Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-166-83
Regional Municipality of Peel (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen in right of Canada (Defendant)
INDEXED AS: PEEL (REGIONAL MUNICIPALITY) v. CANADA
Trial Division, Strayer J.—Toronto, October 14 and 15; Ottawa, November 27, 1986.
Constitutional law — Fundamental constitutional principles — Payments made by municipality in compliance with Court orders issued under s. 20(2) Juvenile Delinquents Act — S. 20(2) invalid — Action for restitution — Constitutional principle to effect executive under no obligation to make expenditure in absence of appropriation — Principle to be applied in context of federal system and in light of principle of redress for unjust enrichment — Action allowed — Bill of Rights, 1688, 1 Will. & Mary, Sess. 2, c. 2 (U.K.) — Constitu tion Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (R.S.C. 1970, Appendix II, No. 5] (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1), s.
91(27) Juvenile Delinquents Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. J-3 (rep. and sub. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 110), s. 20(1),(2).
Crown — Prerogatives — Immunity — Payments made by municipality under invalid federal legislation — Action for recovery allowed — Crown cannot claim immunity on ground no appropriation provided for by legislative branch — To allow immunity claim tantamount to permitting federal gov ernment to achieve constitutionally prohibited results — Requirements of justice as between plaintiff and defendant — Payment authorized under s. 57(3) Federal Court Act — Crown Liability Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-38 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 57(3).
Restitution — Payments made by municipality in compli ance with court orders issued under s. 20(2) Juvenile Delin quents Act — S. 20(2) ultra vires Parliament of Canada — Payments made under mistake of law and compulsion recover able — Principles of federal system of government and of redress for unjust enrichment combined to entitle municipality to reimbursement — Juvenile Delinquents Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. J-3 (rep. and sub. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 110), s. 20(/),(2).
Practice — Limitation of actions — Action for reimburse ment of monies paid in compliance with invalid legislation — Neither s. 11 Public Authorities Protection Act nor s. 45(1)(g) Limitations Act barring recovery — Action one "upon the case" — Limitation period re actions for trespass, contract, debt or detinue applicable to restitutionary actions — Pro-
ceedings instituted within period prescribed by legislation — Public Authorities Protection Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 406, s. 11 — Limitations Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 240, s. 45(1 )(g) — Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 223 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 35, 38.
From 1974 to 1982, the plaintiff municipality paid out monies for the maintenance of juvenile delinquents in compli ance with orders made by the Provincial Court of Ontario under subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act. The payments were made directly to group homes. By judgment rendered in July 1982, the Supreme Court of Canada held subsection 20(2) to be ultra vires the Parliament of Canada on the ground that it purported to authorize a court to impose a financial burden on municipalities for the support of juvenile delinquents. The plaintiff now seeks reimbursement from the defendant in respect of payments made under that invalid legislation.
Held, the action should be allowed.
The claim is essentially one for the recovery of money paid under a mistake of law and under compulsion. It has been established by the Supreme Court of Canada that money paid under such circumstances can be recovered, and that restitution can be had from a public authority even if the money has been expended for the maintenance of a member of the public.
The proposition that the executive government of Canada automatically has an enforceable legal obligation to pay for the administration of federal laws is not a constitutionally valid one. Under the Constitution, there is no right or obligation in the federal executive to pay money when such has not been appropriated; the Crown is not liable vicariously for the actions of the legislative branch, and the doctrine of parliamentary supremacy implies that courts cannot require Parliament to vote appropriations. Those fundamental constitutional princi ples must, however, be applied in the context of a federal system and in the light of the principle of redress for unjust enrichment. There is a political responsibility on the part of each order of government in a federal system to administer effectively the laws adopted by its legislative branch. The 1982 decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Peel v. MacKenzie demonstrates that in providing for the enforcement or adminis tration of criminal law under subsection 91(27) of the Consti tution Act, 1867, Parliament cannot pass on the financial obligations of administration to a province or the instrumental ity of a province if they do not voluntarily undertake such obligations.
The Crown cannot invoke immunity from action for payment of costs unlawfully imposed on the ground that the legislative branch of government has provided no appropriation for the defendant to make such payments as that would be to permit the federal order of government to achieve what it cannot achieve constitutionally, namely, the imposition of a financial burden on the municipality for the maintenance of juvenile delinquents. It is at this point that the principles of the federal system of government and the principle of redress for unjust
enrichment join together to require that the defendant reim burse the plaintiff for the costs incurred by it through compli ance with an invalid law. The liability of the Crown arises out of the requirements of justice as between the plaintiff and the defendant. Subsection 57(3) of the Federal Court Act provides authority for the payment of the amount expended by the plaintiff pursuant to invalid orders.
Neither section 11 of the Public Authorities Protection Act nor paragraph 45(1)(g) of the Limitations Act of Ontario bars recovery of the amount claimed. Under section 11, an action against any person for acts done or not done through neglect or default in the execution of a duty under a statute must be commenced within six months after the cause of action arose. This is not such an action: the defendant herein is being sued on an obligation which arises as a result of the actions of others. In any event, since the cause of action arose when the Supreme Court of Canada rendered its decision on July 22, 1982, and since this action was commenced on January 18, 1983, less than six months had elapsed after the cause of action arose, so that section 11 would not constitute a bar.
With respect to paragraph 45(1)(g), this was an action "upon the case" which, in the context of a modern statute, should be viewed as a residual category of action with the result that the limitation period applicable to actions for trespass, contract, debt or detinue—covered by paragraph 45(1)(g)— should apply to restitutionary actions. In the present case, the action was commenced within the six-year period prescribed by paragraph 45(1)(g). Finally, since there was no undue delay on the part of the plaintiff, the defence of laches could not be successfully invoked.
The claim for pre-judgment interest had to be dismissed as the provisions of section 35 of the Federal Court Act had not been met.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Carleton, County of v. City of Ottawa, [1965] S.C.R. 663; Regional Municipality of Peel v. MacKenzie et al., [1982] 2 S.C.R. 9.
