Docket: T-378-07
Citation:
2015 FC 932
Ottawa, Ontario, July 30, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Boswell
BETWEEN:
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100193 P.E.I.
INC., 100259 P.E.I. INC., 100412 P.E.I. INC., ROBERT ARSENAULT, JOSEPH
AYLWARD, WAYNE AYLWARD, B & F FISHERIES LTD., BERGAYLE FISHERIES LTD.,
JAMES BUOTE, BULLWINKLE FISHERIES LTD., C.D. HUTT ENTERPRISES LTD., CODY-RAY
ENTERPRISES LTD., DALLAN J. LTD., RICHARD BLANCHARD, EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE
OF MICHAEL DEAGLE, PAMELA DEAGLE, BERNARD DIXON, CLIFFORD DOUCETTE, FISHING
2000 INC., KENNETH FRASER, FREE SPIRIT INC., TERRANCE GALLANT, BONNIE GAUDET,
DEVIN GAUDET, NORMAN GAUDET, PETER GAUDET, RODNEY GAUDET, TAYLOR GAUDET,
GAVCO FISHING ENTERPRISES LTD., CASEY GAVIN, JAMIE GAVIN, LEIGH GAVIN, SIDNEY
GAVIN, GRAY LADY ENTERPRISES LTD., DONALD HARPER, HARPER'S FISH HOLDINGS
LTD., JAMIE HUSTLER, CARTER HUTT, KRISTA B FISHING CO. LTD., LAUNCHING
FISHERIES INC., TERRY LLEWELLYN, IVAN MACDONALD, LANCE MACDONALD, WAYNE
MACINTYRE, DAVID MCISAAC, GORDON L. MACLEOD, DONALD MAYHEW, MEGA FISH CO.
LTD., AUSTIN O'MEARA, PAMELA RICHARDS AND TRACEY GAUDET, ADMINISTRATORS OF
THE ESTATE OF PATRICK ROCHFORD, TWIN CONNECTIONS INC., W.F.M. INC.,
WATERWALKER FISHING CO. LTD. AND BOYD VUOZZO
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Plaintiffs
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And
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HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN
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Defendant
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ORDER AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Defendant brings this motion pursuant to
subsection 213(1) of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 [Rules],
requesting a summary judgment dismissing the Plaintiffs’ action in its
entirety. The Defendant argues that there is no genuine issue for trial with
respect to any of the Plaintiffs' claims.
[2]
The Plaintiffs dispute that argument and contend
the Defendant's motion is an abuse of process. They argue that there are
genuine issues for trial, and that their action - which seeks compensation for
losses they allegedly sustained because of how the Defendant has managed the
commercial snow crab fishery in the southern region of the Gulf of St. Lawrence
since 2003 - should proceed to trial as soon as possible.
[3]
The circumstances giving rise to the Plaintiffs’
action have been described in Arsenault v Canada, 2008 FC 299 at
paragraphs 2-10, 330 FTR 8 [Arsenault (Martineau)], aff’d 2009 FCA 242
at paragraph 2, 395 NR 377 [Arsenault (FCA)], leave to appeal to SCC
refused, 33385 (January 13, 2011)). These circumstances do not warrant
repetition at length at the outset of these reasons as they will be discussed
in detail when addressing the evidence below. For now, it suffices to outline
some of the background allegations in support of the Plaintiffs’ claims.
II.
Background
[4]
The individual Plaintiffs are residents of
Prince Edward Island who have benefitted from licences to fish snow crab at
some point during the last 12 years (or, in some cases, the personal
representatives of those fishers’ estates). The corporate Plaintiffs are
companies that operate or have operated the fishing enterprises of some of
those fishers.
[5]
Before the 1990s, the snow crab fishery was
competitive, meaning that the 30 P.E.I. fishers licenced in Crab Fishing Areas
[CFAs] 25 and 26 (sometimes called the “traditional
inshore fishermen”) and the 130 fishers from New Brunswick, Quebec and
Nova Scotia who were licenced to fish in CFA 12 (sometimes called the “traditional mid-shore fishermen”) were allowed to catch
as many snow crabs as they could until the Total Allowable Catch [TAC] for their
respective CFAs had been reached for the fishing season. Following a crisis in
the snow crab stock, the competitive system was replaced by an individual quota
system whereby each P.E.I. licence-holder received an equal share in the TAC of
CFAs 25 and 26. The Plaintiffs allege that this change happened in 1993 through
an oral agreement with the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans [DFO] which
guaranteed the P.E.I. fishers their share of the TAC in exchange for giving up
the competitive fishery and agreeing to finance research and conservation
measures.
[6]
In 1997, CFAs 25 and 26 were integrated into CFA
12 and the fishers agreed to a five-year co-management approach. This approach established
percentage shares of the TAC for the traditional fishers and a formula for
sharing abundant stock once certain monetary thresholds were exceeded. It also
involved an agreement whereby the fishers would contribute significant sums of
money to DFO’s management activities, including trawl surveys and other
scientific monitoring of the fishery.
[7]
In 1999, the Supreme Court of Canada decided
that some First Nations in Atlantic Canada had a treaty right to earn a
moderate livelihood from the fishery (R v Marshall, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 456,
177 DLR (4th) 513 [Marshall]). One way DFO attempted to introduce First
Nations to the commercial fishery was by enticing fishers to voluntarily give
up their licences in exchange for substantial sums of money. The Plaintiffs
refer to this as a “buy-back” initiative, while
the Defendant says DFO offered the traditional fishers “financial
assistance in exchange for their voluntary retirement from the snow crab
fishery.” It is not necessary for the purposes of this motion to decide
the legal significance of these characterizations, but the Plaintiffs'
terminology is more convenient and reflects the language commonly used at the
time.
[8]
At that time, fishers from Prince Edward Island
held 30 of the 160 licences issued to fish snow crab and their combined share
of the TAC was allegedly about 5.325%. Two of those licences were eventually “bought out” by DFO in an attempt to comply with the Marshall
decision. Collectively, the Plaintiffs have stakes in 27 of the remaining licences
issued to the traditional inshore fishermen.
[9]
The present dispute originates from a three-year
management plan which the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans [Minister] approved
in 2003. This plan, according to the Plaintiffs, ultimately reduced each P.E.I.
licence-holder’s share in the TAC in three ways: (1) by integrating CFA 18 with
CFAs 12, 25, and 26, 4.7081% of the combined TAC was allocated to those fishers
who had previously been licenced in only CFA 18; (2) by allocating about 15.8%
of the TAC to First Nations, even though only about 5% of that quota had been
freed up through voluntary agreements with existing fishers; and (3) by
reserving an additional 15% of the TAC for new entrants, which reduced the
share fished by the traditional fishers proportionately. Management plans since
2003 have essentially retained these allocations, although the Plaintiffs
allege their shares of the TAC have been further reduced.
[10]
The Defendant also began setting aside part of
the snow crab resource to finance research activities that had previously been
funded by the fishing industry. Fifty tonnes were set aside in 2003, and that
number had increased to 1000 tonnes by the time the Federal Court of Appeal
ruled that this practice was illegal in 2006 (Larocque v Canada (Minister of
Fisheries and Oceans), 2006 FCA 237 at paragraphs 26-27, 270 DLR (4th) 552
[Larocque]).
[11]
The Plaintiffs now seek compensation for the
financial impact the above actions have had on them, and they allege the
following causes of action in their thrice amended statement of claim:
•
Breach of contract: The Plaintiffs claim that in 1999, following the Marshall
decision, DFO contracted with them to ensure that the only way First Nations
would gain access to the commercial fishery would be through a program where DFO
“bought out” the existing licences of commercial
fishers [Marshall Agreement]. The Plaintiffs allege that the Defendant
breached that agreement in 2003 when they allocated about 15.8% of the TAC to
First Nations, which was substantially more than the portion that had been
freed up through the voluntary “buy-back” initiative.
•
Expropriation: By
allocating portions of the TAC to other groups, the Plaintiffs say the
Defendant expropriated their shares in the resource without compensating them.
•
Breach of fiduciary duty: Because the fishery is their sole source of income, the Plaintiffs
claim the Defendant owes them a fiduciary duty to manage it well. In their
view, the Defendant breached this duty by its actions and by failing to
conserve and protect the snow crab stock in CFAs 12, 18, 25 and 26.
•
Negligence: For
similar reasons, the Plaintiffs assert that the Defendant owed them a duty of
care which was breached when DFO negligently managed the fishery and made
misrepresentations which induced the Plaintiffs to relinquish certain rights
and invest in their fishing enterprises.
•
Misfeasance in public office: The Plaintiffs claim that the Defendant’s actions were illegal and
done in bad faith.
•
Unjust enrichment:
By reducing the Plaintiffs’ share of the TAC to meet extrinsic obligations which
it would otherwise have had to pay for, the Plaintiffs allege that the
Defendant has unjustly enriched itself.
III.
