Supreme Court of Canada
Ponton v. City of Winnipeg, (1908) 41 S.C.R. 18
Date: 1908-10-27
William Nisbet
Ponton (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
The City of Winnipeg (Defendant), Respondent.
1908: October 14, 15; 1908: October 27.
Present: Sir Charles Fitzpatrick C.J. and
Girouard, Davies, Maclennan and Duff JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
MANITOBA.
Municipal corporation—Powers—Land tax sales—Purchase
by corporation—Vesting of title—Manitoba Real Property Act—Agreement to
re-convey—Necessity of by-law.
After the City of Winnipeg had become
purchaser of lands within the city, sold for arrears of overdue taxes, and had
obtained a certificate of title therefor under the Real Property Act, a
resolution of the city council was passed agreeing that the land should be
re-conveyed to the former owner on payment of the taxes in arrears with
interest and costs.
Held, that the
corporation was not bound by the resolution as the re-conveyance
of the lands could be made only under the authority of
a by-law as provided by the city charter. Waterous Engine Works Co. v. The
Town of Palmerston (21 Can. S.C.R. 556) and District of North Vancouver v.
Tracy (34 Can. S.C.R. 132) followed.
Judgment appealed from (17 Man. R. 497)
affirmed.
Appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for Manitoba, affirming the judgment of
Mathers J., at the trial, by which the plaintiff's action was dismissed with
costs.
The circumstances of the case are stated in
the judgment now reported.
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Armour K.C. and R. S. Cassels for the appellant.
Theodore A. Hunt for the respondent.
The judgment of the court was delivered by
Maclennan J.—This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment of the Court
of Appeal for Manitoba, affirming a judgment of the trial judge, who dismissed
the action with costs.
The plaintiff had been the owner of 170 vacant
lots of land situate within the defendant's municipality, except so much
thereof as was taken by the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. for their roadway,
and, on the 25th November, 1892, his title was duly registered under "The
Real Property Act" of Manitoba.
The plaintiff had allowed the taxes imposed by
the defendant in respect of these lands, to fall in arrear and remain unpaid
for a number of years, the last payment made by him having been of those for
the year 1893.
In the year 1897 the defendant caused the lands
to be sold for the arrears of taxes, and as authorized by the law of the
province, became the purchasers thereof.
The validity of this sale and purchase is not
impeached or questioned in the pleadings, and was expressly admitted at the
trial. But the defendant did not, by the mere sale, become the indefeasible
owner of the land. To have that effect, it had to be followed by a certificate
of title obtained from the district registrar of titles.
The defendant did not take the necessary steps
to obtain a certificate of title until the 22nd October,
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1900, when the prescribed notice bearing that
date was prepared and was served upon the plaintiff on the 3rd of November
following. This notice intimated to the plaintiff that, as the law permitted,
he might redeem the land within six months from the day of service, or at any
time before the issue of a certificate of title to the applicant, by payment to
the district registrar of the arrears of taxes, together with a bonus of twenty
per cent., but that in the event of nonpayment a certificate of title under
"The Real Property Act'? would be issued to the applicant.
The plaintiff did not, either within the six
months named in the notice, or afterwards, pay the taxes in arrear, or any part
thereof, although the defendant delayed in applying for a certificate of title
until the 7th of April, 1902.
On the last mentioned day payment not having
been made a certificate issued to the defendant, and no attempt had been made
to impeach its regularity or validity.
It is true that the plaintiff says that he
treated a demand for taxes for the year 1901, made by the defendant, as an
abandonment of the notice of application which had been served on him in 1900.
One can hardly listen seriously to this suggestion, coming from a barrister,
who had been distinctly notified that until certificate obtained he might still
redeem, when in fact the land was still his own, at his option, and, therefore,
continued liable to taxation against him, at all events provisionally.
By section 387 of the defendant's charter taxes
may be sued for as a debt. The taxes due prior to the sale were satisfied by
the sale, unless the plaintiff chose to redeem within the time limited, and if the
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sale became absolute by
certificate of title, the subsequent taxes were merely provisional, on the
defendant's own land and could not be recovered from the plaintiff. There is,
therefore, in my opinion, no question of the validity of the certificate of
title.
