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A-132-76
The Queen in the right of Canada (Appellant) v.
The Queen in the right of the Province of Prince Edward Island (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Pratte and Le Dain JJ.—Ottawa, May 10 and 11 and December 5, 1977.
Crown — Torts — Damages — Government of Prince Edward Island claimed damages in Trial Division for inter
ruption of ferry service Trial Division ruled ferry service statutory duty of federal Government and found breach — Breach did not give rise to damages — Federal Government
appealed and P.E.I. cross-appealed Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 19 — The British North America Act, 1867. 30 & 31 Victoria, c. 3, s. 146 (U.K.) (R.S.C. 1970, Appendix II) — Order in Council (Imp.) dated June 26, 1873 (R.S.C. 1970, Appendix II).
An action for damages was brought under section 19 of the Federal Court Act by the Queen in right of Prince Edward Island because of an interruption in the ferry service between the Island and the mainland—a service required of Canada by the Terms of Union. The Trial Division held that there was a breach of statutory duty by the Government of Canada, but that it did not give rise to an action in damages. The Govern ment of Canada appealed against the determination that there was a breach of statutory duty, and the Government of Prince Edward Island cross-appealed against the determination that it does not give rise to liability in damages.
Held, per Jackett C.J., the appeal is dismissed and the cross-appeal is allowed. The Prince Edward Island Terms of Union created a legal duty in favour of that Province in respect of a ferry service. By imposing duties on Canada in favour of Prince Edward Island, the United Kingdom Parliament made both Governments parties to statutory rights or duties, no matter how unorthodox it may be to create legal rights without legal remedies. When there is a statutory right to have some thing done with no express sanction for breach, there is, prima facie, an implied right to be compensated for breach of such right. It does not follow, however, that the Province has a right to judgment against Canada. Section 19 of the Federal Court Act creates a jurisdiction to decide disputes as between political entities and not as between persons recognized as legal persons in the ordinary municipal courts. The effect of the enactment of the original forerunner of section 19, once the "agreeing" provincial legislation was passed, was to convert a legal (statu- tory) right into a legal right with a remedy, albeit a remedy that can be nothing more than a judicial declaration. In a section 19 proceeding, the parties are political entities which cannot be described more accurately than the peoples or public for the time being of the geographical areas involved. It does
not matter whether such parties are referred to in the proceed ings by the geographical names or by references to the execu tive governments that represent the inhabitants of the geo graphical areas.
Per Pratte J. (dissenting in part), the appeal should be dismissed, for reasons given by Jackett C.J. and Le Dain J., and the cross-appeal should also be dïsmissed. A constitutional document of the nature of the Order in Council cannot be ascribed with the intention of imposing on the Dominion Gov ernment the obligation to compensate all those of the public who might suffer damage as a consequence of its failure to perform its obligation of maintaining the ferry service. Further, if the duty in respect of the ferry service is conceived of as an obligation toward the new Province, it was not the intention of the Order in Council that the Dominion Government, in case of breach, be liable to the Province for the damage suffered as a consequence of the breach. When this duty was imposed on the Dominion Government, it was not, even if it is considered a duty toward the Province, a duty enforceable through legal means for there was no Court then before which the Dominion could be brought to answer the claim of the Province. That an authority, imposing an obligation enforceable by purely politi cal means, might intend to create liability in damages in case of breach is unimaginable. The question of liability resulting from a breach of obligation can only arise in respect of a legally enforceable obligation. Furthermore, in the case of failure of the Dominion Government to operate the ferry service, the Government of the Island would not be likely to suffer any direct damage. It is inconceivable that the Order in Council intended to create a liability toward a government which was not likely to suffer any direct damage as a consequence of the Dominion's failure to perform its obligation.
Per Le Dain J., the cross-appeal is allowed and the appeal dismissed. What is to be looked for is an intention to create a legal right to compensation, however it is to be enforced, rather than a right of action as such. The intention of section 19 of the Federal Court Act is that rights and obligations that would otherwise be unenforceable for lack of a forum are now recog nized as enforceable. (Such rights or liabilities may be thought of as inchoate, perfected by the creation of a forum for their enforcement.) The establishment and maintenance of the ferry service was an essential condition of the Union and the Order in Council clearly evidences a legal intention to create legal rights and obligations between the two Governments. The Province as distinct from individuals should be entitled to be compensated for a breach of this duty; the duty was created to establish which of the two Governments was to be responsible for providing the ferry service. It must have been intended that if Canada failed to perform this obligation the Province would have a right to be compensated for any expense or loss directly caused to it by such failure.
APPEAL.
COUNSEL:
G. W. Ainslie, Q.C., and Duff Friesen for
appellant.
John Coyne, Q.C., and John A. Ghiz for
respondent. ,
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant.
Scales, Ghiz, Jenkins & McQuaid, Charlotte- town, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
JACKETT C.J.: This is an appeal and cross- appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division in a proceeding under section 19 of the Federal Court Act in respect of an alleged breach by the "Federal Government" of one of the terms upon which Prince Edward Island was admitted, under section 146 of The British North America Act, 1867, to the "Union" constituting Canada as created under that Act.
By section 146, the Queen in Council was authorized, inter alia, on Addresses from the Canadian Houses of Parliament and the Legisla ture of the Colony of Prince Edward Island, to admit the Colony into the Union "on such Terms and Conditions ... as are in the Addresses expressed" and it was enacted that "the Provisions of any Order in Council in that Behalf shall have effect as if they had been enacted by the Parlia ment of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland". When Prince Edward Island was admit ted to the Union on June 26, 1873, one of the terms on which it was admitted read, in part:
That the Dominion Government shall assume and defray all the charges for the following services, viz.:—
Efficient Steam Service for the conveyance of mails and passengers, to be established and maintained between the Island and the mainland of the Dominion, Winter and Summer, thus placing the Island in continuous communication with the Intercolonial Railway and the railway system of the Dominion;
By the statement of claim by which the proceed ing was commenced in the Trial Division, it was alleged, inter adia, in effect,
(a) that, during a period from August 23, 1973 to September 2, 1973, a ferry service established by the Federal Government ceased to operate;
(b) as a result of that cessation of service, the Province had been put to loss and expense and will be put to further loss and, in addition, the reputation of the Province in the tourist industry has suffered severe reverses which will affect the number of tourists coming to the Province caus ing the Province to lose revenue;
and a claim was made for damages, costs and such further and other relief as the Court might deem just and expedient.
The Deputy Attorney General of Canada filed a defence, which, in addition to raising various ques tions of a legal character, in effect,
(a) alleged that the Government of Canada has maintained at all material times an efficient ferry service between Prince Edward Island and the mainland of Canada, and
(b) admitted that there was no ferry service between Borden and Cape Tormentine on August 21, 1973, or from 6:30 p.m. on August 23, 1973 to 3:00 a.m. on September 2, 1973.
It appears from the learned Trial Judge's rea sons for judgment [[1976] 2 F.C. 712] that the trial was, in the first instance, limited to the question of "liability" and that the question of damages was deferred to a subsequent time depending upon the resolution of the question of liability. At his request, the parties had agreed upon the following statement of issues:
1. Was there a breach of statutory duty on the part of the Dominion Government?
2. Does the breach give rise to an action for damages?
3. Does the statute contemplate the type of damages com plained of?
4. Quantification.
He found it necessary, therefore, at the end of the first stage of the trial, to deal only with the first two of the issues so stated and he, accordingly, posed to himself the following questions:
1. What is the duty imposed upon the Government of Canada and the nature thereof?
2. Depending upon the answer to the first question, the next question arising is whether there was a breach of that duty by the Government of Canada, and
3. Assuming there was a breach of the duty or failure to comply with constitutional obligations, does that breach or failure give rise to an action for damages, which is the relief sought, at the instance of the Government of the Province?
The learned Trial Judge's conclusion [at page 726] on the first of these three questions was as follows:
Accordingly I conclude that the obligation is upon the Dominion to assume and defray the cost of the establishment and maintenance of an efficient ferry service between the Province and the mainland. The words "assume and defray all the charges" mean that the Dominion is to accept the responsi bility for the cost of the services named in the Order in Council and to pay these costs. For the reasons expressed it is also the responsibility of the Dominion to establish and maintain an efficient and continuous (in the sense of being uninterrupted and inoperative for a protracted period) ferry service between the Province and the mainland and to pay the cost of so establishing and maintaining that service.'
With reference to the second question, the learned Trial Judge found the facts [at pages 726-728] as follows:
It is agreed that there was an interruption of the ferry service by the Canadian National Railway employed by the Dominion to conduct that ferry service on its behalf from August 21, 1973, until September 2, 1973, a period of 10 days, 8 1 / 2 hours. That interruption of ferry service was consequent upon a national strike by the employees of the Canadian National Railways. It was known that 1973 was a "contract year" and it was also known generally, as early as May and June of that year, that there was every likelihood that a settlement would not be reached between the bargaining parties and that the possibility of a strike was imminent. The strike, when it occurred, was a legal strike after all procedures by the Canada Labour Code had been taken. In the public interest and for the public economy Parliament legislated the employees back to work and the railway service, including the ferry service, was resumed on September 2, 1973.
The CNR operated the ferry service over two routes and engaged five vessels in doing so. These five vessels had a daily capacity of 4,270 vehicles. This is the service that was struck.
The Northumberland Ferries Limited operated a third ferry service on behalf of the Dominion in which it had engaged three vessels with a total daily capacity of 960 vehicles. This
While the appeal has not developed in such a way as to require that I express a conclusion with regard thereto, having regard to their political context, and notwithstanding where the particular obligation was inserted, I am inclined to construe the particular obligation in the Terms of Union as an obligation to "assume" and "defray all the charges for" an efficient ferry service and not to regard the words beginning "thus placing ..." as a limitation on the scope of the obligation.
service was in continuous service during the period that the CNR was struck.
It was agreed that there was no interruption in mail service to the Island during the railway strike and that there was a scheduled air service operating daily carrying passengers.
The two principal industries of the Island are agriculture and tourism, in that order. The tourist season lasts for ten weeks, the peak being in July and August. Almost all of the tourists reach the Island by automobile carried on the ferries. In addition, the residents of the Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and tourists visiting those Islands, if they wish to reach the mainland, do so by taking a ferry service from those Islands to Prince Edward Island and continue their journey by ferry service from Prince Edward Island to the mainland. About 80 automobiles per day sought to do this during the period of the strike.
The tourist season ends approximately in the last week in August each year and in 1973 it ended on August 23, the day after the strike began. It takes no imagination to realize the consternation which resulted. Families on vacation were anxious to return home to get their children back to school for the fall term. A great many people were stranded on the Island and many of that number had exhausted their holiday funds. The Government of the Province provided free food and lodging for those who were destitute and set up an emergency cheque cashing service for those with reliable credit. The Province set up an emergency reservation system for the sole operating ferry service. It issued reservation tickets, numbered sequentially, which were in effect reservations to make reservations. Top priority was accorded to truck traffic with lesser priorities following. To make an actual reservation on the only ferry involved a delay of seven to eight days. The Province assigned 144 of its employees to provide these services.
During the period of the strike Northumberland Ferries Limited was able to move 6,463 vehicles and their passengers off the Island. In 1974, that is the next year, the Canadian National Railways over its two ferry lines moved 20,874 vehi cles off the Island over the same period of time for which the strike had lasted in 1973. Assuming the traffic conditions to be approximately the same in both years, this comparison would afford a reasonable indication in the breakdown of the ferry service in the period in 1973.
The damage to the national economy caused by the strike was such that Parliament deemed it wise to order the employees back to work by appropriate legislation. The incon venience caused to the public resident on the mainland was great but those persons could adjust to other means of transpor tation of passengers and freight, though not as efficiently. The impact upon the residents of Prince Edward Island was accen tuated manifold by reason of the fact that the Province is an island separated from the mainland by the Strait of Northum- berland which at its narrowest point is approximately 9 miles wide.
On these facts, he found [at page 729] that, during the period of the strike, the ferry service "fell short of being productive of the results required and was therefore inefficient"; and he concluded [at page
730], therefore, that "the Dominion Government was in breach of its duty imposed upon it by the Order in Council".
The learned Trial Judge, however, decided [at page 738], with reference to the third question, for reasons to which reference will be made hereafter, that "the breach of the duty does not give rise to an action for damages at the suit of Her Majesty in the right of Prince Edward Island".
At the conclusion of the part of the Trial dealing with the question of liability, judgment was ren dered in the following terms:
The breach of the statutory duty upon Her Majesty the Queen in the right of Canada does not give rise to an action for damages for that breach at the suit of Her Majesty the Queen in the right of the Province of Prince Edward Island.
The plaintiff is, therefore, not entitled to judgment for the relief sought in Her statement of claim.
Each party shall bear its own costs.
From this judgment, the Deputy Attorney General of Canada appealed on behalf of the appellant, and the respondent cross-appealed.
The point on which the appeal is based is put by the memorandum filed in this Court by the Attor ney General of Canada, as follows:
The Attorney General of Canada submits that the learned trial judge erred in holding that a ferry service, which was acknowledged to be an efficient service, had become an inef ficient service during a 10-day and 8 1 / 2 -hour period when there was a general strike by the employees of the operator with the consequence that the services provided by the other ferryman were inadequate.
On this question, I am in agreement with the conclusion reached by the learned Trial Judge. In any event, in my view, his conclusion was a conclu sion of fact, was open to him on the evidence and cannot be said to be clearly wrong. 2 In my view, the appeal should, therefore, be dismissed.
2 It is to be noted that the Attorney General's memorandum raises no question as to the legal effect of the particular part of the Terms of Union but merely the question of fact as to whether what had admittedly been an "efficient service" had become "inefficient". No request was made for any amendment to the memorandum. The only question to be considered, therefore, is the question of fact. I do not mean to cast doubt on the view that Canada was bound by the Terms of Union to provide an efficient ferry service or the view that, having regard to changes in circumstances since 1873, what was required by the "Terms" was the kind of ferry service being provided before the 1973 strike.
On the cross-appeal, the respondent submits that the finding of the learned Trial Judge that the breach of duty "did not give rise to a cause of action in the Province for damages" was wrong.