Litigation History
[12]
In 2006, DFO had not spent all of the money it
had been allocated to retire existing snow crab licences under the “buy-back” initiative. The Minister decided to offer a
“voluntary payment” of $72,481.00 to each P.E.I.
fisher in exchange for relinquishing their “eligibility
to receive 14.6427% of the snow crab allocation” related to their
licences. This offer included a release of liability though, and all but two of
the P.E.I. fishers refused to accept the offer. Many of those fishers asked this
Court to order the payment without requiring them to sign the release, but that
application for judicial review was ultimately unsuccessful (Canada (AG) v
Arsenault, 2009 FCA 300, 395 NR 223 [Arsenault (JR)]). Consequently,
very few of the Plaintiffs received any money from this initiative.
[13]
As for the present action, the Defendant
originally moved to strike out the statement of claim, primarily arguing that
the action could not proceed until after the Plaintiffs had challenged the
legality of the Minister’s decisions by way of judicial review (citing Canada
v Grenier, 2005 FCA 348, [2006] 2 FCR 287 [Grenier]). Prothonotary
Morneau agreed with the Defendant and stayed the action (Arsenault v Canada,
2007 FC 876), but the Plaintiffs successfully appealed the Prothonotary’s decision
to Justice Martineau (Arsenault (Martineau) at paragraphs 34, 43 and
61). Justice Martineau's decision, which allowed the action to proceed, was
upheld by the Federal Court of Appeal (Arsenault (FCA) at paragraph 11),
and leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada was refused in January,
2011. Since then, various procedural steps have been completed and
documentation exchanged.
IV.
Summary Judgment
[14]
Although the parties disagree about whether
summary judgment should be granted, they do not really dispute the test for
summary judgment. Sections 213-219 of the Rules (the relevant portions
of which are reproduced in Annex “A”) govern this issue, and subsection 215(1)
provides as follows:
215. (1) If on a motion for summary
judgment the Court is satisfied that there is no genuine issue for trial with
respect to a claim or defence, the Court shall grant summary judgment
accordingly.
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215.
(1) Si, par suite d’une requête en jugement sommaire, la Cour est convaincue
qu’il n’existe pas de véritable question litigieuse quant à une déclaration
ou à une défense, elle rend un jugement sommaire en conséquence.
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[15]
This rule has been applied liberally in this
Court “so as to secure the just, most expeditious and
least expensive determination of every proceeding on its merits” (Rules,
s 3; Garford Pty Ltd v Dywidag Systems International, Canada, Ltd, 2010
FC 996 at paragraph 5, 375 FTR 38 [Garford (FC)], aff'd 2012 FCA 48 at
paragraphs 7 and 9, 428 NR 306). Summary judgment should be granted if the case is “so doubtful that it does not deserve
consideration by the trier of fact at a future trial” (Garford
(FC) at paragraph 2, citing Granville Shipping Co v Pegasus Lines Ltd,
[1996] 2 FCR 853 at paragraph 8, 111 FTR 189 (TD) [Granville Shipping]).
Summary judgment is not, however, an all-or-nothing matter; some claims in an
action can be summarily dismissed even if there is a genuine issue for trial
with respect to other claims (Rules, s 213(1), 215(1), 215(3)(b)).
[16]
The onus is on the moving party, here the
Defendant, to establish that there is no genuine issue for trial with respect
to every cause of action. While each party must “put
its best foot forward” (Canada (AG) v Lameman, 2008 SCC 14 at
paragraph 11, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 372; Rules, s 214), the “burden on a plaintiff responding to a motion for summary
dismissal of a claim is not, and is not intended to be, as onerous as the
plaintiff's burden in a trial. It is an evidentiary burden only” (TPG
Technology Consulting Ltd v Canada, 2013 FCA 183 at paragraph 4, 363 DLR
(4th) 370). The Court can make some findings of fact, but that depends on the
strength of the record and on whether it would be just to make such findings by
a summary process. Serious credibility issues and true disputes should usually
be reserved for trial (Garford (FC) at paragraph 10; Granville
Shipping at paragraph 8; Society of Composers, Authors and Music
Publishers of Canada v Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, 2010 FC 731
at paragraph 15 [SOCAN]).
[17]
Both parties rely to some extent on Hryniak v
Mauldin, 2014 SCC 7, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 87 [Hryniak], the Defendant more so
than the Plaintiffs insofar as Hryniak arguably established a more intensive
fact-finding role for a judge hearing a summary judgment motion. However, Hryniak
was about the summary judgment rule in Ontario; judges in that jurisdiction have
powers of examination which judges of this Court would only have on a motion
for summary trial (Rules, s 216; Manitoba v Canada, 2015 FCA 57
at paragraph 16, 470 NR 187 [Manitoba]). The Federal Court of Appeal has
therefore cautioned that Hryniak “does not
materially change the procedures or standards to be applied in summary judgment
motions brought in the Federal Court under Rule 215(1)” (Manitoba
at paragraph 11).
[18]
Even if there is a genuine issue for trial
though, the Court has the power to “determine that
issue by way of summary trial and make any order necessary for the conduct of
the summary trial” (Rules, s 215(3)(a)). In SOCAN, Mr.
Justice Michael Phelan stated (at paragraph 40) that this rule imposes a duty
on the Court to consider whether a summary trial is appropriate at the end of a
summary judgment motion, even if the parties do not ask for one.
V.
Issues
[19]
The Defendant argues that there is no genuine
issue for trial with respect to any of the Plaintiffs' claims. The Plaintiffs
dispute that, and they also contend that the Defendant's motion is an abuse of
process.
[20]
At the hearing of this matter, the Plaintiffs
acknowledged that their causes of action in negligence and for breach of
fiduciary duty would not be advanced at trial, so it is not necessary to
address the Defendant's written arguments in this regard. It is necessary,
however, to consider whether the Plaintiffs' remaining claims relating to
expropriation (or taking without compensation), unjust enrichment, breach of
the Marshall Agreement, and misfeasance in public office, do raise
genuine issues for a trial.
[21]
Accordingly, I will address the issues raised by
this motion in the following order:
1.
Is this motion for summary judgment an abuse of
process?
2.
Have some of the Plaintiffs relinquished any
cause of action they might have?
3.
Are there any material facts in dispute?
4.
Does the Plaintiffs' breach of contract claim
raise a genuine issue for trial?
5.
Does the Plaintiffs' expropriation claim (or
taking without compensation) raise a genuine issue for trial?
6.
Does the Plaintiffs' misfeasance in public office
claim raise a genuine issue for trial?
7.
Does the Plaintiffs' unjust enrichment claim
raise a genuine issue for trial?
8.
If there are any genuine issues for trial, can
they be resolved by a summary trial?
9.
Should costs be awarded and to whom?
VI.
Analysis
A.
Is this motion for summary judgment an abuse of
process?
(1)
Parties’ Arguments
[22]
The Plaintiffs contend that the Defendant's
motion for summary judgment is an abuse of process for three reasons: (1) the
Defendant has revived the same arguments which were dismissed in its motion to
strike out the statement of claim; (2) the Defendant lost a virtually identical
motion for summary judgment in the similar case of Anglehart Sr v Canada,
2012 FC 1205 [Anglehart]; and (3) the Defendant's position that a
licence is not property and there is no right to renewal contradicts the
position it took in Canada v Haché, 2011 FCA 104, 417 NR 231 [Haché].
Accordingly, the Plaintiffs argue that “allowing the
litigation to proceed would … violate such principles as judicial economy, consistency,
finality and the integrity of the administration of justice” (citing Toronto
(City) v CUPE, Local 79, 2003 SCC 63 at paragraph 37, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 77
[Toronto]).
[23]
The Defendant argued at the hearing of this
matter that it was not making a collateral attack upon or re-litigating the
motion to strike the statement of claim, and that the Plaintiffs’ reliance upon
Anglehart is misguided inasmuch as that case is distinguishable on the
basis there is no breach of contract claim in that case and the record there
was not as comprehensive as the one here.
(2)
Analysis
[24]
Abuse of process is a flexible doctrine
unencumbered by any specific requirements (see: Toronto at paragraph
42). It is not limited to precluding re-litigation, and “it exists to ensure that the administration of justice is
not brought into disrepute” (see: Behn v Moulton Contracting Ltd,
2013 SCC 26 at paragraph 41, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 227).
[25]
However flexible this doctrine is though, I fail
to see how or why the Defendant's present motion is an abuse of process. The
fact the Defendant's motion to strike the statement of claim was dismissed has
little, if any, bearing on the issues now before the Court. A motion to strike asks
only whether “it is plain and obvious, assuming the
facts pleaded to be true, that the pleading discloses no reasonable cause of
action” (R v Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd, 2011 SCC 42 at paragraph
17, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 45). A decision dismissing such a motion is not final because
it only means that the action will not inevitably fail; the facts upon which
the decision was premised must still be proven. In contrast, a motion for
summary judgment permits the introduction of evidence, and that evidence could
affect the viability of whatever legal claims are being advanced. As Mr.
