Supreme Court of Canada
Wardle v. Manitoba Farm Loan Association, [1956] S.C.R. 3
Date: 1955-11-15
Edward Gordon Wardle (Plaintiff)
. . Appellant;
and
The Manitoba Farm Loans Association
and The Government of Manitoba (Defendants) Respondents
1955: May 27,
30, 31; 1955: November 15.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and Rand, Kellock, Estey and Locke JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR MANITOBA
Real Property—Land Titles—Mines and Minerals, title
to—Tax sale lands vested in Crown, revested in Association by
statute—"Crown Lands", meaning of—Certificate of title endorsed with
reservation— Validity—Manitoba Farm Loans Act, R.S.M. 1940, c. 73, ss. 78, 79—
Crown Lands Act, R.S.M. 1940, c. 48, ss. 2(d), 5(d)—The Real Property Act,
R.S.M. 1940, c. 178.
The Manitoba Farm Loans Association (respondent) on acquiring
the lands in suit in 1934 by an assignment of tax sale certificates, applied to
have them brought under The Real Property Act (1934, Man. c. 38). The
application was granted and a certificate of title issued to it in the usual
form. The Manitoba Farm Loans Act (1917, Man. c. 33) as then amended,
provided by s. 78 that lands to which the Association became so entitled should
vest in the Crown in the right of the Province and that the district registrar
of any land titles office in which such land was situate should on the request
of the Provincial Treasurer issue a certificate of title in the name of the
Crown. The Provincial Treasurer made the request and in Sept. 1934 a
certificate of title was issued in the name of "His Majesty the King in the
right of the Province of Manitoba." In 1937 s. 78 was repealed and a new
s. 78 substituted which provided that land to which the Association had become
entitled and was vested in the Crown was thereby revested in the Association
and might be retransferred by a transfer under the hand of the Provincial
Treasurer. Accordingly the Provincial Treasurer executed to the Association a
transfer of all the Crown's estate and interest in the land and a certificate
of title was issued to the Association in the usual form with the words added
by the registrar "Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands
Act."
In 1945 the Association by an agreement of sale agreed to
transfer its title to the appellant's father and in 1948, upon completion of
the payments called for, at the father's request and upon execution of a quit
claim deed by the father to the son, transferred the lands direct to the
appellant. The transfer recited that the Association was the registered owner
of an estate in fee simple in possession subject to the reservations contained
in the Crown Lands Act. The certificate of title issued the appellant
certified him to be seized of a similar estate and subject to a similar
reservation.
Held (Kerwin C.J. and Locke J. dissenting) : That the
lands revested in the respondent Association by s. 78 of The Manitoba Farm
Loans Act (as amended by 1937 S. of M. c. 15) were not "crown
lands" within
[Page 4]
the meaning of The Crown Lands Act, S. of M. 1934, c. 38, and
there was not a disposition of crown lands within the meaning of s. 2(d) of
that Act. The reference to reservations under The Crown Lands Act noted on the
certificate of title issued to the Provincial Treasurer was unauthorized and a
nullity as were the similar notations entered on the subsequent certificates of
title and should be cancelled.
Per Kerwin C.J. (dissenting) : The respondent Association
agreed to sell the lands "subject to the reservations contained in The
Crown Lands Act" and that was what the transfer executed by it in favour
of the appellant transferred,—and nothing more. The reference to the
reservations contained in the Act was sufficient to bring in s. 5(d) thereof
and the Association never agreed to transfer the mines and minerals and never
did transfer them.
Per Locke J. (dissenting) : The only question to be determined
was the proper construction of the language of the agreement for sale which by
its terms showed clearly that the mines and minerals were excluded from the
subject matter of the sale. The question as to whether title to the mines and
minerals was in the Government of Manitoba or in the Manitoba Farm Loans
Association was an irrevelant consideration. The evidence did not disclose a
cause of action.
Decision of the Court of Appeal for Manitoba [1954] 4 D.L.R.
572, reversed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for
Manitoba ,
(Coyne J.A. dissenting) reversing the judgment of Williams C.J.Q.B. in favour
of the plaintiff .
W. B. Scarth, Q.C., A. W. Scarth and H. F. Gyles for the appellant.
A. E. Hoskin, Q.C., F. O. Meighen, Q.C., J. G.
Cowan, Q.C. and O. S. Alsaker for the respondents.
The Chief Justice (dissenting)
:—The dispute in this case is as to the mines and minerals in certain lands in
the Province of Manitoba. On February 21, 1945, the Manitoba Farm Loans
Association, by a document in writing and under seal, agreed to sell these
lands to Gordon Eugene Wardle "Subject to the reservations contained in
the Crown Lands Act". The land was being purchased by Wardle for his son,
the present appellant, Edward Gordon Wardle, and when the payments under the
agreement were completed the father asked the Association to convey the lands
directly to the son. The Association consented if the father would
[Page 5]
execute a quit claim deed to the appellant. Apparently the
quit claim was given although the document has been lost and by a transfer
under The Real Property Act, dated September 9, 1948, the Association
transferred to the appellant all its estate and interest in the lands which had
already been described and to which description was added the clause
"Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act". The
transfer was mailed by the Association to the appellant who swore to the
affidavit of value on September 11, 1948, and sent the transfer to the Land
Titles Office for registration. The District Registrar issued a certificate of
title, dated September 13, 1948, certifying that the appellant
is now seized of an estate in fee simple in possession
subject to such encumbrances, liens and interests as are notified by memorandum
underwritten (or endorsed hereon) in all that piece or parcel of land known and
described as follows,
and then follows the description and the clause
"Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act".
It was only in 1950 after oil had been discovered in the
district and the appellant had made a lease of the oil rights to a third party
that the title of the appellant to those oil rights was questioned, and this
action was commenced by him on March 12, 1952, against the Association and the
Government of Manitoba, under which name the Crown, defined as Her Majesty the
Queen in right of the Province of Manitoba, is to be sued under The
Proceedings Against the Crown Act, c. 13 of the Statutes of Manitoba, 1951.
The statement of claim asks:—
(a) A declaration of this
Honourable Court that the Plaintiff is entitled to all of the gas, oil,
petroleum and mineral rights pertaining to or upon, in or under the said lands
situate;
(b) A declaration
that the Plaintiff is entitled as against the Defendant The Government of the
Province of Manitoba to said oil, gas, petroleum and mineral rights;
(c) A declaration that
there exists in favor of the Defendant The Government of Manitoba no
reservation as to oil, gas, petroleum and mineral rights affecting said lands;
(d) An order that
the Defendant The Manitoba Farm Loans Association do convey unto the Plaintiff
the said oil, gas, petroleum and mineral rights;
(e) Alternatively to (d)
above, an order that the Defendant The Manitoba Farm Loans Association do
execute in favor of the
[Page 6]
Plaintiff such transfer,
assignment or document as shall be necessary to clear the Plaintiff's title of
the notation "subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands
Act";
(f) Damages;
(g) Costs;
(h) Such further
and other relief as the nature of the case may require or as to this Honourable
Court may seem meet.
The Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench, who tried the
action, gave judgment
declaring that the appellant is entitled to all of the petroleum and natural
gas and related hydrocarbons within, upon or under the land and that he was
entitled to them as against both defendants and that there exists no
reservation in favour of either of the defendants. An appeal by the defendants,
the present respondents, was allowed by the Court of Appeal for Manitoba and the action dismissed.
In the view I take of the matter it is unnecessary to detail
the various statutes referred to in the judgments below. By the amendment which
came into force on April 28, 1933, to the Provincial Act respecting the
Association, the lands in question became vested in the Crown since they were
acquired by the Association under an assignment dated February 23, 1934, from
the Rural Municipality of Wallace of certain tax sales certificates. By an
application dated February 28, 1934, and filed March 3, 1934, the Association
applied to bring the land under the operation of The Real Property Act and
the certificate of title granted upon that application is dated August 7, 1934,
and is in the usual form and without the clause "Subject to the
reservations contained in The Crown Lands Act". This
application and certificate were not authorized by the amending statute and on
September 13th the Provincial Treasurer, in accordance with s. 78 of that Act,
applied for the issue of certificate of title in the name of the Crown, which
was issued September 14, 1934, in the name of "His Majesty the King in the
right of the Province of Manitoba". In 1937, by a further amendment to the
Act respecting the Association, the land was vested in it. On June 18th of that
year a transfer was executed by the Provincial Treasurer to the Association of
all the Crown's estate and interest in the land, and on September 7, 1937, a
certificate of title was issued by the
[Page 7]
District Registrar to the
Association in the usual form but including the words "Subject to the
reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act". The old certificate of
title, dated 14th September, 1934, was marked cancelled with a notation
"Transfer of all except Crown Lands Act Reservations".
I am willing to assume that the Registrar had no authority
to insert the clause quoted in the certificate of September 7, 1937, or to
cancel the certificate of September 14, 1934, in the manner described, i.e., by
inserting the words mentioned, because the Statute of 1937 was sufficient to
vest the land in the Association, although, as a matter of record, something
additional might be required. However, the Association agreed to sell the lands
"Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act" and
that is what the transfer executed by it in favour of the appellant
transferred,—and nothing more. The Crown Lands Act as it stood at the
date of the agreement was c. 7 of the Statutes of 1934, and by s. 5 thereof
5. In the absence of express provision to the contrary
therein, there is reseryed to the Crown out of every disposition of Crown land
* * *
(d) mines and minerals, together with the right
to enter, locate, prospect, mine for and remove minerals.
In my view we are not concerned with the question as to
whether the agreement or transfer was a "disposition of Crown lands"
as defined in s. 2 (d) of the Act, because I agree with Mr. Justice
Adamson (now Chief Justice of Manitoba), speaking for the majority of the Court
of Appeal, that the only question is—What did the appellant purchase? There was
no claim for rectification, or anything of that nature, and I think it is quite
apparent that the subject of mines and minerals, (or oil), was not present to
the mind of the father, in view of the following questions and answers in his
evidence:
Q. I direct your attention, Mr. Wardle, to a clause in the
agreement just after the description of land "subject to the reservations
contained in the Crown Lands Act." What have you to say to that?
A. Well I didn't have any experience with titles, I thought
it was just a natural matter that was in all agreements and titles. I wasn't
acquainted with the general regulations regarding that and took it as a matter
of course.
Q. You didn't understand it referred to mines or oil?
A. No, it wasn't discussed nor I didn't question it.
[Page 8]
Therefore, the only question which arises is as to the
meaning to be ascribed to the clause.
It is pointed out in Vol. 10 of Halsbury, 2nd edit., p. 298,
"A reservation may in substance be an exception, as where there is a
reservation of part of the thing granted", but in this case we are not
concerned with the category in which the clause falls because the reference to
the reservations contained in The Crown Lands Act is sufficient to bring
in s. 5 (d) thereof and the Association, therefore, never agreed to
transfer the mines and minerals and never did transfer them. It was contended
that if paragraph (d) of s. 5 is brought in then also the other
paragraphs are also included, if applicable to the land in question. It was not
suggested that any of these other clauses did apply and I, therefore, say
nothing about them.
For these reasons the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
Rand J. :—This
action concerns the title to the mines and minerals underlying the west half of
sec. 24, township 10, range 28, west of the principal meridian in the province
of Manitoba. The lands had been granted in quarter sections by the Dominion in
1886 and 1887 and the grants carried all minerals except gold and silver. In
1932 they were sold for taxes and were bid in by the municipality to which tax
sales certificates were issued. They were not redeemed and on February 23, 1934
the certificates were purchased by the Manitoba Farm Loans Association. That
organization had been established by The Manitoba Farm Loans Act, c. 33
of the statutes of 1917. Its authority to make the purchase and thereafter to
deal with the lands as was done was not contested.
S. 78 of that statute, enacted in 1933, provided :—
Land to which the association has become entitled by or
through foreclosure, tax sale proceedings, conveyance, transfer or otherwise is
hereby vested in the Crown in the right of the province, and land to which it
hereafter in like manner becomes entitled shall thereupon become and be vested
in the Crown in the right of the province ; and the district registrar of any
land titles district in which any parcel of such land is situate shall, on the
request of the Provincial Treasurer, issue a certificate of title therefor in
the name of the Crown.
The Provincial Treasurer made such a request in respect of
the lands in question and a certificate of title was issued
[Page 9]
in the name of His Majesty on September 7, 1934. Previously
in that year the Association had itself obtained a certificate of title under
its tax sales certificates and in the application of the Provincial Treasurer
there was recited a certificate by the secretary of the Association that the
latter had become entitled to the lands by way of tax sale proceedings.
In 1937 s. 78 was repealed and a substituted provision
declared that:—
78. (1) Any land to which the association has become
entitled by or through foreclosure, tax sale proceedings, conveyance, transfer
or otherwise and which vested in the Crown in the right of the province under
the section 78 which is repealed and substituted by this Act, is hereby
revested in the association and may be reconveyed or retransferred, as the case
may be, by conveyance or transfer under the hand of the Provincial Treasurer
and no seal shall be required on any conveyance or transfer.
