Supreme Court of Canada
Marsden Kooler Transport v. Pollock, [1953] 1
S.C.R. 66
Date: 1952-10-07
Marsden Kooler Transport Ltd. and Albert Piche (Defendants) Appellants;
and
Annie Pollock,
as Administratrix of the Estate of William Bruno Pollock, Deceased (Plaintiff) Respondent.
1952: June 11; 1952: October 7.
Present: Kerwin, Kellock, Estey, Locke and
Fauteux JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF ALBERTA, APPELLATE
DIVISION
Automobile—Motorcyclist colliding with disabled trailer
at night—Flares extinguished and not placed at distance required by
Statute—Failure to repair or move trailer—Damages—Deceased illegitimate—Whether
award in reasonable proportion to loss—Public Service Vehicles Act, R.S.A.
1943, c. 276—Fatal Accidents Act, R.SA. 1942, c. 125—Trustee Act, R.S.A. 1942,
c. 215.
The respondent's minor son was killed when his motorcycle
collided in a very foggy night with the appellant's disabled trailer which had
been left parked on the highway well over on its proper side of the road. The
appellant had placed three flares, two behind and one in front of the trailer,
all three at less than one hundred feet from the trailer; but these flares were
extinguished at the time of the accident.
The action was taken by the son's mother, as administratrix of
his estate, and on her own behalf and that of his father, as dependents. The
trial judge, having found negligence in the failure to set out the flares in
the manner prescribed by the Public Service Vehicles Act (R.S.A. 1942,
c. 276) and in the failure to remove the trailer from the highway or repair it,
awarded damages in the sum of $6,000 under the provisions of the Fatal
Accidents Act (R.S.A. 1942, c. 125) and the Trustee Act (R.S.A.
1942, c. 215). This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeal for Alberta.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed; Kellock and Locke
JJ., dissenting in part, would have ordered a new trial restricted to the
amount of damages to be awarded under the Fatal Accidents Act.
Per Kerwin, Estey and Fauteux JJ.: Applying City of
Vancouver v. Burchill [1932] S.C.R. 620 and Fuller v. Nickel
[1949] S.C.R. 601, even if the appellant did put the flares out in a manner
that did not comply with the statute, it was not liable in damages unless such breach
was the direct cause of the accident. The statutory requirement of putting out
flares in the circumstances of this case constitutes a duty the performance of
which is the minimum required by law and does not relieve from exercising the
care that a reasonable man would exercise in the circumstances. The collision
was directly caused by the failure to exercise such care. A reasonable man
would
[Page 67]
have appreciated the danger, foreseen the possibility of
injury and would have made an effort to remove or repair the trailer which,
upon the evidence, would have been successful. (Jones v. Shajer [1948]
S.C.R. 166 distinguished).
The amount of damages awarded under the Fatal Accidents Act
must be determined upon the particular facts in each case and, in part,
must be a matter of estimate, even conjecture. Appellate Courts have, apart
from some error in principle, interfered only where the damages were clearly
excessive, that is to say where there was no reasonable proportion between the
amount awarded and the loss sustained, which is not the case here even though
the damages awarded were somewhat large.
Per: Locke J. (dissenting in part) : The fact that the
flares were not placed at the distance from the stranded vehicle required by
the regulations had no bearing on the occurrence of the accident since they had
been extinguished before it happened. The proper inference to be drawn from the
evidence was that the flares were in a defective condition when placed upon the
highway and this, coupled with the negligence found by the trial judge of
failing to remove the vehicle from the highway, was sufficient to sustain the
finding of liability.
No evidence was given at the trial as to the age or the
financial circumstances of the parents on whose behalf the claim for damages
was made under the Fatal Accidents Act in respect of the death of an
illegitimate child and the amount awarded was so excessive as to bear no
reasonable relation to any loss shown to have been sustained. There should be a
new trial restricted to the assessment of damages.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court of Alberta, affirming the judgment of Shepherd J. , which had awarded the respondent
$6,000 for damages for fatal injuries suffered by her son when his motorcycle
collided with the appellant's trailer parked on the highway at night.
A. F. Moir for the appellants.
F. R. McLean Q.C. and F. Dunne for the
respondent.
