Supreme Court
of Canada
Canadian Pacific
Railway Co. v. Chatham (Township), (1896) 25 S.C.R. 608
Date: 1896-02-18
The Canadian Pacific
Railway Company (Plaintiffs) Appellants;
and
The Township of
Chatham (Defendants) Respondents.
1895: October 23, 24; 1896: February
18.
Present: Taschereau, Gwynne,
Sedgewick, King and Girouard JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Municipal by-law—Special assessments—Drainage—Powers
of council as to additional necessary works—Ultra
vires resolutions—Executed contract.
Where a
municipal by-law authorized the construction of a drain benefiting lands in an
adjoining municipality which was to pass under a railway where it was apparent
that a culvert to carry off the water brought down by the drain and prevent the
flooding of adjacent lands would be an absolute necessity, the construction of
such culvert was a matter within the provisions of sec. 573 of the Municipal
Act (R.S.O. [1887] c. 184), and a new by-law authorizing it was not necessary.
Taschereau J. dissenting.
APPEAL from the
Court of Appeal for Ontario,
affirming the judgment in the Common Pleas Division,
which upheld the dismissal of the plaintiff’s
action in the court below.
Certain drainage
works had been constructed under a by-law passed under the provisions of The
Municipal Act, which benefited lands in an adjoining township, and after the
completion of the works it was found absolutely necessary to construct a new
culvert under the line of the Canadian Pacific Railway in order to carry off
the increased flow of water brought down by the drain and prevent the flooding
of the adjacent lands. The plaintiffs and defendants entered into a contract
under seal by which the plaintiffs agreed to construct, and actually did
construct, the
[Page 609]
necessary culvert
at a cost exceeding two hundred dollars. When the works were completed they
were inspected, accepted and used by the municipal corporation, and
correspondence passed between the plaintiffs and certain officers of the
corporation upon the subject of the works done, by which assurances were given
to the plaintiffs that in case the funds provided by the original by-law for
the drainage works proved insufficient to cover the additional cost of the
culvert, the necessary funds would be provided to pay whatever difference there
might be under the powers given in the Municipal Act. The municipal council
passed resolutions approving of the work done by the plaintiffs and paid sums
on account of the cost, but did not pass a new by-law or make any report or
fresh assessment respecting the contract with the plaintiffs, or as to the
works executed thereunder.
The special
circumstances of the case and questions raised upon the issues appear more
fully in the judgments reported.
Moss Q.C. and
MacMurchy for the appellant. The culvert being essential for the efficient
working of the drain, the case comes within sec. 573 of the Municipal Act. In
re Suskey and The Township of Romney; Attorney-General v. The Mayor of Newcastle.
The work was
constructed and accepted by the municipality, who cannot get rid of paying for
it because there was no by-law. Bernardin v. North Dufferin.
Wilson Q.C. and
Pegley Q.C. for the respondent. The municipality is only liable to the extent
declared by statute. Municipality of Pictou v. Geldert; Cowley v. Newmarket.
[Page 610]
That a by-law was
necessary see Cross v. City of Ottawa;
Waterous Engine Works Co. v. Town of Palmerston.
Under the by-law
passed debentures could not have been issued for the cost of the culvert. Confederation
Life Assoc. v. Howard.
TASCHEREAU J.
(dissenting).—I would dismiss this appeal. I cannot
say that I see anything reprehensible in the respondents’ refusal to pay this claim They are in duty bound to do
so, and the appellants have no one else than themselves to blame if they suffer
any prejudice. It was their duty, before entering into this contract, to
ascertain whether or not this corporation was acting intrâ vires. Bernardin v.
North Dufferin
has no application. The township at large gets no benefit from this drainage. I
need not enter into a review of the sections of the Municipal Act that rule the
case. That has been elaborately done in the three Ontario courts which have
dismissed the appellants’ claim. The question is, it seems to
me, one largely of fact. Was this stone culvert contemplated when by-law no.
169 for this drainage was passed? With the three courts below, I say no. Was
the work contemplated by the by-law fully completed when the agreement sued
upon was entered into? With the three courts below, I say yes. This stone
culvert was not thought of, or at all taken into consideration, when the by‑law
was passed. The assessment was levied in the two townships on an estimate for a
drain through the cattle pass.
We are now asked
to add to it a sum nearly doubling it in amount. And, in defiance of the
unquestionable policy of the statute that none but those benefited by drainage
work should be assessed for the cost thereof,
[Page 611]
the appellants
would charge every inch of property in this township for this piece of
drainage. That, it seems to me, would be a fraud on the taxpayers. I adopt
Chief Justice Hagarty’s reasoning in the Court of Appeal,
and Chief Justice Galt’s as reported in 25 O.R. 465.