By section 71 of "The Real Property
Act" it is declared as follows:
Every certificate of title, hereafter or
heretofore issued, shall as long as the same remains in force, and uncancelled,
be conclusive evidence at law and in equity, as against His Majesty and all
other persons whomsoever, that the person named in such certificate is entitled
to the land described therein, for the estate or interest therein specified,
subject to the right of any person to shew (certain things including fraud not
material in this case).
The effect therefore of the certificate obtained
by the defendant was to extinguish the plaintiff's title, both at law and in
equity. From that time he had no right, legal or equitable, to the land any
more than any other of His Majesty's subjects, and unless the defendant has
dealt with the plaintiff, in relation to this land, in some way, which under
the like circumstances, would give a right either legal or equitable to any
other person, he cannot succeed in this appeal.
The defendant's title then being such as I have
indicated, by virtue of the sale and the certificate, has anything happened, or
has the defendant done anything, since obtaining it, to entitle the plaintiff
to maintain this action?
One thing relied on is this: that after the date
of the certificate, the 7th of April, 1902, the defendant's assessment
commissioner served the plaintiff with a notice of assessment of the lands
dated 3rd of May, 1902. I think that fact is of no importance. Section 325 of
the city charter, section 10 of the "Assessment Act," requires that
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as early as practicable in each year the
assessment commissioner shall report to the council the completion of the
assessment rolls.
And the learned trial judge has pointed out that
the plaintiff was the proper person in whose name to assess the lands up to the
time that the certificate of title was issued to the defendant.
The assessment proceedings were commenced, and
properly commenced, before the issue of the certificate, and were continued
afterwards by the officer, without any special directions from the council.
Under these circumstances I think the assessment
of the plaintiff for the year 1902 necessarily became and was quite nugatory,
and could confer no right of redemption on the plaintiff.
The only serious question in the appeal in my
opinion is the resolution of the finance committee of the 11th December, 1903, and its adoption by the defendant's council on the 14th of the same month, in
the presence of the solicitor for the plaintiff.
The resolution is as follows:
That all lot3 formerly owned by W. N.
Ponton acquired by the city at tax sale be conveyed to the said Ponton on
payment of all costs, interest and taxes to date.
And it was signed by the mayor and city clerk.
Nothing was done by the plaintiff' or his
solicitors in the way of accepting or availing himself of this resolution for
more than four months, and on the 4th of April following a member of the
council gave notice of a motion to rescind the resolution at its next meeting,
and the council advertised the lands to be sold by public sale on the 20th of
April.
This roused the plaintiff's solicitors to action
and, on the 16th April, a clerk of the plaintiff's solicitors made a tender to
the treasurer of the defendant of
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a sum of money accompanied by a letter offering
to accept the resolution of the 14th December, but the tender was refused, and
on the 18th of April the resolution of the 14th of December was rescinded.
The present action was commenced two days
afterwards on the 20th of April.
It is upon this resolution of council, the offer
to accept it, and the tender made to the treasurer, that the principal reliance
of the plaintiff is placed, both in pleading and in argument.
It is said that the resolution and acceptance
constitute a contract between the defendant and the plaintiff; and that the
resolution is an offer which was accepted by the plaintiff by his solicitors'
letter to the city treasurer, of the 16th of April, accompanied by the tender
of the taxes, interest and costs.
The evidence of the assistant treasurer is that
the sum tendered was considerably less than what was then due for taxes,
interest and costs; but however that may be, I am clearly of opinion that the
resolution, even though accepted, was not a contract or engagement which bound
the defendant. The Statute of Frauds was pleaded, if that was necessary, and a
contract in writing was necessary to bind the defendant.
Section 472 of the city charter is express that
the powers of the council shall be exercised by by-law when not otherwise
authorized or provided for, and I have looked in vain for any authorization or
provision in the charter enabling it to sell land by mere resolution. A by-law
authorizing a sale and a contract under seal were essential, in my opinion, to
bind the defendant, and for want of these essentials, the alleged contract was
inoperative.
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I refer to Waterous Engine Works Co. v. Town of Palmerston (1), and District of North Vancouver v. Tracey (2).
For these reasons, and the reasons of the
learned judges of the Court of Appeal, I think the appeal must be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Tupper,
Galt, Tupper, Minty & McTavish.
Solicitor for the respondent: Theodore A. Hunt.