Justice Michel Beaudry said when rejecting a very similar argument in Anglehart
(at paragraph 53), “[t]he fact that a motion to strike
has been filed does not prevent the defendant from filing a motion for summary
judgment, so long as it meets the conditions of subsection 213(1) of the Rules.
Ultimately, one does not bar the other.”
[26]
Moreover, the Defendant is not re-litigating
anything, since neither Justice Martineau nor the Court of Appeal decided the
legal issues now raised by the Defendant. Most of Justice Martineau’s reasoning
focused on whether Grenier applied to preclude this Court's jurisdiction
to consider this action. That argument has not been advanced again, nor could
it be since Grenier was overruled by the Supreme Court of Canada in Canada
(AG) v TeleZone Inc, 2010 SCC 62 at paragraphs 32-78, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 585 [TeleZone].
Although the Defendant did make some arguments on the motion to strike that it
now repeats, Justice Martineau declined to offer any conclusive opinion about
them. On the contrary, he repeatedly said he was “not
in a position to decide” those issues without evidence since they
involved complex questions of fact and law (Arsenault (Martineau) at
paragraph 54). After striking out the Plaintiffs’ claim for specific
performance, Justice Martineau stated (at paragraph 61) that “[t]his is not to suggest the plaintiffs’ remaining claims in
damages are likely to succeed,” and he expressly noted that a motion for
summary judgment would be available once the Defendant filed its defence. It is
not an abuse of process for the Defendant to bring the very motion suggested by
Justice Martineau.
[27]
The Plaintiffs also contend that the Defendant’s
present motion is an abuse of process because a similar motion was dismissed in
Anglehart. That decision is certainly relevant. However, I do not see
how the administration of justice is brought into disrepute to permit this motion
to proceed. As the Defendant accurately points out, a motion for summary
judgment ultimately succeeds or fails based on the strength of the record. The
fact the plaintiffs in Anglehart had enough evidence to raise a genuine
issue for trial does not automatically mean that the Plaintiffs’ similar
allegations in this case also raise a genuine issue for trial. The Defendant is
entitled to test the Plaintiffs' case by way of the present motion.
[28]
As to the Plaintiffs' argument that the
Defendant cannot argue that fishing licences do not accord their bearers a
right to renewal because it advanced the opposite position in Haché, and
that this about-face is an abuse of process, this argument is without merit.
The Plaintiffs' reliance upon the principle of approbation and reprobation
(sometimes called the doctrine of election in litigation) is misguided.
[29]
Haché only
decided whether a snow crab licence was “property”
within the meaning of subsection 248(1) of the Income Tax Act, RSC 1985,
c 1 (5th Supp) (as it appeared on 17 March 2011), which stated as follows:
248. (1) In this Act,
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248.
(1) Les définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente loi.
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…
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…
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“property” means property of any kind whatever whether real or
personal or corporeal or incorporeal and, without restricting the generality
of the foregoing, includes
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« biens » Biens
de toute nature, meubles ou immeubles, corporels ou incorporels, y compris,
sans préjudice de la portée générale de ce qui précède :
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(a) a
right of any kind whatever, a share or a chose in action,
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a) les
droits de quelque nature qu’ils soient, les actions ou parts;
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(b) unless
a contrary intention is evident, money,
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b) à
moins d’une intention contraire évidente, l’argent;
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(c) a
timber resource property, and
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c) les
avoirs forestiers;
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(d) the
work in progress of a business that is a profession;
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d) les
travaux en cours d’une entreprise qui est une profession libérale.
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[30]
This is a broad, statutory definition (see e.g. Manrell
v Canada, 2003 FCA 128 at paragraphs 48-54, [2003] 3 FCR 727). As the
Supreme Court said with respect to a different statutory definition of
property, the fact that “a fishing licence may not
qualify as 'property' for the general purposes of the common law does not mean
that it is also excluded from the reach of the statutes. For particular
purposes Parliament can and does create its own lexicon” (Saulnier v
Royal Bank of Canada, 2008 SCC 58 at paragraph 16, [2008] 3 S.C.R. 166 [Saulnier]).
It is not an abuse of process for the Defendant to advance a different
conception of property in the present action, since its position is not
necessarily inconsistent with the one advanced in Haché.
B.
Have some of the Plaintiffs relinquished any
cause of action?
[31]
As mentioned above, DFO offered compensation for
lost quota but most P.E.I. fishers rejected that offer. Two of the Plaintiffs,
however, did accept the offer of compensation: namely, Boyd Vuozzo; and Richard
Blanchard, on behalf of the estate of Michael Jos Deagle. They both signed agreements
which included the following provision:
9. In consideration for the payments
herein, the Recipient here releases Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada
and Her Ministers, officers, employees and agents from any and all claims,
suits, actions or demands of any nature that the Recipient has or may have and
that are related to or arise from this Agreement.
[32]
This release of liability could also affect the
claims of B&F Fisheries Ltd. (which has operated Mr. Vuozzo's fishing
enterprise since 2006), and Pamela Deagle (who received Mr. Deagle's licence in
2010).
[33]
Apart from mentioning that these agreements were
signed though, the Defendant has not argued that the action insofar as it
relates to these Plaintiffs should be dismissed. In this regard, although some
of the plaintiffs in Anglehart had signed similar agreements, Justice
Beaudry nonetheless held (at paragraph 131) that there were still genuine
issues for trial for the following three reasons:
First of all, the Court does not know which
plaintiffs were compensated or exactly how much was paid out. No list was
provided. Second, the document on which the defendant relies, namely, the [TRANSLATION]
“Financial Aid Agreement to Give Aboriginal Fishers Access to the Snow Crab
Fishery – Areas 12, 18, 25/26”, is not so clear on this point that it can be
determined whether the compensation was for the past or the future. Third, the
Court cannot determine for what portion of the 35% reduction the plaintiffs
were allegedly compensated.
[34]
The first rationale above does not apply in this
case since the evidence shows which Plaintiffs accepted the offer and how much
they received. The other two reasons, however, could apply in this case. The
agreement here is written in the future tense when it states that the Recipient
“will … relinquish his or her eligibility to
receive 14.6427% of the snow crab allocation” (underlining added,
bold in original). These releases signed in this case might not apply to
extinguish any claims from 2003 to the dates they were signed and, also, may
not have relinquished all of the claims now asserted by these Plaintiffs.
[35]
As Justice Martineau said in Alyafi v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 952 at paragraph 45: “a judge should follow a decision on the same question of one
of his or her colleagues, unless the previous decision differs in the facts, a
different question is asked, the decision is clearly wrong or the application
of the decision would create an injustice.” Accordingly, the interests
of judicial comity require that I find there is a genuine issue for trial as to
whether these Plaintiffs may have relinquished any or all of their claims. The
words of a release take their meaning from the context in which they are used
and the intent of the parties. In considering what was in the contemplation of
the parties, a court should consider the context, including the circumstances
surrounding the execution of the document and evidence of the intention of
parties (see: Arcand v Abiwin Co-Operative Inc, 2010 FC 529 at
paragraphs 40-42, 368 FTR 145, aff'd 2011 FCA 170 at paragraph 2, 423 NR 268).
This is something which cannot be ascertained on the basis of the record now before
the Court and should be addressed by way of a trial.
C.
Are there any material facts in dispute?
[36]
The Defendant submits that most of the material
facts are not disputed, and that the only ones which are have not been
substantiated by the Plaintiffs. Specifically, the Defendant states the
Plaintiffs have not provided evidence to support any of the following
allegations:
•
The switch to an individual quota system in 1993
was done through an oral agreement with DFO;
•
In 1997, DFO agreed to grant P.E.I. fishers a
permanent 5.325% share in the TAC of CFAs 12, 25, and 26;
•
Following the Marshall decision, DFO and
other officials promised the Plaintiffs that the only way that First Nations
would gain access to the fishery was through a voluntary buy-back system;
•
The Plaintiffs were told that First Nations
would only get between 1-2% of the TAC;
•
DFO's distribution of quota in 2003 endangered
the viability of the Plaintiffs' crab fishing enterprises and put the resource
in peril;
•
DFO set a low TAC in 2003 contrary to the
recommendations of DFO's own scientists; and
•
The integration of CFA 18 reduced the
Plaintiffs' quota by 4.7081%.
[37]
The Plaintiffs argue that the factual claims of
the parties are far more divergent than the Defendant admits, and they disagree
on all but the most non-contentious historical facts. The two affiants, Jim
Jones on behalf of the Defendant, and Carter Hutt, on behalf of all the
Plaintiffs, are diametrically opposed on many issues, and the Plaintiffs therefore
submit that a credibility assessment at trial is the only way to resolve those
inconsistencies. The Plaintiffs also challenge the Defendant's assertion that
they have supplied no proof for many of their claims, saying that all are
clearly supported by the documents attached to Carter Hutt's affidavit.