CONSIDERED:
Brook's Wharf and Bull Wharf, Ld. v. Goodman Broth ers, [1937] 1 K.B. 534 (C.A.); Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v. Fairbairn, Lawson, Combe Barbour, Ld., [1943] A.C. 32 (H.L.); Deglman v. Constantineau, [1954] S.C.R. 725; Hydro Electric Commission of Nepean v. Ontario Hydro, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 347; Amax Potash Ltd. et al. v. Government of Saskatchewan, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 576; B.C. Power Corporation v. B.C. Electric Company, [1962] S.C.R. 642.
REFERRED TO:
Morgentaler et al. v. Ackroyd et al. (1983), 150 D.L.R. (3d) 59 (Ont. H.C.); Jacobs (George Porky) Enterprises Ltd. v. City of Regina, [1964] S.C.R. 326; Eadie v.
Township of Brantford, [1967] S.C.R. 573; White et al. v. Central Trust Co. et al. (1984), 7 D.L.R. (4th) 236 (N.B.C.A.); Attorney General of Canada v. Canadian National Transportation, Ltd. et al., [1983] 2 S.C.R. 206; R. v. Wetmore et al., [1983] 2 S.C.R. 284; R. v. Transworld Shipping Ltd., [1976] I F.C. 159 (C.A.); Welbridge Holdings Ltd. v. Metropolitan Corporation of Greater Winnipeg, [1971] S.C.R. 957; North v. Wal- thamstow Urban Council (1898), 67 L.J.Q.B. 972; In re Diplock, [1948] Ch. 465; affd [1951] A.C. 251 (H.L.); Maskell v. Horner, [1915] 3 K.B. 106 (C.A.); Salford (Mayor & c., of, Borough of) v. County Council of Lancashire (1890), 25 Q.B.D. 384 (C.A.); Green & Co. v. Cukier & Toronto Gen'l Trusts, [1949] 4 D.L.R. 729 (Ont. C.A.); Hydro Electric Commission of the Town ship of Nepean v. Ontario Hydro (1979), 92 D.L.R. (3d) 481 (Ont. H.C.).
COUNSEL:
J. E. Sexton, Q.C. and B. Morgan for
plaintiff.
J. E. Thompson for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt, Toronto, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
STRAYER J.: Facts
This is an action for recovery of money paid out by the plaintiff for the maintenance of juvenile delinquents in compliance with orders made by the Provincial Court of Ontario purportedly under subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. J-3 (that Act has since been replaced by the Young Offenders Act, S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 110).
Subsections 20(1) and (2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act provided as follows:
20. (1) In the case of a child adjudged to be a juvenile delinquent the court may, in its discretion, take either one or more of the several courses of action hereinafter in this section set out, as it may in its judgment deem proper in the circum stances of the case:
(a) suspend final disposition;
(b) adjourn the hearing or disposition of the case from time to time for any definite or indefinite period;
(c) impose a fine not exceeding twenty-five dollars, which may be paid in periodical amounts or otherwise;
(d) commit the child to the care or custody of a probation officer or of any other suitable person;
(e) allow the child to remain in its home, subject to the visitation of a probation officer, such child to report to the court or to the probation officer as often as may be required;
(/) cause the child to be placed in a suitable family home as a foster home, subject to the friendly supervision of a proba tion officer and the further order of the court;
(g) impose upon the delinquent such further or other condi tions as may be deemed advisable;
(h) commit the child to the charge of any children's aid society, duly organized under an Act of the legislature of the province and approved by the lieutenant governor in council, or, in any municipality in which there is no children's aid society, to the charge of the superintendent, if there is one; or
(i) commit the child to an industrial school duly approved by the lieutenant governor in council.
(2) In every such case it is within the power of the court to make an order upon the parent or parents of the child, or upon the municipality to which the child belongs, to contribute to the child's support such sum as the court may determine, and where such order is made upon the municipality, the municipal ity may from time to time recover from the parent or parents any sum or sums paid by it pursuant to such order.
Subsection (2) had been in the Act since 1908 (S.C. 1908, c. 40, subs. 16(2)).
At the trial of this matter the parties submitted an agreed statement of facts most of which is reproduced as follows:
2. By Judgment dated July 22, 1982, The Supreme Court of Canada held that sub-section 20(2) of the Act was not within the legislative competence of the Parliament of Canada insofar as it purported to authorize a Court to impose a financial burden on municipalities for the support of juvenile delin quents. Regional Municipality of Peel v. MacKenzie and the Attorney General of Canada et al., [[1982] 2 S.C.R. 9]; (1982), 139 D.L.R. (3d) 14 S.C.C... .
3. Under sub-section 20(1) of the Act a Court was authorized to make any one of nine possible Orders with respect to a juvenile delinquent. These included the following:
(a) Orders under s. 20(1)(a), and (b) which did not impose any financial burden on a municipality;
(b) Orders under s. 20(1)(e) and (i) which were to be implemented at the provincial level, and which did not impose any financial burden on a municipality.
(c) Orders under s. 20(1)(h) which provided for the commit tal of a juvenile delinquent to the charge of a Children's Aid Society. By subsequent agreement between the federal, pro vincial and municipal governments, the federal government
would be responsible for 50%, the province 30% and the municipality 20% of the costs involved in such placements, without any Order under s. 20(2); and
(d) Orders under s. 20(1)(d), (f) and (g) which were relied on with respect to the placement of children with group homes and other similar institutions, including private homes as foster homes, the cost of all of which would be borne by a municipality where so ordered by a court under subsection 20(2)....
4. The Plaintiff, the Regional Municipality of Peel, is a Regional Municipality which was incorporated on October 1, 1973 and commenced functioning on January 1, 1974. From 1974 until 1982, the Peel Family Court made Orders pursuant to sub-section 20(1) of the Act placing children with various group homes and other similar institutions, and by virtue of the provisions of sub-section 20(2) of the Act, the Court ordered that the cost of such placements be borne by the Plaintiff municipality. The majority of Orders made by the Peel Family Court directed that children be placed with Viking Houses, a division of Marshall Childrens' Foundation (Viking Houses).
5. The financial contributions which were required to be made by the Plaintiff as a result of Orders made pursuant to sub-sec tion 20(2) of the Act were to be made payable directly to the various group homes, institutions and individuals in question.