The judgment of Kerwin, Estey and Eauteux JJ. was delivered
by
Estey J.:—William
Bruno Pollock, shortly after 1:30 on the morning of August 20, 1948, riding a
motorcycle northward toward Edmonton on Highway No. 2, lost his life when he
collided with a heavily loaded trailer owned by the appellant Marsden Kooler
Transport Limited (hereinafter called the Company) and parked on the highway.
This action is brought by his mother, as administratrix of his estate, on her
own behalf and that of his father William
[Page 68]
Bruno. The learned trial judge awarded damages in the sum of
$6,000 against both appellants and his judgment was affirmed in the Appellate
Court.
The appellant Piche, an employee of the Company, was driving
the Company's truck, with trailer attached, northward on Highway No. 2 when
about 9:00 p.m., on the evening of August 19, 1948, a bearing seized in the
right rear wheel of the trailer. It was impossible for him then to move the
trailer further with his own truck. He, therefore, detached the truck and left
this trailer, 22 feet long and 7 feet 8 inches wide, parked on the east side of
the highway. The highway had a hard surface width of 22 feet, with one foot of
gravel on each side. The policeman who made certain measurements found the west
side of the trailer was 13 6 feet from the west edge of the hard surface. This
trailer was entirely on the hard surface and every vehicle proceeding
northward, of necessity, had to turn to the west in order to avoid it.
Piche immediately communicated with another of the Company's
drivers, who returned with his truck while Piche was still there, but no effort
was then made, notwithstanding the presence of two of the Company's drivers and
their respective trucks, to move the trailer. The learned trial judge found:
I am satisfied from the evidence that had Piche and his
fellow truck driver hooked up their two trucks to the trailer they could have
removed it from the highway without difficulty shortly after it became
disabled. The wrecker truck that did remove it the next morning pulled it two
and a half miles in about an hour to a point where it was clear of the highway.
Piche put out three flares, one between 30 and 50 feet north
of the trailer, the second just south of the trailer and a third about 30 or 50
feet south of the trailer. These were not placed as required by the regulations
made under The Public Service Vehicles Act of the Province of Alberta
(R.S.A. 1942, c. 276). They remained burning until some time around midnight,
but were not burning at the time of the collision. After the collision these
flares were found in a damaged condition, but in places that did not assist in
determining where they had been originally placed. The learned trial judge
stated that after parking the trailer and placing the flares
[Page 69]
Piche then drove in his truck to Edmonton, called at his
employer's warehouse and, finding it closed, went home to bed, making no other
effort to get in touch with his employer until the next morning, nor did he
notify the police, nor anyone else, of the presence of the trailer on the
highway.
The trailer was, in fact, removed by another party the next
morning as a result of action taken by the police.
The deceased had left Edmonton about midnight with two
friends, each riding a motorcycle. They went to Leduc and
as they passed the trailer the three flares were burning. They left Leduc to return to Edmonton about 1:30 in the morning. It was
then very foggy. As they approached the trailer the flares were not burning.
The deceased was riding last and it would appear that his motorcycle collided
with the rear left corner of the trailer, causing him to lose his life.
The appellants' contention that, even if Piche did put the
flares out in a manner that did not comply with the statute, the appellants are
not liable in damages, as here claimed, unless such breach was the direct cause
of the accident, has been repeatedly recognized. City of Vancouver v. Burchill
and Fuller v. Nickel et al .
The learned trial judge appears to have been satisfied that the absence of the
flares did contribute to the accident and that their absence was due to the
manner in which they were placed by Piche. It was, however, unnecessary for the
learned judge to make a specific finding to that effect, as he found that if
Piche had exercised reasonable care the trailer would have been removed from
the highway some time before the accident took place. It was on the failure in
this regard that the learned judge appeared to place the greater emphasis and
it was undoubtedly a direct cause of the collision.
This case illustrates again what has been repeatedly stated
that a statutory requirement such as putting out flares constitutes a duty that
must be performed and if the flares are placed with care they are often an
adequate protection, at least for some time. However, the performance of that
statutory obligation is the minimum required by law and does not relieve a
person in Piche's position from exercising the care that a reasonable man would
[Page 70]
exercise in the circumstances. A
reasonable man would have appreciated the danger caused by the presence of the
trailer, foreseen the possibility of injury and would have utilized the
Company's two trucks in an effort to remove the trailer which, upon the evidence,
would have been successful.