[38]
I will deal with the issue of whether there are material
facts in dispute shortly below in addressing the remaining issues.
D.
Does the Plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim
raise a genuine issue for trial?
(1)
Parties’ Arguments
[39]
The Plaintiffs argue there are material issues
of fact regarding whether the Defendant breached its agreement to pay fair
market value for licences before allocating any share in the TAC to First
Nations. While the Defendant denies DFO would ever make a contract to govern
how it allocates the TAC, the Plaintiffs point out that the Defendant admits it
has entered into several negotiated agreements with First Nations in its own
memorandum of fact and law. The Plaintiffs contend there are many examples in
the record of contracts which require the Minister to deliver quota in the
future. Furthermore, the Plaintiffs emphasize that the Minister at the time
said in 1999 that “if conservation's a priority you
don't want to put pressure on an existing resource that's fully subscribed. If
you want new entrants you'll have to buy new licences. I think that's common
sense.” In the Plaintiffs’ view, the Defendant has not even tried to
justify breaking that commitment.
[40]
In addition to issues of fact, the Plaintiffs
argue there are significant legal issues which also require a trial. The
Plaintiffs dispute the Defendant’s argument that it cannot possibly be liable
for any contracts it entered since that would fetter the Minister's discretion.
According to the Plaintiffs, the law on the anti-fettering doctrine is still in
a state of flux (citing Andrews v Canada (AG), 2014 NLCA 32 at
paragraphs 34-42, 376 DLR (4th) 719). While this doctrine may preclude some
remedies for breach of contract such as specific performance, they contend that
does not mean the government can escape the consequences of making such contracts
altogether (citing Wells v Newfoundland, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 199 at paragraph
41, 177 DLR (4th) 73).
[41]
The Plaintiffs further point out that duties of
good faith and honesty arise in contractual dealings (citing Bhasin v Hrynew,
2014 SCC 71, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 495 [Bhasin]), and the Defendant led the
Plaintiffs to believe the agreements it was making were legally binding. The
Plaintiffs also contend that both the Fisheries Development Act, RSC
1985, c F-21, s 3(4), and the Atlantic Fisheries Restructuring Act, RSC
1985, c A-14, expressly authorize the Minister to make contracts, and a full
trial is required to determine whether those provisions apply to the Marshall
Agreement.
[42]
The Defendant argues there never was any so-called
Marshall Agreement. That claim is based only on supposed representations
from DFO officials, and the Defendant says there is no evidence as to any
intention to contract, any negotiations, or any consideration provided by the
Plaintiffs. DFO officials, including the Minister, had expressed a desire not
to increase access to the fishery at the expense of the traditional fishers,
but those comments were about a policy initiative and did not create a
contract. Nor could it have, according to the Defendant, because the executive
cannot agree to any contractual term which would fetter its statutory
discretion, and no such term could ever be enforced by a court (citing e.g. Pacific
National Investments Ltd v Victoria (City), 2000 SCC 64 at paragraphs 59,
65-66, 74, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 919; and Happy Adventure Sea Products (1991) Ltd v
Newfoundland and Labrador (Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture), 2006
NLCA 61 at paragraphs 1 and 27-28, 277 DLR (4th) 117).
(2)
Analysis
[43]
Following the Marshall decision, it is
undisputed that DFO wanted to find a way to give First Nations access to the
commercial fishery without affecting the existing fishers, and the record shows
that it frequently said so. For instance, on October 21, 1999, the Minister at
the time said in the House of Commons that: “the long
term solution in terms of the treaty right will not be at the expense of
traditional commercial fishermen or their families” (Plaintiffs’ motion
record at page 982); and on February 11, 2001, the Minister told the Maritime
Fishermen's Union that: “any increase in Aboriginal
participation in the commercial fishery will not come at the expense of
fairness to other users of the resource” (Plaintiffs’ motion record at
page 1212, emphasis omitted). One way DFO endeavoured to do this was through
the “buy-back” initiative.
[44]
The Plaintiffs also properly point out that DFO
encouraged fishers to show patience, restraint, and goodwill. For example, the
Minister said at a meeting on February 21, 2001, that the “patience and calm you demonstrated in the face of last
year's tension bears testament to this fact [Canada’s ability to peacefully and
harmoniously build a diverse population]. And more of the same is needed in the
time ahead.”
[45]
The primary factual dispute between the parties
is whether the representations made by the Minister and other DFO officials
formed a contract, and therefore the question to decide is whether that issue
deserves a trial. For the following reasons, I conclude that it does not.
[46]
In Scotsburn Co-Operative Services v WT
Goodwin Ltd, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 54 at 63, 16 DLR (4th) 161, the Supreme Court
stated that, in general, an enforceable agreement is “manifested
by an offer by one party accepted by the other with the intention of creating a
legal relationship, and supported by consideration.” In Allergan, Inc
v Apotex Inc, 2015 FC 367 (at paragraph 41), Mr. Justice Roger Hughes
reviewed the jurisprudence on formation of a contract and concisely stated four
governing principles. Of those, the first two are pertinent to the question at
hand:
• for
there to be a binding contract, there must be an offer and acceptance wherein
the terms of the offer are matched by the terms of the acceptance;
• the acceptance must be
unequivocal;
[47]
In Bhasin, the Supreme Court confirmed
(at paragraph 45) that the “primary object of
contractual interpretation is … to give effect to the intentions of the parties
at the time of contract formation,” and the same is true when deciding
if a contract was formed. The test is objective, however, and it “does not depend on an inquiry into the actual state of mind
of the parties or on the parole evidence of one party's subjective intention.
Rather, it depends on whether the words or acts of the parties, judged by a
reasonable standard, manifest an intention to agree with respect to the matter
in question” (Chippewas of Mnjikaning First Nation v Ontario
(Minister Responsible for Native Affairs), 2010 ONCA 47 at paragraph 192,
265 OAC 247; Saint John Tug Boat Co Ltd v Irving Refining Ltd, [1964]
SCR 614 at 621-622, 46 DLR (2d) 1; Ehler Marine & Industrial Service Co
v M/V Pacific Yellowfin (Ship), 2015 FC 324 at paragraphs 26-28).
[48]
Therefore, the following question must be
answered: “would an objective, reasonable bystander
conclude that, in all the circumstances, the parties intended to contract?”
(UBS Securities Canada, Inc v Sands Brothers Canada, Ltd, 2009
ONCA 328 at paragraph 47, 95 OR (3d) 93; Remington Energy Ltd v British
Columbia (Hydro and Power Authority), 2005 BCCA 191 at paragraph 31, 210
BCAC 293; Jeffrie v Hendriksen, 2015 NSCA 49 at paragraph 36). The only
direct evidence of the so-called Marshall Agreement is supplied by
Carter Hutt in his affidavit:
31. DFO represented to the traditional
fishers from the outset that the integration of aboriginal fishers into the
snow crab fishery would not be accomplished “on the backs” of the traditional
fishers and was to be achieved only by a process of voluntary buy-back of
existing licences. In exchange, DFO asked the traditional fishers to exercise
restraint in the pursuit of their legal options and to cooperate in the
integration of aboriginal fishers into the commercial crab fishery. We were
assured that no increase in the number of fishing licences, or in the total
fishery itself, would result from the integration. We were told by DFO that
only a small portion of the TAC would be required. DFO initially told us 1% to
2% would be required but that number rose quickly as aboriginal access
agreements were negotiated. It is my understanding that this range was stated
to representatives of the traditional fishers by Mr. Jones, by Monique Baker
and by Gilles Theriault, all senior DFO employees. In reliance on these
covenants and on DFO’s assurances and representations, we the Plaintiffs
herein, or their predecessors in title, continued to invest in our enterprises
and pay DFO amounts due under the Co-management Agreement. We cooperated with
patience and restraint in the integration of aboriginals into the snow crab
fishery. In short, we lived up to our side of the bargain (the “Marshall
Agreement”).
[49]
Even taken at face value, this evidence
immediately raises many questions. For instance: were these alleged
representations made at one time or at different times? Which representations
constituted the offer? Did the offer have any terms when it was made? Did any
negotiations take place? Was the offer accepted? When did the Plaintiffs accept
the offer? Was anyone appointed as an agent of the fishers, or did they all
individually accept the offer? How did they communicate their acceptance of the
offer? If the agreement was made orally, where did they accept the offer? What “legal options” did the commercial fishers give up?
[50]
None of the documentary evidence in the record reveals
any answers to such questions. During his cross-examination, Mr. Hutt
identified the date of the Marshall agreement as December 6, 1999, when
Minister Dhaliwal gave a speech to the mid-shore Southern Gulf fishery in
Moncton that touched on the impact of the Marshall decision. Minister
Dhaliwal said during that speech that: “[t]his problem
will not be resolved on the backs of traditional commercial fishermen and their
families. But we will do it through negotiations, sitting at the table, and
that that's [sic] the way to resolve this issue” (Plaintiffs’
motion record at page 1006). At a media scrum afterward, he explained that: “if conservation's a priority you don't want to put pressure
on an existing resource that's fully subscribed. If you want new entrants
you'll have to buy new licences. I think that's common sense” (Plaintiffs’
motion record at page 1008).
