Docket: T-1699-13
Citation: 2014 FC 461
Ottawa, Ontario, May 21, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
BETWEEN:
|
THE CANADIAN TRANSIT COMPANY
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF WINDSOR
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The Federal Court
of Appeal has adamantly stated in Canada (National Revenue) v JP Morgan Asset Management (Canada) Inc, 2013 FCA 250:
[101] For some, judicial review in the
Federal Court is a preferred tool of first resort. They are wrong. It is a tool
of last resort, available only when a cognizable administrative law claim
exists, all other routes of redress now or later are foreclosed, ineffective or
inadequate, and the Federal Court has the power to grant the relief sought.
[2]
The Federal Court must not only have
jurisdiction over a subject matter, but also over the parties, and jurisdiction
to order a remedy sought. There is no statutory provision presented by the
Applicant that would allow the Federal Court to consider its application. This
Court makes reference to the Supreme Court of Canada decision, ITO-Int’l
Terminal Operators v Miida Electronics Inc, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752 at paragraph
11, in respect of the requirement for a statutory provision for the Federal
Court to have the jurisdiction by which to entertain a matter.
II.
Introduction
[3]
The Respondent has brought a motion to strike
the Applicant’s Notice of Application pursuant to Rule 221(1)(a) of the
Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, on the grounds that this Court does not
have jurisdiction to hear the application. In the application, the Applicant,
the Canadian Transit Company [CTC], seeks declaratory relief regarding the
scope of its rights pursuant to an Act to Incorporate the Canadian Transit
Company, SC 1921, c 57 [AICTC] and the applicability of various municipal by-laws
to properties it owns in the City of Windsor.
III.
Background
[4]
The Applicant, the CTC, purchased 114 properties
between 2004 and 2013 in the community of Olde Sandwich Towne in Windsor,
Ontario, located immediately west of the Canadian side of the Ambassador
Bridge. These purchases were made as part of a long standing effort to
construct a second span of the Ambassador Bridge over the Detroit River. The CTC’s intention is, and has always been, to demolish the structures located on these
properties in order to build the second span.
[5]
In September 2013, the City of Windsor, issued
repair orders in relation to the 114 vacant properties as they had become a
blight on the community. The CTC appealed these orders to the Property
Standards Committee.
[6]
In October 2013, the Applicant filed an
application to the Federal Court seeking a declaration that, among other
things, the Ambassador Bridge is considered a “federal
undertaking”, and as such, is not subject to municipal by-laws. It is
this application which the Respondent is asking the Court to strike for want of
jurisdiction.
[7]
On November 1, 2013, the Property Standards Committee
ordered that 83 of the 114 repair orders be modified to permit demolition as
requested by the CTC, and deferred the hearing of the appeals with respect to
the remaining 31 properties pending a discussion between the parties. The City
of Windsor appealed both orders.
[8]
On appeal of the deferral order, the Property
Standards Committee upheld the City of Windsor’s original repair orders for the
31 properties. The CTC subsequently appealed this order.
[9]
The City of Windsor’s appeal in regard to the
orders permitting the demolition of 83 properties was scheduled to be heard on
April 7, 2014. The CTC’s appeal of the order related to the 31 other properties
was scheduled to be heard on April 8, 2014.
IV.
Issue
[10]
Should the Respondent’s motion to strike the Applicant’s
Notice of Application be granted?
V.
Analysis
[11]
This Court has long held that a motion to strike
an application for want of jurisdiction should be used only in exceptional
cases and should only succeed if the application for judicial review is so
clearly improper as to be bereft of any chance of success (David Bull
Laboratories (Canada) Inc v Pharmacia Inc, [1995] 1 FC 588 (CA)). The basic
rule expressed in David Bull, and recently affirmed in Canada
(National Revenue) v JP Morgan Asset Management (Canada) Inc, above,
provides that:
[47] The Court will strike a notice of
application for judicial review only where it is “so clearly improper as to be bereft
of any possibility of success” … There must be a “show
stopper” or a “knockout punch” - an obvious, fatal
flaw striking at the root of this Court's power to entertain the application …
[12]
Without deciding this matter on the merits, the
Court is of the view that it is plain and obvious that the application lacks a
reasonable cause of action and that it is bereft of any possibility of success.
Even on a generous reading of the Applicant’s Notice of Application, it is
extremely unclear what exactly the Applicant is asking of the Court. The
Applicant does not appear to be challenging any particular decision of the City
of Windsor, the Property Standards Committee, or any order of a federal board,
commission or other tribunal. Rather, the Applicant appears to be simply
seeking a legal opinion regarding the applicability of the AICTC from the
Court.
[13]
The Court does not have the statutory authority
to grant such a remedy. A reference to the Court can only be sought by the
Attorney General of Canada or a federal board, commission or other tribunal
over which the Court otherwise exercises judicial review functions pursuant to
paragraphs 18.3 (1) and (2) of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7.
It cannot be used by private applicants as a tool to obtain a declaratory
judgment from this Court (Band Council of Whitesand First Nation v Diabo,
2011 FCA 96).
[14]
In these circumstances, the Court finds that the
Applicant has failed to present a cognizable administrative law claim, which
qualifies as an obvious, fatal flaw warranting the striking out of the Applicant’s
Notice of Application (Canada (National Revenue) v JP Morgan Asset
Management (Canada) Inc, above).
[15]
The Court also finds that it is equally unclear
what legal basis the Applicant has relied upon in bringing the application to
the Court. The Applicant issued the Notice of Application on the basis of
paragraph 23(c) of the Federal Courts Act; however, paragraph 23(c)
only constitutes a statutory grant of jurisdiction to the Court by the Federal
Parliament. The provision does not grant any right of appeal or judicial review
to an applicant, nor does it give the Court the authority to grant a
declaratory remedy.
[16]
The Applicant was required to file the Notice of
Application in accordance with the judicial review regime set out in the Federal
Courts Act. In particular, the Applicant was required to provide a complete
and concise statement of the grounds intended to be argued, including a
reference to any statutory provision or rule to be relied on (Rule 301(e)
of the Federal Courts Rules). Failure to specify a proper legal basis
for the Applicant’s application has resulted in a further obvious, fatal flaw
striking at the root of this Court's power to entertain the application (Canada
(National Revenue) v JP Morgan Asset Management (Canada) Inc, above at para
47).
[17]
Although the Applicant may be correct
that the subject matter at issue falls under paragraph 23(c) of the Federal
Courts Act as a “federal undertaking”, this
finding alone would not be sufficient to cure the other major flaws in the
Applicant’s Notice of Application. The Federal Court must not only have
jurisdiction over a subject matter, but also over the parties, and jurisdiction
to order a remedy sought. There is no statutory provision presented by the
Applicant that would allow the Federal Court to consider its application. This
Court makes reference to the Supreme Court of Canada decision, ITO-Int’l
Terminal Operators v Miida Electronics Inc, above, in respect of the requirement
for a statutory provision for the Federal Court to have the jurisdiction by
which to entertain a matter.
VI.
Conclusion
[18]
For all of the above reasons, the Respondent’s motion
to strike the Applicant’s Notice of Application is granted. It is both plain
and obvious that the Court cannot entertain the underlying application.