GWYNNE J.—The municipal council of the township of Chatham, prior
to the year 1890, had constructed certain drains known as the Louisville Tap
and Big Creek drains under by-laws passed for that purpose by the municipal
council of the said township under the provisions of the Ontario Municipal Act.
In the year 1890 these drains became in a measure insufficient for the purpose
for which they were constructed, and it was deemed expedient to make a new and
additional outlet therefor; accordingly the township engineer was instructed to
take levels, make estimates and assessments and report on the most practicable
outlet for the water of the said drains, and he thereupon made a report
recommending the construction of a drain from the river Thames at a point in
lot 23 in the 2nd concession of the said township of Chatham, to be continued
northerly under the Canadian Pacific Railway as it crossed lot 23 in 3rd
concession of said township, to the Big Creek drain as it ran through lot 23 in
the 4th concession of the said township, upon a plan and profile accompanying
the report which was also accompanied by an estimate, and an assessment of
lands which in the engineer’s judgment would be benefited by the
proposed work, some of which lands were in the adjoining township of Camden.
The plan and profile annexed to the report showed that the depth to which the
proposed drain was to be dug was such that at the place where it was proposed
to pass under the railway it was to be several feet below the bottom of the
cattle
[Page 612]
pass there. Upon
this report a by-law was passed by the municipal council of the township under
the provisions of sec. 585 of the Municipal Act of Ontario, which authorized
the township council to undertake and complete the work specified in the report
under the provisions contained in secs. 569 to 582, inclusive, without the
petition required in sec. 569. The by-law contained recitals:
1. The
previous construction of the Louisville Tap and Big Creek drains under by-laws
passed by the township council under the provisions of the Municipal Act.
2. That the
better to maintain the said drains and to prevent damage to the adjacent lands,
it was deemed expedient to make a new and additional outlet to the said drains.
3. That a
number of ratepayers along the course of the said drains had petitioned the
council praying that the said outlet might be made.
4. The
report, plan, profile, estimate and assessment of the township engineer, and
his recommendation that the proposed work should be undertaken, as it will be
the means of doing “a vast amount of good, and will likely
prevent expensive litigation.”
It then enacted:
1. That the
said report, plans and estimates be adopted, and that the said drain and the
works connected therewith be made and constructed in accordance therewith. 2.
That the reeve might borrow the sum of $2,839.61 to pay the estimated cost of
the work as charged upon lands in the township of Chatham.
3. Enacted that
special rates should be levied as directed upon the lots in the township of
Chatham assessed by the engineer for the work.
Clause 4 provided
for payment of the township’s share for the benefit to its roads,
and clause 5 appointed E.W. Haslett, one of the deputy reeves of the township
and W.G. George (the township engineer) commissioners for the construction of
the drain.
Upon the 18th
November, 1890, the municipal council of the township of Camden passed a by-law
for raising the amount assessed by the report and assessment of the engineer of
the township of Chatham upon
[Page 613]
lands in the
township of Camden as benefited by the proposed work and for levying the
amounts charged in such assessment upon the lots and roads in Camden.
The third recital
in the above by-law of the township of Chatham is wholly irrelevant as the work
was proposed to be constructed under the provisions of sec. 585 of the
Municipal Act, and it is to be observed that the petition recited is not one
within the provisions of sec. 569. As no petition was necessary the recital of
there having been the one recited is wholly immaterial, and this case must be
considered just as if there never had been the petition recited to have been
presented or any petition.
Now the plan and
profile adopted by the by-law clearly showed that the drain was contemplated to
be constructed and that it must be constructed under the railway, and such
being the case it was apparent that a properly constructed culvert sufficient
to bear the weight of the superincumbent earth upon which the railway was laid
was an absolute necessity. The bottom of the drain according to the design and
profile and plan thereof was to be, when the drain should be constructed, 19
feet below the level of the rails. The engineer who designed the drain also
knew, or was at least of opinion, that the plan of such a culvert should have
to be approved by the railway company. In his evidence he says that the drain
as designed would be absolutely useless unless carried under the railway by
just such a culvert as has been constructed, and that the reason why he did not
in his estimate of the work provide for the cost of the culvert through which
the waters in the drain should pass was that when he made his report he did not
know what kind of culvert the railway company would require. From about the
time of the passage of the by-law continuously through the year 1891 until the
making of
[Page 614]
the contract upon
which this action is brought, the township council, through some or one of
their councillors, their solicitor, and their engineer, appear to have been in
communication with the railway company in relation to the construction of the
necessary culvert; a letter has been put in evidence dated the 20th February,
1891, from the solicitor of the township to a Mr. Armstrong, an official
of the railway company at Toronto, in which is the following passage:
DEAR SIR.—The council of the township of Chatham have requested me
to write you about putting in a culvert in the Big Creek Cut-off at Kent
bridge. They say that last fall you agreed to do so in conversation with the
Reeve, &c., &c.