[51]
The transcript of Minister Dhaliwal's speech
reveals nothing which could reasonably be construed as an offer capable of
acceptance. While the Minister emphasized the voluntary buy-back program and
was encouraging fishers to be calm, this speech included no terms and merely
expressed a policy objective. If there was any doubt about that, the fact the
Minister says these issues will be negotiated indicates they have not
been negotiated or finalized yet. As for the alleged representation that a
voluntary buy-back was the only option on the table, the Minister plainly said
at the meeting: “license buy-out is one of the options
that we have to look at but we have to look at all the options available out
there to deal with it but I don't want to prejudge the process. I don't want to
impose. This is something that will have to be settled through negotiations and
that's exactly what we're doing” (Plaintiffs’ motion record at page
1008).
[52]
Moreover, there is nothing in this transcript to
suggest the fishers present at the meeting accepted the Minister's alleged
offer. There is no contemporaneous documentation which suggests any fisher or
DFO official thought they had a binding agreement following the December 6th
meeting or that they intended there to be a binding agreement. All that the
Plaintiffs have attached as exhibits to Mr. Hutt's affidavit are documents
showing that DFO attempted to buy back licences, and that this was its
preferred strategy for freeing up TAC. DFO officials often said as much at
meetings with industry representatives, but nothing indicated that this was the
only option on the table.
[53]
On the contrary, at a meeting with the snow crab
co-management committee on March 8, 2000, Gilles Thériault, the assistant
federal representative in negotiations with the First Nations, “reminded the participants that DFO has an obligation to
provide access to the snow crab fishery to the [First Nations] whether or not
DFO is successful in acquiring quotas.” There is no indication that the
fishers present at this meeting protested that this would be a breach of
contract.
[54]
There is also nothing to suggest the government considered
there to be a binding agreement. On March 30, 2000, a DFO official was being
harshly questioned by the Standing Committee of Fisheries and Oceans about the
impact of the Marshall decision on the commercial fishery, but the
official did not reassure the Committee by saying that DFO had promised fishers
that quota would only be bought back voluntarily, as one would expect him to do
had the Marshall Agreement in fact been made. Instead, the DFO official
said the following (at page 1095 of the Plaintiffs’ motion record):
If we can’t get an agreement with people to
provide access, obviously, the minister has absolute discretion in licensing
and providing access. So there are other opportunities. But we are not inclined
to expropriate. We have funds available to compensate people for the access so
we will work on agreements. In the absence of agreements we do have other
options but we are not going to just take without compensation. I’m hopeful
that we won’t have any need to exercise unilateral authority in taking access.
[55]
In addition, there is nothing in the record
before the Court to indicate that a contract was formed at a later date through
other meetings, or that there were unqualified representations that purchasing
quota would be the only way quota would be freed up. The evidence presented by
the Plaintiffs is not reasonably capable of proving that DFO ever made them an
offer saying the only way quota would be freed up would be by buy-backs or that
the Plaintiffs accepted any offer, or proving that either party ever intended
to enter a binding agreement. This cause of action is so doubtful it does not
deserve a trial.
[56]
The so-called Marshall Agreement does not
exist. This being so, there is no need to address whether the anti-fettering
doctrine would preclude its enforcement.
E.
Does the Plaintiffs’ claim of expropriation (or
taking without compensation) raise a genuine issue for trial?
(1)
Parties’ Arguments
[57]
The Plaintiffs argue that, in the absence of
express language, statutes should not be construed “so
as to take away the property of a subject without compensation” (citing Attorney-General
v De Keyser's Royal Hotel, Limited, [1920] All ER Rep 80 at 94, [1920] AC
508 (HL), Lord Atkinson; Manitoba Fisheries Ltd v Canada (1978), [1979]
1 SCR 101 at 109-110, 88 DLR (3d) 462 [Manitoba Fisheries]). They say
(at paragraph 74 of their memorandum) they are entitled to compensation so long
as they can prove two things: (1) that the Defendant's “use
of private property … is so restrictive that it amounts to the confiscation
from the private owner of virtually all of the rights of ownership”; and
(2) that the Defendant acquired “benefits comparable to
those taken away from the private owner.”
[58]
In the Plaintiffs’ view, the Defendant unduly
focuses on a technical or narrow definition of “property”
to say that nothing at all was taken from the Plaintiffs when it reduced their
shares in the TAC. Not only have fishing licences been held to be property in
other contexts (citing Saulnier at paragraph 43; Haché), but the
Plaintiffs argue they do not need to prove that a licence is property in the
common law sense; they only need to show that the Defendant has taken something
of value from them. The Plaintiffs draw an analogy to Manitoba Fisheries
where the Supreme Court held (at page 118) that the government was required to
compensate a company which it had driven out of business by enacting a
monopolistic statute. The Supreme Court found (at page 108): “goodwill, although intangible in character is a part of the
property of a business just as much as the premises, machinery and equipment
employed in the production of the product whose quality engenders that
goodwill.” The Plaintiffs say the same is true of their fishing
licences, and the fact these licences are ultimately contingent on an exercise
of Ministerial discretion does not change that (citing e.g. British Columbia
v Tener, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 533, 17 DLR (4th) 1; Rock Resources Inc v British
Columbia, 2003 BCCA 324 at paragraphs 48 and 50, 229 DLR (4th) 115; Canadian
Pacific Railway Co v Vancouver (City), 2006 SCC 5 at paragraph 32, [2006] 1
SCR 227).
[59]
The Plaintiffs say their licences, however
characterized, are assets with major commercial value (citing Saulnier
at paragraphs 14, 22-23). The Defendant has bought, sold, leased, and taxed
licences in the past, and DFO officials have described allocating quota to
other groups as “borrowing” and “expropriation” publicly and in internal memoranda
(see: e.g. pages 785, 797, 804, 808, 818-819, and 1095 of the Plaintiffs' motion
record). The Plaintiffs point out that in Anglehart, Justice Beaudry
said (at paragraph 141) the “case law has not yet
clearly determined what rights fishers who have their licences renewed year
after year have.” Just like in that case, the Plaintiffs say this issue
deserves a trial.
[60]
The Defendant submits there was no expropriation
since nothing was taken from the Plaintiffs, and no property, nor a beneficial
interest in property, was acquired by the state for its own use or destruction.
The Defendant premises this argument on its view that the quota allocated to
the Plaintiffs is not property (Taylor v Dairy Farmers of Nova Scotia,
2010 NSSC 436 at paragraphs 63 and 68, 298 NSR (2d) 116, aff'd on other
grounds, 2012 NSCA 1 at paragraph 22, 311 NSR (2d) 300). According to the
Defendant, fishing licences are issued annually and their issuance “does not imply or confer any future right or privilege for
that person to be issued a document of the same type or any other type” (Fishery
(General) Regulations, SOR/93-53, ss 2, 16). A licence simply grants
permission to do what is otherwise unlawful, and the only proprietary interest
is in the harvest from the fishing effort (Saulnier at paragraph 22).
The Defendant says that neither the licence nor the quota attached to it can be
property in the common law sense, since it does not impart “the right to exclude others from the enjoyment of,
interference with or appropriation of a specific legal right” (Re
National Trust Co and Bouckhuyt (1987), 61 OR (2d) 640 at paragraph 24,
43 DLR (4th) 543).
[61]
Furthermore, the Defendant submits that
licence-holders are “not entitled to a specific
percentage of the TAC” (Canada (AG) v Chiasson, 2009 FCA 299 at
paragraph 28, 314 DLR (4th) 512 [Chiasson]), and points out that the
Court of Appeal has said: “if there is no vested right
to a given quota, there can be no right to compensation arising purely from the
fact of loss of quota” (Arsenault (JR) at paragraph 57, Pelletier
JA, concurring). In the Defendant's view, any decisions in the past to offer
compensation for reducing quota were simply policy decisions which did not
reflect any legal obligation.
(2)
Analysis
[62]
With respect to this issue, there is no material
reason or any substantial basis upon which to distinguish this case from Anglehart.
The facts are essentially the same on this point as they were in Anglehart
and the same arguments were advanced by the Defendant in that case as in this one
(see: Anglehart at paragraphs 109-113). Yet, Justice Beaudry found
there was a genuine issue for trial (Anglehart at paragraphs 141-152).
It cannot be said that Justice Beaudry's decision was clearly wrong.
[63]
Nor has the law of summary judgment changed since
the time of Justice Beaudry's decision (see: Manitoba at paragraph 11).
