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A-344-75
Quebec North Shore Paper Company and Quebec and Ontario Transportation Company (Appel- lants) (Defendants)
v.
Canadian Pacific Limited and Incan Ships Lim ited (Respondents) (Plaintiffs)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow, Ryan and Le Dain JJ.—Montreal, November 21, 1975; Ottawa, December 22, 1975.
Jurisdiction—Damages--Contract for construction and operation of rail car marine terminal—Appellant "Q and O" and respondent 'I" contracting with respondent "CP" to oper ate rail transporter for "CP"—Failure of appellants to con struct within specified time—Action for breach of contract— Application by appellants to strike out statement of claim for want of jurisdiction—Whether purely local undertaking— Motion dismissed—Appeal—Whether Court has jurisdiction under s. 23 of Federal Court Act—Federal Court Act, ss. 2, 3, 23—British North America Act, 1867, ss. 91(29), 92(10)(a), 101.
Appellants contracted to construct and operate a rail car marine terminal to be ready by May 15, 1975. Appellant Q and O and respondent I contracted to form a Joint Venture to operate the transporter, and, by contract, appellant Q and O and respondent I agreed with respondent CP to operate the transporter for CP. All parties agree that the contracts should be considered as part of a scheme in which they all were interested. Respondents claimed damages, alleging default in failing to perform within the time stipulated. Appellants main tained that the subject matter was only within Quebec, and thus, a local undertaking. Appellants further alleged that this was not a case of extension of a railway line, but of extension of a railway line by means of a shipping line which was purely local, and appellants moved to strike out the statement of claim for want of jurisdiction. The Trial Division found that the Court had jurisdiction, and dismissed the motion. Appellants appealed.
Held, dismissing the appeal, the Court has jurisdiction. The subject matter of the action is the Heads of Agreement con tract and the Joint Venture and Ship Operating contracts, taken as a whole. The obligation of QNS and Q and O to construct the terminal and facilities and make then available by May 15, 1975, is not a separate agreement. It is part of the consideration of the obligation of CP to transport newsprint of QNS from on board the rail transporter at Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago and of the obligation of I to construct terminal facilities at Quebec City and to operate the terminal under the Joint Venture. The overall objective is the transporta tion of newsprint by CP from Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago using the rail transporter between Baie Comeau and Quebec City and the CP extraprovincial railway undertaking beyond Quebec City. As far as CP is concerned, the Heads of
Agreement is a long-term contract for the international trans portation of goods, to be performed in part by its extraprovin- cial railway undertaking. Such a contract is a vital part of the operating of such an undertaking, and as such, falls within the exclusive legislative jurisdiction of Parliament—a matter coming within the class of subject "works and undertakings connecting a province with any other province, or extending beyond the boundaries of a province."
Also, per Thurlow J.: The contractual arrangements between I and CP, I and QNS, and I and Q and O are all incidental to and necessary for the effective carrying out of the central purpose of the arrangements, and thus can be seen as matters falling within the class of subject, etc., because they are inci dents of and necessary to the carrying out of contractual obligations falling within the class of subject, "works and undertakings ...., etc.
Reference as to the Validity of the Industrial Relations and Disputes Investigation Act [1955] S.C.R. 529 and Toronto v. The Bell Telephone Company of Canada [1905] A.C. 52, distinguished. Commission du Salaire Minimum v. The Bell Telephone Company of Canada [1966] S.C.R. 767, applied.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
P. M. Laing, Q.C., and G. Nesbitt for appellants.
C. R. O. Munro, Q.C., for respondents. SOLICITORS:
Laing, Weldon, Courtois, Clarkson, Parsons & Tétrault, Montreal, for appellants.
Law Department, Canadian Pacific • for respondents.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW J.: I agree with Mr. Justice Le Dain, and for the reasons given by him, that on the facts before us the Court has jurisdiction to entertain and enforce the claim of Canadian Pacific Limited against both defendants for breach of the contract. It seems to me that the contract is one made by Canadian Pacific Limited in the course of carrying on its existing railway transportation system and is thus a matter falling within the class of subjects, namely, works and undertakings connecting a province with any other province or extending beyond the limits of a province, within the mean ing of section 23 of the Federal Court Act.
