of that particular claim. Assuming the allegations in the statement of claim to be true, I agree. Jurisdiction can be found, for the claim against the Crown, in subsection 17(1) of the Federal Court Act 2 and in the Crown Liability Act'. I do not think subsection 17(2) or paragraph 17(3)(c) of the Federal Court Act apply, as contended by the plaintiff, in this case.
Mr. Parker then relies on certain portions of the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in McNamara Construction (Western) Ltd. v. The Queen 4 . The facts are stated in the reasons of
2 R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10.
' R.S.C. 1970, c. C-38.
4 [1977] 2 S.C.R. 654. See also The Queen v. Rhine [1978] 1
F.C. 356.
Laskin C.J.C. as follows: 5
The facts giving rise to this issue may be shortly stated. The Crown in right of Canada entered into a contract with the defendant appellant McNamara Construction (Western) Lim ited, an Alberta company, for the construction of a Young Offenders Institution in Drumheller, Alberta. Fidelity Insur ance Company of Canada provided a surety bond to the Crown in respect of McNamara's obligations under the construction contract. This contract was preceded by a consulting contract entered into between the Crown and J. Stevenson & Associates, an Alberta firm of architects and engineers which prepared the plans, specifications and tender documents upon which the construction contract was based. Alleging a breach of their respective contracts by Stevenson and by McNamara, the Crown brought action against them in the Federal Court claiming against each, in the alternative, damages for the breach and claiming against Fidelity under its surety bond.
In the same action, McNamara and Fidelity gave notice, pursuant to Federal Court Rule 1730, of a claim over against their co-defendant Stevenson, alleging negligence on Steven- son's part in the preparation of the plans. McNamara and Fidelity also served a third party notice, pursuant to Federal Court Rule 1726, on Lockerbie & Hole Western Limited, a subcontractor, claiming relief over by reason of alleged negli gence or breach of contract by the third party.
The defendants took the position there was no jurisdiction in the Federal Court to hear the claim of the Crown. The Supreme Court of Canada sustained that position. The Court referred to and amplified its earlier reasoning in Quebec North Shore Paper Co. v. Canadian Pacific Ltd.: 6 for this Court to have jurisdiction it is a prerequisite
... there be existing and applicable federal law which can be invoked to support any proceedings before it. It is not enough that the Parliament of Canada have legislative jurisdiction in respect of some matter which is the subject of litigation in the Federal Court.'
The Court found there was no existing federal law on which the plaintiff there could found its claim. The action was dismissed.
In respect of the third party proceedings (which were, as here, between subject and subject) the
5 Page 657.
6 [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054. See the following where the Quebec North Shore principle has been applied: Blanchette v. C.N.R. [1977] 2 F.C. 431; McGregor v. The Queen [1977] 2 F.C. 520; The Queen v. Canadian Vickers Ltd. (unreported, T-1453-74— reasons June 22, 1977); Skaarup Shipping Corp. v. Hawker Industries Ltd. (T-1648-77—reasons September 26, 1977).
7 McNamara, page 658.
Court said: 8
I conclude, therefore, that the appellants' challenge to the jurisdiction of the Federal Court must succeed and that their appeals must, accordingly, be allowed with costs throughout. The judgments of the Courts below should be set aside and the statements of claim served on the appellants should be struck out. In view of this conclusion, the consequential proceedings between the co-defendants and the third party proceedings must likewise fall, and it is unnecessary to deal with the issues raised as to their validity or propriety. I would, however, observe that if there had been jurisdiction in the Federal Court there could be some likelihood of proceedings for contribution or indemnity being similarly competent, at least between the parties, in so far as the supporting federal law embraced the issues arising therein. [My underlining.]
The plaintiff relies on the underlined sentence as authority for this Court having jurisdiction in this case. I cannot so interpret that observation.
The claim advanced by the plaintiff against the Crown and the Town of Faro is not, in my opinion, one for contribution or indemnity, in the sense Laskin C.J.C. is using that expression. It seems to me what is being spoken of there are true contribu tion or indemnity proceedings among defendants, or by defendants vis-à-vis third parties.
In my view the plaintiff has not shown that its proceedings against the Town of Faro are support ed by "existing and applicable federal law".
A sometimes useful test to apply in approaching the question of jurisdiction is to see whether this Court would have jurisdiction if the claim advanced against one particular defendant stood alone and was not joined in an action against other defendants over whom there properly is jurisdiction. 9 When that test is used here in respect of the plaintiff's claim against the Town of Faro, the answer must be, No. Mr. Parker frankly conceded that answer. He said that, in those cir cumstances, jurisdiction would lie with the Supreme Court of the Yukon Territory. I assume the applicable law then would be the statutory and
8 Pages 663-664. I note that at page 659, Laskin C.J.C. included in federal law, federal "common law".
9 See McGregor v. The Queen [1977] 2 F.C. 520 at 522.
common law of the territory.