The reasons given by the learned Trial Judge for holding that the appellant is not liable in these proceedings to the respondent even though he had concluded that the "Dominion Government" was in breach of its duty under the Terms of Union may, as I understand them, be summarized as follows:
1. He conceived the question to be whether "an action will lie for damages" and expressed the view [at pages 730-731] that
Whether such action for damages will lie will depend on the intention of the legislature to be derived from the language of the statute, in this instance The British North America Act and the Order in Council, and taking the matter a step further, what party is entitled, within the ambit of the statute, to bring the action, or put another way, who is the intended beneficiary of the right.
2. He cited authority for the proposition that a provincial executive's power to create binding contractual obligations is subject to legislative authorization or ratification and seemed to apply that principle as leading to the conclusion [at page 732] that "the Crown" cannot "be held liable in a civil action for damages".
3. Based on We!bridge Holdings Ltd. v. Greater Winnipeg', which held that an action in negli gence would not lie against that municipality for the manner in which it attempted unsuccessfully to exercise its legislative powers, he concluded [at page 733] that "a breach of a general public duty, in this case the duty to provide and pay for a ferry service, does not give rise to a civil action in damages against the Crown in the right of Canada".
4. He cited a decision of the Trial Division that held that a user of the mails has no right of action against Her Majesty for an interruption of postal service and concluded [at page 734]
3 [1971] S.C.R. 957.
that "where there is an obligation created by the statute for the general public good and where there is a breach of that obligation, there is no right of action in a particular person injured by the breach". He proceeded from there to consid er whether "Her Majesty in the right of the Province of Prince Edward Island can maintain a civil action for damages caused by this breach of the statutory duty any more so than an individual who may have been affected there by". He dealt with this matter as follows [at pages 734-736]:
The general scheme of The British North America Act is that with regard to the distribution of legislative powers when it has been determined that the subject matter of the legislation falls within the exclusive purview of the Provincial Legislatures or the Parliament of Canada, then each such legislature is supreme. Here there is no question that the Parliament of Canada has exclusive and omnipotent jurisdiction, by virtue of section 91, Head 13, over "Ferries between a Province and any British or Foreign Country or between Two Provinces".
In Theodore v. Duncan [1919] A.C. 696, Viscount Haldane said at page 706:
The Crown is one and indivisible throughout the Empire, and it acts in self-governing States on the initiative and advice of its own Ministers in these States.
Section 9 of The British North America Act, 1867 reads:
9. The Executive Government and Authority of and over Canada is hereby declared to continue and be vested in the Queen.
As such, Her Majesty the Queen in the right of Canada has seen fit to assume the responsibility of establishing and paying for a ferry service with the Island for the general good of all residents of Canada and not only for the residents of Prince Edward Island. At best, the failure to fulfill that duty might affect the residents of Prince Edward Island to a greater degree than residents of a distant province but that of itself does not confer a right of action for damages.
The Queen in the right of Prince Edward Island is the same Queen as the Queen in the right of Canada. Here the liability is that of the Queen in the right of Canada. The action to enforce that liability by way of compensation in damages is by the Queen in the right of the Province who is the same Royal Person, although advised by different ministers, but it is the Queen suing Herself which is incongruous. Accordingly I do not think that The British North America Act intended that the duty can be enforceable in a court by way of judgment for damages for a breach of that duty at the behest of the Queen in the right of the Province against the Queen in the right of Canada.
If that were so, there would be no need for the enactment of section 19 of the Federal Court Act but rather relief by way of damages could be obtained as it can by any person or legal
entity under section 17 against the Crown which is defined in the Act as Her Majesty in the right of Canada.
I do not overlook that section 19 vests jurisdiction in the Trial Division of this Court in the first instance to determine controversies between Canada and a province where the legisla ture of the province has passed an Act agreeing that this Court has jurisdiction in such controversies as Prince Edward Island has done. However, it seems to me that because Her Majesty in the right of the Province and in the right of Canada being one and the same person cannot be construed as separate entities for the purpose of a civil action in damages, but that they can only be considered as separate entities for the limited purpose of determining the obligation of the Dominion and if there has been a breach thereof, that is to set forth the rights and obligations vis-à-vis the Dominion and the Province. That would be declaratory relief. But to carry the matter a step forward and say that there shall be judgment for monetary damages is not contemplated because of the very nature of the constitution as outlined in The British North America Act.
For the reason that Her Majesty cannot sue herself there must be a recourse to basic principles, that is the principle applicable where there is a general public duty for the benefit of all residents of Canada, not only a segment of the whole population, whom Her Majesty in the right of the Province seeks to represent. Being a general public duty for the reasons previously expressed no cause of action lies in an individual who is adversely affected by a failure to perform that duty. The right, if it had existed, would be in the individual and not in Her Majesty in the right of the Province. 4
The submissions of the appellant on the cross- appeal that, as I understood them, were intended to support the conclusion that, even if there were a breach of statutory duty, in the circumstances of this case there is no right to damages, in a manner that differed somewhat from the reasons of the learned Trial Judge are summarized in that part of the memorandum of the Attorney General of Canada on the cross-appeal that reads as follows:
4. It is respectfully submitted that, having regard to the whole of the Order-in-Council and The British North America Act, 1867, and the circumstances in which they were enacted, the statutory duty must be held to be of a political rather than of a legal nature. The Order-in-Council divides constitutional re sponsibility for various subject matters between the Federal and Provincial levels of government in Canada, and the legislative
° He went on to demonstrate that he found support for his conclusion in remarks of the Chief Justice of Canada in P.P.G. Industries Canada Ltd. and Pilkington Brothers (Canada) Limited v. The Attorney General of Canada [1976] 2 S.C.R. 739. As these remarks do not, as it seems to me, bear on the problems raised by this proceeding, I shall not further refer to them.
intent that those responsibilities are political and not legal is shown by the facts that:
(a) constitutional obligations are imposed for the benefit of the public in general rather than for the benefit of the Crown;
(b) in light of the fact that the statutory duty upon which Prince Edward Island relies does not expressly remove the Crown's prerogative not to be sued in tort, it cannot have been intended by the enactment of that statutory duty to create rights enforceable by action in tort against the Crown because:
(i) the prerogative of the Crown not to be sued in tort can be removed only by express language.
(ii) an action for breach of statutory duty is an action in tort;
(iii) at the time the statutory duty was enacted (1873), the Crown in right of Canada was immune from actions for torts.
The subsequent enactment of legislation making the Crown liable to actions in tort as though it were a private person does not alter the fact that it was never intended by the enactment of statutory duties in The British North America Act that breach of the duty by the Crown should be considered as giving rise to a tortious conduct. As mentioned above, such legislative intent must be demonstrated as the basis of any action for damages for breach of a statutory duty. The duty or obligation imposed on the Federal Government by the Order-in-Council to assume and affray [sic] all charges for an efficient transit service between the island and the mainland was not an obligation enforceable in a Court of law. The obligation was' and remains in the nature of a political obligation the breach of which would not give rise to any judiciable issue. In the event that there should be a failure to comply with that duty or an omission then
"For any omission of that duty the Sovereign cannot be held responsible. The responsibility would rest with the advisers of the Crown, and they are responsible to Parliament, and to Parliament alone" per Lush, J. in Rustomjee v. The Queen (1876) 1 Q.B.D. 487 at 497, cited with approval by Lord Buckmaster in Civilian War Claimants Association, Limited v. The King [1932] A.C. 14 at 25-26
Having regard to the realities of Canadian Confederation, it is necessary to have some means of adjudicating inter-governmen tal controversies, and section 19 of the Federal Court Act was enacted for that purpose. This is a statutory exception to the principle of law mentioned above, and this Court's jurisdiction in such controversies is no broader than the terms of the enactment. However, that provision is inapplicable inasmuch as the Province has not sought determination of a controversy but has brought an action for damages. Any decision of this Honourable Court that a breach of the obligation to be found in the Order-in-Council, would give rise to an action for damages would constitute an extension of the Court's true function into a domain that does not belong to it, namely the
consideration of undertakings and obligations depending entire ly on political sanctions.
7. The statutory duty upon which the Respondent relies is by its terms imposed upon the "Dominion Government" but, there being no such legal entity, the duty must in law be considered to have been imposed upon the Crown.
8. It is therefore submitted that no action for damages lies against the Crown in right of Canada at the instance of the Crown in right of Prince Edward Island. Rather, the Province's appropriate and only remedy is to proceed under section 19 of the Federal Court Act for a declaration determining the nature and extent of the duty imposed on Canada and whether that duty has been breached.
There are two aspects of the cross-appeal that, in my view, may be disposed of shortly.
In so far as the appellant's position is based on the description of the parties in the style of cause and the body of the statement of claim being such as to characterize the proceeding as a claim in damages against Her Majesty in right of Canada that would fall under section 17 of the Federal Court Act rather than a dispute between Canada and the Province that would fall under section 19, I am of the view that this is a mere technicality (Rule 302) that should not be allowed to affect the outcome of the cross-appeal. In my view, if the Trial Division has jurisdiction over the substance of the matter in the statement of claim, that is sufficient. Here, in my view, which I shall endeavour to explain hereafter, there is a matter that falls within section 19, viz., a dispute between Canada and Prince Edward Island as to whether Prince Edward Island is entitled to be compensat ed for breach of the Term of Union and, if so, to what extent. Furthermore, the parties are acting through officers of state that have the responsibili ty of safeguarding the rights of the parties whether those parties be legal persons such as Her Majesty or political entities such as Canada or Prince Edward Island. I can see no ground of substance for allowing the matter to turn on the way the parties were described.
In so far as the learned Trial Judge relied upon the principle that the executive's power to contract is conditional upon legislative authority or appro bation is concerned, it seems to me that the only comment required is that that principle only
applies to contracts and has no application to the present problem. 5 As I view it, the present problem is to decide what effect is to be given to an obligation imposed by a particular part of the Constitution, which takes the form of an order having the effect of a United Kingdom statute. 6
The other reasons given by the learned Trial Judge and the other submissions of the appellant on this branch of the case raise problems that are more difficult, in part, because of the murky nature of the legal personality of Her Majesty and because of the problems raised by the fact that our Constitution adopts, for a country with divided sovereignty, a sovereign whose legal characteristics have been developed for a unitary state.'
At this point I should say that, as I understood it, the matter was discussed before us on the basis that there was an obligation (duty) imposed by the term in question, by virtue of the Order in Council under section 146, on the "Dominion Govern ment" in favour of "Prince Edward Island". There is another possible view—namely, that the term did not create an obligation (which, by definition, requires that there be an obligee) but merely imposed a constitutional duty or function on the "Dominion Government" of the same character as that that is sometimes imposed expressly when a government service is established by statute or
The appellant relied strongly on the decision of the High Court of Australia in The State of South Australia v. The Commonwealth of Australia (1961-1962) 108 C.L.R. 130, but that decision involved a claim based on an intergovernmental agreement and I can see no application for the reasoning of the judges in that case to the problems raised by this case.
6 "... the principle actually adopted was not that of federa tion in the strict sense, but one under which the Constitutions of the provinces had been surrendered to the Imperial Parlia ment for the purpose of being refashioned. The result had been to establish wholly new Dominion and provincial Governments with defined powers and duties both derived from the statute ..." per Viscount Haldane in Bonanza Creek Gold Mining Company, Limited v. The King [1916] I A.C. 566 at p. 579. See also In re Representation of P.E.I. in the House of Commons (1903) 33 S.C.R. 594 at pp. 664-665; and Samson v. The Queen [1957] S.C.R. 832, per Rand J., at p. 836.
' See Appendix "B" for a portion of "The Crown as Corpora tion" from Maitland Selected Essays 1936. See also Town Investments Ltd. v. Department of the Environment [1977] 2 W.L.R. 450 (HI.).
impliedly by the conferring of monopoly or other powers. I am, however, of the view, for the reasons set out in Appendix "A", that the condition in question does impose an obligation in favour of "Prince Edward Island", whatever may be repre sented by those words, and I shall consider what effect should be given to proceedings based on breach of the statutory obligation so understood.
In my view, the learned Trial Judge miscon ceived the true character of what was involved, when he
(a) regarded it as a claim against Her Majesty,'
(b) regarded it as a claim by Her Majesty,'
(c) regarded it as an "action", as that word is ordinarily used in the judicial system whose normal function is to settle disputes between ordinary persons.
As I have already indicated, I do agree with the learned Trial Judge as to the substance of the obligation involved. The problem, as I see it, is to establish, as far as is necessary for these proceed ings, the nature or character of the "obligor" and "obligee" and of the appropriate parties to legal proceedings concerning disputes arising from breach of such an obligation.
I propose to consider the matter
(a) first, from the point of view of what legal rights and obligations are involved because the identification of the "obligor" and "obligee" is an integral part of describing an obligation, and
(b) second, from the point of view of the nature and character of the proceeding in the Trial Division and the parties thereto.
I turn, first, to the difficult problem of deter mining the character of the "obligor" and the "obligee" in the statutory obligation that has been breached.
s The fact that the style of cause was so framed is a techni cality that should not, as the learned Trial Judge very properly recognized, be allowed to defeat the obvious purpose of the proceedings.
While the Constitution must be interpreted, having regard to changing times, 9 in considering what was intended by certain expressions used at the time when parts of the Constitution were given statutory form, it is of help to consider those expressions in the light of developments in the institutions in question as of that time. 10 For this reason, in considering who is the "obligor" and "obligee" in respect of the duty that the learned Trial Judge has held to be breached, it is worthy of note, without undue reference to the statutes and authorities,
(a) that, for present purposes, it is sufficiently accurate to say that, in England, as it existed prior to the incorporation of the other parts of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ire- land (which was the Kingdom when The British North America Act was enacted in 1867)," absolute power of government had been origi nally, legally and factually, vested in the Sover eign but, by a process of gradual development, government had been separated into legislative, executive and judicial branches, carried on legally in the name of the Sovereign, although in fact by a democratically controlled organization;
(b) that, by 1867, as a result of such gradual development—statutory, jurisprudential and
conventional government was carried on in the United Kingdom
(i) on the legislative side, by the Sovereign acting by and with the advice and consent of the United Kingdom Houses of Parliament,
(ii) on the executive side, by the Sovereign acting either on the advice of, or through the agency of, Ministers (collectively called, as of any time, the "Government" of "the day") which Ministers were not, generally speaking, chosen by the Sovereign but had tenure based on maintaining the confidence of Parliament, and
9 Cf. Edwards v. Attorney-General for Canada [ 1930] A.C. 124.
10 Cf. Attorney-General of Ontario v. Attorney-General for Canada [1894] A.C. 189 at pp. 199 et seq.; Croft v. Dunphy [1933] A.C. 156 at p. 166; and Attorney-General for British Columbia v. Attorney-General for Canada [1937] A.C. 391 at pp. 401-403.