6. The Plaintiff made payments to Viking Houses as well as other group homes, institutions and individuals pursuant to Orders made under sub-section 20(2) of the Act between the period of January, 1974 and approximately July 22, 1982. The gross amounts of such payments were $2,036,131.37. Up to April, 1976, the Plaintiff received some small subsidies from the Province under the General Welfare Assistance Act for amounts paid for the support of juvenile delinquents as foster children. The amount of these subsidy payments was $25,330.50. From April, 1976, the Province provided a subsidy to cover 50% of all the amounts paid by the Plaintiff pursuant to Orders made under sub-section 20(2) of the Act. The total amount of these subsidy payments was $843,986.65. The total provincial subsidy payments were therefore $869,317.15. As a result, the total net amount paid by the Plaintiff as a result of Orders made pursuant to sub-section 20(2) of the Act was $1,166,814.22... .
7. Throughout the period 1974 to 1982, where juveniles in Ontario were committed by the Court to the charge of a Children's Aid Society pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(h) of the Act, the juveniles were transferred to provincial welfare laws by a Provincial Secretary's Order pursuant to section 21 of the Act, and the Federal Government paid fifty per cent of the cost of such juveniles' support pursuant to the Canada Assistance Plan. The Court made no orders under subsection 20(2) of the Act against municipalities for the support of such juveniles ....
8. Throughout the period 1974 to 1982, where juveniles in Ontario were committed by the Court to an industrial school
pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(i) of the Act, such juveniles remained subject to provincial correctional law and were not transferred to provincial welfare law under section 21 of the Act. From April 1, 1974 through and including 1982, pursuant to an agreement called the Young Offenders Agreement be tween the Federal Government and Ontario, the Federal Gov ernment paid the same portion of the costs of supporting such juveniles as under the Canada Assistance Plan. The Young Offenders Agreement was entered by the Federal Government under the authority of the Appropriations Act No. 4, 1974 S.C. 1974-5-6 c. 21. The Young Offenders Agreement was instituted by the Federal Government as an interim arrangement pending the replacement of the Act by the Young Offenders Act. The Young Offenders Act was ultimately enacted on July 7, 1982 and proclaimed in force on April 7, 1984... .
9. By applications for certiorari dated February 1, 1977, the Plaintiff challenged three of the said Orders by which juveniles were placed with Viking Houses and the Plaintiff was ordered to pay Viking Houses for their support. The grounds on which the Plaintiff relied were: (1) that sub-section 20(2) of the Act was not within the legislative competence of the Parliament of Canada, and (2) that none of the provisions of subsection 20(1) of the Act authorized a placement to Viking Houses.
10. By Order in the Supreme Court of Ontario dated April 21, 1977, the Honourable Mr. Justice John Holland ruled in favour of the Plaintiff on the second ground, holding that the Court had no jurisdiction to order that juveniles be placed with or committed to Viking Houses under Section 20(1) of the Act and he ordered that the said Orders be quashed. On appeal by Viking Houses, the decision of The Honourable Mr. Justice John Holland was upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Canada by decisions dated June 24, 1977 and June 26, 1979 respectively. The Honourable Mr. Justice John Holland and the Ontario Court of Appeal held that s. 20(2) of the Act was constitutionally valid. In view of its decision on the other ground of challenge, the Supreme Court of Canada expressly did not adjudicate on the constitutional issue in its decision. The Defendant, Her Majesty the Queen, was given notice of the constitutional issue raised by the Plaintiff in its applications for certiorari dated February 1, 1977, and intervened and participated at each level of the case .... Re Regional Municipality of Peel and Viking Houses (1977), 16 O.R. (2d) 632 (H. Ct.); (1977), 16 O.R. (2d) 765 (C.A.); sub nom A.G. Ontario and Viking Houses v. Regional Municipality of Peel (1979), 104 D.L.R. (3d) 1 (S.C.C.).
11. As a result of the said Order of the Honourable Mr. Justice John Holland dated April 21, 1977, the juvenile T.G.N., who had been adjudged to be delinquent, was brought back before the Provincial Court (Family Division) by Viking Houses. By an Order dated July 26, 1977, the Provincial Court (Family Division) committed the custody of T.G.N. to an employee of Viking Houses, directed that he should keep T.G.N. in a house of Viking Houses, and ordered, under Section 20(2) of the Act, that the Plaintiff pay a per diem amount for her support in the house of Viking Houses.
12. The Plaintiff appealed the said Order dated July 26, 1977 regarding T.G.N., relying inter alia, on the ground that Section 20(2) of the Act was unconstitutional. By Judgments dated July 10, 1978 and June 19, 1980 respectively, Madam Justice Van Camp and the Ontario Court of Appeal upheld the said Order. On further appeal, the Supreme Court of Canada held by a Judgment dated July 22, 1982 that Section 20(2) of the Act was unconstitutional insofar as it purported to authorize the imposition by Court Order of a financial burden on munici palities, and that Court set aside the said Order dated July 26, 1977 as invalid insofar as it imposed an obligation on the Plaintiff to pay for the support of the said juvenile. The Defendant, Her Majesty the Queen, was given notice of the constitutional issue at each level of that case, and intervened and participated before the Supreme Court of Canada .... Re Regional Municipality of Peel and Viking Houses (unreported, July 10, 1978) (H. Ct.); (1980) 113 D.L.R. (3d) 350 (C.A.); sub nom Regional Municipality of Peel v. MacKenzie [[1982] 2 S.C.R. 9]; (1982), 139 D.L.R. (3d) 14 (S.C.C.).
13. With respect to the payments made by the Plaintiff, there were four types of Orders under subsection 20(1) of the Act which were made with the Orders under subsection 20(2) against the Plaintiff. These four types of Orders are as follows:
(a) Orders made under paragraphs 20(1)(d), (f) or (g) committing the juvenile to the corporate entity of a group home, as in the Orders dealt with in the first Viking Houses case, referred to in paragraphs 9 and 10 above, and set out in Appendix "B". A schedule of the Orders falling within this category is filed as Exhibit 3.