* * *
(3) Any such conveyance or transfer shall be conclusive
evidence that the land described therein is land which hereby revests in the
association without further or other proof thereof.
(4) Any lands vested in the Crown by virtue of section 78
which is repealed hereby and which may have been sold under an agreement for
sale or leased under the authority conferred by section 79 repealed hereby,
shall be deemed to have been sold or leased in the name of the association.
To be "hereby revested in the association" means,
as I interpret the section, that the beneficial ownership of the defaulting
taxpayer passed back to the Association ; the conveyance or transfer by the
Provincial Treasurer seems to have been a formality operating on the bare legal
title for the purpose of conforming to the Real Property Act.
In fulfilment of the section, a considerable number of
parcels of land were included in a transfer executed by the Provincial
Treasurer among which was the west half of sec. 24. By the instrument, given
"in consideration of Bill No. 93-1937 Session—", His Majesty
transferred to the Association "all His estate in the said pieces of
land". The descriptions of the parcels were of the interest or estate held
by the defaulting owners and in many instances they included a reference to
reservations to the Crown contained in the original grant. This is significant
when it is remembered that the fee, including all Crown reservations, was at
the time of the enactment of 1937 vested in the Crown, and it can only mean
that where reservations had been originally made they were intended to be
retained, and
[Page 10]
where they had not been, they were not. The item for the
west half of sec. 24 contained no reference to reservations.
I am unable to agree that the revesting in the Association
by the amending s. 78 was a "disposition of Crown land" within s. 5
of The Crown Lands Act which, in the case of such an act, in the absence
of an express provision to the contrary, reserved the mines and minerals to the
Crown. The definition of "disposition" in s. 2(d) declared
it to include
… every act of the Crown whereby Crown lands or a right,
interest or estate therein are granted, disposed of or affected or by which the
Crown divests itself of or creates a right, interest or estate in land or
permits the use of land; and the words "dispose of" shall have a
corresponding meaning;
The key words are "act of the Crown"; but the
revesting of lands by statute is not such an act.
The word "revesting" indicates that the object of
the amendment was to restore the prior condition of title. It was in this view
that the parcels of land transferred back to the Association were described as
stated. For some reason, which we are not called upon to seek, a new policy of
dealing with the lands was adopted. One reason may be mentioned to be rejected,
that the vesting was for the purpose of bringing lands carrying minerals in
their private title under the operation of s. 5 of The Crown Lands Act in
subsequent dispositions. This is negatived by the repeal of the vesting and the
statutory restoration of title. In these circumstances, the title in 1937
vested in the Association by the direct operation of the statute, completed by
the transfer executed by the Provincial Treasurer, was a fee simple.
But the meaning and effect of the phrase "subject to
the reservations contained in The Crown Lands Act" in the
agreement of sale in 1945, and the certificate of title issued to the purchaser
in 1948, remain to be considered. The reservations of s. 5 of The Crown
Lands Act can be summarized shortly. Item (A) reserves a strip of land 1½
chains in width from ordinary high water where the land extends to the sea or
navigable water or from the boundary where it touches another province or the
United States; (B) reserves the public right of mooring boats and vessels where
the land borders navigable waters; (C) provides for the reservation
[Page 11]
of the bed of a body of water below ordinary high water mark
and the public right of passing over a portage or trail in existence at the
date of the disposition; (D) reserves mines and minerals; (E) reserves the
right to and the use of the land necessary for the protection or development of
adjacent water power ; (F) the power to raise or lower the levels of a body of
water adjacent to the land, subject to the payment of compensation. So far as
the facts appear, none of these could be effective except (D) and they are not
of the character to be reserved ordinarily by a private person , or a
corporation acting in its own interest and not representing the Crown.
The Court of Appeal appears to have been influenced by what,
at first sight, seems to be an implication of the description of the land sold,
that the purchaser was to receive the fee only as diminished by those items:
but the reasonable construction of the language, to the benefit of which the
purchaser is entitled, is that of their subtraction from the fee by operation
of the statute and not by force of the contract or transfer: the reference to
the statute is not a descriptive incorporation of the items for the purpose of
an affirmative reservation. Their inclusion, on the part of the Association,
resulted from a mistake of law and there is no evidence that the purchaser had
any view or belief about it at all. It is not the case of a common mistake of
the parties on a matter of law or fact fundamental to the contract. A
unilateral misconception cannot here charge the conscience of the purchaser and
the case must be dealt with on the basis of the strictly legal position.
A "reservation" of minerals is an exception, a
subtraction from the larger content of the property described. Neither the word
"reservation" nor "exception", often used interchangeably,
is limited to its strict legal signification and the meaning of the expression
in which it is used is to be gathered from the context. In some cases of a
reservation, such as a profit à prendre, easement
or other privilege, a regrant is implied even to a third person: Wickham v.
Hawker .
But the language here does not admit of that implication; it is not a case of
"reserving" anything to the Crown : the words are "subject
to" and these do not carry the meaning
[Page 12]
of an original reservation as between the parties: it is
rather a reference to a precedent operation of the statute, whatever that may
have been.
The cognate expression as used with reference to Crown
grants, "subject to the reservations contained in the original grant from
the Crown", has become commonplace in Western Canada. There has been such
an extensive retention of minerals by the Crown that the phrase is ordinarily
contained in the standard forms of contract. It is used as an abbreviation
describing the actual or possible withholding from a fee simple by reservation
or exception as a protection to the vendor. If there happens to have been no
reservation in an original grant, the entire fee passes.
A reference to statutory reservations is of the same nature.
If the statute has operated so as to retain interests in the Crown, the clause
protects the vendor : if it has not, the fee goes to the purchaser. The clause
safeguards the vendor; it does not constitute a provision that, regardless of
the operation of the statute, these limitations of the fee shall be effective
either to the Crown or the Association by force of the contract.
It was urged by Mr. Hoskin that the Association was an agent
of the Crown, and in that capacity it could effectuate the reservations of the
statute. On this assumption the transfer by the Provincial Treasurer to the
Association would not be a disposition since no beneficial interest would have
passed out of the Crown. But the statute does not lend support to that
contention. The Association, no doubt, bears the stamp of a public corporation,
but it is a legislative creation with specified and limited objects. In many
respects it is subject to governmental control; but these are powers which,
with those given the corporation, make up the total functioning contemplated by
the legislature. I find nothing to warrant the view that in administering the
lands to which it became entitled it was acting as an agent or alter ego of
the Crown ; the statutory provisions regulating the relations between the Crown
and the Association and the treatment of title are inconsistent with that
relationship. When the title was in the Crown, the Association administered for
and in the name of the Crown ; but the fact and mode of restoration to the
original
[Page 13]
situation of title indicates an
unmistakable intention to restrict the government's relations to those
specifically provided in the Act.