" See the preamble to The British North America Act, 1867.
(iii) on the judicial side, by judges who were appointed by the Sovereign on the advice of Ministers but who, once appointed, were, during good behaviour, independent, in fact if not in law, of the Sovereign, the executive Government and Parliament;
with the result that, subject to statutory excep tions, while others had the de facto power and responsibility, all acts of government, in the widest sense of that word, were, in law, acts of the Sovereign and all public property was vested in the Sovereign;
(c) that, during the period leading up to The British North America Act, 1867, colonies and other possessions of the British Crown outside the Kingdom proper, sometimes called "prov- inces", were subject to the authority of the Sovereign acting on the advice of the United Kingdom Ministers and the legislative au thority of the United Kingdom Parliament;' 2
(d) that grants of local government, which, sooner or later, developed into responsible gov ernment, were ordinarily made to such colonies and possessions, which governments were car ried on by governors or other officials in the name of the Sovereign on the advice of local executive and legislative councils and, in accord ance with authority from the Sovereign or legis lative authority, acquired control of public monies and property legal title to which was in the Sovereign; 13
(e) that, with rare exceptions, all such govern ments as well as the Government of the United Kingdom, were, in law, pretty generally regard
12 "Crown" was used then, as it is now, as the equivalent of "Her Majesty" to refer to the Person who was the Sovereign. Compare the definition of "Her Majesty ..." in the Interpreta tion Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-23, s. 28. For the constitutional position of possessions of the Crown outside the Kingdom, see, for example, Campbell v. Hall (1774) 98 E.R. 848, and Halsbury's Laws of England, first edition, vol. 6, pp. 421 et seq.
13 See, for example, sections LIX and LXI of The Union Act, 1840 (U.K.).
ed as being carried on by a single person who was Sovereign 14 although the forum in which the Sovereign could be impleaded depended on the government involved. 15
It is against this background that, by The Brit- ish North America Act, 1867, provision was made for the creation of Canada by the Union of certain of such provinces, colonies and other possessions. By that Act, legislative and executive power in the Union was divided 16 between
(a) "Executive Government and authority of and over Canada" that was vested in "The Queen" (section 9) and a "Parliament for Cana- da" consisting of the Queen and the Canadian Houses of Parliament (section 17), and
(b) an "Executive Authority" for each province (sections 58 et seq.), also vested in the Queen," and a Legislature for each province (sections 69 to 88) consisting of a Lieutenant Governor acting on behalf of the Queen and an appropri ate legislative body."
Public property of the provinces and colonies so united, although legally vested in the Sovereign, was divided between that which was subject to appropriation by the Canadian Parliament (sec- tions 106 et seq.) and that which was subject to appropriation by the respective provincial legisla tures (section 126). Furthermore, certain property was described as being the "property" of Canada
' 4 Compare The Queen v. Bank of Nova Scotia (1885) 11 S.C.R. 1, per Strong J. at p. 19:
That the Crown ... by which I mean that Her Majesty the Queen is, in her own royal person, the head of that govern ment ... there can be no doubt ....
15 Cf. Robertson's Civil Proceedings by and against the Crown (1908) p. 340.
16 Compare Bonanza Creek Gold Mining Co. Ltd. v. The King [1916] 1 A.C. 566, at pp. 579-580.
17 See Liquidators of the Maritime Bank of Canada v. Receiver-General of New Brunswick [ 1892] A.C. 437, and The King v. Carroll [1948] S.C.R. 126.
(e.g., section 107 and section 108) or as "belong- ing" to one of the "Provinces"' 8 (e.g., section 109 and section 110), and it was not only provided that "Canada" was to be "liable" for certain "Debts of each Province existing at the Union" (section 111) but provinces were to be "liable to Canada" for certain amounts (section 112, section 114 and section 115). Furthermore, there were various express provisions for payments by the "Govern- ment of Canada" or by "Canada" to the "Prov- inces" (e.g., section 116 and section 118). More over, in at least one case, there was a statutory duty imposed by the 1867 Act on Canada ("the Government and Parliament of Canada") to carry out a public work for the benefit of particular provinces (section 145); and there was provision (section 146) for "Terms and Conditions" having the effect of statute that might require similar obligations in favour of new provinces to be admit ted after 1867.
One finds in the use of the "courageous
words" 19 "Canada" and the "Provinces" in The British North America Act, 1867 an apparent anomaly, viz., notwithstanding that all state prop erty and all executive and legislative power, both for Canada as a whole and for each province, are legally vested in the Sovereign, it is contemplated by the statute that there will be payments and liability as between any two of them. As far as I
18 "... these expressions merely import that the right to its beneficial use, or to its proceeds, has been appropriated to the Dominion or the Province, as the case may be, and is subject to the control of its legislature, and land itself being vested in the Crown." per Lord Watson in St. Catherine's Milling and Lumber Company v. The Queen (1889) 14 App. Cas. 46, at p. 56. "... it should be added that the right of disposing of the land can only be exercised by the Crown under the advice of the Ministers of the Dominion or province, as the case may be ..." per Lord Davey in Ontario Mining Company Ltd. v. Seybold [1903] A.C. 73 at p. 79. Cf. Burrard Power Company, Ltd. v. The King [1911] A.C. 87, per Lord Mersey at p. 95.
19 Compare Maitland's Essay "The Crown as Corporation" (supra) at p. 121. Similar references to Canada and the provinces seem to occur consistently in subsequent B.N.A. Acts, Orders in Council made pursuant thereto and such statutes as The Manitoba Act, The Saskatchewan Act, The Alberta Act and The Natural Resources Transfer Agreement Act of 1930 discussed in West Canadian Collieries Limited v. Attorney General of Alberta [1953] 8 W.W.R. (N.S.) 275. (See Appen dix to the Revised Statutes of Canada.)
know, there has been no authoritative rationaliza tion of this apparent anomaly. Two possibilities are to be found in the jurisprudence, viz.,
(a) as between Canada or a province and an ordinary person, the relationship is, in law, be tween the Sovereign and the ordinary person while, as between Canada and a province (or between two provinces) it is a relationship be tween governments, 20
(b) Her Majesty is not a single person but Her Majesty in right of Canada is one legal person and Her Majesty in right of a province is a distinctly different legal person. 21
In my view, this anomaly does not have to be clarified for present purposes. 22 Indeed, I doubt
20 Compare Theodore v. Duncan [1919] A.C. 696, per Vis count Haldane at p. 706:
The Crown is one and indivisible throughout the Empire, and it acts in self-governing States on the initiative and advice of its own Ministers in these States. The question is one not of property or of prerogative in the sense of the word in which it signifies the power of the Crown apart from statutory au thority, but is one of Ministerial administration, and this is confided to the discretion in the present instance of the same set of Ministers under both Acts. With the exercise of that discretion no Court of law can interfere so long as no provision enacted by the Legislature is infringed. The Minis ters are responsible for the exercise of their functions to the Crown and to Parliament only, and cannot be controlled by any outside authority, so long as they do nothing that is illegal.
See also Williams v. Howarth [1905] A.C. 551.
21 Compare Attorney General of British Columbia v. Attor ney General of Canada (1887) 14 S.C.R. 345, per Fournier J. (dissenting) at pp. 363-364; In re Taxation Agreement between Saskatchewan and Dominion of Canada [1946] 1 W.W.R. 257 at p. 278 and at p. 285; The Government of the Province of Newfoundland v. The Government of Canada per Thorson P. in Ex.C.R. [1960] (unreported) and the judgment of the Chief Justice of Canada in Her Majesty in Right of the Province of Alberta v. Canadian Transport Commission [1977] (unreport- ed).
22 The only class of case in which, as I conceive of it at the moment, this jurisprudential problem might have to be authoritatively determined, is illustrated by the case of a gov ernment claiming against another in a court having jurisdiction in claims between legal persons to which Her Majesty is subject, but not having the section 19 type of jurisdiction. The question then might arise as to whether Her Majesty in one right could bring an action against Her Majesty in another right on the same basis as an ordinary person brings an action against Her Majesty. The Government lawyers instructed to prepare the documentation for a transfer of administration
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whether the problem even arises in the circum stances of the dispute that is in question. Assuming the claim to be one against Her Majesty in one right by Her Majesty in another right, I cannot conceive that the special defences available to Her as against an ordinary person would be available to Her as against Herself in another right. Assum ing the claim to be one government against another, the parties must be acting in some repre sentative capacity and not on behalf of the individuals comprising their membership for the time being.
In my view, the present problem may be solved as a pure matter of statutory interpretation.
In so far as most of the provisions in The British North America Act, 1867 to which I have referred are concerned, they can be interpreted, on the basis of the Sovereign being one and indivisible in the light of the explanation given by Viscount Dunedin in In re Silver Brothers Limited, 23 where he said:
It is true that there is only one Crown, but as regards Crown revenues and Crown property by legislation assented to by the Crown there is a distinction made between the revenues and property in the Province and the revenues and property in the Dominion. There are two separate statutory purses. In each the ingathering and expending authority is different.
On this view, a provision in the Constitution describing property as belonging to Canada or a province merely determines what legislative and executive bodies have jurisdiction and powers in relation thereto and when Canada (or the Govern ment of Canada) is required to pay or transfer to, or is said to be entitled to payment or a transfer from, a province (or the Government of a prov ince), it is merely a requirement of a transfer of money or other property from the legislative and executive control (sometimes called "administra-
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have a problem as to which is the proper method, viz.,
(a) a transfer as between ordinary persons, or
(b) a statute, order in council or dispatch (see cases cited in the Higbie case [ 1945] S.C.R. 385);
but this would appear to me more a problem of elegance than substance as there is little doubt that the Courts would give effect to the transfer no matter which method was chosen. 23 [1932] A.C. 514, at p. 524.
tion") of the one to the other. 24
In any such case, the content of the obligation or right is clear, it is more difficult to define with precision the obligor and obligee. (Fortunately, this is a jurisprudential problem that does not ordinarily require to be solved.)
Clearly, the obligor or obligee is not the particu lar group of individuals who, at any particular time happens to constitute the executive or legisla tive arm of government of Canada or a province. Those individuals have no more interest personally in public property than other members of the public. For the transfer of property or the payment of monies type of case, it would be a practical solution to personify the respective executive (or executive and legislative) arms of government, or to regard the Sovereign as having a separate legal personality for Canada and for each of the prov inces respectively. Such a personification might also serve to rationalize the class of case typified by Canada's claim against Ontario arising out of the surrender of Indian lands under Indian treaties negotiated by Canada. 25 This would, however, in my view, be a judicial creation or fiction that is unnecessary for such cases and would complicate
24 See, for example, Attorney-General of British Columbia v. Attorney-General of Canada (1889) 14 App. Cas. 295, per Lord Watson at p. 301.
The title to the public lands of British Columbia has all along been, and still is, vested in the Crown; but the right to administer and to dispose of these lands to settlers, together with all royal and territorial revenues arising therefrom, had been transferred to the Province, before its admission into the Federal union.
Compare Attorney General of Canada v. Western Higbie and Albion Investments Ltd. [1945] S.C.R. 385.
25 See Dominion of Canada v. Province of Ontario [1910] A.C. 637, per Lord Loreburn L.C. at p. 645:
To begin with, this case ought to be regarded as if what was done by the Crown in 1873 had been done by the Dominion Government, as in substance it was in fact done. The Crown acts on the advice of ministers in making treaties, and in owning public lands holds them for the good of the community. When differences arise between the two Govern ments in regard to what is due to the Crown as maker of treaties from the Crown as owner of public lands they must be adjusted as though the two Governments were separately invested by the Crown with its rights and responsibilities as treaty maker and as owner respectively.
rather than simplify the problems arising from such cases as a breach of the constitutional (statu- tory) right
(a) under section 145 of The British North America Act, 1867, to have a railway construct ed to connect the St. Lawrence River to Halifax,
(b) under the Terms of Union with British Columbia, to have a transcontinental railway built, 26
(c) under the Terms of Union with British Columbia, to provide "an efficient mail service" between Victoria and San Francisco and be tween Victoria and Olympia, or
(d) under the Prince Edward Island Terms of Union, to have an efficient ferry service operated.
In my view, there is a more realistic analysis of the situation, at least for such cases.
By 1867, it would seem that, while provinces and colonies such as the ones in question here were subject to the sovereignty of the British Crown, each of them had, as a political matter, achieved a political identity of its own within the British Empire not unlike the political identity of sover eign states in the international sphere. While such a political identity was not, at that time at least, in the eyes of the ordinary municipal law, a "person" capable of having rights and liabilities and suing and being sued, it was a political reality in the sense that the people of a particular "self-govern ing" region had to be accepted and dealt with as a unity having desires and interests in common, as is demonstrated by the fact that they were, by The British North America Act, 1867, so dealt with.
There is no doubt, in my view, that the United Kingdom Parliament, by section 145 of the 1867 Act, created a legal duty in favour of three "Provinces". 27 Similarly, in my view, the Prince
26 Compare Attorney General for Saskatchewan v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. [1953] A.C. 594, at pp. 610 et seq.
27 Compare Dominion of Canada v. Province of Ontario [1910] A.C. 637, at p. 645. This, in itself, may have created a right in a province to sue as such on the application of reasoning such as is found in The Taff Vale Railway Company v. The Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants [1901] A. C. 426.