I have had more difficulty in understanding how the claim of Incan Ships Limited for damages which it alleges it has sustained in respect of the same breach of the same contract and for annul ment of the contract is a claim for relief in relation to a matter falling within the same class of subject. Viewed by themselves I cannot see how the con tractual obligations and rights of Incan fit the description. However, the facts are open to the view that the contractual arrangements between Incan and Canadian Pacific, between Incan and Quebec North Shore Paper Company and between Incan and Quebec and Ontario Transportation Company Limited are all incidental to and neces sary for the effective carrying out of the central purpose of the arrangements, that is to say, the carriage of newsprint from Baie Comeau over provincial and international boundaries to New York and Chicago. On this basis it seems to me that they can be regarded as matters falling within the class of subject, etc., because they are incidents of and necessary to the carrying out of contractual obligations which are matters that fall within the class of subject, works and undertakings, etc. Having regard to the judgments of the Supreme Court in the Stevedoring case', Commission du Salaire Minimum v. Bell Telephone Co. of Canada' and Kootenay and Elk Railway Co. v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. 3 this appears to me to be the better view. It seems to me to be of particular importance that under the arrangements Mean and Quebec and Ontario Transportation Company are to carry out on behalf of Canadian Pacific a portion of the international carriage of newsprint which Canadian Pacific contracts with Quebec North Shore Paper Company to carry from Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago. I therefore concur in the dismissal of the appeal.
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The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
LE DAIN J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division 4 dismissing an application to have the statement of claim struck out and the
1 [1955] S.C.R. 529.
2 [1966] S.C.R. 767.
3 [1974] S.C.R. 955.
4 [1976] 1 F.C. 405.
action dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
The action is one for breach of contract in which the respondents claim from the appellants dam ages totalling $35,987,385 and declarations to set the contracts aside. There are three contracts involved: the principal contract, dated January 22, 1974, which is referred to as the Heads of Agree ment contract, and two accessory contracts, dated February 13, 1974, and March 26, 1974, and referred to respectively as the Joint Venture and the Ship Operating contracts. It is agreed that these contracts are to be considered as forming part of a single, overall project in which all of the parties are interested.
The project is described in the preamble to the Heads of Agreement contract as follows:
The following Heads of Agreement are set out as an agreement for the operation of rail transporters to transport newsprint of Quebec North Shore Paper Company between Baie Comeau, Quebec, and Quebec City, Quebec, for furtherance to New York City, New York, and Chicago, Illinois, and other destina tions, and to transport general cargo to and from points on the North Shore of the St. Lawrence, and to define the obligations and responsibilities of Quebec North Shore Paper Company, Canadian Pacific Limited, Quebec & Ontario Transportation Company, Limited and Incan Ships Limited in the implemen tation of this project.
The contracts contemplate the operation of a special form of water transportation consisting of a self-propelled railcar barge (referred to as a "rail transporter") capable of carrying 26 newsprint boxcars and making 175 round trip voyages annu ally between Baie Comeau and Quebec City; the construction and operation of related terminal facilities at Baie Comeau and Quebec City; and the through transportation by Canadian Pacific Limited (hereinafter referred to as "CP") of the newsprint of Quebec North Shore Paper Company (hereinafter referred to as "QNS") from on-board the rail transporter at Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago, using the rail transporter from Baie Comeau to Quebec City, and CP rail and connect ing carriers thereafter.
The rail transporter is to be owned and operated by a Joint Venture consisting of Quebec and Ontario Transportation Company (hereinafter referred to as "Q&O") and Incan Ships Limited (hereinafter referred to as "Incan").