It was also argued by Mr. Hoskin that at the outset there is
the existence of two certificates of title, one embodying the reservation and
the other the remaining interests of the fee. But the entry on the original
certificate in the name of the Crown, issued upon the request of the Provincial
Treasurer in September, 1934, was made by the Registrar of Land Titles as what
he considered to be a legal consequence of the application of s. 5 of The
Crown Lands Act to the revesting by the statute, followed by the transfer
executed by the Provincial Treasurer. S. 5 effected no such reservation and
there was no legal foundation for the endorsement. It, therefore, was
improperly entered on the certificate of the Crown, and, as the Chief Justice
of the King's Bench held, the entry is a nullity. There is, then, no conflict
between the certificates. The title of the purchaser to the lands under the
certificate issued to him in 1948 is not subject to the reservations specified
in s. 5 of The Crown Lands Act; certificate No. 61305 must be read with
the words of reference to that statute struck out: and the endorsement on
certificate No. V-4338 of the reservations under The Crown Lands Act is without
validity.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal and restore the
judgment at trial, amending the latter, however, by adding thereto the
direction to cancel the reference to the reservations under The Crown Lands
Act in certificates Nos. V-4338, V-5208 and 61305.
The appellant will have his costs in both courts.
Kellock J.
:—This appeal is concerned with the title to the mines and minerals in certain
lands described in an agreement of sale of the 21st of February, 1945, between
the respondent Farm Loans Association and Gordon Eugene Wardle, as well as in a
subsequent transfer dated September 13, 1948, to the appellant, and the
certificate of title issued to the appellant on the same date.
The lands, as described in the agreement of sale were :
The West Half of Section Twenty-four in Township Ten and
Range Twenty-eight, West of the Principal Meridian in Manitoba.
[Page 14]
This is followed by the sentence
Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands
Act.
The original purchaser, having completed his payments under
the agreement, executed a quit claim deed to the appellant, in whose favour the
respondent Farm Loans Association executed the above-mentioned transfer. This
transfer recites the Association to be the registered owner of "an estate
in fee simple in possession" in the lands described as in the agreement of
sale and transfers to the appellant all its estate and interest in the
"said piece of land." The certificate of title, dated the 13th day of
September, 1948, certifies the appellant to be seized of an estate in fee
simple in possession of the land similarly described, the sentence
"Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act" being
also included.
In order to appreciate the nature of the interest of the
respondent Association in the land at the time of the execution of the
above-mentioned documents, it is necessary to refer to certain special
legislation enacted by the legislature of Manitoba. By amendment to the
"Manitoba Farm Loans Act", c. 13 of the Statutes of 1933, s. 78, it
was enacted that
Land to which the association has become entitled by or
through foreclosure, tax sale proceedings, conveyance, transfer or otherwise is
hereby vested in the Crown in the right of the province, and land to which it
hereafter in like manner becomes entitled shall thereupon become and be vested
in the Crown in the right of the province;
The section authorized the district registrar of land
titles, on request of the Provincial Treasurer, to issue a certificate of title
in the name of the Crown.
S. 79 is also important in that it provides that all land
vested in the Crown by the Act should nevertheless continue to be administered
by the respondent Association in its own name under the provisions of the Act,
and that the Association should have the same powers as to such administration
of the land as if it had continued the owner, including power in the
name of the Crown to sell, assign, convey, transfer and otherwise dispose of
the land or any estate or interest therein and to execute and deliver in the
name of the Crown all necessary conveyances, transfers, agreements and
documents. There is no dispute that prior to this legislation the title of the
respondent Association extended to the minerals. This title accordingly passed
to the Crown by virtue of the statute.
[Page 15]
Subsequently, on the 17th of April, 1937, the legislature,
by c. 15, repealed the amendments of 1933 and enacted new provisions. S. 78,
s-s. (1), provides that any land to which the Association had become entitled
and which had vested in the Crown under the repealed section "is hereby
revested" in the Association and may be reconveyed and retransferred by
instrument under the hand of the Provincial Treasurer. S-s. (3) enacts that any
such conveyance or transfer shall be conclusive "evidence" that the
land described therein is land which "hereby revests in" the
Association.
It will thus be seen that it was the statute itself which
"revested" the lands in the Association, the conveyance of the
Provincial Treasurer being permissive and merely constituting evidence of such
revesting. Title to the minerals was, of course, as much "revested"
in the Association by the legislation as were the surface rights. This result
could not in any way be affected by any error or insufficiency in any transfer
by the Provincial Treasurer—and there was none—or in any certificate of title.
The lands with which we are here concerned were acquired by
the respondent Association under an assignment by the Rural Municipality of
Wallace of a tax sale certificate dated February 23, 1934. Accordingly, by
force of the statute of 1933, they immediately became vested in the Crown. The
issue on August 7, 1934, of a certificate of title to the Association is an
irrelevant circumstance. It was not authorized by the statute. On the 13th of
September following, the Provincial Treasurer, in pursuance of s. 78 of the Act
of 1933, applied for the issue of a certificate of title in the name of the
Crown, which issued the following day.
Upon enactment of the legislation of 1937, the Provincial
Treasurer, pursuant to s. 78, s-s. (1), executed a transfer on the 18th of
June, 1937, to the respondent Association of
The West Half of Section Twenty-four in Township Ten and
Range Twenty-eight West of the Principal Meridian in the Province of Manitoba
simpliciter, in accordance with the description
in the certificate of title issued to the Crown on the 14th of September, 1934,
and by the transfer, the Crown transferred to the Association "all its
estate and interest" in the said lands
[Page 16]
without reservation. This, of course, was in accord with the
statute, which made no reservation of minerals to the Crown.
The district registrar, however, in issuing the certificate
of title to the respondent Association on the 7th of September, 1937, inserted
the words "Subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands
Act", in the evident belief that the last mentioned statute applied. The
question is as to the effect, if any, of this language.
The Crown Lands Act was enacted on the 29th of March,
1934, as c. 7 of the Statutes of that year. By s. 5, it is enacted that, in the
absence of express provision to the contrary therein, there is reserved to the
Crown out of every "disposition" of "Crown land"
(d) mines and minerals, together with the
right to enter, locate, prospect, mine for and remove minerals;
S. 2, so far as material, reads as follows:
2. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, the
expression
(b) "Crown lands" includes land,
whether within or without the province, vested in the Crown, and includes
"provincial lands" whenever that expression is used in an Act of the
Legislature;
(d) "Disposition" includes every act of the
Crown whereby Crown lands or a right, interest or estate therein are granted,
disposed of or affected or by which the Crown divests itself of or creates a
right, interest or estate in land or permits the use of land; and the words
"dispose of" shall have a corresponding meaning;
While the definition in para. (b), taken alone,
would, no doubt, include the lands vested in the Crown under the special
legislation of 1933, it is to be observed that the expression "Crown
lands" as used in the Act of 1934 is only to include lands as described in
the paragraph "unless the context otherwise requires". For reasons
which I proceed to give, the context of the statute, in my opinion, renders it
abundantly plain that the statute has no application to the lands which the
legislature had made the subject of the special Farm Loans legislation in 1933
and subsequently in 1937 and 1939.