(b) Orders made under paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Act com mitting the juvenile to an individual who was an employee of the corporate entity of a group home, as in the Order dealt with in the second Viking Houses case, referred to in para graphs 11 and 12 above, and set out in Appendix "C". A schedule of the Orders falling within this category is filed as Exhibit 4.
(c) Orders made under paragraph 20(1)(f) of the Act plac ing the juvenile in a foster home. A schedule of the Orders falling within this category is filed as Exhibit 5, together with copies of such Orders.
(d) An Order regarding the juvenile T.O.A., in which it was ordered under paragraphs 20(1)(b) and (g) that the matter be adjourned and that the juvenile attend a private educa tional institution, the Toronto Learning Centre, and further ordered under subsection 20(2) of the Act that the Plaintiff pay the cost of this institution. This Order was upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal in a decision on January 15th, 1982, reported as T.O.A. v. Regional Municipality of Peel (1982), 35 O.R. (2d) 260.... Regional Municipality of Peel and A. (1980) 30 O.R. (2d) 452 and T.O.A. v. Regional Municipality of Peel (1982), 35 O.R. (2d) 260.
14. It was not until the Plaintiff served Notice dated October 12, 1982 pursuant to the Crown Liability Act R.S.C. 1970, Chapter C-38 that the Plaintiff expressly sought reimburse-
ment from the Defendant for payments made by it with respect to Orders made under subsection 20(2) of the Act ....
In addition to the agreed facts, I find as a fact that the plaintiff made these payments, in compli ance with the orders purportedly made under sub section 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act, under compulsion. It is clear that failure to pay as ordered by the Court would have exposed the plaintiff to contempt proceedings. This was always implicit and was made explicit, according to the evidence, on at least two occasions. Exhibit 51 is a letter dated January 13, 1977 from the solicitors for the corporate group homes, Viking Houses, a division of Marshall Childrens' Foundation, advis ing the solicitor for the plaintiff that any position taken by the plaintiff refusing immediate payment under court orders made in favour of Viking Houses would be the subject of contempt proceed ings. No. 68 of the agreed exhibits is a memoran dum dated July 25, 1977, received by the witness Mr. Crozier, Commissioner of Social Services for Peel, from the solicitor for the Regional Munici pality, advising that counsel for Viking Houses had informed them that failure to pay pursuant to the orders would result in Viking Houses seeking a warrant of committal or a warrant of distress.
While there was some effort made during the trial to demonstrate that the plaintiff had clearly protested payment including protesting to the Gov ernment of Canada, this was not really demon strated. I do not, however, consider it necessary that a clear protest be established if it is apparent the money was being paid under compulsion. It is also apparent that the plaintiff did not wish to deprive young offenders of care and supervision and that, given the disposition made of their cases by the Provincial Court, it was necessary that the municipality pay in accordance with the Court orders if they were to have some care and supervi sion. This in itself created a form of practical compulsion. For most of the period in question the plaintiff was not sitting on its rights, however, having commenced proceedings as early as Febru- ary 1977, to challenge these orders.
Conclusions
(i) Principles of Restitution
The essential issue here is whether Her Majesty in right of Canada can be obliged through this action to reimburse the plaintiff municipality for monies paid by the latter, not to the Government of Canada, but to third persons for the benefit of other third persons, all because the Parliament of Canada adopted an invalid law which purported to require those payments. It appears to me that this action falls within that category of actions which were maintainable against the Crown at common law by petition of right (not required since 1971) and is in no way dependent on the Crown Liability Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-38.
It is clear that this money was paid under a mistake of law: namely, under the mistaken belief that subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act validly authorized the Provincial Court of Ontario to make such orders. Even though the plaintiff commenced to challenge this assumption as early as February 1977 it quite properly com plied with the law until the latter was finally held invalid by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1982. Normally laws should be observed until they are held to be invalid: see e.g. Morgentaler et al. v. Ackroyd et al. (1983), 150 D.L.R. (3d) 59 (Ont. H.C.).
The plaintiff in its statement of claim says that the defendant has been "unjustly enriched" and also seeks "recoupment" for money paid by it to discharge the "liability or responsibility of the Defendant arising from its general public duty to provide the funds necessary to implement its legis lation". In argument it relied on a number of authorities, some of which were directed more to the general principle of unjust enrichment, and others of which dealt with the particular remedy of recovery of money paid under mistake of law to or for the benefit of the defendant. While this is essentially a claim for recovery of money paid under mistake of law and under compulsion, it
involves a somewhat novel situation where one must go beyond the precedents in looking for the underlying principles upon which recovery may or may not be based.
Without going back to Lord Mansfield and his leading decisions of the 18th century on this sub ject, it may suffice to begin with a decision of the English Court of Appeal in Brook's Wharf and Bull Wharf Ld. v. Goodman Brothers, [1937] 1 K.B. 534 where the plaintiff was allowed to recov er custom duties paid by it, as it was obliged by law to do, on furs imported by the defendant. The Court approved the principle that where a plaintiff has been compelled by law to pay money which the defendant was ultimately liable to pay, as between the plaintiff and defendant the plaintiff is entitled to be reimbursed. It was said [at page 545] that this obligation did not arise out of contract but
.... is imposed by the Court simply under the circumstances of the case and on what the Court decides is just and reasonable, having regard to the relationship of the parties.
In the case of Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v. Fair- bairn, Lawson, Combe Barbour, Ld., [1943] A.C. 32 (H.L.), Lord Wright made the observation, since much quoted, that [at page 61]:
It is clear that any civilized system of law is bound to provide remedies for cases of what has been called unjust enrichment or unjust benefit, that is to prevent a man from retaining the money of or some benefit derived from another which it is against conscience that he should keep.
While that case essentially involved recovery of money paid under a contract that had become frustrated by war, Lord Wright said that such recovery was based neither on contract nor tort, but falls within a "third category ... called quasi- contract or restitution".