QNS or Q&O is to construct, own and operate the necessary terminal facilities at Baie Comeau, and Incan is to construct, own and operate the necessary terminal facilities at Quebec City. The obligation of QNS or Q&O in this respect, for the alleged non-fulfilment of which the present action is brought, is provided for by clause 6.02 of the Heads of Agreement contract as follows:
Q&O or QNS shall purchase or lease the required land and construct and operate a rail car marine terminal facility, altera tions to warehouse facilities and general cargo transit facilities at Baie Comeau, which facilities are to be available for May 15, 1975.
With respect to the agreement by CP to carry the newsprint of QNS, clause 4.01 of the Heads of Agreement contract provides as follows:
CP undertakes and agrees to carry a minimum of 310,000 tons of newsprint shipped by QNS from on-board the rail transport er at Baie Comeau to the New York pressrooms in Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York City, and to the Chicago Tribune's rail siding in Chicago, during each year of a 15-year period commencing on the Commencement Date, subject to the provi sions of 7.02, Section 10 and 11.01 hereof. CP also undertakes to carry general cargo to and from points on the North Shore during the same period.
The contract fixes the through rates to be paid by QNS to CP for the transportation of newsprint from Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago. Such rates are to be water competitive and subject to approval by the appropriate regulatory bodies. The contract also fixes the charge to be paid by CP to the Joint Venture for its part in the through transportation, such charge being broken down into components allocated to the Baie Comeau terminal, the rail transporter operation, and the Quebec City terminal.
The Joint Venture is to lease the necessary newsprint rail cars "in sufficient numbers to trans port efficiently 310,000 tons of newsprint per annum from Baie Comeau to New York City and Chicago combined". The cost to the Joint Venture of leasing such cars is to be charged, up to a certain maximum amount, to QNS, and any cost in excess of that amount is to be reimbursed to the Joint Venture by CP.
The Ship Operating contract provides further for the relationship between the Joint Venture and CP in clauses 1 and 3 as follows:
I. CP hereby retains Q&O and Incan operating as a joint venture to carry newsprint from Baie Comeau to Quebec City for furtherance to New York City and Chicago and general cargo via the rail transporter as an extension of CP's rail system, the whole in accordance with and in the manner provided for in the Heads of Agreement and Q&O and Incan agree to operate the rail transporter for and on behalf of CP in accordance with and in the manner provided for in the Heads of Agreement.
3. All newsprint and general cargo carried on the rail trans porter shall be solicited by CP and carried on a standard CP through bill of lading.
In their action the respondents allege that they have complied with their obligations under the Heads of Agreement contract but that the appel lants have failed to perform their obligation to construct the rail car marine terminal at Baie Comeau and by their delay have rendered the performance of such obligation impossible. CP claims for loss of profits that it would have earned during the life of the contract and for loss in connection with other arrangements called for by the contract. Incan claims for expenses incurred in the construction of the terminal at Quebec City, the leasing of rail cars, and the purchase of the rail transporter, and for loss of profits which would have been earned during the life of the contract. The appellants further conclude that the contracts be annulled, voided and terminated à toutes fins que de droit.
The issue on appeal is whether the Federal Court of Canada has jurisdiction to entertain the action by virtue of section 23 of the Federal Court Act, which reads as follows:
23. The Trial Division has concurrent original jurisdiction as well between subject and subject as otherwise, in all cases in which a claim for relief is made or a remedy is sought under an Act of the Parliament of Canada or otherwise in relation to any matter coming within any following class of subjects, namely bills of exchange and promissory notes where the Crown is a party to the proceedings, aeronautics, and works and undertak ings connecting a province with any other province or extending beyond the limits of a province, except to the extent that jurisdiction has been otherwise specially assigned.
The question to be determined, therefore, is whether the claim for relief in this case relates to a matter coming within the class of subjects "works and undertakings connecting a province with any
other province or extending beyond the limits of a province".