But, it is urged, that conclusion creates an unjust and undesirable result: the plaintiff must pursue his remedy in two courts. The argument was put by Mr. Parker this way:
There is an ancient precedent of the common law that for every right there must be a Court to which the subject can resort to enforce that right.* In the present case, the subject must resort to the Federal Court of Canada to enforce its right against the Crown in Right of Canada. Now if the Plaintiff in this action does not join the Town of Faro as one of the Defendants, it could not later sue the Town of Faro because it is an equally well established principle of the common law that if a Plaintiff sues one of several tortfeasers that automatically relieves the other tortfeasers of liability. Taking the two princi ples together, then, there must be a Court in which the Plaintiff can take action against the Town of Faro as a joint tortfeaser, and the Court has to be the Federal Court of Canada, because there is no other court in which the plaintiff can sue the Crown in such an action as this.
* The old maxim, ubi jus ibi remedium, is part of the law of the land. It says, of course, that where there is [a] right recognized by the law there exists also a remedy for any infringement of such right. Chief Justice Holt stated this proposition in the old case of Ashby vs. White (1703), 2Ld RAYM 938 at P.952. His words were these: "Indeed it is a vain thing to imagine a right without a remedy, for want of right and want of remedy are reciprocal". Were it not so it would be a scandal on the law.
I do not quite agree with the proposition put forward that merely suing one only of several tortfeasors relieves the others of liability. As I understand the old common law rule, it was the taking of judgment (among other things) against one concurrent tortfeasor which discharged the others. 10 That common law principle came from England, a unitary state with a unitary system of courts. It may be that in Canada, with the division of legislative powers, differing law in the prov inces, and a dual court system, different consider ations should apply. In any event, the old common law rule no longer exists in England and in some of
10 This whole subject area is discussed in Glanville L. Wil- liams. Joint Torts and Contributory Negligence. London, Ste- vens & Sons Ltd., 1951. See particularly ss. 9-13, 15, 18-22, and 28-30.
the Canadian provinces." Whether it still exists in the Yukon Territory I cannot say. There appears to be no legislative abolition of the rule in the Contributory Negligence Ordinance. 12 Nor am I able to say whether the rule still exists as part of federal common law.
It would indeed be unfortunate if the applicable law provided that the plaintiff would be defeated in a claim against the Town of Faro in another court by securing judgment against the federal Crown in this Court. It would be equally unfortu nate if the applicable law were that by suing and recovering judgment against the town in the Supreme Court of the Yukon Territory, recovery against the federal Crown in this Court would be barred. 13
But those lamentable possibilities cannot, having in mind the Quebec North Shore and McNamara principles, clothe this Court with jurisdiction.
Nor can possible duplication of proceedings (one in this Court and another in the Yukon court) be a ground for asserting jurisdiction here.
While duplication of proceedings is undesirable, it may be a fact of life in a federal system such as we have in Canada with the division of legislative powers as set out in The British North America Act, 1867.
I have considered The "Sparrows Point". 14 Kel- lock J., in the course of upholding the admiralty jurisdiction of the Exchequer Court over one par ticular defendant, observed that all claims in that particular case should be disposed of in one action in one court "to avoid the scandal of possible
" See for example Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
12 R.O.Y.T. 1975, c. C-14.
13 There could possibly be a further unfortunate consequence if the plaintiff has not yet brought action against the town in the Supreme Court of the Yukon Territory. A limitation period may have intervened.
'4 [1951] S.C.R. 396.
different results. ..." 15 Rand J. concluded the navigation of the vessel sued was the product of the joint negligence of those on board her and of the other defendant. He held them to be joint tortfeasors. At page 411 he said this:
Every consideration of convenience and justice would seem to require that such a single cause of action be dealt with under a single field of law and in a single proceeding in which the claimant may prosecute all remedies to which he is entitled; any other course would defeat, so far, the purpose of the statute. The claim is for damage done "by a ship"; the remedies in personam are against persons responsible for the act of the ship; and I interpret the language of the statute to permit a joinder in an action properly brought against one party of other participants in the joint wrong.
In my opinion, The `Sparrows Point" is distin guishable on its particular facts, 16 and must now be read in the light of the Quebec North Shore and McNamara decisions.
The plaintiff's motion is therefore dismissed.
15 Page 404.
16 See Anglophoto Limited v. The "Ikaros" [1973] F.C. 483 where I attempted to distinguish it.
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