The issue as to whether an interest in a fishing licence is capable of being
expropriated is essentially a question of law, so it could be decided pursuant
to paragraph 215(2)(b) of the Rules. However, this question is
complicated; it requires a factual underpinning which can only be produced by
way of a trial. This is all the more apparent in view of a history of
co-management and negotiations between the Plaintiffs and the Minister's
officials which could, conceivably, affect the interests conveyed by a licence.
As such, there are genuine factual disputes that could affect the resolution of
this legal issue.
[64]
There have also not been any relevant legal
developments which would affect Justice Beaudry's conclusion that the “case law has not yet clearly determined what rights fishers
who have their licences renewed year after year have” (Anglehart
at paragraph 141). If anything, the plaintiffs in Anglehart had a weaker
argument since they also had to overcome the fact they had accepted financial
assistance; whereas in this case all but two of the Plaintiffs in this case
rejected such assistance (Anglehart at paragraphs 23 and 131).
[65]
As noted above with respect to the issue of
whether some of the Plaintiffs may have relinquished any cause of action,
judicial comity suggests there is a genuine issue for trial in this case with
respect to the Applicants’ claim of expropriation or taking without
compensation. There is no reason that the claim in Anglehart should
proceed to trial next year while the nearly identical claim in this case
flounders.
F.
Does the Plaintiffs’ misfeasance in public
office claim raise a genuine issue for trial?
(1)
Parties’ Arguments
[66]
The parties agree that the leading case on misfeasance
in public office is Odhavji Estate v Woodhouse, 2003 SCC 69, [2003] 3
SCR 263, where the Supreme Court summarized the basic elements of this tort as
follows:
32 …the tort of misfeasance in a
public office is an intentional tort whose distinguishing elements are twofold:
(i) deliberate unlawful conduct in the exercise of public functions; and (ii)
awareness that the conduct is unlawful and likely to injure the plaintiff. Alongside
deliberate unlawful conduct and the requisite knowledge, a plaintiff must also
prove the other requirements common to all torts. More specifically, the
plaintiff must prove that the tortious conduct was the legal cause of his or
her injuries, and that the injuries suffered are compensable in tort law.
[67]
The Plaintiffs say they never conceded that the
Defendant's actions were legal when they opposed its earlier motion to strike.
Their point at that time was only that they were not attacking the Minister's
actions from an administrative law standpoint, so the now-defunct Grenier
case was inapplicable. Their claim for misfeasance in public office has never
been struck, and the Plaintiffs submit there are several reasons this claim
should proceed to trial.
[68]
The Plaintiffs submit that, as early as 1991, the
Defendant knew it could not use fish resources to fund management activities.
It did so anyway when it started funding research that way in 2003, thus
intentionally depriving the Plaintiffs and other fishers of the TAC they
otherwise would have had an exclusive right to harvest. Not only that, but the
Plaintiffs argue the Defendant has used some of the TAC set aside for new
entrants to issue licences to organizations like the PEI Fishermen's
Association (whose members are fishers of lobster and other ground fish); this
Association then distributes those licences to its members and uses some of the
proceeds to purchase and retire lobster licences. This activity, the Plaintiffs
submit, is indistinguishable from that prohibited in Larocque; DFO is
using the snow crab resource to pay for its programs instead of general
revenues budgeted to it by Parliament. The same applies to the Defendant's
decision to allocate some of the TAC to First Nations, and the Plaintiffs say
all of these actions constitute misfeasance in public office.
[69]
The Plaintiffs further attack the Minister's
decision to integrate CFA 18 into CFAs 12, 25, and 26. DFO originally had a
mandate to allocate only between 2.2% and 3% of the combined TAC to fishers
from CFA 18, based on the historical catches from that area from 1995 to 2002.
However, DFO ultimately abandoned that methodology and based its decision not
on the actual historical harvest from CFA 18, but on the average allowable
harvest from 1987 to 1996 irrespective of whether it had been reached. CFA 18
fishers thus ended up with a 4.708% share of the combined TAC of CFAs 12, 18,
25, and 26. The Plaintiffs allege that was far greater than what was added to
the stock by the integration of CFA 18 because the government created a no‑fish
zone in CFA 18 which covered a large portion of CFA 18's supposed contribution
to the number of snow crabs in the combined area. The Plaintiffs allege the Minister's
decision was made in bad faith and was calculated to injure them.
[70]
The Plaintiffs also contend that DFO
deliberately set the TAC in 2003 lower than that recommended by their own
scientists in order to punish the Plaintiffs for refusing to finance DFO's
management measures. This too, they say, was misfeasance in public office.
[71]
The Defendant contends that the Plaintiffs strenuously
argued at the motion to strike the statement of claim they were not challenging
the legality of any of the Defendant's actions. According to the Defendant,
that concession dooms this cause of action to failure. Equally fatal, in the
Defendant's view, is the absence of any intention to do harm or act in a way
incompatible with the statute (citing Canada v Cheticamp Fisheries Co-op Ltd
(1995), 139 NSR (2d) 224 at paragraph 74, 123 DLR (4th) 121 (NSCA)). The
Defendant asserts (at paragraph 121 of its written memorandum):
There is no evidence before the Court (i) to
establish that the Minister or DFO officials acted unlawfully, (ii) that the
Minister or DFO officials specifically intended to injure the Respondents, and
(iii) of any deliberate unlawful activity with knowledge of the lack of power
to do the act complained of and that the act was likely to injure the
Respondents. Finally, it cannot be said that a public official’s tortious
conduct was the legal cause of the alleged losses.
(2)
Analysis
[72]
In the memorandum the Plaintiffs submitted when
defending the motion to strike, they stated they were “in
no way challenging the scope of the Minister's statutory discretionary power
under the Fisheries Act. Rather, the [Plaintiffs] contend that during a
valid exercise of his discretion, the Minister violated the terms of a binding
contract with the [Plaintiffs].” The Defendant argues that this
concession precludes any action in misfeasance in public office.
[73]
The Defendant states its case too broadly,
however, when it argues that all of the Plaintiffs' claims are defeated by this
alleged concession. While the Plaintiffs did make the above submission to avoid
the application of Grenier, they always maintained in their memorandum
on the motion to strike that “the Minister's actions in
allocating quota to DFO for financing purposes is an invalid exercise of
ministerial discretion.” To avoid Grenier with respect to those
claims, they simply argued they did not need to challenge the Minister’s
decision through judicial review first since Larocque had already
settled that issue, and Justice Martineau accepted that argument (Arsenault
(Martineau) at paragraph 44). Thus, the Defendant's argument can apply only to
the last four misfeasance claims advanced by the Plaintiffs.
[74]
Even with respect to those four claims though, I
reject the Defendant's argument. It bears some similarity to the doctrine of
election in litigation relied upon by the Plaintiffs with respect to the
Defendant’s position in Haché. That doctrine, however, typically applies
only to someone who pursues inconsistent or irreconcilable rights or remedies (Harbuz
v Capital Construction Supplies Ltd, 2013 BCSC 1624 at paragraphs 47 and
49), and this is not the case here. On the contrary, the Plaintiffs have just
advanced a different legal characterization of their causes of action. Since “a trial judge is not bound by concessions of law if those
concessions are erroneous” (R v Barabash, 2015 SCC 29 at
paragraph 54, [2015] 7 WWR 1), there is no particular reason why a party should
not be permitted to withdraw such a concession in response to a significant
change in the law (TeleZone at paragraph 32). Moreover, there is no
prejudice to the Defendant, since this cause of action is supported by the same
facts underlying the rest of the action and the amended statement of claim
plainly alleges that the Defendant acted “illegally”
and “not in furtherance of the statutory authority
which the Defendant's servants purported to exercise.” Consequently, the
Plaintiffs are not estopped from advancing any of their arguments as to this
cause of action.
[75]
Turning now to the Plaintiffs' specific claims,
some of them clearly raise a genuine issue for trial. In Larocque, the
Court of Appeal held (at paragraph 26): “the Minister
financed his scientific research program without first appropriating the funds
necessary and by misappropriating, for all intents and purposes, resources that
do not belong to him.” The Court of Appeal also held (at paragraph 20) the
Minister was “aware of the risks that he was taking in
funding using fishery resources,” and in the record now before the Court
there is some evidence to support a similar conclusion in this case. For
example, in an e-mail to David Bevan dated August 2, 2002 (reproduced at pages
933-934 of the Plaintiffs’ motion record), Bernard Vezina reviewed a 2002
report from the Review Directorate about the Regulatory Process in Fisheries
and Oceans. He noted that:
The report includes many references to using
fish resources to pay for some of DFO’s management costs and that this was
providing operating funds not voted by Parliament. The Auditor General had
concluded years ago in a previous report that this was not consistant [sic]
with legislation. … Legal Services has also advised that, as a well recognized
principle, government or DFO cannot do indirectly what it does not have the
legal authority to do directly. Using the S-F snow crab fishery as an example
(see page 32), DFO cannot (directly) use the fish resources to pay for its fish
management programs. We would not either have the authority to give the fish to
industry who would then turn around and then pay for DFO’s programs.