By s. 3 of The Crown Lands Act, a branch of the
Department of Mines and Natural Resources was established, to be known as the
Lands Branch, under the control of the Minister, through which he was required
to manage and administer "Crown Lands". The Minister referred to was
(s. 2(f)) the Minister of Mines and Natural Resources "or
[Page 17]
such member of the Executive Council as is appointed to
administer this Act." By s. 9, also, the Minister was to have not only
the control and management of "Crown lands" but the
"disposition" thereof and he was to execute all documents evidencing
any "disposition" (s. 22).
Under the Farm Loans Act of 1933, however, although
the land to which the Association had become or might become entitled became
vested in the Crown, nevertheless by s. 79, as already mentioned, the land was
to continue to be administered by the Association in its own name under the
provisions of that statute and the Association was to have the same powers
as to such administration as if it had continued the owner, including
power "in the name of the Crown" to sell, assign, convey, transfer
and otherwise dispose of the land and to execute and deliver all documents with
relation thereto." It is, in my opinion, quite impossible that the same
land could be subject at one and the same time to the provisions of both the Farm
Loans Act and the Crown Lands Act and no such situation could have
been in the contemplation of the legislature. The Farm Loans legislation is
special legislation with respect to the lands thereby dealt with and although
such lands from 1933 to 1937 or thereafter were Crown lands in the sense that
they were the property of the Crown, they were not "Crown lands"
within the meaning of the Crown Lands Act. Other provisions of the last
mentioned statute emphasize this.
As already pointed out, s. 9 gives to the Minister of Mines
and Natural Resources the control and management of "Crown lands" and
of the "disposition" thereof. It is contended for the respondents
that "disposition", as defined by s. 2(d), includes the
revesting of the lands in the respondent Association by the statute of 1937. In
the face of s. 9, however, this is an impossible contention. By no stretch of
language can the statute of 1937 be brought within the scope of s. 9. While no
doubt the statute did dispose of the lands, it was not a
"disposition" with which the Minister of Mines and Natural Resources
had anything to do, with which "dispositions" alone the Crown
Lands Act is concerned. Neither the legislation of 1937 nor the transfer
executed by the Provincial Treasurer on the 18th of June, 1937,
[Page 18]
pursuant to that legislation, were in any sense ever within
"the control and management" of the Minister of Mines and Natural
Resources.
Moreover, it is impossible, in my opinion, to bring the
statute of 1937 within the words "act of the Crown" in s. 2(d),
as the respondents contend. By s. 2(a)
(a) "Crown" means His Majesty the King, in
the right of the province,
and there is no context in the statute affecting or
enlarging this language.
The statute opens with the words
His Majesty, by and with the consent of the Legislative
Assembly of Manitoba, enacts as follows:
Accordingly, the statute itself differentiates between the
Crown and the Legislative Assembly, the statute, as in the case of that of
1937, being the concurrent act of both, i.e., of the Legislature; The
Manitoba Act, 33 Vic., c. 3.
It is therefore plain, in my view, that the context of the
Crown Lands Act itself "otherwise requires" the exclusion from the
operation of that statute of the lands here in question, any and all dealing
therewith being governed by the special Farm Loans legislation to which I have
referred. S. 5 of the Act of 1934 had, therefore, no relation to these lands
and the transfer from the Crown to the respondent Association executed by the
Provincial Treasurer pursuant to the legislation of 1937 on the 18th of June of
that year became, by force of s. 78(3) of that legislation, "conclusive
evidence" of the revesting of the land in the Association, including the
minerals. The transfer itself did not purport to operate otherwise.
That this is the correct construction of the legislation is,
in my opinion, strikingly emphasized by the amending legislation of 1939 as
contained in c. 23 of the Statutes of that year, entitled "An Act to
Consolidate and Amend the Manitoba Farm Loans Act and to provide for
Realizing on the Assets of the Association". By s, 2(d) of the
statute, land is defined to mean "land … and all mines, minerals
and quarries unless specially excepted." The section does not contain. the
words "unless the context otherwise requires" as in the case of s. 2
of the Crown Lands Act. S. 28, s-s. (1), provides that "any"
land acquired by the Association "shall" be disposed of by the Board
at the
[Page 19]
earliest favourable opportunity at such price and interest
rate and upon such terms and conditions as the Board may approve. It would be remarkable
if, as the respondents contend on the footing that the respondent Association
became, after the date of this legislation, the mere agent of the Crown, the
legislature should have required it to dispose at the earliest favourable
opportunity of its land including the minerals, and yet, at the same time, that
the minerals in all the land of the Association should, by force of s. 5 of the
Crown Lands Act, be retained in the ownership of the Crown. In my
opinion, such a construction would reduce the legislation to nonsense. Properly
construed, the two statutes may stand together but operating in quite
different-spheres.
Accordingly, at the time of the agreement of sale of the
21st of February, 1945, the land here in question, including the minerals, was
vested in the respondent Association and neither the words "Subject to the
reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act" inserted by the registrar
in the certificate of title issued to' the respondent on September 7, 1937, nor
the failure of the registrar to cancel in full the certificate of title
previously issued to the Crown under the Act of 1933, affected the title of the
respondent. These entries were and are, in my opinion, a nullity; Balzer v.
District Registrar .
It is in these circumstances that the question arises as to
the effect of the words "Subject to the reservations contained in the
Crown Lands Act" in the agreement of sale of February, 1945, and the
subsequent transfer. In the view of Adamson J.A., now C.J.M., who delivered the
judgment of the majority in the Court of Appeal, their effect was to
incorporate into these documents s. 5 of the Crown Lands Act. Even so,
neither that section nor the statute in which it is found effect a reservation
of minerals to the Crown in the case of an instrument which does not constitute
a "disposition" of "Crown lands" within the meaning of that
statute. The quoted language, which is to be construed contra proferentem is,
in relation to the circumstances here in question, ineffective to produce the
result for which the respondents contend, which, if it had been intended in
fact, could have been effected by very simple language.