Such English jurisprudence has been cited with approval in Canadian courts. In the case of Degl- man v. Constantineau, [1954] S.C.R. 725 the Supreme Court allowed the nephew of a deceased
person to recover from her estate payment for services rendered by him to her during her life. He had rendered such services on the oral understand ing that she would provide for him in her will. She failed to do so. He was not allowed to enforce the contract because it was not in writing as required by the Statute of Frauds [R.S.O. 1950, c. 371]. Mr. Justice Rand writing for himself and two other Judges, allowed recovery on what he described as [at page 728]
...the principle of restitution against what would otherwise be an unjust enrichment of the defendant at the expense of the plaintiff.
While Rand J. did not quote any authority for this proposition, Cartwright J., writing for himself and the majority of the Court, came to the same result and quoted the above statement by Lord Wright in the Fibrosa Spolka case. More recently, the Supreme Court ' of Canada in Hydro Electric Commission of Nepean v. Ontario Hydro, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 347 analyzed at length the principles of law applicable to recovery of money paid, in error, by one party to a contract to the other party. While this decision is not directly on point, there was extensive analysis in both the dissenting and majority judgments as to the requirements for the recovery of money paid under mistake of law. Dickson J. [as he then was], dissenting, writing for himself and Laskin C.J.C., having examined at length the English and Canadian authorities and having noted the many exceptions to the principle that money paid under a mistake of law is not recoverable, stated at pages 367 and 368 that the doctrine of restitution or unjust enrichment is not an exception or qualification to this rule but instead provides an underlying principle of recov ery in respect of which distinctions as to mistake of law and mistake of fact are meaningless. He con cluded that there should be recovery in that case on such basis, but before doing so he examined carefully the possibility that there might be equita ble defences to what he presumably regarded as an equitable right to recovery. He found no such defences. Mr. Justice Estey, writing on behalf of the majority, declined to order repayment of the money to the plaintiff. While not expressly disa greeing with the position of the dissenting Judges as to the principles of unjust enrichment, he
expressed the view at page 412 that the plaintiff had not raised squarely or relied on these princi ples. The majority rejected recovery claimed on the basis of a mistake of law because none of the exceptions to the rule that one may not recover money paid under a mistake of law were present in this case. At pages 409 and 410, however, Estey J. made it clear that if the payments had been made under compulsion they would be recoverable whether or not there was a mistake of law. In effect, the presence of mistake of law would be irrelevant. This would appear to accord with one of the bases for recovery upheld in an earlier judg ment of the Court written by Hall J. in Jacobs (George Porky) Enterprises Ltd. v. City of Regina, [1964] S.C.R. 326, at pages 330 and 331.
Another relevant decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, although not directly applicable to the present situation since it involved collection and retention by the defendant of taxes paid to it under compulsion pursuant to an allegedly invalid stat ute, is Amax Potash Ltd. et al. v. Government of Saskatchewan, [ 1977] 2 S.C.R. 576. There the Court appears to have assumed that at common law the plaintiff would have a right to recover such money if the statute were held to be invalid. On this assumption it was held that the provincial legislature could not preclude such recovery by legislation because such a statutory bar would represent an indirect means of achieving the result prohibited by the Constitution—that is, the gain ing of revenues through an invalid scheme of taxation.
A further Supreme Court decision of interest in relation to the present case is that of Carleton, County of v. City of Ottawa, [1965] S.C.R. 663.
In that case the City of Ottawa had annexed, effective January 1, 1950, a portion of the Town ship of Gloucester which was previously in the County of Carleton. In 1948 one N.B., an indigent person previously resident in this part of Glouces- ter later to be annexed by Ottawa, was placed in a home for the aged in Lanark County where she was maintained at the expense of Carleton County. At the time of the annexation of the portion of Gloucester by Ottawa it was agreed between Ottawa and Gloucester that Ottawa would assume responsibility for the maintenance of indigent residents in the area to be annexed. Subsequently Carleton County delivered a list of such persons to Ottawa but through oversight N.B. was not included in the list. Carleton continued to pay Lanark County for the maintenance of N.B. until 1960, and then N.B. was moved to a home operated by Carleton where she continued to be maintained at the expense of Carleton County. In 1962, the error having been discovered, Carleton demanded from Ottawa payment of the amounts expended by Carleton from 1950 to 1962 for the maintenance of N.B. It will be noted that responsi bility for the maintenance of such indigents was imposed by law on the county or city where they were deemed resident pursuant to The Homes for the Aged Act, S.O. 1947, c. 46. Carleton based its claim on the doctrine of restitution. Hall J. deliver ing the judgment of the Court, quoted with approval the Brook's Wharf case supra, the Fibrosa Spolka case supra and the Deglman case supra. Apparently applying those cases, Hall J. held that as Ottawa had assumed responsibility for Carleton's obligations to indigent residents as of 1950, but through an error Carleton had continued to pay for the maintenance of N.B., it would be "against conscience" that Ottawa should escape responsibility for those expenses. Ottawa was therefore ordered to reimburse Carleton for them. The particular significance of this case, vis-à-vis the present case is that, although it apparently involved only an error of fact, it concerned a dispute between two public authorities to which the doctrine of restitution or unjust enrichment was applied; and that the money paid by the plaintiff Carleton had not been paid to the defen dant nor for its direct benefit but for the benefit of
a third party, N.B., which the defendant had an obligation in law to support.
From other cases such as Eadie v. Township of Brantford, [1967] S.C.R. 573 and (by inference) the Nepean case supra one can conclude that money paid under a mistake of law and under compulsion can be recovered. More generally, the County of Carleton case supports the view that restitution can be had from a public authority even if the money has been expended for the mainte nance of a member of the public. Even more importantly, the Deglman case, County of Carle- ton case, and the dissenting judgment in Nepean (the substance of which was not rejected by the majority, just thought to be inapplicable in that case) all indicate that in Canada there is now a more generalized and fundamental principle of redressing unjust enrichment which may go beyond its English origins and which informs or should inform any particular judgment in this area. This has also been suggested by the New Brunswick Court of Appeal in White et al. v. Central Trust Co. et al. (1984), 7 D.L.R. (4th) 236 and by some writers: see e.g. Fridman and McLeod, Restitution (1982), chapter 2; McCa- mus, "Restitutionary Recovery of Moneys Paid to a Public Authority Under a Mistake of Law: Ignorantia Juris in the Supreme Court of Cana- da" (1983), 17 U.B.C. L. Rev. 233; Gautreau, "Developments in the Law of Restitution" (1984- 85), 5 Advocates' Q. 419. It is this principle which must not be lost sight of in examining the difficul ties facing the plaintiff in this case.