Edward Island Terms of Union created a legal duty in favour of that province in respect of a ferry service. In each case, as I view it, the "obligor", while it was described as the "Dominion Govern ment" or the "Government and Parliament of Canada", was the newly created political entity called "Canada" and the obligee was a province or provinces. Neither the obligor nor obligee was an entity having status as a person in any British or international court of law. Nevertheless, the United Kingdom Parliament, by imposing duties on one in favour of another, made them parties to statutory rights or duties, 28 no matter how unorth odox it may be to create legal rights without legal remedies. It is important to emphasize that what we are discussing is "a general statutory arrange ment" and not a contract or "independent treaty between the two governments". 29
In my view, the result of conferring such statu tory rights on the provinces in question, in the absence of any other sanction, was to confer a right on them to be compensated in respect of damages arising from breach thereof; 30 but the
28 Speaking of section 109, it was said in Attorney General of Ontario v. Mercer (1883) 8 App. Cas. 767, at p. 778:
The general subject of the whole section is of a high political nature; it is the attribution of royal territorial rights, for purposes of revenue and government, to the provinces....
In my view, from the point of view of an implied right to be compensated for breach, there is a difference in kind between a provision, such as that under consideration, which is, on the face of it, a part of the inducement by means of which the particular province was persuaded to join the union and other provisions (even though they are grammatically joined with it) that merely provide for Canada assuming the same responsibili ties toward the new province as it assumes toward all the rest of the country.
29 Compare Attorney-General of British Columbia v. Attor- ney-General of Canada (1889) 14 App. Cas. 295, per Lord Watson at p. 303 and Bonanza Creek Gold Mining Co. Ltd. v. The King [1916] 1 A.C. 566, per Viscount Haldane at p. 579 (quoted in footnote supra).
3° Compare Samson v. The Queen [ 1957] S.C.R. 832, per Locke J. at p. 841. As a realistic matter, it seems obvious that, just as being joined to the eastern provinces by railway was a sine qua non of British Columbia joining the union, so the right to be joined to the mainland by ferry service was a sine qua non of Prince Edward Island joining. To my mind, it is inconceiv able that when such terms of union were given statutory form,
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only remedy, at the time that the right was created was that that was available where there was no
legal regime for settling disputes namely (leaving aside force or other illegal acts), negotiation and invoking the intervention of third parties (e.g. in 1867 and 1873, Her Majesty's United Kingdom Government). 31 However, the lack of legal ma chinery at that time to determine disputes does not, in my view, detract from the existence at that time of a right to have the statutory duty carried out or to be compensated for breach of that duty.
In my view, when there is a statutory right to have something done with no express sanction for breach, there is, prima facie, an implied right to be compensated for a breach of such right; and nei ther the reasons given by the learned Trial Judge nor the submissions on behalf of the respondent make that reasoning inapplicable here. 32 I am, therefore, of the view that the learned Trial Judge
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the resultant rights were meant to be of such an empty nature that breach thereof would not give rise to a right to compensation.
That is not to say that an individual who happened to be an inhabitant of the Province at the time of breach has a legal claim to damages for his loss suffered as an individual. I express no opinion on that question but I must express doubt with regard thereto. I am of opinion that the "obligee" is the "Province"—i.e., the mass of inhabitants of the geographical area whoever they may be from time to time. I do not see the obligation to the Province as a joint right of the individuals or as a right held in trust for them as individuals. I see an analogy to the "booty of war" case (Kinloch v. The Secretary of State for India in Council (1882) 7 App. Cas. 619 (H.L.)) and to the case of reparations received by a country which is the success ful party to a peace treaty.
3' The only machinery contemplated by The British North America Act, 1867, for settling disputes between Canada and the provinces as to the effect of the arrangements among them laid down by that Act is section 142 thereof, which reads:
142. The Division and Adjustment of the Debts, Credits, Liabilities, Properties, and Assets of Upper Canada and Lower Canada shall be referred to the Arbitrament of Three Arbitrators, One chosen by the Government of Ontario, One by the Government of Quebec, and One by the Government of Canada; and the Selection of the Arbitrators shall not be made until the Parliament of Canada and the Legislatures of Ontario and Quebec have met; and the Arbitrator chosen by the Government of Canada shall not be a Resident either in Ontario or in Quebec.
32 The question whether what we are discussing is a "legal" obligation or a "political" obligation has no bearing that I can
was wrong when he concluded, in effect, that the breach of the Terms of Union that he found did not give rise to a right to compensation for dam ages suffered as a result of the breach.
However, it does not follow that, because a right conferred on the Province by virtue of Imperial legislation has been breached by Canada, the prov ince has a right to a judgment against Canada. This brings me to a consideration of the nature and character of the proceeding in the Trial Divi sion and of the parties thereto.
I doubt that either Canada or a province is a person in the sense that it would, as such, be recognized as falling within the jurisdiction of a Superior Court having the jurisdiction of the common law Superior Courts." In any event, the
see on the question whether there is an implied right to compensation for breach. Just as there can be social obligations that, not being legal obligations, are not justiciable in a court of law, so there can be political obligations that are not so justiciable; and, prior to the creation of the special type of judicial remedy now reflected in section 19 of the Federal Court Act, any obligation (e.g., to pay money) to which "Cana- da" or the "provinces" were parties, as such, must have been such a "political obligation" because the parties were political entities and were not as such entities in respect of which any court of law had jurisdiction. It follows that, at that time, the sole remedy was political pressure just as, in the case of social obligations, the sole remedy is social pressure. However, what has to be considered is not the nature of the remedy but the nature of the right. Whether the remedy was political or judicial action, in my view, just as failure to pay money or transfer property when required by law gives rise to an inciden tal right to future payment or transfer and compensation for loss arising from delay, so failure to provide a service required by law during a period gives rise to a right to compensation for loss arising from the failure.
33 As I understand the use of the word "person" in the law, it is that which is competent in the eyes of the law to have rights and obligations and to sue and be sued. (Cf. section 20 of the Interpretation Act and the definition of "person" in section 28 thereof.) Persons may, therefore, vary from one system of law to another; e.g., from a municipal system to international law. As I see it, the provisions of The British North America Act that are being considered create a system of rights somewhere in between and section 19 sets up a jurisdiction to give effect to such rights. Canada and the provinces are the persons who are competent to have rights and obligations and to sue and be sued under such system and jurisdiction.
Trial Division would, in my view, have no jurisdic tion in a dispute between two such political entities 34 apart from section 19 of the Federal Court Act, which reads:
19. Where the legislature of a province has passed an Act agreeing that the Court, whether referred to in that Act by its new name or by its former name, has jurisdiction in cases of controversies,
(a) between Canada and such province, or
(b) between such province and any other province or prov inces that have passed a like Act,
the Court has jurisdiction to determine such controversies and the Trial Division shall deal with any such matter in the first instance.
and the "agreeing" provincial Act. In my view, this legislation (section 19 and the provincial "Act") creates a jurisdiction differing in kind from the ordinary jurisdiction of municipal courts to decide disputes between ordinary persons or be tween the Sovereign and an ordinary person. 35 It is a jurisdiction to decide disputes as between politi cal entities and not as between persons recognized as legal persons in the ordinary municipal courts. 36 Similarly, in my view, this legislation creates a jurisdiction differing in kind from international courts or tribunals. It is a jurisdiction to decide a dispute in accordance with some "recognized legal principle" 37 (in this case, a provision in the legal constitution of Canada, which is, vis-à-vis inter national law, Canadian municipal law).
34 I can see that, on the view that Her Majesty as part of each of the respective executive and legislative arms of govern ment combined, is a separate legal person, the Federal Court might have jurisdiction under section 17 of the Federal Court Act where the claim is for a transfer of administration of Crown property (which would include a payment of money) from one executive arm to another. I cannot see how such a view would permit a realistic interpretation of a constitutional obligation such as that under consideration. It is not the executive or legislative arms of government that are the true sufferers or delinquents. It is the particular public (group of people) represented by such arms of government.
35 Even in such courts, the Sovereign can only be impleaded as "provided by statute". See Young v. SS. "Scotia" [1903] A.C. 501 at pp. 504-505.
36 Compare Sloman v. The Governor and Government of New Zealand (1876) L.R. 1 C.P.D. 563.
37 Dominion of Canada v. Province of Ontario [1910] A.C. 637, per Lord Loreburn L.C. at p. 645. I take "legal" in this phrase to exclude the application of ideas of abstract justice and "recognized" to require recognition as part of the munic ipal law of Canada.
The effect of the enactment of the original forerunner of section 19, 3 B once the "agreeing" provincial legislation was passed, was, as I see it, to convert a legal (statutory) right of a "province" without a legal remedy into a legal right with a remedy, albeit a remedy that can be nothing more than a judicial declaration. 39
On this view of the nature of a proceeding under section 19, the parties thereto are the political entities, in this case the Province and Canada, which cannot be described any more accurately, as I conceive them, than the peoples or public for the time being of the geographical areas involved. In effect, it is a claim by the people for the time being of Prince Edward Island against the people for the time being of all Canada. In my view, it does not matter whether such parties are referred to in the proceedings by the geographical names or by ref erence to the executive governments that represent the inhabitants of the geographical areas and that must be their spokesmen for the purposes of the dispute. 40
38 See section 54 of the Supreme and Exchequer Courts Act, c. 11 of the Statutes of Canada of 1875.
39 This is not to be taken as depreciatory of the remedy. A judicial remedy against the Sovereign (Government) in right of Canada has always been by declaration. See section 10 of the Petition of Right Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-12, and Rule 605 of the Federal Court Rules, which reads:
Rule 605. A judgment against the Crown shall be a declara tion that the person in favour of whom the judgment is given is entitled to the relief to which the Court has decided that he is entitled, either absolutely or upon such terms and condi tions, if any, as are just.
The Government will not, of course, ignore the Court's deci sion. "It is the duty of the Crown and of every branch of the Executive to abide by and obey the law" (Eastern Trust Company v. McKenzie, Mann and Co., Ltd. [l915] A.C. 750, at p. 759).
4° While describing the executive government as "Her Majes ty in right of" may or may not be particularly appropriate, there is no question, reading the proceedings in the light of section 19, that it is the Province and Canada that are the true parties to the dispute and so there is, in my view, no defect in the proceeding. (See Her Majesty in Right of the Province of Alberta v. Canadian Transport Commission [1977] per Laskin C.J.C. (unreported).) Furthermore, the practical result of the proceeding, if successful, will probably be a declaration that the Province is entitled to be paid $x by Canada which would mean a transfer from the Government of Canada to the Government of Prince Edward Island of money that would then become
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In considering the judgment of this Court that would flow, if the conclusion that I have reached is adopted by the Court, consideration must be given to that part of the learned Trial Judge's reasons, which reads [at page 7211:
In seeking a trial date counsel for the parties agreed that the trial, in the first instance, should be limited to the question of liability and that the question of damages should be deferred to a subsequent time depending upon the resolution of the ques tion of liability. Accordingly both parties waived examination for discovery respecting the quantum of damages to a time prior to the trial of that issue, should it become necessary.
Having regard thereto, my conclusion would be that the appeal should be dismissed with costs and the cross-appeal should be allowed with costs, that the judgment of the Trial Division should be set aside and that the matter should be referred back for further proceedings in accordance with the arrangement between the parties pursuant to which the matter went to trial.
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subject to appropriation by the Legislature of Prince Edward Island. Section 57(3) of the Federal Court Act would not seem to apply to authorize payment, in which event, it would seem that special Parliamentary authority would be necessary. In such a proceeding, Rule 5—the "Gap Rule"—would, I should have thought, solve most procedural problems, as, for example, the problem that arose in 1960 in the unreported judgment of Thorson P. in Government of the Province of Newfoundland v. Government of Canada.
I should add that, as far as this appeal is concerned, as I have already indicated, it does not seem to me to make any differ ence whether the parties to this proceeding are conceived to be
(a) the "Governments" of Canada and Prince Edward Island, respectively,
(b) Her Majesty in right of Canada and Her Majesty in right of Prince Edward Island, regarded as two separate legal personalities, or
(c) Canada and Prince Edward Island regarded as political entities (rather than ordinary legal personalities) upon whom the Constitution imposes rights and obligations that may give rise to disputes for which section 19 creates a remedy differ ent in kind juristically from the ordinary remedies in munic ipal courts.
No matter which is the more accurate analysis, as it seems to me, the learned Trial Judge erred in not holding that there was a right to compensation for breach of the particular provision in the terms of union. However, the damages to be assessed during the second stage of the trial may vary substantially depending upon the correct view as to who is the party who is to be compensated.
However, my tentative conclusion that the matter should be referred back to the Trial Divi sion for further proceedings raises a question as to the validity of section 19 of the Federal Court Act in so far as it purports to confer jurisdiction on the Trial Division in respect of this claim by the Province against Canada. The parties indicated, through their counsel on the argument in this Court, that they were satisfied that the Trial Divi sion has jurisdiction. There have, moreover, been various decisions on appeal in proceedings initiated under the predecessors of section 19 by which the Supreme Court of Canada and the Judicial Com mittee have dealt with such matters without cast ing any doubt on the jurisdiction created by such provisions. 41 Two recent decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada—Quebec North Shore Paper Company v. Canadian Pacific Limited [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054 and McNamara Construction (West- ern) Limited v. The Queen [ 1977] 2 S.C.R. 654— have, however, cast new light on the ambit of section 101 of The British North America Act, 1867 which requires consideration of the question of jurisdiction because the Court should "take objection where the absence of jurisdiction is apparent on the face of the proceedings". 42 It follows, in my view, that this Court should not refer the matter back to the Trial Division for further proceedings if it is apparent on the face of the proceedings that the Trial Division has no jurisdiction.
After giving the two recent decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada concerning the ambit of section 101 the best consideration that I can, I have concluded that they do not make it "appar- ent" that the Trial Division has no jurisdiction in this claim by Prince Edward Island against Canada so as to justify or require this Court to take cognizance of such absence of jurisdiction when the matter has not been put in issue between the parties. One of those cases deals with a dispute
"' See, for example, Attorney-General of British Coumbia v. Attorney-General of Canada (1889) 14 App. Cas. 295; Dominion of Canada v. Province of Ontario [1910] A.C. 637; The King v. Attorney-General of British Columbia [1924] A.C. 213; and Attorney-General of British Columbia v. Attor- ney-General of Canada [1924] A.C. 222.