[Page 20]
It may be pointed out that the respondents expressly plead
that although the respondent Association did not own the minerals at the time
of the agreement of sale and transfer, the appellant received from the
Association "a conveyance of the whole of its interest in the said
lands." As to the extent of that interest, the respondents were, as I have
shown, mistaken, but the pleading clearly shows that the parties were dealing
with regard to that entire interest.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal and restore the
judgment at trial, amending the latter, however, by adding thereto a direction
to cancel the reference to the reservations under The Crown Lands Act in
certificates Nos. V-4338, V-5208 and 61305. The
appellant will have his costs in both courts.
Estey J. :—The
appellant (plaintiff) in this action asks a declaration that he is entitled to
the gas, oil, petroleum and mineral rights pertaining to, or upon, in, or under
the W½ 24-10-28 W.P.M. in Manitoba.
The Manitoba Farm Loans Association (hereinafter referred to
as the Association), as vendor, sold to Gordon E. Wardle, as purchaser, under
an agreement for sale in writing dated February 21, 1945, the above half
section and concluded the description thereof with the words "subject to
the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act."
When Gordon E. Wardle had paid the purchase price he
requested the Association to transfer the half section to his son, Edward G.
Wardle," and, upon receipt of a quit claim deed from the vendor, Gordon E.
Wardle, the Association issued the transfer to Edward G. Wardle, the appellant.
This transfer to the appellant included the words "subject to the
reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act." The appellant duly
registered this transfer in the Land Titles Office and pursuant thereto
Certificate of Title No. 61305 dated September 13, 1948, was issued to the appellant
and concluded with the words "subject to the reservations contained in the
Crown Lands Act."
In order to appreciate the respective contentions raised in
this litigation it is necessary to study the legislation affecting this land
and to understand how the words "subject to the reservations contained in
the Crown Lands Act" came to be noted on the title thereof. The
Association acquired
[Page 21]
the above-mentioned half section by virtue of an assignment
of tax sale proceedings in respect to this half section from the Rural
Municipality of Wallace in the Province of Manitoba and, pursuant thereto,
became the registered owner thereof under Certificate of Title dated August 7,
1934, and numbered V4319 issued under The Real Property Act (R.S.M.
1940, c. 178 and amendments thereto).
The respondent Association was incorporated by act of the
Province of Manitoba in 1917 (S. of M. 1917. c 33). This statute was
consolidated in 1924 (S. of M. 1924, c. 71) and amended in 1933 (S. of M. 1933,
c. 13) by adding ss. 78 and 79, which "vested in the Crown in the right of
the province" the land which it had or would thereafter become entitled to
"by or through foreclosure, tax sale proceedings, conveyance, …" and
further that "the district registrar of any land titles district in which
any parcel of such land is situate shall, on the request of the Provincial
Treasurer, issue a certificate of title therefor in the name of the
Crown."
The District Registrar, upon receipt of a request made under
s. 78 of the 1933 amendment by the Provincial Treasurer in respect to the half
section here in question, issued, in the name of His Majesty in the right of
the Province of Manitoba, Certificate of Title No. V4338. There is no question
but that at that time the land, including the mines and minerals, under that
Certificate of Title, was vested in the Crown.
In 1934 the Legislature of Manitoba enacted The Crown
Lands Act (S. of M. 1934, c. 7), s. 5 of which (effective, so far as
relevant hereto, as of March 6, 1934) provides, in part, as follows:
5. In the absence of express provision to the contrary
therein, there is reserved to the Crown out of every disposition of Crown Land
* * *
(d) mines and minerals, together with the right to
enter, locate, prospect, mine for and remove minerals.
In 1937 The Manitoba Farm Loans Act was further
amended (S. of M. 1937, c. 15) and ss. 78 to 81, as enacted in 1933, were
repealed and new ss. 78 and 79 were enacted. The relevant portion of s. 78
reads as follows :
78(1) Any land to which the association has become entitled
by or through foreclosure, tax sale proceedings, conveyance, transfer or
otherwise and which vested in the Crown in the right of the province under the
[Page 22]
section 78 which is repealed and substituted by this Act, is
hereby revested in the Association and may be reconveyed or retransferred, as
the case may be, by conveyance or transfer under the hand of the Provincial.
Treasurer and no seal shall be required on any conveyance or transfer.
It may be pointed out that, notwithstanding that the land
was vested in the Crown and title issued in the name of the Crown, throughout
the Association has had the responsibility of administering the land.
It is the contention of the appellant that, notwithstanding
the terms of the agreement for sale, the transfer and the Certificate of Title
issued to him, he is, and has at all times relevant hereto been entitled to the
mines and minerals. The respondents, on the other hand, contend that the revesting
of the land in 1937 was subject to the provisions of s. 5 of the Crown Lands
Act, under which the mines and minerals remained in the Crown; in effect,
therefore, that Certificate of Title in the name of the Crown numbered V4338,
dated September 14, 1934, has remained outstanding with respect to the mines
and minerals and that the Certificate of Title issued to the Association by
virtue of the revesting in 1937, being Certificate of Title No. V5208, dated
September 7, 1937, is in respect to the land other than mines and minerals.
It would, therefore, appear that it is first essential to
determine the meaning and effect, in the agreement for sale of February 21,
1945, of the words "subject to the reservations contained in the Crown
Lands Act." If that statute had no application to the half section
here in question it must follow that in this agreement for sale these words are
mere surplus and without meaning.
The Legislature, in enacting the amendment of 1937, made no
reference to the Crown Lands Act. While such an omission is not
conclusive, its significance is emphasized as one examines the intent and
purpose of the Legislature in the enactment of the 1937 amendment. The
statutory revesting therein provided for is followed immediately by a provision
for a reconveyance or retransfer, which can only be for the convenience of the
parties and to facilitate the keeping of the records in the Land Titles
Offices. This reconveyance or retransfer is effected, not by any action on part
of the Crown, as that phrase is usually used in relation
[Page 23]
to the transfer of land, but rather by a statutory
designation of the Provincial Treasurer as an agent of the Legislature to
execute these documents. It is such a designation as that discussed by Sir
Lyman Duff in Lake Champlain and St. Lawrence Ship Canal Co. v. The
King .