(ii) Constitutional Principles
A critical question is whether the defendant, the executive government of Canada, can be said to have received a benefit, either generally or through the discharge of its legal responsibility, by the payment by the Regional Municipality of Peel of the cost of maintenance of juvenile delinquents pursuant to an invalid federal law. In the narrow sense, I am not able to find that the executive government of Canada automatically has an enforceable legal obligation to pay the costs of
administration of every Act of Parliament, even of valid Acts. No authority has been submitted for such a proposition and both experience and princi ple suggest the contrary.
It is obvious for example that Parliament often imposes obligations on individuals and corpora tions which entail the expenditure by them of their own money in the course of compliance with the law. Little or no obligation is placed on the execu tive branch in such cases, except perhaps for pur poses of monitoring compliance. It is also obvious that the provinces collectively spend hundreds of millions of dollars in the enforcement and adminis tration of the federal Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34] or the Juvenile Delinquents Act and its successor. Arguably, those provincial expenditures may be regarded as voluntary although it appears to me from the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Regional Municipality of Peel v. MacKenzie et al., [ [ 1982] 2 S.C.R. 9] that a federal enactment properly characterized as "criminal law" could impose expenditure obliga tions on a province or its instrumentalities. At page 22 it was said that the purported imposition on municipalities of the obligation under subsec tion 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act
... could not be justified in the absence of a direct link with federal legislative power under s. 91(27). [Emphasis added.]
This implies that if there were a "direct link" with federal legislative power then such obligations could be imposed on municipalities and it would not be the federal executive that would be obliged to make such expenditures.
•
On the basis of general constitutional principles, it is also difficult to contend that there is automatically a financial obligation on the federal executive to pay for the administration of federal laws. That executive is responsible to Parliament for its expenditure of money, and if it has not been authorized by Parliament to make a certain expen diture it has no right or enforceable legal obliga tion to do so. Nor is the Crown liable vicariously for the actions of the legislative branch; Parlia ment is in no sense the agent or servant of the Crown. Further, the doctrine of parliamentary
supremacy implies that courts cannot require Par liament to vote appropriations. If Parliament has not provided for payment out of the federal Con solidated Revenue Fund of the costs of implemen tation of legislation, and has not validly imposed a duty on others to bear those costs, a court could not issue a mandatory injunction or a mandamus to require Parliament to vote an appropriation for the proper administration of its law. Any such obligation is of a political, not a juridical, nature. These are fundamental principles of the English Constitution which emerged in the 17th century and were confirmed by the Bill of Rights, 1688, 1 Will. & Mary, Sess. 2, c. 2 (U.K.). We have inherited them through the language of the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867 [30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix II, No. 5] (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1)] which states that we are to have a constitution "similar in Principle to that of the United Kingdom".
These fundamental constitutional principles de veloped in a unitary state must, however, be applied in the context of a federal system and in the light of the principle of redress for unjust enrichment. Even if there is not a right of action against the federal executive for the cost of enforc ing federal laws, or against the provincial execu tive for the costs of enforcing provincial laws, there is unquestionably a generally perceived political responsibility on the part of each order of govern ment in a federal system to administer effectively the laws adopted by its legislative branch. In the field of criminal law, the federal obligation is underlined by the confirmation in Attorney Gener al of Canada v. Canadian National Transporta tion, Ltd. et al., [1983] 2 S.C.R. 206, followed in R. v. Wetmore et al., [1983] 2 S.C.R. 284, that Parliament's jurisdiction under head 91(27) of the Constitution Act, 1867 includes the power to pro vide for the enforcement of criminal law. The case of Peel v. MacKenzie, supra demonstrates, how ever, that in so providing for the enforcement or administration of criminal law Parliament cannot, in the circumstances involved here, pass on the financial obligations of administration to a prov ince or the instrumentality of a province if that
province or instrumentality does not voluntarily undertake such obligations. Yet, if there were not redress for the plaintiff in this case, Parliament would have effectively done so through its invalid legislation (subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delin quents Act) which has since 1908 obliged munici palities to pay such costs, and through its reliance on the constitutional principle that there is no right or obligation in the federal executive to pay money where such has not been appropriated by Parliament. In this connection, it is instructive to consider the case of B.C. Power Corporation v. B.C. Electric Company, [1962] S.C.R. 642. There the validity of legislation expropriating the common shares of the British Columbia Electric Company Limited was being attacked as to its constitutionality. The Crown in right of the prov ince objected to the appointment of a receiver of the company pending the outcome of the litigation, on the grounds that such an order would affect the property or interest of the Crown in the company as provided for in the impugned legislation. The Supreme Court confirmed that such a receiver could be appointed pendente lite and that Crown immunity from suit as it then generally existed in British Columbia could not be invoked to prevent such an order. At pages 644 and 645 Kerwin C.J. on behalf of the Court stated:
In a federal system, where legislative authority is divided, as are also the prerogatives of the Crown, as between the Domin ion and the Provinces, it is my view that it is not open to the Crown, either in right of Canada or of a Province, to claim a Crown immunity based upon an interest in certain property, where its very interest in that property depends completely and solely on the validity of the legislation which it has itself passed, if there is a reasonable doubt as to whether such legislation is constitutionally valid. To permit it to do so would be to enable it, by the assertion of rights claimed under legislation which is beyond its powers, to achieve the same results as if the legislation were valid. In a federal system it appears to me that, in such circumstances, the Court has the same jurisdiction to preserve assets whose title is dependent on the validity of the legislation as it has to determine the validity of the legislation itself.
This statement was quoted with approval in Amax Potash Ltd. et al. v. Government of Saskatchewan
supra at page 591. Dickson J. remarked there that while the B.C. Electric case involved somewhat different issues, the Amax case
... would seem to be governed by the very considerations which led to the decision in the earlier case. In each case, the concern is with the preservation of the Constitution which is paramount. [Emphasis added.]