The words "matter coming within any following class of subjects" in section 23 would appear to be used in a sense that corresponds to that in which the words "Matters coming within the Classes of Subjects" are used in sections 91 and 92 of the British North America Act and to be subject to the same approach to interpretation. The French version of these words in section 23 of the Federal Court Act—en matière de—is not quite the same as the French translation of the corresponding words in the B.N.A. Act—matières tombant dans les catégories de sujets—but I do not think any particular significance is to be attached to this difference. It is reasonable to conclude that section 23 contemplates that where Parliament has legisla tive jurisdiction to make laws in relation to a matter because it falls within the class of subjects described in section 92(10) (a) of the B.N.A. Act— "Lines of Steam or other Ships, Railways, Canals, Telegraphs, and other Works and Undertakings connecting the Province with any other or others of the Provinces, or extending beyond the Limits of the Province"—this Court has jurisdiction in a case in which the claim for relief relates to such a matter.
The claim for relief must be made or the remedy sought under an Act of the Parliament of Canada "or otherwise". By the words "or otherwise" I understand any other law that can be considered to form part of the "Laws of Canada" within the meaning of section 101 of the B.N.A. Act, since Parliament only has legislative competence by virtue of that section to confer jurisdiction on the Court to administer the laws of Canada. This limitation is reflected in section 3 of the Federal Court Act, which refers to the Court as "an addi tional court for the better administration of the laws of Canada" and in section 2 of the Act, which provides that " 'laws of Canada' has the same meaning as those words have in section 101 of The British North America Act, 1867." The expression "laws of Canada", within the meaning of section 101 of the B.N.A. Act, includes not only existing federal statutes but also any law that Parliament can validly enact, amend or repeal. Consolidated
Distilleries Limited v. The King [1933] A.C. 508. In this case the respondents' claim for relief is based not on federal statute law but on the Quebec civil law of contract. The contracts in issue all contain a provision that they and any disputes arising thereunder are to be interpreted and con strued in accordance with the laws of the Province of Quebec. In so far as the civil law of Quebec applies to a matter within federal legislative juris diction with respect to an extraprovincial under taking contemplated by section 92(10)(a) of the B.N.A. Act, it forms part of the laws of Canada within the meaning of section 101 of the B.N.A. Act since it could be enacted, amended or repealed by the Parliament of Canada. In other words, Parliament could validly enact contract law to apply to matters falling within its jurisdiction with respect to such undertakings. Laskin's Canadian Constitutional Law, Revised Fourth Edition, 1975, page 793.
In my view, the matter in relation to which the claim for relief is made, or the subject-matter of the action in the present case, is the Heads of Agreement contract, and the accessory Joint Ven ture and Ship Operating contracts, taken as a whole. It is these contracts which are the basis of the respondents' claims for damages and which they seek to have set aside. The obligation of the QNS and Q&O to construct a rail car marine terminal and related facilities at Baie Comeau and to make them available by May 15, 1975, is not a separate or severable agreement. It is part of the cause or consideration of the obligation of CP to transport newsprint of QNS from on-board the rail transporter at Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago and of the obligation of Incan to con struct terminal facilities at Quebec City and to operate the rail transporter under the Joint Ven ture. The respondents' claims for damages include expenses incurred in the performance of their obli gations under these contracts and loss of profits that would have been earned during the life of the Heads of Agreement contract.
The further question, then, is whether the Heads of Agreement and related contracts constitute a matter coming within the class of subjects "works and undertakings connecting a province with any other province or extending beyond the limits of a
province". Do the contracts relate to an undertak ing within the meaning of section 23 in such a manner as to give the Court jurisdiction?