Then we find that
the commissioner on the Big Creek outlet was, by a resolution of the council of
the 9th March, 1891, authorized to consult W.G. McGeorge in regard to the
proposed culvert, which in the resolution is called a “brick” culvert, under the Canadian Pacific
Railway and to take such steps as he might recommend in the matter. The
commissioner here referred to was the Deputy Reeve, Mr. Haslett, who with Mr.
McGeorge himself were the commissioners appointed by the by-law to construct
the drain. Then we find the chief engineer of the company directing the
divisional engineer, Mr. Henderson, by a letter dated the 16th March, 1891, to
arrange a meeting with Mr. McGeorge upon the subject.
This meeting took
place and Mr. Henderson testifies that Mr. McGeorge stated then that he wanted
the bottom of the culvert to be a little lower than the proposed bottom of the
drain, to which Mr. Henderson says that he replied that it should be placed as
low as he wished. Mr. McGeorge as to this meeting, in answer to the
question: “Did you tell him what depth you
wanted?” said “we
both agreed it should go two feet lower than the bottom of the drain.”
[Page 615]
That would be 21
feet below the rail on the track from which the 19 feet to the bottom of the
drain was measured.
Then upon the 13th
May, 1891, we find Mr. McGeorge addressed to Mr. Henderson a letter in the
following terms:
DEAR SIR,—May we soon expect a copy of the drawings of the culvert
at the Big Creek drain cut-off and your estimate of cost. Our council keep
asking me about it and I tell them you are likely very busy but we will soon
hear from you.
Then we find that upon
the 5th June, 1891, the railway company furnished to the township corporation
through their solicitor a plan and estimate for the proposed culvert. This plan
was placed in the hands of Mr. McGeorge for his approval, and he transmitted it
to the township clerk, with a letter dated the 20th June, 1891, wherein he
said:
The structure
will be admirably adapted to its place, and will be of a very permanent kind.
The cost is estimated higher than we had expected, but no doubt the engineer of
the company has gone into it very carefully, and knows as nearly as can be
computed in advance the cost of such work.
Upon the 25th June
this plan and Mr. McGeorge’s report thereon, as contained in the
above letter, were laid before the council of the township, who thereupon
passed a resolution to the effect following:
That the
plans for the arch culvert under the Canadian Pacific Railway at the Big Creek
outlet as sent from the Canadian Pacific Railway office, and prepared by the
railway engineer, be adopted, and that the matter of the cost of said culvert
be referred to the reeve and first and second deputy reeves, with power to
settle with said railway company to the best possible advantage.
Upon the 4th July,
1891, the solicitor of the township transmitted to the general superintendent
of the railway company a copy of Mr. McGeorge’s
above letter to the township clerk, in a letter of that date in which he said:
[Page 616]
DEAR SIR,—I have submitted the plan sent me for this work to Mr.
McGeorge, the township engineer, and I enclose you a copy of his letter to the
township clerk, which will give you his views as to it.
I also
enclose you a draft of a short agreement on the matter which you can revise,
and I will have it engrossed in duplicate for execution.
Then after some
observations in relation to the estimated cost, he closed his letter as
follows:
The township
is anxious to see the culvert put in this summer, so as to be ready for use
when the fall rains come.
A lengthy
correspondence then took place between the solicitor of the township and the
solicitor of the railway company as to the frame of the agreement between the
parties for the construction of the culvert by the railway company at the
expense of the township, and as to the payment by the latter for the work. In
the course of this correspondence the solicitor of the township, in a letter of
the 17th August, says:
The drain in
question is constructed under the Municipal Act, and if the funds assessed for
construction are not sufficient in consequence of the culvert costing more than
was anticipated, the council will have to amend the by-law under sec. 573,
subsec. 1, Municipal Act ch. 184 R.S.O., 1887.