42 See Westminster Bank, Ld. v. Edwards [1942] A.C. 529, per Viscount Simon L.C. at p. 533.
between ordinary persons. The other deals with a claim by Her Majesty against an ordinary person. In both cases, the matter was to be resolved by application of provincial law 4 3 There was no occa sion in those cases for the Court to address itself to the question whether the application of a part of the Constitution of Canada (as found in or under United Kingdom legislation) to resolve a dispute between Canada and one of its provinces fell within the words "Administration of the Laws of Canada" in section 101 of The British North America Act, 1867. 44
My conclusion is, therefore, that the appeal should be dismissed with costs and the cross- appeal should be allowed with costs, that the judg ment of the Trial Division should be set aside and that the matter should be referred back to the Trial Division for further proceedings in accord ance with the arrangement between the parties pursuant to which the matter went to trial.
APPENDIX "A"
DISCUSSION OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS UPON WHICH PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND WAS ADMITTED TO CONFEDERATION
The Imperial order-in-council of June 26, 1873, after reciting the terms of section 146 of The
43 In the Quebec North Shore Paper Company case, the Chief Justice of Canada (delivering the judgment of the Court) pointed out [at page 10631 "that the law respecting the Crown came into Canada as part of the public or constitutional law of Great Britain, and there can be no pretence that that law is provincial law". The passage in which this appears was quoted by him, when giving judgment on behalf of the Court in the McNamara case.
44 if the matter comes to be argued, there are other aspects that may require to be considered. It may be that, properly considered, section 19, like the old section 20 of the Exchequer Court Act, creates a legally enforceable right as well as confer ring jurisdiction on the Court. (See The King v. Armstrong (1908) 40 S.C.R. 229 at p. 248; The King v. DesRosiers (1908) 41 S.C.R. 71, at p. 78; and The Queen v. Murray [1967] S.C.R. 262, per Martland J. (delivering the judgment of the Court) at p. 269.) It may, on the other hand, be that, in so far as claims against Canada are concerned, section 19 is legisla tion, under the introductory words of section 91, conferring arbitral powers on the Court and authorizing it to accept similar powers, in so far as claims against provinces are con cerned, from provincial legislatures on the principle applied, in a different context, in P.E.1. Potato Marketing Board v. 11.B. Willis Inc. 119521 2 S.C.R. 392.
British North America Act, 1867, and referring to the Addresses of the Houses of Parliament and the Legislative Council and House of Assembly of Prince Edward Island, ordered that Prince Edward Island be admitted into and become part of Canada upon the terms and conditions set forth in such addresses. 45
The terms and conditions that were set forth in each of such addresses read as follows:
[A] That Canada shall be liable for the debts and liabilities of Prince Edward Island at the time of the Union;
[B] That in consideration of the large expenditure author ized by the Parliament of Canada for the construction of railways and canals, and in view of the possibility of a re-adjustment of the financial arrangements between Canada and the several Provinces now embraced in the Dominion, as well as the isolated and exceptional condi tion of Prince Edward Island, that Colony shall, on entering the Union, be entitled to incur a debt equal to fifty dollars per head of its population, as shewn by the Census Returns of 1871, that is to say: four millions seven hundred and one thousand and fifty dollars;
[C] That Prince Edward Island not having incurred debts equal to the sum mentioned in the next preceding Reso lution, shall be entitled to receive, by half-yearly pay ments, in advance, from the General Government, inter est at the rate of five per cent. per annum on the difference, from time to time, between the actual amount of its indebtedness and the amount of indebted ness authorized as aforesaid, viz., four millions seven hundred and one thousand and fifty dollars;
[D] That Prince Edward Island shall be liable to Canada for the amount (if any) by which its public debt and liabilities at the date of the Union, may exceed four millions seven hundred and one thousand and fifty dollars and shall be chargeable with interest at the rate of five per cent. per annum on such excess;
[E] That as the Government of Prince Edward Island holds no lands from the Crown, and consequently enjoys no revenue from that source for the construction and main tenance of local works, the Dominion Government shall pay by half-yearly instalments, in advance, to the Gov ernment of Prince Edward Island, forty-five thousand dollars per annum, less interest at five per cent. per annum, upon any sum not exceeding eight hundred thousand dollars which the Dominion Government may advance to the Prince Edward Island Government for the purchase of lands now held by large proprietors;
[F] That in consideration of the transfer to the Parliament of Canada of the powers of taxation, the following sums shall be paid yearly by Canada to Prince Edward Island,
45 It also made certain provisions concerning the representa tion of Prince Edward Island in Parliament to which it is unnecessary to refer for present purposes.
for the support of its Government and Legislature, that is to say, thirty thousand dollars, and an annual grant equal to eighty cents per head of its population, as shown by the Census returns of 1871, viz., 94,021, both by half-yearly payments in advance such grant of eighty cents per head to be augmented in proportion to the increase of population of the Island as may be shown by each subsequent decennial Census, until the popula tion amounts to four hundred thousand, at which rate such grant shall thereafter remain it being understood that the next Census shall be taken in the year 1881;
[G] That the Dominion Government shall assume and defray all the charges for the following services, viz.:— The salary of the Lieutenant Governor;
The salaries of the Judges of the Superior Court and of the District or County Courts when established;
The charges in respect of the Department of Customs; The Postal Department;
The protection of the Fisheries;
The provision for the Militia;
The Lighthouses, Shipwrecked Crews, Quarantine and Marine Hospitals;
The Geological Survey;
The Penitentiary;
Efficient Steam Service for the conveyance of mails and passengers, to be established and maintained be tween the Island and the mainland of the Dominion, Winter and Summer, thus placing the Island in contin uous communication with the Intercolonial Railway and the railway system of the Dominion;
The maintenance of telegraphic communication be tween the Island and the mainland of the Dominion;
And such other charges as may be incident to, and connected with, the services which by the "British North America Act, 1867," appertain to the General Govern ment, and as are or may be allowed to the other Provinces;
[H] That the railways under contract and in course of construction for the Government of the Island, shall be the property of Canada;
[I] That the new building in which are held the Law Courts, Registry Office, etc., shall be transferred to Canada, on the payment of sixty-nine thousand dollars. The purchase to include the land on which the building stands, and a suitable space of ground in addition, for yard room, etc;
[J] That the Steam Dredge Boat in course of construction, shall be taken by the Dominion, at a cost not exceeding twenty-two thousand dollars;
[K] That the Steam Ferry Boat owned by the Government of the Island, and used as such, shall remain the prop erty of the Island;
[L] That the population of Prince Edward Island having been increased by fifteen thousand or upwards since the year 1861, the Island shall be represented in the House
of Commons of Canada by six Members; the representa tion to be readjusted, from time to time, under the provisions of the "British North America Act, 1867;"
[MI That the constitution of the Executive Author ity and of the Legislature of Prince Edward Island, shall, subject to the provisions of the "British North America Act, 1867," continue, as at the time of the Union, until altered under the authority of the said Act, and the House of Assembly of Prince Edward Island existing at the date of the Union shall, unless sooner dissolved, continue for the period for which it was elected;
[NI That the Provisions in the "British North America Act, 1867," shall, except those parts thereof which are in terms made, or by reasonable intendment, may be held to be especially applicable to, and only to affect one and not the whole of the Provinces now composing the Dominion, and except so far as the same may be varied by these resolutions, be applicable to Prince Edward Island, in the same way and to the same extent as they apply to the other Provinces of the Dominion, and as if the Colony of Prince Edward Island had been one of the Provinces originally united by the said Act.
A preliminary observation is that, in my view, this document must be understood having regard to the fact that it is obviously a political document prepared by politicians and is not a statute drafted by professional draftsmen. This appears particu larly from the organization of the subject matter— or lack of any such organization. The document plunges immediately into the financial arrange ments (paragraphs marked A to F) and concludes with the principal term, concerning which there could have been no controversy, that the provisions of The British North America Act, 1867 appli cable to all the other provinces would apply to Prince Edward Island except as varied by the terms and conditions themselves (paragraph marked N). In my view, this obvious lack of attention to scientific arrangement of the docu ment is particularly evident in the paragraph where one finds the provision that has to be con strued in this appeal (paragraph marked G).
In my view, having regard to the fact that the terms of this document are obviously the direct result of political negotiations, the introductory words of this paragraph (paragraph marked G) must be read flexibly according to the particular item in relation to which they are read. Where the item is in terms (and in substance) a disbursement (i.e., a charge on government funds), it would
seem to me that the words "for the following services" must be ignored. In such cases, the spe cific items would all seem to fall within the terms of the concluding item "... charges ... incident to, and connected with, the services which by the `British North America Act, 1867,' appertain to the General Government ..."—e.g., section 60, section 100, section 91(2) and (3), section 91(5), section 91(12), and section 91(7). Certain items, however, appear to contemplate that the Dominion Government will "assume" and "defray all the charges for" certain services (i.e., branches of the public service) theretofore operated by the Colo- ny—e.g., "the Department of Customs", "The Postal Department", "The protection of the Fish eries", "the Militia", "The Geological Survey" and "The Penitentiary". The item here in ques- tion—"Efficient Steam Service"—in my view, is different in character from either of those two classes of item. It refers to a service "to be estab lished and maintained ... Winter and Summer
..". It does relate to a service but it does not provide for a mere assumption of operations there- tofore operated by the Colony to be integrated into the respective national services but it is a require ment that a theretofore non-existent service be "established" and "maintained" in the future.
I am, therefore, of the view that this item in the paragraph in question is different in kind from the other items in that paragraph (with the possible exception of the "telegraphic communication" item). It is neither the repetition, for greater cer tainty, of what would follow from entry of the Province into Confederation on the same terms as apply to the other provinces nor is it a taking over of staff and facilities previously operated by the Colony. It must, in my view, be read (once incor porated by reference in the Order in Council) as a legal obligation imposed on the Dominion Govern ment to establish and maintain a new service. Furthermore, reading the document realistically, as one directly worked out in political negotiations, in my view, it must be read as an obligation imposed in favour of "Prince Edward Island" in the same way as the financial terms ("C", "E" and "F") and the property terms ("K") where Prince Edward Island was expressly made the beneficiary of the obligation.
In my opinion, it would be unrealistic to put these provisions, which were obviously the result of hard bargaining, in the same class as either
(a) a limitation on legislative power—e.g., the provision in question in Attorney General for Saskatchewan v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. 46— which operates of its own force, or
(b) a provision imposing on government service agencies a legal duty to provide services to the public, where, at least until recently, the sanc tion for failure has been political action alone.
In my view, notwithstanding its position in the document, the "Efficient Steam Service" item is of the same nature as the financial provisions and the provisions dividing public property and created a statutory obligation as between Canada and the Province once it was incorporated in the Order in Council under section 146.
APPENDIX "B"
Maitland—Selected Essays (1936) Cambridge University Press
The Crown as Corporation 47
The medieval king was every inch a king, but just for this reason he was every inch a man and you did not talk nonsense about him. You did not ascribe to him immortality or ubiquity or such powers as no mortal can wield. If you said that he was Christ's Vicar, you meant what you said, and you might add that he would become the servant of the devil if he declined towards tyranny. And there was little cause for ascribing to him more than one capacity. Now and then it was necessary to distinguish between lands that he held in right of his crown and lands which had come to him in right of an escheated barony or vacant bishopric. But in the main all his lands were his lands, and we must be careful not to read a trusteeship for the nation into our medieval documents. The oft-repeated demand that the king should "live of his own" implied this view of the situation. I do not mean that this was at any time a complete view. We may, for example, find the lawyers of Edward II's day catching up a notion that the canonists had propagated, declaring that the king's crown is always under age, and so co-ordinating the corona with the ecclesia. But English lawyers were not good at work of this kind; they liked their persons to be real, and what we have seen of the parochial glebe has shown us that even the church (ecclesia particularis) was not for them a person. As to the king, in all the Year Books I have seen very little said of
46 [1953] A.C. 594.
47 Published in 1901 in 17 L.Q.R. 131.
him that was not meant to be strictly and literally true of a man, of an Edward or a Henry.
Then, on the other hand, medieval thought conceived the nation as a community and pictured it as a body of which the king was the head. It resembled those smaller bodies which it comprised and of which it was in some sort composed. What we should regard as the contrast between State and Corporation was hardly visible. The "commune of the realm" differed rather in size and power than in essence from the commune of a county or the commune of a borough. And as the conritatus or county took visible form in the comitatus or county court, so the realm took visible form in a parliament. Every one, said Thorpe C.J. in 1365, "is bound to know at once what is done in Parliament, for Parliament represents the body of the whole realm." For a time it seems very possible, as we read the Year Books, that so soon as lawyers begin to argue about the nature of corporations or bodies politic and clearly to sever the Bor ough, for example, from the sum of burgesses, they will defi nitely grasp and formulate the very sound thought that the realm is "a corporation aggregate of many". In 1522 Fineux C.J. after telling how some corporations are made by the king, others by the pope, others by both king and pope, adds that there are corporations by the common law, for, says he, "the parliament of the king and the lords and the commons are a corporation." What is still lacking is the admission that the corporate realm, besides being the wielder of public power, may also be the "subject" of private rights, the owner of lands and chattels. And this is the step that we have never yet formally taken.
The portrait that Henry VIII painted of the body politic of which he was the sovereign head will not be forgotten:
Where by divers sundry old authentic histories and chroni cles it is manifestly declared and expressed that this realm of England is an Empire, and so hath been accepted in the world, governed by One supreme Head and King, having the dignity and royal estate of the Imperial Crown of the same, unto whom a Body Politick, compact of all sorts and degrees of people and by names of Spirituality and Temporally been bounden, and owen to bear, next to God, a natural and humble obedience....