There was another alternative. It was about 10:00 p.m. when
Piche left for Edmonton. A reasonable man would not have been content merely to
try the warehouse door, but would have made an effort to communicate with his employer
and endeavour to arrange for either the repair, which the evidence establishes
could have been made upon the highway, or removal of the trailer.
If either of the foregoing reasonable courses had been
adopted the trailer would not have been there at the time of the collision. It
was Piche's failure to exercise the care of a reasonable man in the
circumstances that directly caused the collision here in question. At all
material times he was acting within the scope of his employment with the
appellant company.
Jones v. Shafer , relied upon by the appellants,
is distinguishable upon its facts. There, apart from other distinguishing
factors, the learned trial judge found:
I do not think under the circumstances here that the
defendant could have secured the necessary equipment to do so (that is to move
the truck), at least until the next morning.
The flares were put out with care and were removed by some
unknown person. Moreover, after the flares were so removed the police visited
the vehicle there in question and lighted the lights thereon, which were
burning at the time of the accident.
The appellants contend that the damages in the sum of $6,000
awarded under The Fatal Accidents Act (R.S.A. 1942, c. 125) are
excessive. They draw our attention to the statement of my Lord the Chief
Justice, then Rinfret J., with whom Smith J. concurred, in Littley v. Brooks
et al :
In assessing damages under the Fatal Accidents Act, it is
well settled law that the jury are confined to pecuniary loss sustained by the
family and cannot take into consideration the mental suffering of the survivors
… It is the reasonable expectation of pecuniary advantage by the relatives
remaining alive that may be taken into consideration.
[Page 71]
The appellants then cite a number of cases in which they
contend the damages awarded were such as to indicate the damages here are
excessive. The amount of damages allowed upon the above basis must be
determined upon the particular facts under consideration in each case and, in
part, must be a matter of estimate, even conjecture. Grand Trunk Ry. Co. of
Can. v. Jennings .
Appellate courts have, apart from some error in principle, interfered only
where the damages are clearly excessive. Our attention was directed to Taff
Vale Ry. v. Jenkins ,
where damages were fixed by a jury under The Fatal Accidents Act. It was
contended in the House of Lords that the damages were excessive. Lord Atkinson
stated that in such a case an appellate court would regard the damages as
excessive only where "the Court cannot find any reasonable proportion
between the amount awarded and the loss sustained." In Davies v. Powell
Duffryn Associated Collieries, Ld. ,
Lord Wright stated:
Where the verdict is that of a jury, it will only be set
aside if the appellate court is satisfied that the verdict on damages is such
that it is out of all proportion to the circumstances of the case: Mechanical
and General Inventions Co., Ld. v. Austin, 1935 A.C. 346. Where,
however, the award is that of the judge alone, the appeal is by way of
rehearing on damages as on all other issues, but as there is generally so much
room for individual choice so that the assessment of damages is more like an
exercise of discretion than an ordinary act of decision, the appellate court is
particularly slow to reverse the trial judge on a question of the amount of
damages. It is difficult to lay down any precise rule which will cover all
cases, but a good general guide is given by Greer L.J. in Flint v.
Lovell, 1935—1 KB. 354, 360.
The statement of Lord Justice Greer referred to reads as follows:
In order to justify reversing the trial judge on the
question of the amount of damages it will generally be necessary that this
Court should be convinced either that the judge acted upon some wrong principle
of law, or that the amount awarded was so extremely high or so very small as to
make it, in the judgment of this Court, an entirely erroneous estimate of the
damage to which the plaintiff is entitled.
On the foregoing basis, even if one were disposed to conclude
that the damages were somewhat large, there is no basis here disclosed upon
which an appellate court should interfere.
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
[Page 72]
Kellock, J.