[76]
It could be argued that DFO knew this would harm
the Plaintiffs insofar as the snow crab sold to finance other programs might have
been part of the TAC otherwise available (Association des crabiers Acadiens
v Canada (AG), 2006 FC 1241 at paragraph 6, 301 FTR 297 [Association des
crabiers]). There is a genuine issue for trial with respect to this claim.
[77]
The Plaintiffs also dispute the use of the snow
crab resource to give First Nations access to the fishery and to rationalize
other fisheries (i.e. reduce the number of licences in other fisheries by, essentially,
permitting fishers to exchange those licences for a snow crab licence).
Arguably, that falls much more squarely within the Minister's “absolute discretion” to “issue
or authorize to be issued leases and licences for fisheries or fishing”
(Fisheries Act, s 7(1)), and so is not unlawful. However, if the
Plaintiffs prevail at trial with respect to their expropriation arguments, a
failure to compensate them could be unlawful. Since that issue deserves a
trial, so too does this one.
[78]
The Plaintiffs further contend that the
Defendant spitefully lowered the TAC in 2003 to put pressure on the Plaintiffs
to agree to finance conservation measures. The stock status report for CFA 12
in 2003 indicated “it would be prudent for the 2003
quota to not exceed 20,000 [tonnes]” (Plaintiffs’ motion record at page
1645). Mr. Hutt says the TAC should have been 21,600 tonnes by adding in an
amount from CFA 18. The Minister ultimately set the TAC to 17,148 tonnes,
however, on a recommendation from DFO that a “more
conservative approach is needed to ensure future recruitment into the fishery”,
and was “even more justified in the absence of
comprehensive and detailed monitoring of the fishery that would enable small
areas to be closed to fishing quickly when the incidence of soft-shelled crab
increased” (Plaintiffs’ motion record at page 1391). Subsequently, the
Minister proposed to increase the TAC to “20,000 [tonnes]
subject to a co-management approach, funded at $1.7 million for 2003” (Defendant’s
motion record at page 948). That deal ultimately fell through despite agreement
from the P.E.I. fishers.
[79]
The Defendant replies that the TAC was set to
17,148 tonnes based on legitimate and lawful concerns, and it was consistent
with the average exploitation rate over the past decade. There is some evidence
to support that proposition. However, as noted above, there is also evidence it
was lower than the stock status report said was necessary, and the Minister
used it as a bargaining chip to entice the fishers into a deal where they would
supply funding for DFO's management program. This occurred after the e-mail
quoted above which questioned whether DFO had “the
authority to give the fish to industry who would then turn around and then pay
for DFO's programs.” There are thus genuine issues for trial regarding
whether DFO was acting unlawfully and whether it was aware it was so doing.
[80]
The Plaintiffs also criticize the integration of
CFA 18. Although there is little evidence in the record to support the
Plaintiffs' claims in this regard, there is a memo dated November 21, 2002
(reproduced at pages 1368-1375 of their motion record), which authorized the
mandate for discussing the integration of CFA 18. This memo states (at page
1371): “the fishery in CFA 18 has been in a precarious
state since the mid-1990s. Uncaught quotas and early closures due to the
incidence of soft-shell crab have been frequent. … As well, indications are
that CFA 18 does not contain large areas of habitat favourable to snow crab.”
A lower portion of the TAC than they eventually received was therefore
contemplated in this mandate.
[81]
However, the Plaintiffs have supplied no
evidence that the integration has caused any damages to them. In 2003, the
stock status reports indicated that the estimated commercial biomass in CFA 18
was 3,369 tonnes, which was reduced to 2,986 tonnes once a new no-fishing area
was established. When integrated with CFA 12, the combined stock was 44,540
tonnes (Defendant’s motion record at pages 647 and 649). The TAC was 38.5% of
that amount, so the integration of CFA 18 added about 1,150 tonnes to the TAC. Fishers
from CFA 18 only caught about 578 tonnes (Defendants’ motion record at page
963). Since the fishers from CFA 18 brought more snow crab with them than they
received, there is no evidence to support the Plaintiffs' claim that this
integration cut into the Plaintiffs' share of the TAC. There is also no
evidence in the record to suggest this has changed in the years since then.
This claim does not warrant a trial.
G.
Does the Plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claim
raise a genuine issue for trial?
(1)
Parties’ Arguments
[82]
The parties do not dispute the test for unjust
enrichment. As stated in Kerr v Baranow, 2011 SCC 10 at paragraph 32,
[2011] 1 S.C.R. 269 [Kerr], a plaintiff needs to prove three things: “an enrichment of or benefit to the defendant, a
corresponding deprivation of the plaintiff, and the absence of a juristic
reason for the enrichment.” The first two criteria are satisfied
whenever a plaintiff's loss has conveyed a benefit which has “enriched the defendant and which can be restored to the
plaintiff in specie or by money” (Kerr at paragraph 38).
The benefit must be tangible and it can be either “positive
or negative, the latter in the sense that the benefit conferred on the
defendant spares him or her an expense he or she would have had to undertake”
(Kerr at paragraph 38). As for the third element, this simply “means that there is no reason in law or justice for the
defendant's retention of the benefit conferred by the plaintiff” (Kerr
at paragraph 40).
[83]
The Plaintiffs argue there are three ways the
Defendant has been unjustly enriched. First, they criticize DFO for its
practice from 2003 to 2006 of selling a portion of the TAC in order to fund
research. In Association des crabiers (at paragraph 6), Justice
Martineau agreed with the applicants' submission that, “by
deducting an allocation of 480 [metric tonnes] from the TAC, the Minister
deprived each licensee of this share of the TAC and indirectly imposed an
additional charge on them.” That, the Plaintiffs claim, enriched the
Defendant since it would otherwise have had to pay for the research out of its
own budget. The Plaintiffs submit there was no juristic reason for the
deprivation because that practice was illegal (Larocque at paragraphs
26-27; and Association des crabiers at paragraphs 7-10).
[84]
Second, the Plaintiffs contend that the
Defendant was unjustly enriched when the Minister allocated part of the TAC to
other groups in 2003 in order to meet other self-imposed obligations. The
Defendant was enriched, the Plaintiffs say, since DFO otherwise would have had
to buy that TAC back from the existing fishers, and those fishers suffered a
deprivation since their quotas were reduced to about two-thirds of what they
would otherwise be. The Plaintiffs submit there was no juristic reason for
this, and they distinguish Gladstone v Canada (AG), 2005 SCC 21, [2005]
1 SCR 325, on the basis there was an extensive legislative framework governing
the seizure of fish in that case.
[85]
Third, the Plaintiffs point out that DFO had
funded scientific research on crab stocks out of its own budget until the
1990s, at which time fishers agreed to fund management measures and research.
That co-operation continued until 2003, and the Plaintiffs say eliciting
payments from fishers was illegal for the same reasons it was illegal for DFO
to sell TAC directly to pay for those management measures. The Plaintiffs argue
that was an unjust enrichment too, and they want to recover their contribution
to the costs of fishery science and monitoring.
[86]
The Defendant submits it has never received any
tangible benefit from any of the actions criticized by the Plaintiffs. The
Minister was simply managing the fishery in the public interest. In any event,
there was no corresponding deprivation, according to the Defendant, since the
Plaintiffs have no property interest in any share of the TAC. As for the
financial contributions to science and monitoring made by Prince Edward Island
Snow Crab Fishermen Inc., those contributions ceased in 2003 and the
Plaintiffs' claims do not extend back that far.
[87]
Furthermore, the Defendant says there was a
juristic reason for sharing the resource with First Nations and new entrants
because the Minister was lawfully executing his statutory duties. As for DFO's
actions in selling the resource to fund science and management, the Defendant
argues the Plaintiffs actually benefitted from that since it permitted the
Minister to set a more aggressive TAC.
(2)
Analysis
[88]
I reject the Plaintiffs’ assertion that they are
seeking to recover the costs of their contributions to DFO's research prior to
2003. As the Defendant points out (at page 1085 of its motion record),the
following exchange occurred during Mr. Hutt's cross-examination:
Q. Right.
So just to be absolutely clear, because it’s important to both of us, the
Plaintiffs are not looking to recover their or their association’s financial
contribution to Fisheries Science or fishery monitoring ever. Period.
A. No,
not to my knowledge. No.