Much of the appellants' argument on this issue was directed to the contention that the rail car marine terminal and related facilities to be con structed and operated at Baie Comeau would not form part of an undertaking of the kind contem plated by section 23. The terminal, it was argued, would not be an integral part of the rail transport er undertaking, much less a part of the CP under taking. The terminal was likened to a warehousing facility. It was said that the shipper's warehousing facility could not be considered to be a part of the transportation undertaking which is to transport his goods. The appellants further contended that for a local undertaking to become an integral part of an extraprovincial undertaking there must be more than a mere physical connection and that it must be owned or operated by the latter. Refer ence was made to City of Montreal v. Montreal Street Railway [1912] A.C. 333; Luscar Collier ies, Limited v. McDonald [1927] A.C. 925; The British Columbia Electric Railway Company Limited v. Canadian National Railway Company [1932] S.C.R. 161; Kootenay and Elk Railway Co. v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. [1974] S.C.R. 955. Nor would it be sufficient in the appellants' submission, that there be a contractual relationship in which the operators of the local undertaking are to carry out, as independent con tractors, a functionally necessary part of the ser vice which the operators of the extraprovincial undertaking have contracted to provide. The Stevedoring case,' in which the shipping and stevedoring operations were carried on by different companies, was distinguished on the ground that the decision in that case was based on federal jurisdiction with respect to navigation and ship ping rather than on that with respect to undertak ings within the meaning of section 92(10)(a) of the B.N.A. Act.
Reference as to the Validity of the Industrial Relations and Disputes Investigation Act [1955] S.C.R. 529.
The appellants further contended that in so far as the terminal at Baie Comeau and the rail transporter were concerned, there was as yet no undertaking in fact or in law. Toronto Corporation v. Bell Telephone Company of Canada [1905] A.C. 52, was distinguished on the ground that in that case the company had been incorporated by federal statute with power to establish and operate an interprovincial undertaking. It was a question of provincial or municipal power to interfere with the establishment of an undertaking that had been authorized by Parliament in the exercise of its legislative jurisdiction under section 92(10)(a) and section 91(29) of the B.N.A. Act. In the present case, it was said, there was merely a contract. It created an obligation to establish an undertaking, but it was not statutory authority to do so. For jurisdiction under section 23 of the Federal Court Act, it was contended, there must be an existing extraprovincial undertaking to which the claim for relief relates.
On the other hand, the respondents contended that a contract for the interprovincial or interna tional transportation of goods was by itself suffi cient to give Parliament legislative jurisdiction, and accordingly the Federal Court must have jurisdiction. The respondents argued that no pro vincial legislature could legislate with respect to such a contract, and that since it would fall within federal legislative competence this Court must have jurisdiction with respect to an action to enforce it. What this argument appears to amount to, for purposes of section 23 of the Federal Court Act, is that the Heads of Agreement and accessory contracts contemplate the establishment and oper ation of an international transportation service that would constitute an undertaking within the meaning of that section. Obviously, there are dis tinctions to be drawn between a contract of car riage or transportation and the transportation undertaking by which it is to be performed.
In view of the conclusions to which I have come concerning the nature of the Heads of Agreement and accessory contracts, in relation to the extra- provincial railway undertaking of CP, I do not find it necessary to deal with these various contentions of the appellants and the respondents.
There is no doubt that the contracts have several facets. A principal objective of the contracts is the
establishment of a rail transporter service operat ing between Baie Comeau and Quebec City, with related terminal facilities at each of these points. But the overall objective is the transportation of newsprint by CP from Baie Comeau to New York and Chicago, using the rail transporter between Baie Comeau and Quebec City and the CP extra- provincial railway undertaking beyond Quebec City. That the extraprovincial railway undertaking of CP is necessarily involved is conceded by the appellants, who, in their memorandum of fact and law, state:
Indubitably, Respondent Canadian Pacific by its railway connects two and more provinces and extends beyond the limits of the Province of Quebec and is classed as an undertaking contemplated by Section 23 of the Federal Court Act and Section 92(10)(a) of the British North America Act.
In so far, then, as CP is concerned, the Heads of Agreement contract is a long-term contract for the international transportation of goods, to be per formed in part by its extraprovincial railway undertaking. Such a contract is a vital part of the operation of such an undertaking and as such falls within the exclusive legislative jurisdiction of Par liament under the test affirmed in Commission du Salaire Minimum v. The Bell Telephone Com pany of Canada [1966] S.C.R. 767. It is thus a matter coming within the class of subject "works and undertakings connecting a province with any other province or extending beyond the limits of a province" within the meaning of section 23 of the Federal Court Act. Accordingly, the Court has jurisdiction to entertain the action. I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
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RYAN J.: I concur.
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