It is stately stuff into which old thoughts and new are woven. "The body spiritual" is henceforth to be conceived as "part of the said body politick" which culminates in King Henry. The medieval dualism of Church and State is at length transcended by the majestic lord who broke the bonds of Rome. The frontispiece of the Leviathan is already before our eyes. But, as for Hobbes, so also for King Henry, the personality of the corporate body is concentrated in and absorbed by the person ality of its monarchical head. His reign was not the time when the king's lands could be severed from the nation's lands, the king's wealth from the common wealth, or even the king's power from the power of the State. The idea of a corporation
sole which was being prepared in the ecclesiastical sphere might do good service here. Were not all Englishmen incorporated in King Henry? Were not his acts and deeds the acts and deeds of that body politic which was both Realm and Church?
A certain amount of disputation there was sure to be over land acquired by the king in divers ways. Edward VI, not being yet of the age of twenty-one years, purported to alienate land which formed part of the duchy of Lancaster. Did this act fall within the doctrine that the king can convey while he is an infant? Land had been conveyed to Henry VII "and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten". Did this give him an estate tail or a fee simple conditional? Could the head of a body politic beget heirs? A few cases of this kind came before the Court soon after the middle of the sixteenth century. In Plow- den's reports of these cases we may find much curious argumentation about the king's two "bodies", and I do not know where to look in the whole series of our law books for so marvellous a display of metaphysical—or we might say meta- physiological—nonsense. Whether this sort of talk was really new about the year 1550, or whether it had gone unreported until Plowden arose, it were not easy to say; but the Year Books have not prepared us for it. Two sentences may be enough to illustrate what I mean:
So that he [the king] has a body natural adorned and invested with the estate and dignity royal, and he has not a body natural distinct and divided by itself from the office and dignity royal, but a body natural and a body politic together indivisible, and these two bodies are incorporated in one person and make one body and not divers, that is, the body corporate in the body natural et e contra the body natural in the body corporate. So that the body natural by the conjunc tion of the body politic to it (which body politic contains the office, government and majesty royal) is magnified and by the said consolidation hath in it the body politic.
"Which faith," we are inclined to add, "except every man keep whole and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish ever- lastingly." However, a gleam of light seems sometimes to penetrate the darkness. The thought that in one of his two capacities the king is only the "head" of a corporation has not been wholly suppressed.
The king has two capacities, for he has two bodies, the one whereof is a body natural ... the other is a body politic, and the members thereof are his subjects, and he and his subjects together compose the corporation, as Southcote said, and he is incorporated with them and they with him, and he is the head and they are the members, and he has the sole govern ment of them.
Again, in that strange debate occasioned by the too sudden death of Sir James Hales, Brown J. says that suicide is an offence not only against God and Nature, but against the King, for "he, being the Head, has lost one of his mystical members". But, for reasons that lie for the more part outside the history of law, this thought fell into the background. The king was left with "two bodies"; one of them was natural, the other non- natural. Of this last body we can say little; but it is "politic", whatever "politic" may mean.
Meanwhile the concept of a corporation sole was being fashioned in order to explain, if this were possible, the parson's relation to the glebe. Then came Coke and in his masterful fashion classified Persons for the coming ages. They are natural or artificial. Kings and parsons are artificial persons, corpora tions sole, created not by God but by the policy of man.
Abortive as I think the attempt to bring the parson into line with corporations aggregate—abortive, for the freehold of the glebe persists in falling into abeyance whenever a parson dies— the attempt to play the same trick with the king seems to me still more abortive and infinitely more mischievous. In the first place, the theory is never logically formulated even by those who are its inventors. We are taught that the king is two "persons", only to be taught that though he has "two bodies" and "two capacities" he "hath but one person". Any real and consistent severance of the two personalities would naturally have led to "the damnable and damned opinion", productive of "execrable and detestable consequences", that allegiance is due to the corporation sole and not to the mortal man. In the second place, we are plunged into talk about kings who do not die, who are never under age, who are ubiquitous, who do no wrong and (says Blackstone) think no wrong; and such talk has not been innocuous. Readers of Kinglake's Crimea will not have forgot ten the instructive and amusing account of "the two kings" who shared between them control of the British army: "the personal king" and "his constitutional rival". But in the third place, the theory of the two kings or two persons stubbornly refuses to do any real work in the case of jurisprudence.
We might have thought that it would at least have led to a separation of the land that the king held as king from the land that he held as man, and to a legal severance of the money that was in the Exchequer from the money that was in the king's pocket. It did nothing of the sort. All had to be done by statute, and very slowly and clumsily it was done. After the king's lands had been made inalienable, George Ill had to go to Parliament for permission to hold some land as a man and not as a king, for he had been denied rights that were not denied to "any of His Majesty's subjects". A deal of legislation, extending into Queen Victoria's reign, has been required in order to secure "private estates" for the king. "Whereas it is doubtful", says an Act of 1862. "And whereas it may be doubtful", says an Act of 1873. Many things may be doubtful if we try to make two persons of one man, or to provide one person with two bodies.
The purely natural way in which the king was regarded in the Middle Ages is well illustrated by the terrible consequences of what we now call a demise of the Crown, but what seemed to our ancestors the death of a man who had delegated many of his powers to judges and others. At the delegator's death the delegation ceased. All litigation not only came to a stop but had to be begun over again. We might have thought that the introduction of phrases which gave the king an immortal as well as a mortal body would have transformed this part of the law. But no. The consequences of the old principle had to be picked off one after another by statute. At the beginning of Queen Victoria's reign it was discovered that "great incon venience had arisen on occasion of the demise of the Crown from the necessity of renewing all military commissions under
the royal sign manual". When on a demise of the Crown we see all the wheels of the State stopping or even running backwards, it seems an idle jest to say that the king never dies.
But the worst of it is that we are compelled to introduce into our legal thinking a person whose personality our law does not formally or explicitly recognize. We cannot get on without the State, or the Nation, or the Commonwealth, or the Public, or some similar entity, and yet that is what we are professing to do. In the days when Queen Elizabeth was our Prince—more often Prince than Princess her secretary might write in Latin De republica Anglorum, and in English Of the Commonwealth of England: Prince and Republic were not yet incompatible. A little later Guy Fawkes and others, so said the Statute Book, had attempted the destruction of His Majesty and "the over throw of the whole State and Common wealth". In 1623 the Exchequer Chamber could speak of the inconvenience that "remote limitations" had introduced "in the republic". But the great struggle that followed had the effect of depriving us of two useful words. "Republic" and "Commonwealth" implied kinglessness and therefore treason. As to "the State", it was a late comer but little known until after 1600—and though it might govern political thought, and on rare occasions make its way into the preamble of a statute, it was slow to find a home in English law-books. There is wonderfully little of the State in Blackstone's Commentaries. It is true that "The people" exists, and "the liberties of the People" must be set over against "the prerogatives of the King"; but just because the King is no part of the People, the People cannot be the State or Commonwealth.
But "the Publick" might be useful. And those who watch the doings of this Publick in the Statute Book of the eighteenth century may feel inclined to say that it has dropped a first syllable. After the rebellion of 1715 an Act of Parliament declared that the estates of certain traitors were to be vested in the king "to the use of the Publick". Whether this is the first appearance of "the Publick" as cestui que trust of a part of those lands of which the king is owner I do not know; but it is an early example. Then we come upon an amusing little story which illustrates the curious qualities of our royal corporation sole. One of the attainted traitors was Lord Derwentwater, and the tenants of his barony of Langley had been accustomed to pay a fine when their lord died: such a custom was, I believe, commoner elsewhere than in England. But, says an Act of 1738, the said premises "being vested in His Majesty, his heirs and successors in his politick capacity, which in consideration of law never dies, it may create a doubt whether the tenants of the said estates ought ... to pay such fines ... on the death of His present Majesty (whom God long preserve for the benefit of his People) or on the death of any future King or Queen". So the tenants are to pay as they would have paid "in case such King or Queen so dying was considered as a private person only and not in his or her politick capacity". Thus that artificial person, the king in his politick capacity, who is a trustee for the Publick, must be deemed to die now and then for the benefit of cestui que trust.
But it was of "the Publick" that we were speaking, and I believe that "the Publick" first becomes prominent in connex-
ion with the National Debt. Though much might be done for us by a slightly denaturalized king, he could not do all that was requisite. Some proceedings of one of his predecessors, who closed the Exchequer and ruined the goldsmiths, had made our king no good borrower. So the Publick had to take his place. The money might be "advanced to His Majesty", but the Publick had to owe it. This idea could not be kept off the statute book. "Whereas", said an Act of 1786, "the Publick stands indebted to" the East India Company in a sum of four millions and more.
What is the Publick which owes the National Debt? We try to evade that question. We try to think of that debt not as a debt owed by a person, but as a sum charged upon a pledged or mortgaged thing, upon the Consolidated Fund. This is natural, for we may, if we will, trace the beginnings of a national debt back to days when a king borrows money and charges the repayment of it upon a specific tax; perhaps he will even appoint his creditor to collect that tax, and so enable him to repay himself. Then there was the long transitional stage in which annuities were charged on the Aggregate Fund, the General Fund, the South Sea Fund, and so forth. And now we have the Consolidated Fund; but even the most licentious "objectification" (or, as Dr James Ward says, "reification") can hardly make that Fund "a thing" for jurisprudence. On the one hand, we do not conceive that the holders of Consols would have the slightest right to complain if the present taxes were swept away and new taxes invented, and, on the other hand, we conceive that if the present taxes will not suffice to pay the interest of the debt more taxes must be imposed. Then we speak of "the security of an Act of Parliament", as if the Act were a profit-bearing thing that could be pledged. Or we introduce "the Government" as a debtor. But what, we may ask, is this Government? Surely not the group of Ministers, not the Gov ernment which can be contrasted with Parliament. I am happy to think that no words of mine can affect the price of Bank Annuities, but it seems to me that the national debt is not a "secured debt" in any other than that loose sense in which we speak of "personal security", and that the creditor has nothing to trust to but the honesty and solvency of that honest and solvent community of which the King is the head and "Govern- ment" and Parliament are organs.
One of our subterfuges has been that of making the king a trustee (vel quasi) for unincorporated groups. Another of our subterfuges has been that of slowly substituting "the Crown" for King or Queen. Now the use which has been made in different ages of the crown —a chattel now lying in the Tower and partaking (so it is said) of the nature of an heirloom might be made the matter of a long essay. I believe, however, that an habitual and perfectly unambiguous personification of the Crown—in particular, the attribution of acts to the Crown—is much more modern than most people would believe. It seems to me that in fully half the cases in which Sir William Anson writes "Crown", Blackstone would have written "King". In strictness, however, "the Crown" is not, I take it, among the persons known to our law, unless it is merely another name for the King. The Crown, by that name, never sues, never prose cutes, never issues writs or letters patent. On the face of formal records the King or Queen does it all. I would not, if I could, stop the process which is making "the Crown" one of the names of a certain organized community; but in the meantime that
term is being used in three or four different, though closely related, senses. "We all know that the Crown is an abstrac tion", said Lord Penzance. I do not feel quite sure of knowing even this.
The suggestion that "the Crown" is very often a suppressed or partially recognized corporation aggregate is forced upon us so soon as we begin to attend with care to the language which is used by judges when they are freely reasoning about modern matters and are not feeling the pressure of old theories. Let us listen, for example, to Blackburn J., when in a famous opinion he was explaining why it is that the Postmaster-General or the captain of a man-of-war cannot be made to answer in a civil action for the negligence of his subordinates. "These cases were decided upon the ground that the government was the principal and the defendant merely the servant.... All that is decided by this class of cases is that the liability of a servant of the public is no greater than that of the servant of any other principal, though the recourse against the principal, the public, cannot be by an action." So here the Government and the Public are identified, or else the one is an organ or agent of the other. But the Postmaster-General or the captain of a man-of-war is assuredly a servant of the Crown, and yet he does not serve two masters. A statute of 1887 tells us that "the expressions `permanent civil service of the state', `permanent civil service of Her Majesty', and `permanent civil service of the Crown', are hereby declared to have the same meaning". Now as it is evident that King Edward is not (though Louis XIV may have been) the State, we seem to have statutory author ity for holding that the State is "His Majesty". The way out of this mess, for mess it is, lies in a perception of the fact, for fact it is, that our sovereign lord is not a "corporation sole", but is the head of a complex and highly organized "corporation aggregate of many"—of very many. I see no great harm in calling this corporation a Crown. But a better word has lately returned to the statute book. That word is Commonwealth.
Even if the king would have served as a satisfactory debtor for the national debt, some new questions would have been raised in the course of that process which has been called the expansion of England; for colonies came into being which had public debts of their own. At this point it is well for us to remember that three colonies which were exceptionally impor tant on account of their antiquity and activity, namely Massa- chusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, were corporations duly created by charter with a sufficiency of operative and inoperative words. Also we may notice that the king was no more a corporator of Rhode Island than he was a corporator of the city of Norwich or of the East India Company, and that the Governor of Connecticut was as little a deputy of the king as was the Governor of the Bank of England. But even where there was a royal governor, and where there was no solemnly created corporation, there was a "subject" capable of borrow ing money and contracting debts. At least as early as 1709, and I know not how much earlier, bills of credit were being emitted which ran in this form:
This indented bill of shillings due from the Colony
of New York to the possessor thereof shall be in value equal to money and shall be accepted accordingly by the Treasurer of this Colony for the time being in all public payments and
for any fund at any time in the Treasury. Dated, New York the first of November, 1709, by order of the Lieutenant Governor, Council and General Assembly of the said Colony.
In 1714 the Governor, Council and General Assembly of New York passed a long Act "for the paying and discharging the several debts and sums of money claimed as debts of this Colony". A preamble stated that some of the debts of the Colony had not been paid because the Governors had misap plied and extravagantly expended "the revenue given by the loyal subjects aforesaid to Her Majesty and Her Royal Prede cessors, Kings and Queens of England, sufficient for the hon ourable as well as necessary support of their Government here." "This Colony", the preamble added, "in strict justice is in no manner of way obliged to pay many of the said claims"; however, in order "to restore the Publick Credit", they were to be paid. Here we have a Colony which can be bound even in strict justice to pay money. What the great colonies did the small colonies did also. In 1697 an Act was passed at Montser- rat "for raising a Levy or Tax for defraying the Publick Debts of this His Majesty's Island".