Similarly, in the present case, if the Crown in right of Canada can invoke an immunity from action for payment of costs unlawfully imposed by the legislative branch of the federal government on the plaintiff, on the grounds that the legislative branch has provided no appropriation or authori zation for the defendant to make such payments, then the federal order of government will have achieved what the Constitution says it cannot achieve: namely, the imposition of a financial burden on the plaintiff municipality for the main tenance of juvenile delinquents under the Juvenile Delinquents Act.
(iii) The Principles Combined
It is at this point where the principles of the federal system of government and the principle of redress for unjust enrichment join together in requiring that the defendant reimburse the plain tiff for the costs incurred by the plaintiff through compliance with the invalid law. It might well have been impossible for anyone to have sued the defendant directly to force the payment of such monies in the first place. But where the plaintiff has paid them in compliance with a federal law that has turned out to be invalid, and in further ance of the objectives of that law duly adopted by Parliament, as between the plaintiff and the defendant it would be unjust that the plaintiff ultimately bear those costs rather than the defendant.
In my view this creates no insuperable problem in payment of such an amount by the executive branch of government, notwithstanding the fact that Parliament made no specific appropriation of funds for the administration of this aspect of the Juvenile Delinquents Act. The liability of the Crown here arises out of general principles of law and equity and it is provided by the Federal Court
Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, in subsection 57(3):
57....
(3) There shall be paid out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund any money or costs awarded to any person against the Crown in any proceedings in the Court.
This provides adequate authority for the payment of the sum in question. See R. v. Transworld Shipping Ltd., [1976] 1 F.C. 159 (C.A.), at page 165, note 10.
In finding that the Crown is liable to pay such amount in the present circumstances, it is impor tant to make clear what is not being decided. As noted above, I am not prepared to adopt the view that the federal executive is automatically and legally obliged to pay all the costs of the adminis tration of federal laws. Further, recovery here is not being allowed on some theory of constitutional tort based on liability for "legislating without due care and attention". I recognize that the function of enacting legislation involves a political and social responsibility which does not give rise to a private duty of care: see Welbridge Holdings Ltd. v. Metropolitan Corporation of Greater Winnipeg, [1971] S.C.R. 957, at pages 969 and 970. Instead, liability to reimburse the plaintiff arises out of the requirements of justice as between the two parties.
(iv) Invalidity of Disposition Orders
Counsel for the defendant contended that the plaintiff had in effect made payments unnecessari ly under orders which, while purportedly made under subsection 20(2) were not in accordance with the requirements prescribed in subsection 20(1) for orders for the disposition of juveniles found to be delinquent. According to him, the validity of an order issued under subsection 20(2) depended on its compliance with the criteria for such orders as were prescribed in subsection 20(1). It is true that, as set out in paragraphs 9 and 10 of the agreed statement of facts quoted above, the plaintiff successfully challenged certain of the orders for failure to comply with subsection 20(1). It may be that many of the other orders were not within the terms of subsection 20(1) and could also have been challenged for that reason, but it is
not for me to determine that question in a collater al proceeding such as this. Nor do I think compli ance or non-compliance with subsection 20(1) is relevant to the present claim by the plaintiff. For there to be practical compulsion to pay, as I have found existed in this case, it is not pertinent that the plaintiff might ultimately have resisted such compulsion successfully: see North v. Waltham- stow Urban Council (1898), 67 L.J.Q.B. 972. It is no doubt for this reason that the courts have frequently insisted that all that is required, in establishing a claim for restitution, is to show that the payment was made under "practical" compul sion: see, e.g., Eadie, supra. Further, while compli ance with the criteria of subsection 20(1) would determine the validity of the orders in so far as the placement and supervision of the juvenile delin quent was concerned, it was subsection 20(2) which implicated the municipality in the matter. The immediate cause of the unlawful impositions on the municipality was the latter subsection and it was in the mistaken belief as to its validity that the municipality paid out the sums in question. The municipality cannot be viewed as a volunteer in making payments pursuant to that subsection even if the orders might have been challengeable on other bases. The municipality was obliged to treat those orders as valid until they had been success fully attacked on some ground. The municipality launched that attack in 1977 with respect to sub section 20(2) but did not succeed until it raised the matter again in the MacKenzie case, as described in paragraphs 11 and 12 of the agreed statement of facts supra.
(v) Limitation Periods
By virtue of section 38 of the Federal Court Act, the question of limitation periods is governed by the law of Ontario where the cause of action arose.
The defendant pleaded prescription, invoking the Limitations Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 240, s. 45, and the Public Authorities Protection Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 406, s. 11. It also pleaded, for reasons
which were not explained nor are they apparent, the Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 223. In respect of the first statute the defendant argued that the case came within paragraph 45(1)(g) of the Act, being an action "upon the case" which must be commenced "within six years after the cause of action arose". As for section 11 of the Public Authorities Protection Act, it provides that an action
11.—(1) ... against any person for an act done in pursuance or execution or intended execution of any statutory or other public duty or authority, or in respect of any alleged neglect or default in the execution of any such duty or authority ....
must be commenced "within six months next after the cause of action arose". In my view this is not such an action: the defendant is not being sued for acts done or not done through neglect or default in the execution of a duty under a statute or other wise. Neither a statute nor general principles of law obliged it to act differently in respect of the plaintiff. Instead, it is being sued on an obligation which now arises as a result of the actions of others.
The plaintiff argues that the Limitations Act does not apply because this is an action for equita ble relief which is nowhere referred to in section 45 of that Act. It contends instead that only the equitable doctrine of laches applies, a much more elastic concept. Further, it contends that the cause of action did not arise until the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on July 22, 1982 in the MacKenzie case, supra holding that subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act is invalid. The present action for recovery of monies paid by the plaintiff in compliance with the invalid law was commenced on January 18, 1983 less than six months after that judgment.