Now although it
was apparent, as indeed has been admitted by the township engineer, that the
drain as designed would be absolutely useless without the construction of a
proper culvert at the place in question, nevertheless the commissioners
appointed by the bylaw to construct the drain proceeded with the digging of the
drain from the Big Creek to the railway, a distance of more than a mile and a
quarter, before ever the contract for the construction of a necessary culvert
was entered into. The natural consequence of this proceeding was that the lands
lying between the railway and Big Creek became flooded, to the great damage of
the land owners, and the railway itself was endangered to such a degree that it
was deemed necessary to protect it with piles driven in to resist the violence
[Page 617]
of the descending
waters and to avert the injury anticipated therefrom. Such a proceeding could
scarcely be said to have been authorized by the by-law for construction of the
work and all damages arising therefrom would seem to be attributable to the negligence
of the township authorities in proceeding with the opening of the drain from
Big Creek before the necessary culvert was completed rather than to be
necessarily incidental to, and consequential upon, the construction of the
drain authorized by the by-law, so that if the culvert had not been a necessary
part of the work contemplated and authorized by the by-law, the township
corporation were placed in this dilemma, that they must, at whatever cost,
carry off this water so brought down or pay all damages arising therefrom not
only to the owner of the drowned lands, but also to the railway company. In
such a state of facts there cannot, I think, be a doubt that upon the
completion of the work under this contract the corporation would be bound to
pay therefor as for a necessary work completely executed, the benefit of which
they enjoy, and that they could not be permitted to set up the fraudulent
defence that they had no power to enter into a contract for the construction of
a work from the execution of which they derived such substantial benefit.
The defence to
this action set up by the defendants is:
1st. That the
charge made by the plaintiffs for the work is so much in excess of what was
contemplated and estimated by the plaintiffs themselves, that the defendants
have a right to insist upon the strictest proof of every item; and
2nd. That the
contract was ultra vires of the corporation, and so not binding on them.
As to the first of
these grounds of defence, the plaintiffs say that they constructed the work in
every respect according to the dimensions and di-
[Page 618]
rections given by
the township engineer and commissioner for the construction of the drain and
according to the plan of the culvert approved by him and the township council,
and they say that the cost was increased beyond what was anticipated and
estimated by causes over which the plaintiffs had no control, namely, 1st the
appearance of quick sand in the excavation to the depth required of which
immediately upon its appearance the council of the corporation were informed
and directed the plaintiffs to proceed with the work; and 2ndly by reason of
the drain from the railway to the river Thames not having been dug to the depth
required by the plan and profile of the work adopted by the by-law until after
the completion of the culvert. However, these matters are unimportant at the
present time, for the plaintiffs submit to a most searching inquiry into every
item of their claim upon a reference to the proper officer in this action.
As to the second
ground of defence, namely, that the contract is ultra vires of the defendants,
it must, I think, be admitted to the credit of the defendants that this defence
is entered at the instance of the corporations of the township of Camden who
insist that the lands in Camden should not be held to be liable to contribute
to the cost of the work constructed under the contract sued upon.
Whether the
township of Camden should or should not contribute to the cost of the work to
any, and if any to what, extent is a question with which we are not concerned
in this action. The only question with which we have to deal is whether the
contract into which the defendants have entered was ultra vires or on the
contrary is binding upon them. If the latter with what may be the consequences
we are not concerned. Now that the construction of a sufficient culvert at the
place where the drain was designed to pass under the
[Page 619]
railway was an
absolute necessity in the construction of the work designed and authorized by
by-law, and that it was in point of fact part of the work contemplated to be
constructed under the by-law, cannot, I think, admit of a doubt. The residue of
the work would have been of no use whatever without such sufficient culvert,
its sufficiency consisting not merely in dimensions capable of carrying off the
waters brought down to it from the Big Creek but in strength capable of
supporting the weight of the superincumbent earth constituting the railway bed.
We have the evidence of the engineer who designed the drain that the culvert as
contracted for was just such a one and that it was an absolute necessity to the
efficient completion of the drain. I am of opinion therefore that the case
does, as the township council appear to have been advised, come within sec. 573
of ch. 184 R.S.O., and that the contract under which the work has been executed
is binding upon the defendants.
The appeal must be
allowed with costs and the case be remitted to the court below to be dealt with
by that court by reference to the proper officer or otherwise as the court
shall direct for ascertaining what amount if any remains due to the plaintiffs
under the contract.
SEDGEWICK, KING
and GIROUARD JJ. concurred.
Appeal
allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Wells
& MacMurchy.
Solicitors for the respondents: Pegley
& Sayer.