[89]
The Plaintiffs protest they have not “amended their claim in relation to recovering their
contribution to the costs of fishery science and monitoring,” and their
amended statement of claim does say that one of the deprivations they suffered
was “cash paid for scientific research and monitoring
activities.” However, their amended statement of claim does not allege
the source of this deprivation. Rather, when describing the nature of their
action, the third amended statement of claim states (at paragraph 8) the
Plaintiffs “are seeking compensation for the losses
they sustained because of the actions of DFO in the management of the
commercial snow crab fishery in the southern region of the Gulf of St. Lawrence
since 2003” (emphasis added), which was after those contributions
had ceased. Furthermore, the Plaintiffs identify the actions which have
allegedly resulted in an unjust enrichment to the Defendant at paragraph 73 of
their third amended statement of claim:
The Plaintiffs state that the use by DFO of
the Plaintiffs’ share of the TAC for the purposes of funding its purported
obligations to Atlantic Region First Nations, rationalizing the lobster and
ground fish fisheries, and the integration of Fishing Area 18 snow crab fishery
has resulted in a financial benefit to the Defendant.
[90]
The funds the Plaintiffs paid prior to 2003 are
not included on the above list, and the Plaintiffs refer to the same list when
discussing the source of their deprivations at paragraph 74 of their third amended
statement of claim. Having failed to plead that their pre-2003 contributions to
fishery science and monitoring unjustly enriched the Defendant, this allegation
does not give rise to a genuine issue for trial.
[91]
As well, there is no genuine issue for trial
regarding the Plaintiffs' claim that they were deprived of anything when CFA 18
was integrated into CFAs 12, 25 and 26. As mentioned above with respect to the
misfeasance claim, that actually increased the total amount of snow crab the
Plaintiffs could fish in 2003 and subsequent years.
[92]
As for the remaining claims, the Defendant
argues the Plaintiffs were not deprived of any TAC because they had no right to
it. In allowing the application for judicial review in Association des
crabiers, however, Justice Martineau stated (at paragraph 7) he agreed with
the applicants' submissions, one of which was that “by
deducting an allocation of 480 [metric tonnes] from the TAC, the Minister
deprived each licensee of this share of the TAC and indirectly imposed an
additional charge on them” (Association des crabiers at paragraph
6). If the trial judge should agree with that finding, it could establish both
the deprivation and the corresponding enrichment, since DFO might otherwise
have had to meet its objectives in some other way which could have involved
purchasing the quota or finding other financing. This claim thus depends on the
nature of the Plaintiffs' interest in their fishing licences, and it deserves a
trial for the same reason that the expropriation or taking without compensation
claim does.
[93]
The same is true when considering whether there
is a juristic reason for the absence of compensation, and selling the quota
directly has already been held to be unlawful in Larocque. While the
Defendant might be right that the Plaintiffs benefitted from the scientific
monitoring DFO unlawfully purchased (Chiasson at paragraph 27), that
argument presumes DFO had no obligation to conduct research and monitor the
fishery anyway – an obligation which it might have violated had it not
undertaken those activities.
[94]
There is therefore a genuine issue for trial on
the Plaintiffs' unjust enrichment claims.
H.
If there is a genuine issue for trial, can it be
determined by a summary trial?
[95]
While the parties have not asked for a summary
trial, there is a duty to consider whether any genuine issues for trial could
suitably be resolved by a summary trial (Rules, s 215(3)(a), 216(5); SOCAN
at paragraph 40). In Tremblay v Orio Canada Inc, 2013 FC 109, [2014] 3
FCR 404, Mr. Justice Richard Boivin summarized the appropriate considerations
for this issue concisely (at paragraph 24):
The plaintiff bears the burden of
demonstrating that a summary trial is appropriate ([Teva Canada Ltd v Wyeth
LLC, 2011 FC 1169], at para 35). In deciding whether a file lends itself to
a summary trial, a judge may consider, among other things, the complexity of
the matter, its urgency, the cost of taking the case forward to a conventional
trial in relation to the amount involved (Inspiration Management Ltd v
McDermid St. Lawrence Ltd (BCCA) (1989), [1989] BCJ no 1003, 36 BCLR (2d)
202), whether the litigation is extensive, whether the summary trial will take
considerable time, whether credibility is a crucial factor, whether the summary
trial will involve a substantial risk of wasting time and effort and whether
the summary trial will result in litigating in slices (Wenzel Downhole,
above, at para 37, citing Dahl v Royal Bank, 2005 BCSC 1263 at para 12,
46 BCLR (4th) 342).
[96]
Applying these principles, a summary trial is
neither suitable nor appropriate here. This matter is complex and the
litigation is (and has been to date) extensive, and it is not urgent. A trial
likely will be expensive (especially considering that the trial in Anglehart
is presently scheduled for 49½ days), and the Plaintiffs are seeking over
$17,000,000; the costs of a trial are therefore reasonably proportionate to the
amount involved. Even if one of the issues raised above could be resolved
justly by way of a summary trial, it would in all likelihood be a waste of time
since it would not obviate the need for a full trial on the other issues. In
any event, while it may have been appropriate to bi-furcate the issues of
liability and quantum in this proceeding, the same cannot be said for ordering
a summary trial in respect of any of the Plaintiffs’ remaining claims since the
facts underlying all of such claims are inextricably intertwined.
I.
Should costs be awarded and to whom?
[97]
The parties' submissions with respect to costs
made at the hearing of this matter were, to say the least, widely divergent. On
the one hand, the Defendant submitted that in the event it was successful, even
in part, costs should be awarded and assessed at the middle column of Tariff B
or, alternatively, in a lump sum amount of $7,000 plus disbursements. On the
other, the Plaintiffs submitted a Bill of Costs in a total amount of
$123,914.14 (including HST and disbursements) or, alternatively, a proposed
lump sum of $99,404.42 (including HST and disbursements).
[98]
The Plaintiffs have requested their costs on a
substantial indemnity basis because the motion was an abuse of process. Their
arguments in this regard were rejected. Nevertheless, there is some authority
to suggest that costs should be enhanced when a defendant's motion for summary
judgment is dismissed. Mr. Justice James Hugessen explained why in Crocs
Canada Inc v Holey Soles Holdings Ltd, 2008 FC 384 [Crocs Canada]:
[2] …where a defendant moves for
summary judgment it is appropriate to order costs on a higher scale because of
the disproportionate risk which such a motion places on the plaintiffs in
comparison to the defendant. If the motion succeeds the plaintiffs are out of court
and the defendant has the benefit of a final judgment dismissing the action,
normally including costs. On the other hand, if the action survives the motion
it is unfair that the defendant should only have been exposed to costs of a
motion on the ordinary scale of Column III of the Tariff.
[99]
There is no question that the Defendant's motion
for summary judgment has served, at a minimum, to reduce some of the issues for
trial. The Plaintiffs' claims for breach of contract in respect of the
so-called Marshall Agreement and their claims relating to the
integration of CFA 18 do not raise genuine issues for trial. I reject the
Defendant's suggestion, however, that the Plaintiffs' abandonment of their
claims in negligence and for breach of fiduciary duty was precipitated only by
reason of the Defendant's motion for summary judgment.
[100] This motion was heard over the course of three days. The motion records
compiled by the parties ran to a combined total of some 3,200 pages. The record
before the Court was voluminous (all the more so, I must say, because it was
duplicative in many respects and might well have been reduced with some
coordination or co-operation between the parties' counsel; for example, some
form of agreed statement of facts and a common list of exhibits would have
assisted not only the Court but the parties as well).
[101] In addition, while the Defendant was successful in part, inasmuch as
the Plaintiffs' claims for breach of contract and those relating to the
integration of CFA 18 do not raise genuine issues for trial, the Defendant's
motion was not entirely successful. The Plaintiffs' remaining claims relating
to expropriation (or taking without compensation), unjust enrichment, and
misfeasance in public office, all raise genuine and substantial issues for a
trial. The Plaintiffs' risk on this motion was disproportionate in comparison
to the Defendant. The Plaintiffs successfully defended substantial portions of
their claims and the remaining claims should proceed to trial as soon as
possible. It has now been more than eight years since the Plaintiffs filed
their initial statement of claim. This case has a protracted litigation history.
It should move beyond procedural wrangling and to a trial on the merits.
[102] Having regard to the outcome of the motion, it is unfair that the
Defendant should only have been exposed to the costs of a motion,
notwithstanding its partial success. I appreciate that the plaintiffs in Crocs
Canada were awarded an enhanced amount of costs because the defendant's
motion for summary judgment was dismissed in its entirety, unlike the case
here. However, in view of the decisions in Larocque, Association des
crabiers and, especially, Anglehart, some aspects of the Defendant's
challenges to the Plaintiffs' claims were, to say the least, of doubtful merit.
Accordingly, I exercise my discretion under Rules 400(1) and 400(4) and award
the Plaintiffs a lump sum amount of $25,000, inclusive of all disbursements and
any taxes thereon, for their costs on this motion. These costs shall be payable
in any event of the cause.
VII.
Conclusion
[103] In the result, therefore, the Defendant’s motion for summary
judgment is granted in part; in that the Plaintiffs’ claims and causes of
action grounded on breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty, and in
negligence, along with their claims relating to the integration of CFA 18, are
dismissed. The Plaintiffs' other claims, however, should proceed to trial for
the reasons stated above.