Moreover, that the Legislature intended the purpose of the
1937 amendment should be effected separate and apart from the provisions of the
Crown Lands Act is further evidenced by a reference to the provisions of
both statutes. In my view it was never intended that the statutory revesting
effected by the 1937 amendment should constitute a "disposition"
within the meaning of the Crown Lands Act. The word "disposition"
in the latter Act is defined in s. 2(d) to include "every
act of the Crown whereby Crown lands, or a right, interest or estate therein,
are granted, disposed of … " The "Crown" is defined by s. 2(a)
of that statute to mean "His Majesty the King in the right of the
province." Under this statute it is contemplated that the Crown is acting
as Lord Macnaghten, speaking on behalf of the Privy Council, stated:
The proper meaning of the expression "grant from the
Crown" in the case of a land grant is a conveyance by Letters Patent under
the Great Seal and, although, of course, Crown lands may be transferred to a
subject by Act of Parliament, such a transfer would not ordinarily or properly
be described as "a grant from the Crown." Rex v. C.P.R. .
This distinction expressed by Lord Macnaghten emphasizes the
view that the Legislature, in enacting the amendment of 1937 under which the
land was vested in the Association, was proceeding upon a basis entirely
different from any disposition of land contemplated under the Crown Lands
Act. This conclusion is not affected by the fact that the "Crown"
is given a more extended meaning in District Registrar Land Titles, Portage
la Prairie v. Canadian Superior Oil of California Ltd. and Hiebert .
In view of the foregoing, the question arises how did this
notation "subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands
Act". come into existence in reference to this half section. As already
pointed out, when the Provincial Treasurer, acting pursuant to the amendment of
1937, executed a transfer dated June 18, 1937, reconveying the lands to
[Page 24]
the Association he included no reservation with respect to
mines or minerals, nor any reference to the Crown Lands Act. When, however,
this transfer was placed in the Land Titles Office the Registrar, under date of
September 7, 1937, issued to the Association duplicate Certificate of Title No.
V5208 in respect of this half section and he added thereon "subject to the
reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act." Neither the legislation
already referred to nor any legislative provision to which our attention has
been directed justified this notation by the Registrar in respect to this half
section. The position with respect to that notation is similar to that dealt
with in Balzer v. Registrar of Moosomin Land Registration District et al ,
as well as other authorities that might 'be cited with respect to the removal
of unauthorized notations upon Certificates of Title under the Torrens system.
Such a notation, where the rights of third parties are concerned, may be
important, but where, as here, all the parties are before the Court and third
party rights are not in issue this notation must be regarded as an error which,
as between the parties, is entirely ineffective and may be corrected.
This was the position of the title when the agreement for
sale dated February 21, 1945, was made between the Association and Gordon E.
Wardle. The position of the appellant, who is in the identical position of his
father and has been so treated throughout this litigation, is not that the
agreement for sale should be rectified, but that at all times relevant hereto
the reservation here under discussion, as it appeared in the agreement, was
meaningless and of no effect.
The position here is quite different from that in Knight
Sugar Co. Ltd. v. Alberta Railway and Irrigation Co. . There the Privy Council held that
the agreements for sale were merged in the transfers under the Alberta Land
Titles Act. This is not a case where the purchaser has accepted a transfer
of land on terms different from those contained in his agreement for purchase,
but rather a case where the purchaser's contention is that the agreement and
consequent transfer are to the same effect and asks that they be given effect
to according to their true intent and meaning, or, as
[Page 25]
otherwise put, the contention is that the reservation in the
agreement for sale was, as between the parties, never effective.
The position is, therefore, that the appellant brings into
Court the Association and the Government of Manitoba, being the only parties
concerned, and asks, as already stated, that the Association be compelled to
transfer to him the mines and minerals on the basis that the act of the
Registrar in inserting the reservation was unauthorized. If, as already
intimated, there were intervening rights of third parties, which would require
a consideration of relevant provisions of the Real Property Act, the
position might be entirely different. That, however, is not the position here
and, in my view, the appellant's action should be allowed.
It is contended on behalf of the respondents that since the
enactment of The Manitoba Farm Loans Act in 1939 (S. of M. 1939, c. 23),
effective as of May 1, 1938, the Association has been but an agent of the
Crown. In support of this it was pointed out that the Association no longer
engaged in the lending of money, that in respect of the borrowing of money and
other activities it was controlled by Order in Council and that the statute as
a whole looked to the winding up of the Association. It, however, cannot be
overlooked that the Association continued as a corporate body with the power of
acquiring, holding and alienating property and, in particular, might make
advances to purchase seed grain and generally lease and dispose of any land
acquired by the Association "at the earliest favourable opportunity … at
such price and interest rate and upon such terms and conditions as the Board
may approve." I am, therefore, of the opinion that the degree of control
here exercised was not sufficent to make the Association an agent of. the Crown
within the meaning of City of Halifax v. Halifax Harbour
Commissioners ; Oatway
v. The Canadian Wheat Board ; Regina
Industries Ltd. v. City of Regina ; as
well as other authorities to the same effect.
With great respect to the learned trial judge, it would seem
that this is a proper case in which the Court should make the corrections
contemplated by s. 159 of the Real Property Act. I am, therefore, of the
opinion that the
[Page 26]
appeal should be allowed and that the judgment of the
learned trial judge should be restored, with additions directing that on
Certificate of Title dated September 14, 1934, and numbered V4338 the
endorsement, stating that the transfer to the Manitoba Farm Loans Association
be "all except Crown Lands Act reservations," be deleted and,
further, that the words "subject to the reservations contained in the
Crown Lands Act," where they appear on Certificate of Title dated
September 7, 1937, and numbered V5208, and on Certificate of Title dated
September 13, 1948, and numbered 61305, be deleted; the appellant to have his
costs throughout.
Locke J.
(dissenting) :—This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for
Manitoba by which the appeal of the respondents from a judgment delivered by
the Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench in favour of the present appellant was
allowed and the action dismissed. Coyne J.A. dissented and would have dismissed
the appeal.
On February 21, 1945, the respondent, the Manitoba Farm
Loans Association, entered into an agreement in writing to sell the west half
of Section 24 in Township 10 and Range 28 West of the Principal Meridian in the
Province of Manitoba, subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands
Act, to Gordon Eugene Wardle, the father of the appellant, for the sum of
$2,500, part of which was to be paid in cash and the remainder in yearly
instalments, the last of which was payable on November 1, 1947. Upon the
completion of these payments, the vendor agreed to convey the said land to the
purchaser by a transfer under the Real Property Act, subject to the
conditions and reservations contained in the original grant from the Crown.
In due course, the payments called for by the agreement were
made. Wardle, who had apparently purchased the property for his son, the
present appellant, who was a minor at the time the agreement was made, executed
a quit claim deed in favour of the latter, which was delivered to the
Association upon the completion of the payments with a request that the
transfer be made to Edward Gordon Wardle. This was done and on September 9,
1948, the
[Page 27]
Association executed a transfer in
the form provided by the Real Property Act (c. 178, R.S.M. 1940), which
read in part:—
The Manitoba Farm Loans Association being registered owner
of an estate in fee simple in possession subject, however, to such
encumbrances, liens and interests as are notified by memorandum underwritten or
endorsed hereon in all that piece or parcel of land known and described as
follows:
The West half of Section Twenty-four in Township Ten and
Range Twenty-eight, West of the Principal Meridian, in the Province of
Manitoba. Subject to the Reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act …
transfers to the said EDWARD GORDON WARDLE all its estate and interest in the
said piece of land.