The Colonial Assemblies imitated the Parliament of Eng- land. They voted supplies to "His Majesty"; but they also appropriated those supplies. In Colonial Acts coming from what we may call an ancient date and from places which still form parts of the British Empire, we may see a good deal of care taken that whatever is given to the king shall be marked with a trust. For instance, in the Bermudas, when in 1698 a penalty is imposed, half of it is given to the informer, "and the remainder to His Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, to be imployed for and towards the support of the Government of these Islands and the contingent charges thereof'. If "the old house and kitchen belonging to their Majesties [William and Mary] and formerly inhabited by the Governors of these Islands" is to be sold, then the price is to be paid "into the Publick Stock or Revenue for the Publick Uses of these Islands and the same to be paid out by Order of the Governor, Council and a Committee of Assembly". It would, I believe, be found that in some colonies in which there was no ancestral tradition of republicanism, the Assemblies were not far behind the House of Commons in controlling the expenditure of whatever money was voted to the king. In 1753 the Assembly of Jamaica resolved "that it is the inherent and undoubted right of the Representatives of the People to raise and apply monies for the services and exigencies of government and to appoint such person or persons for the receiving and issuing thereof as they shall think proper, which right this House hath exerted and will always exert in such manner as they shall judge most conducive to the service of His Majesty and the interest of his People." In many or most of the colonies the treasurer was appointed, not by the Governor but by an Act of Assembly; sometimes he was appointed by a mere resolution of the House of Representa tives. In the matter of finance, "responsible government" (as we now call it) or "a tendency of the legislature to encroach upon the proper functions of the executive" (as some modern Americans call it) is no new thing in an English colony.
We deny nowadays that a Colony is a corporation. The three unquestionably incorporated colonies have gone their own way and are forgotten of lawyers. James L.J. once said that it
seemed to him an abuse of language to speak of the Governor and Government of New Zealand as a corporation. So be it, and I should not wish to see a "Governor" or a "Government" incorporated. But can we—do we really and not merely in words—avoid an admission that the Colony of New Zealand is a person? In the case that was before the Court a contract for the conveyance of emigrants had professedly been made be tween "Her Majesty the Queen for and on behalf of the Colony of New Zealand" of the first part, Mr Featherston, "the agent-general in England for the Government of New Zea- land", of the second part, and Sloman & Co. of the third part. Now when in a legal document we see those words "for and on behalf of we generally expect that they will be followed by the name of a person; and I cannot help thinking that they were so followed in this case. I gather that some of the colonies have abandoned the policy of compelling those who have aught against them to pursue the ancient, if royal, road of a petition of right. Perhaps we may not think wholly satisfactory the Australian device of a "nominal defendant" appointed to resist an action in which a claim is made "against the Colonial Government", for there is no need for "nominal parties to actions where real parties (such, for example, as a Colony or State) are forthcoming. But it is a wholesome sight to see "the Crown" sued and answering for its torts. If the field that sends cases to the Judicial Committee is not narrowed, a good many old superstitions will be put upon their trial.
In the British North America Act, 1867, there are coura geous words. "Canada shall be liable for the debts and liabili ties of each Province existing at the Union. Ontario and Quebec conjointly shall be liable to Canada.... The assets enumerated in the fourth schedule ... shall be the property of Ontario and Quebec conjointly. Nova Scotia shall be liable to Canada.... New Brunswick shall be liable to Canada. ... The several Provinces shall retain all their respective public property.... New Brunswick shall receive from Canada. ... The right of New Brunswick to levy the lumber dues. ... No lands or property belonging to Canada or any Province shall be liable to taxation. ..." This is the language of statesmanship, of the statute book, and of daily life. But then comes the lawyer with theories in his head, and begins by placing a legal estate in what he calls the Crown or Her Majesty. "In construing these enactments, it must always be kept in view that wherever public land with its incidents is described as 'the property of' or as 'belonging to' the Dominion or a Province, these expressions merely import that the right to its beneficial use, or to its proceeds, has been appropriated to the Dominion or the Prov ince, as the case may be, and is subject to the control of its legislature, the land itself being vested in the Crown." And so we have to distinguish the lands vested in the Crown "for" or "in right of Canada from the lands vested in the Crown "for" or "in right of Quebec or Ontario or British Columbia, or between lands "vested in the Crown as represented by the Dominion" and lands "vested in the Crown as represented by a Province". Apparently "Canada" or "Nova Scotia" is person enough to be the Crown's cestui que trust and at the same time the Crown's representative, but is not person enough to hold a legal estate. It is a funny jumble, which becomes funnier still if we insist that the Crown is a legal fiction.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
PRATTE J. (dissenting in part): I agree with the Chief Justice and my brother Le Dain that the appeal should be dismissed. However, I do not share their view in respect of the cross-appeal which, in my opinion, should also be dismissed.
The Order in Council of June 26, 1873, imposed on the Dominion Government the legal duty to establish and maintain an efficient ferry service between the mainland and Prince Edward Island. The Dominion having failed in the performance of that duty, is it under an obligation to compensate the Province of Prince Edward Island for the damage suffered as a consequence of that breach? This is, in my view, the crucial question raised by the cross-appeal. The Chief Justice and my broth er Le Dain would answer it in the affirmative; I would answer it in the negative.
I concede that, as a rule, an individual who has been prejudicially affected by another person's failure to perform a statutory duty has the right to claim damages from that other person. But this is not an absolute rule:
Notwithstanding the general rule, there are many cases in which no action for damages will lie in respect of injuries caused by the breach of a statutory duty. For there is no such remedy unless the legislature, in creating the duty, intended that it should be enforceable in this way. 48
While the Order in Council of June 26, 1873, was adopted following an agreement between Canada and Prince Edward Island, it did not describe the duty imposed on the Dominion Gov ernment relating to the ferry service as a duty toward the new Province or its Government. It is, therefore, possible to conceive of that duty as one toward the public at large. In that perspective, in case of a breach, the right to be compensated should not be limited to the Government of the Province; it should, in all logic, be granted to all persons suffering damage as a result of the breach. But this, I would find unacceptable. I cannot
48 Salmond on the Law of Torts, 15th ed., 1969, p. 312.
ascribe to a constitutional document of the nature of the Order in Council the intention of imposing on the Dominion Government, in addition to the public duty to establish and maintain the ferry service, the obligation to compensate all those who might suffer damage as a consequence of a failure in the performance of that obligation.
If, on the other hand, the duty in respect of the ferry service is conceived of as an obligation toward the new Province, the question, which remains a question of interpretation, is whether it was the intention of the Order in Council that the Dominion Government, in case of breach, be liable to the Province for the damage suffered as a consequence of the breach. If the problem is viewed in that light, the answer, in my view, must remain negative and, this, for two reasons.
When the duty relating to the ferry was imposed on the Dominion Government, it was not, even if it is considered as a duty toward the Province, a duty enforceable through legal means. There was then no court before which the Dominion could be brought to answer the claim of the Province (see Duff J., as he then was, in Province of Ontario v. Dominion of Canada (1910) 42 S.C.R. 1, at p. 119). I cannot imagine that an authority imposing an obligation enforceable by purely political means might intend to create liability in damages in case of breach. In my view, the question of liability resulting from a breach of an obligation can only arise in respect of a legally enforceable obligation.
My second reason for reaching that conclusion is that in case of failure of the Dominion Govern ment to operate the ferry service, the Government of the Island, as such, would not be likely to suffer any direct damage. Those who would normally be directly affected by an interruption of the ferry service are those who, be they residents of the Island or not, would otherwise have made use of the ferry and I have already said that, in my view, it was not the intention of the Order in Council that the Dominion be liable toward them. I cannot imagine that, at the same time, the Order in
Council intended to create a liability toward a government which, as such, was not likely to suffer any direct damage as a consequence of the failure of the Dominion to perform its obligation.
I may add that my conclusion might have been different if, on the one hand, the duty relating to the ferry had been imposed as a duty toward the inhabitants of the Island, and, on the other hand, the Government of the Island had the right to sue as the representative of those inhabitants. How ever, neither of those two propositions is, in my view, well founded.
For these reasons, I would dismiss both the appeal and the cross-appeal. I would not make any order as to costs.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
LE DAIN J.: This is an appeal and a cross- appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division in an action for damages brought under section 19 of the Federal Court Act by Her Majesty the Queen, in the right of Prince Edward Island, against Her Majesty the Queen, in the right of Canada, for alleged breach of a duty imposed on the Govern ment of Canada by the Order in Council of June 26, 1873 49 which, pursuant to section 146 of The British North America Act, 1867 5 °, admitted the colony of Prince Edward Island into the Dominion of Canada on July 1, 1873.
49 R.S.C. 1970, Appendices, p. 291.
50 146. It shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with the Advice of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, on Addresses from the Houses of the Parliament of Canada, and from the Houses of the respective Legislatures of the Colonies or Provinces of Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, and British Columbia, to admit those Colonies or Provinces, or any of them, into the Union, and on Address from the Houses of the Parliament of Canada to admit Rupert's Land and the North western Territory, or either of them, into the Union, on such Terms and Conditions in each Case as are in the Addresses expressed and as the Queen thinks fit to approve, subject to the Provisions of this Act; and the Provisions of any Order in Council in that Behalf shall have effect as if they had been enacted by the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
The Terms of Union which are the subject of the controversy in this case are those respecting the ferry service to be established and maintained between the Island and the mainland. They are contained in a provision respecting the responsibil ity of the Dominion for certain public services. This provision, which appears in the Schedule to the Order in Council, reads as follows:
That the Dominion Government shall assume and defray all the charges for the following services, viz.:—
The salary of the Lieutenant Governor;
The salaries of the Judges of the Superior Court and of the District or County Courts when established;
The charges in respect of the Department of Customs; The Postal Department;
The protection of the Fisheries;
The provision for the Militia;
The Lighthouses, Shipwrecked Crews, Quarantine and Marine Hospitals;
The Geological Survey;
The Penitentiary;
Efficient Steam Service for the conveyance of mails and passengers, to be established and maintained between the Island and the mainland of the Dominion, Winter and Summer, thus placing the Island in continuous communication with the Intercolonial Railway and the railway system of the Dominion;
The maintenance of telegraphic communication between the Island and the mainland of the Dominion;
And such other charges as may be incident to, and connected with, the services which by the "British North America Act, 1867," appertain to the General Government, and as are or may be allowed to the other Provinces;
The Province's amended statement of claim con tains the following allegations with respect to the ferry service assumed by the Dominion in fulfil ment of the Terms of Union and the breach of duty which is the foundation of the action:
6. In fulfillment of the above term or condition, and subject to the hereinafter mentioned breach, the Federal Government established and maintained a ferry service between the Port at Borden, Prince Edward Island, and the Port at Cape Tormen- tine, New Brunswick, which said ferry service operates Winter and Summer. The ferries plying between the two ports are owned and operated by the Federal Government although latterly they have operated through the agency of the Canadian National Railways.
7. In violation of the obligation on the Federal Government to assume and defray the cost of efficient and continuous communication between Prince Edward Island and the main land of the Dominion the ferry service between Borden and Cape Tormentine ceased to operate from 6:00 a.m. on the 21st
day of August, A.D. 1973 until 6:00 a.m. at the 22nd day of August, 1973 and also from the hour of 6:30 p.m. on the 23rd day of August, A.D. 1973 to the hour of 3:00 a.m. on the 2nd day of September, A.D. 1973.
This stoppage of some 10 days and 8' hours in the ferry service resulted from a nation-wide strike in the Canadian National Railway system.
The Province claims damage for loss and expense specified in paragraphs 9 and 10 of its amended statement of claim as follows:
9. The loss and expense incurred by the Province as a result of the stoppage in the ferry service is as follows:
(a) wages and expenses for overtime employees of the Prov ince in dealing with the emergency situation in handling the large number of tourists stranded in the Province due to the stoppage in ferry service;
(b) other and miscellaneous expenses of the Province through the advertising media, telephone and telegram ser vices in keeping the public abreast of the ferry situation;
(c) the Province is dependent on its tourist industry as a major source of its revenue and as a result of the aforemen tioned stoppage in the ferry service its tourist industry for the 1973 year came to an abrupt halt thereby causing the Province to lose revenue from the following sources:
(i) loss of revenue from sales tax;
(ii) loss of revenue from gasoline tax;
(iii) loss of revenue from entertainment tax;
(iv) loss of revenue from the profits realized through the sale of liquor in the Province.
In addition to the above mentioned items of loss, the Prov ince contends that its reputation in the tourist industry has suffered severe reverses which will affect the number of tourists coming to the Province in subsequent years thereby causing the Province to lose revenue derived from the sources set out in paragraph 9(c).
10. By reason of the loss already incurred and by reason of the diminution in the Province's reputation as a tourist prov ince, which will cause further loss, the Province has suffered loss and expense and will suffer further loss.
At the trial it was agreed that the Court should give judgment first on the question of liability by a determination of the following issues:
1. Was there a breach of statutory duty on the part of the Dominion Government?
2. Does the breach give rise to an action for damages?
and that the following questions should be reserved for subsequent determination if the Court found that there was liability:
3. Does the statute contemplate the type of damages com plained of?
4. Quantification.
To facilitate the disposition of the action the parties submitted an agreed statement of facts concerning the establishment and maintenance of the ferry service and the political settlement of certain claims by the Province for alleged non-ful filment of Canada's obligation with respect to the service. The agreed statement of facts discloses, among other things, that the Government of Canada has for many years made the necessary arrangements to provide a ferry service between the Island and the mainland, and that on at least two occasions claims by the Province for alleged non-fulfilment of the Terms of Union respecting the ferry service have been presented by memorial to the Government of Canada and settled by agreement between the two governments; and it contains the following paragraphs with respect to the two ferry services being operated between the Island and the mainland when the strike occurred:
12. The Dominion has employed Northumberland Ferries Lim ited to operate a ferry service on its behalf between Wood Island, Prince Edward Island to Caribou, Nova Scotia and paid a subsidy for such service.