Plaintiff argues that it could not have known until that judgment that it had paid the money under a mistake of law and the cause of action did not arise until that time. It is therefore entitled to
claim for all monies paid between 1974 and 1982 pursuant to orders made under subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act. The defendant, of course, contends that if the plaintiff is entitled to recover anything, it can at best only recover such amounts as were paid during the period of six years immediately preceding the commencement of this action, which would mean that payments made prior to January 18, 1977 would not be recoverable.
In my view the cause of action did not arise until the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on July 22, 1982 holding subsection 20(2) to be inval id. It was only then that any of the parties were certain that the plaintiff had been compelled to make payments which it was not constitutionally obliged to make. Only then could the cause of action be said to have arisen. I believe that this is the position which is the most consistent with the judgment of the majority of judges in Deglman v. Constantineau, supra, at page 736. After empha sizing that recovery was not based on contract, Cartwright J. held that the obligation which the law imposed on the deceased's administrator to pay the deceased's nephew a sum of money in lieu of the property which she had promised to devise to him did not arise until the deceased died intes tate. Until that time the nephew had no reason to doubt that she would make the promised provision in her will. Therefore the cause of action did not accrue until the death of the deceased intestate. See also the White case, supra, at page 252; Fridman and McLeod, supra, at pages 600-602. Similarly, in the present case it was not until the decision of the Supreme Court on July 22, 1982 that the plaintiff knew that it had expended money when it had no legal obligation to do so, and it was then that a right to recoupment or restitution arose.
It is interesting to note that in the case of Carleton v. Ottawa, supra, the case closest to the present one for these purposes and also involving
the law of Ontario as to the relevant limitation period, no mention was made in any of the report ed decisions of the claim being in any way statute- barred. In that case payment was ordered in respect of sums paid up by the plaintiff for a period of more than twelve years prior to com mencement of the action. In the Nepean case, supra, the plaintiff conceded that the Limitations Act applied so as to limit its claim to the six years preceding issue of the writ. It therefore equally conceded that the cause of action arose at the time payment was made.
Concluding as I do that the cause of action here did not arise until July 22, 1982 it is of little importance which limitation period is applied to this claim since none will bar recovery of all the amounts claimed in this action. Even if the Public Authorities Protection Act were to apply, the action was commenced within six months after the cause of action arose so it would not constitute a bar. If paragraph 45(1)(g) of the Limitations Act applies, the action was commenced well within the six-year period permitted. I have in fact concluded that paragraph 45(1)(g) of the Limitations Act does apply to this action on the basis that it is "an action ... upon the case". It is perhaps anomalous that we should today be required to resort to distinctions having their origin in the fourteenth century and their significance in the forms of action which Anglo-Canadian law purportedly abandoned over a century ago. But the wording of the Ontario statute obliges me to do so. An "action upon the case" should in the context of a modern statute be viewed somewhat as a residual category of action, which is indeed a role not inconsistent with its original development. As it developed, action on the case was not confined to torts but also was used for new claims such as assumpsit. See e.g. Plucknett, A Concise History of the Common Law (5th ed., 1956), at pages 372-373, 637-640. The result of finding this to be an action on the case would be to have the same limitation period apply to restitutionary actions, such as the present one, as would apply to actions for trespass, contract, debt or detinue (also covered by para graph 45(1)(g) of the Ontario Limitations Act). The same policy which justifies the limitation period for these actions would appear to be equally
relevant to restitutionary actions. See Fridman and McLeod, supra, at pages 597-602. There are many cases where limitation statutes have been applied to restitutionary actions (see e.g. Maskell v. Horner, [1915] 3 K.B. 106 (C.A.); In re Diplock, [ 1948] Ch. 465, affirmed [1951] A.C. 251 (H.L.)). In particular, such actions have on occa sion been specifically held to be actions on the case: see Salford (Mayor & c., of Borough of) v. County Council of Lancashire (1890), 25 Q.B.D. 384 (C.A.); Green & Co. v. Cukier & Toronto Gen'l Trusts, [1949] 4 D.L.R. 729 (Ont. C.A.). The latter case, being a decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal on the same statutory provision as is involved here, is particularly pertinent.
My conclusion that this is an action on the case and subject to a six-year limitation period does not entirely resolve the matter, however. Section 2 of the Ontario Limitations Act provides:
2. Nothing in this Act interferes with any rule of equity in refusing relief on the ground of acquiescence, or otherwise, to any person whose right to bring an action is not barred by virtue of this Act.
This appears to mean that even though an action is commenced within the limitation period prescribed in the statute, if it is equitable in nature it may be barred by the conduct of the plaintiff through, e.g. delay. Although at the trial of the Nepean case supra Craig J. seems to have assumed that the existence of a relevant limitation statute precluded a defence of laches (see (1979), 92 D.L.R. (3d) 481 (Ont. H.C.), at page 495) and Dickson J. in the Supreme Court accepted this view (see page 379), neither referred to section 2 of the Limita tions Act as quoted above. It is likely that an action for recovery of money paid under mistake of law should be regarded as an equitable action subject to equitable defences. If, however, there does remain a possible defence of laches here by
virtue of section 2, I find that there was no undue delay on the part of the plaintiff in bringing this action. Therefore laches cannot be successfully invoked by the defendant.
(vi) Entitlement to Recovery
The plaintiff is therefore entitled to be paid by the defendant the sum of $1,166,814.22 represent ing the net amount expended by the plaintiff pur suant to invalid orders made under subsection 20(2) of the Juvenile Delinquents Act.
(vii) Interest
The plaintiff in its statement of claim asks for interest which I take to refer to pre-judgment interest on the sums paid out by it under the invalid federal law. I am unable to award such interest because of the provisions of section 35 of the Federal Court Act which states:
35. In adjudicating upon any claim against the Crown, the Court shall not allow interest on any sum of money that the Court considers to be due to the claimant, in the absence of any contract stipulating for payment of such interest or of a statute providing in such a case for the payment of interest by the Crown.
There is no contract providing for the payment of interest in the present case. Nor does there appear to be any relevant statute; the claim, as I have held, does not arise under the Crown Liability Act which might, were it applicable, apply by reference the law of Ontario on this subject.
(viii) Costs
The plaintiff is entitled to its costs.
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