In pursuance of this transfer a certificate of title issued
to the appellant in which the land so transferred was described in the language
of the transfer. The certificate, as required by the Real Property Act, bore
the endorsement that the land mentioned should, by implication and without
special mention in the certificate unless the contrary be expressly declared,
be deemed to be subject, inter alia, to any subsisting reservation
contained in the original grant of the land from the Crown.
In the Fall of 1951 the appellant, apparently believing that
he was entitled to the oil and other mineral rights, proposed to grant a lease
of such rights, oil having been discovered in the vicinity, but was informed by
the solicitors for the proposed lessees that they were unwilling to accept his
title. On March 12, 1952, the present action was brought.
At the time the agreement referred to was made, the Association held a certificate of title to the lands in
question in its name dated September 7, 1937. The description in this
certificate was in the same terms as the description in the agreement of sale
and as in the certificate of title issued to the appellant in 1948.
The Statement of Claim, after reciting the circumstances
under which the certificate of title had issued to the Association in the year
1937 and alleging that the latter was the owner in fee simple of the said
lands, without any reservation to the Crown in the right of the Province of
Manitoba of any oil, gas, petroleum or mineral rights at the date when the
agreement of sale was entered into, said that, by the agreement, George Eugene
Wardle "did purchase
[Page 28]
the said lands" from the Association and thereafter had
quit claimed his interest in the said lands and in the agreement of sale to the
plaintiff, and that the plaintiff upon payment of the purchase price:—
became entitled to a transfer and conveyance of the said
lands clear of encumbrances and without any reservations as to oil, gas,
petroleum or mineral rights.
After reciting the fact that the payments called for by the
agreement had been made and that the Association had transferred to the
plaintiff "all its estate and interest in the said piece of land" and
that the certificate of title issued had been endorsed with a notation
"subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act", it
was alleged that the plaintiff had been entitled to a transfer and a certificate
of title without any such notation or reservation. By the prayer for relief the
plaintiff claimed a declaration that he was entitled to the oil and other
mineral rights referred to and a direction that the Association do convey to
him such rights.
While the plaintiff had not alleged that the written
agreement of February 21, 1945, was not in accordance with such oral agreement,
if any, as existed between G. E. Wardle and the
Association prior to the execution of the agreement, Wardle was permitted at
the trial to give evidence, without objection, that he had had no discussion
with the officials of the Association as to the oil and mineral rights when he
was negotiating the terms of the purchase. He said that he had been negotiating
by correspondence during the year 1944 but there was some disagreement as to
the price and, accordingly, he went to Winnipeg to see Mr. Griffith, the
Chairman of the Board, and while the latter told him that he could not make a
binding agreement without the approval of the Board, he would recommend that
the property be sold at the price offered. When, in relation to this
discussion, the agreement was signed is not disclosed by the evidence. Upon
being asked whether anything had been said between him and any member of the
Association about oil or minerals, he said there had not and that the
[Page 29]
matter was not discussed. Asked as to the clause in the
agreement reading "subject to the reservations contained in the Crown
Lands Act", he answered:—
Well, I didn't have any experience with titles. I thought it
was just a natural matter that was in all agreements and titles. I wasn't
acquainted with the general regulations regarding that and took it as a matter
of course.
It is to be noted that the witness did not say that he did
not understand what the clause meant, but rather that he thought it was a term
commonly included in descriptions of land. In the absence, therefore, of any
suggestion that any representation was made on behalf of the Association which
led him to understand the language other than in its natural and ordinary
meaning, or of some evidence that the clause was inserted in the agreement as a
result of a mutual mistake, and neither is suggested either in the pleadings or
the evidence, the only question is as to the proper interpretation of the
expression in its context, since it is upon the written agreement, and not that
agreement with a variation, on which the appellant based his claim.
The Crown Lands Act, as it was at the time the agreement
of sale was entered into, was c. 48 R.S.M. 1940 (as amended by c. 98 S.M. 1943
and C.11 S.M. 1945). S.5 of the Act, which appears under a sub-heading
"Reservations from Dispositions", provides that, in the absence of
express provision to the contrary, there is reserved to the Crown out of every
disposition of Crown lands, inter alia:—
(d) mines and minerals, together with the right to
enter, locate, prospect, mine in and remove minerals.
A term of the agreement read:—
And it is further agreed that the Purchaser hereby accepts
the title of the Vendor to the said lands and shall not be entitled to call for
the production of any abstract of title or proof or evidence of title or any
deeds, papers or documents relating to the said property other than those which
are in the possession of the Vendor.
The evidence of the title of the Association was the
certificate of title issued to it, as above stated, in 1937, which described
the property in the same manner as it was described in the agreement of sale.
While the nature of the property excepted might have been stated with greater
particularity in the agreement, the interpretation to be placed upon the words
"subject to the reservations contained in the Crown Lands Act"
appears to me to be clear.
[Page 30]
The exceptions were enumerated by reference to s.5 of the Crown
Lands Act and might be ascertained by reference to that section. It was not
the Crown with whom Wardle was bargaining but with the Association, a separate
entity. The rights reserved to the Crown by s.5 were excepted from the West
Half of Section 24 in Township 10 and Range 28 West of the Principal Meridian
and it was that property, with these exceptions, that formed the subject matter
of the sale.
In the reasons for judgment delivered by Mr. Justice Adamson
(now C.J.M.), with which the majority of the Court concurred, it is said that
it makes no difference who presently has title to the mines and minerals when
the question is, What did the appellant purchase? since if the Association owns
the mines and minerals the clause is a reservation, while if the Government of
Manitoba owns them it is an exception. With this I respectfully agree.
The transfer of the land subsequently made to the appellant
by the Association described the property sold in the language of the agreement
and the certificate of title which issued thereafter so describes it. In my
opinion, the appellant received from the Manitoba Farm Loans Association
exactly what the . Association agreed to sell to George Eugene Wardle by the agreement
of February 21, 1945, and the evidence discloses no cause of action.
In view of my conclusion, it is unnecessary for me to
express my views upon the other questions which were so fully argued before us.
I would dismiss this appeal with costs.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Thompson &
Scarth.
Solicitors for the respondents: A. E. Hoskin, F. J. Meighen.