13. The Dominion has since the year 1923, employed the Canadian National Railway to operate a ferry service on its behalf between Port Borden, Prince Edward Island and Port Cape Tormentine, New Brunswick with vessels supplied by it. From the year 1945 to the 2nd day of September, A.D. 1973, there was a continuous service provided except for five stop pages. For nine days in 1950, five days in 1966, and nine days in 1973, there were stoppages due to strikes which occurred after all of the steps that are required to be taken by the Canada Labour Code had been taken. In the fall of 1969, for eight hours, and again in April, 1973 for four hours, there were stoppages which occurred when Deck Officers walked out for study sessions. At the time of the strike which occurred during the time mentioned in paragraph 7 of the Amended Statement of Claim, which strike was a general railway strike, during which no railway service was provided, the regular schedule, as evidenced by Exhibit "F" attached hereto, was not in effect. The schedule which was in effect both before and after the stoppage complained of in paragraph 7 of the Amended State ment of Claim provided an efficient service.
The parties further agreed upon the following
facts:
1. During the material time, there was a continuous air service to and from Prince Edward Island, on a scheduled basis, carrying passengers;
2. At all material times, there was a mail service to and from the island;
3. The scheduled ferry service between Wood Island, Prince Edward Island, and Caribou, Nova Scotia, was maintained during all material times.
The Trial Division held that there was a breach of statutory duty by the Government of Canada but that it did not give rise to an action for damages. It pronounced judgment in the following terms:
The breach of the statutory duty upon Her Majesty the Queen in the right of Canada does not give rise to an action for damages for that breach at the suit of Her Majesty the Queen in the right of the Province of Prince Edward Island.
The plaintiff is, therefore, not entitled to judgment for the relief sought in Her statement of claim.
Each party shall bear its own costs.
Canada appeals against the determination that there was a breach of statutory duty, and Prince Edward Island cross-appeals against the determi nation that it does not give rise to liability in damages.
Prince Edward Island invokes the jurisdiction of the Federal Court to determine a controversy be tween Canada and a province which is conferred by section 19 of the Federal Court Act in the following terms:
19. Where the legislature of a province has passed an Act agreeing that the Court, whether referred to in that Act by its new name or by its former name, has jurisdiction in cases of controversies,
(a) between Canada and such province, or
(b) between such province and any other province or prov inces that have passed a like Act,
the Court has jurisdiction to determine such controversies and the Trial Division shall deal with any such matter in the first instance.
The Province adopted the necessary enabling legislation for purposes of this jurisdiction in 1941 by the Judicature Act Amendments, 1941, S.P.E.I. c. 16, s. 11. It is now contained in The Judicature Act, R.S.P.E.I. 1951, c. 79, s. 40, as replaced by S.P.E.I. 1973, c. 13, s. 5.
The constitution of Canada, of which the Order in Council admitting Prince Edward Island into the Union forms part, attributes rights and obliga tions to Canada and the Provinces as distinct
entities, however these entities and their precise relationship to such rights and obligations should be characterized. Section 19 of the Federal Court Act and the necessary provincial enabling legisla tion create a jurisdiction for the determination of controversies between these entities, involving such rights and obligations among others. Like the Chief Justice, I am, with respect, of the opinion that neither the doctrine of the indivisibility of the Crown nor that of Crown immunity, whether pro- cessual or substantive, should be an obstacle to a determination of intergovernmental liability under this provision, which clearly contemplates that Canada and the provinces are to be treated in law as separate and equal entities for purposes of the determination of a controversy arising between them. The term "controversy" is broad enough to encompass any kind of legal right, obligation or liability that may exist between governments or their strictly legal personification. It is certainly broad enough to include a dispute as to whether one government is liable in damages to another. It is not clear whether the judicial power conferred by section 19 includes the power to award conse quential as well as declaratory relief, but I assume, given the nature of the parties to a controversy, that what was contemplated was a declaration. The proceedings in the present case are brought as an action for damages by Her Majesty the Queen in the right of Prince Edward Island against Her Majesty the Queen in the right of Canada but since the proceedings are clearly intended to invoke the jurisdiction of the Court under section 19 the style of cause and the nature of the relief sought are in my respectful opinion matters of form that should not be permitted to defeat the substance and merits of the claim. I can see no reason why the proceedings should not be treated broadly as a claim for a determination or declara tion by the Court that the Province is entitled to be compensated in damages for the alleged breach of duty by Canada.
In so far as the question of jurisdiction is con cerned, I agree with the Chief Justice that it is not such as to require the Court to raise it proprio motu. On the appeal and cross-appeal there was no issue raised with respect to the constitutional foun dations of section 19 of the Federal Court Act and the provincial enabling legislation, or with respect to the assumption that, in so far as the validity and scope off section 19 must, as federal legislation, rest on section 101 of The British North America Act, 1867 (a matter that is not beyond argument), the application of the jurisdiction in the present case involves the administration of the laws of Canada within the meaning of section 101. Like the Chief Justice I am, with respect, of the opinion that there is nothing in the decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Quebec North Shore 51 and McNamara Construction 52 cases that prevents us from proceeding on the assumption that the Trial Division has jurisdiction under a statutory provi sion which recognizes rights of action that would otherwise be unenforceable, in a case which involves the application of a provision of the con stitution of Canada to the determination of the liability of Canada.
The precise nature of the obligation with respect to the ferry service is somewhat elusive. This is partly because of the Terms of Union themselves and partly because of the subsequent conduct of the parties as disclosed by the agreed statement of facts. On its face the obligation is to assume and defray the expense of a ferry service of a certain character. It is not clearly indicated which of the two governments is to assume the initiative and responsibility for establishing and maintaining the service. It is, I think, however, a reasonable infer ence, if not a necessary implication, that of the two, that government which has assumed the financial responsibility is to have the right, if not the obligation, of making the necessary arrange ments for the establishment and maintenance of the service. That is, as the history shows, how the Government of Canada has chosen to perform its obligation, not only with the approval of, but at
51 Quebec North Shore Paper Co. v. Canadian Pacific Ltd. [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1054.
52 McNamara Construction (Western) Ltd. v. The Queen [1977] 2 S.C.R. 654.
the repeated insistence of, the Province. The same is true of the nature of the ferry service to be provided. In strict terms the obligation refers to the conveyance of "mails and passengers" and not vehicles. The evident purpose of the obligation, however, is that the Island should be placed in effective communication with the mainland, and with the passage of time that object could only be served by a ferry service that would convey not only passengers but their vehicles as well. The record shows that this is what the Government of Canada judged to be necessary or appropriate in the performance of its obligation.
I confess, however, to some difficulty in finding a precise legal basis for an obligation of the nature and scope of that which the Government of Canada has apparently assumed. It may well be that Canada has assumed, as a matter of political or constitutional policy, a responsibility that extends beyond the strictly legal limits of the one that was imposed on it by the Terms of Union. I am not certain that the principle of contemporanea exposito properly applies to what has occurred. Nor am I satisfied that the issue can be disposed of by a broad assertion that the terms upon which Prince Edward Island was admitted into the Union, like other provisions of the constitution, must be interpreted in the light of changing condi tions so as to fulfil the evident purpose for which they were designed. I am in agreement, however, with the Chief Justice that the issue must be considered to be concluded in the present case by the manner in which the appeal must be disposed of as a result of the basis on which the Attorney General of Canada chose to attack the judgment appealed from.
Under the heading "Errors in Judgment Appealed From" in his memorandum of fact and law the Attorney General of Canada formulated a single ground of attack: "that the learned trial judge erred in holding that a ferry service, which was acknowledged to be an efficient service, had become an inefficient service during a 10-day and 8 1 / 2 -hour period when there was a general strike by
the employees of the operator with the conse quence that the services provided by the other ferryman were inadequate". In the course of his argument in support of this contention he did make two submissions as to the nature and scope of the obligation with respect to the ferry service. The first was that the obligation is an obligation to assume and defray the expense of a ferry service of a certain character and not an obligation to oper ate such a service. The second was that the service required by the Terms of Union is one that would place passengers in continuous communication with the railway system of the Dominion rather than one that would carry not only passengers but their vehicles as well, and that since the railway system was not operating during the period of the strike there could not be a failure to perform this obligation. But these submissions were not made the basis of a clear and specific ground of attack on the judgment appealed from. There was no clearly formulated challenge to the conclusion of the Trial Division that the obligation of the Gov ernment of Canada, as construed in the light of the manner in which Canada had chosen to perform the obligation for many years, is to provide a ferry service that will carry vehicles as well as passen gers. In effect, the Attorney General of Canada did not press these submissions. The essential argument on the appeal, as I understood it, was that Canada has an obligation to provide a service of a certain general character but not an obligation to operate such a service without interruption. There is a sense in which a service may be general ly efficient despite occasional stoppages or inter ruptions. But "efficient" in the Terms of Union does not simply mean a service that is so organized as to be capable of maintaining continuous com munication between the Island and the mainland. It must in fact produce that result. The efficiency of the service is to be judged with regard to its operation. Whether a particular stoppage or inter ruption of the service is such that the service cannot for that period of time be considered to be an efficient one within the meaning of the Terms
of Union is a question of fact a matter of degree. The Trial Division held that in all the circum stances the ferry service was wholly inadequate to meet the requirements for transportation during the period of the strike and as such had ceased to be an efficient service for that period. Like the
Chief Justice I can see no basis for interfering with that finding of fact.
The Attorney General of Canada contended that the obligation with respect to the ferry service is a political obligation. He relied particularly on what was said by certain judges of the High Court of Australia in The State of South Australia v. The Commonwealth of Australia (1962) 108 C.L.R. 130. That was an action for a declaration that there had been a breach of an intergovern- mental agreement for the standardization of cer tain lines of railway by conversion of their gauge. A majority of the Court held that there had not been a breach of the agreement. Certain members of the Court expressed the view that the parties had not intended to create legal obligations cogniz- able in a court. I do not think the distinctions reflected in these opinions have application to the obligation created by the Order in Council which admitted Prince Edward Island into the Union. Although the Order in Council gave effect to an agreement of a high political or constitutional nature it was an enactment having the effect of a statute. While the rights and obligations created by it were attributed to the Dominion and the Province, entities not recognized as having juridi cal personality at common law, and the precise nature of these rights and obligations and the relationship of the federal and provincial govern ments to them turn on concepts peculiar to our monarchical form of constitution, it cannot be doubted that they were intended to be legal rights and obligations. The same is true of the provisions in sections 102 and following of The British North America Act, 1867, which attribute rights and obligations to Canada and the provinces. A contro versy involving such rights and obligations is justi- ciable under section 19 of the Federal Court Act since it is one that arises between Canada and a province, and it can be determined on the basis of recognized legal principles. See Dominion of Canada v. Province of Ontario [ 1910] A.C. 637 at p. 645. It is not a controversy that "requires for its settlement the application of political as distin guished from judicial considerations". See The
State of South Australia v. The State of Victoria (1911) 12 C.L.R. 667 at pp. 674-675. The obliga tion with respect to the ferry service is sufficiently defined and is not one that involves the exercise of political judgment, but is rather one that, as its nature and the history show, can be carried out by non-governmental enterprise.
The question, then, is whether we should ascribe to the Order in Council an intention that the Province is entitled to be compensated for damages resulting from a breach of this legal obligation or duty by the Government of Canada. There could not, of course, have been any question at the time of the Order in Council of an intention that a breach of the duty should give rise to an action for damages since there was no forum in which an action could have been brought by the Province against Canada. See Duff J., as he then was, in Province of Ontario v. Dominion of Canada (1910) 42 S.C.R. 1 at p. 119. But this distinction between right and remedy is true of all the rights and obligations attributed by constitutional provi sion to these entities. I agree with the Chief Justice that what is to be looked for is an intention to create a legal right to compensation, however it is to be enforced, rather than a right of action as such. I think we are entitled to take this view since it is clearly the intention of section 19 of the Federal Court Act that rights and obligations that would otherwise be unenforceable for lack of a forum are now to be recognized as enforceable. The right or liability may be thought of as an inchoate or imperfect one which is perfected by the creation of a forum in which it may be enforced. Cf. Dixon J., as he then was, in Werrin v. Com monwealth (1938) 59 C.L.R. 150 at pp. 167-168.
The cases, such as Cutler v. Wandsworth Stadi um Ld. [ 1949] A.C. 398, which have considered whether an individual affected by a breach of statutory duty should have an action for damages, are not really of direct application to the problem
in the present case, where the duty is clearly a public one but the question is whether it is a public duty imposed in favour of the Province. I agree with the learned Trial Judge that it could not have been intended that individuals should have an action for damages for breach of the duty. But I do not think it necessarily follows from this conclu sion that it could not have been intended that the Province, as distinct from individuals, should be entitled to be compensated for a breach of the duty. The Order in Council arose out of and gave effect to an agreement between Canada and Prince Edward Island. It clearly evidences an intention to create legal rights and obligations as between the two. It contains several provisions creating finan cial liability. The obligation with respect to the ferry service is also imposed in the context of financial liability. It is clear that the establishment and maintenance of the ferry service was an essen tial condition of the Union—a practical necessity. It was a matter of governmental responsibility, and the purpose of the obligation was to establish which of the two governments was to be respon sible financially and otherwise for providing the service. It must have been intended that in the measure that Canada failed to perform this obliga tion the Province would have a right to be compen sated for any expense or loss directly caused to it by such failure. The kind of damages that should be held to be contemplated by the Order in Coun cil is, of course, another question. It is a question that was reserved for subsequent determination by the Trial Division. While I should not express an opinion on this question I must make it clear that in my view the obligation or duty is to the govern ment of the Province, and that the implied right to compensation is for expense or loss to the govern ment as a result of the breach of duty. I am unable to conclude that it could have been intended that there should be a claim for the adverse effects which the Province as a whole might suffer from a breach of the duty. These might well be the sub ject of a claim for political relief, as they were in the past, but they could not in my opinion have been intended to be the subject of a legal right.
For the foregoing reasons I am of the opinion that the appeal should be dismissed and the cross- appeal should be allowed on the terms proposed by the Chief Justice.
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