(dissenting in part)—In my opinion, this appeal should succeed as to damages
only. At the time of the accident, the deceased was within a few weeks of being
seventeen years old. He was a normal, healthy boy, and the family was
apparently in humble circumstances. The boy had been engaged in helping his
father in his business of trucking, being paid a wage of $60 a month, out of
which he was paying $7 a week to his mother for board. The father testified
that a few months after his son's death he took in another man on a partnership
basis, he himself retaining a 75 per cent interest, and that this arrangement
cost him from $60 to $70 a month more than he had been paying his deceased son.
There is nothing in this evidence, however, which suggests that either the
father or the son during the latter's lifetime realized that the boy was being
under-paid or that he was making a contribution to his father. He occasionally
bought, as the father said, "odd little things, a present, some small
thing" for his sister "that didn't amount to much."
The contention of the respondent that the deceased "was
in a rather different position from so many others of his age due to the fact
that here was not only an expectation of contribution insofar as the dependents
were concerned, but an actual contribution of $50 to $60 per month through his work
with his father," is therefore not borne out by the evidence.
It is, of course, quite unnecessary in a case of this kind
that, in order to establish a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit, the
deceased should have in fact contributed to the support of the plaintiff, but,
to employ the language of Lord Atkinson in Taff Vale Railway Company v. Jenkins
, the
court must find a "reasonable proportion between the amount awarded and
the loss sustained."
In my opinion, there is on the evidence in this case no
reasonable relation between the amount awarded and the loss sustained. I
therefore concur in the order proposed by my brother Locke.
[Page 73]
Locke, J.
(dissenting in part) :—This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate
Division of the Supreme Court of Alberta which dismissed the appeal of the
present appellants from a judgment for damages awarded against them under the
provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act (c. 125, R.S.A. 1942) and the Trustee
Act (c. 215, R.S.A. 1942).
In view of the nature of the findings of negligence made at
the trial, it is desirable to state the facts proven in some detail. The
appellant Piche, a truck driver employed by the appellant company, was on the
evening of August 19, 1948, driving a three ton tractor drawing a vehicle
described as a semi-trailer upon the main highway from Calgary to Edmonton. At
about 8 o'clock, when he was north of Leduc, trouble
developed in one of the housings of the trailer, the bearings being smashed or
seized, whereupon he drew over to the right side of the pavement and stopped
and, deciding that he would be unable to proceed without assistance, sent word
to the driver of another truck of the respondent company which was preceding
him to the north asking him to return and assist him. When the driver of the
second truck joined him, Piche decided to put out
flares on the highway to give warning of the presence of the trailer, to
disconnect that vehicle from the tractor and leave it standing on the highway.
Having done this, he proceeded to Edmonton and, after going to the appellant
company's warehouse to report and finding it closed, went to his home and
retired to bed.
The highway at the place in question has a hard surface
twenty-two feet wide: the trailer was twenty-two feet long and seven feet eight
inches wide and, according to a constable who gave evidence on the respondent's
behalf, the left side of the vehicle was thirteen feet six inches distant from
the west side of the pavement, thus being well to the east of the center line
The right wheels of the trailer were close to the easterly edge of the
pavement. While the trailer was equipped with the clearance lights required by
the Vehicles and Highways Traffic Act (c. 275, R.S.A. 1942), these were
supplied with electricity from the tractor and were extinguished when the
latter unit was disconnected.
The boy William Bruno Pollock in respect of whose death
damages were claimed had that evening ridden, in company with two companions
named Fricker and McMinn
[Page 74]
from Edmonton South to Leduc. Each
of them was riding on a motorcycle. They had passed the trailer on their way
south, at which time, according to Fricker, there were three flares on the roadway, one to the north and two to the south of the
trailer. After spending a short time at Leduc, McMinn started
north for Edmonton and was followed a short time after by the others. Pollock
who had left with Flicker apparently got behind and was riding alone at the
time the accident occurred. According to Flicker, it had become very foggy and
before he reached the place where the trailer was standing he had lost sight of
Pollock. As he approached the trailer there were no flares to be seen: having
passed it he proceeded north. Pollock meanwhile followed Fricker along the
highway and, failing to detect the presence of the trailer, collided with the
left rear of the vehicle suffering injuries which caused his death before
anyone reached the scene of the accident.
The claim of the respondents as pleaded is in negligence.
While, as stated in the reasons for judgment of Shepherd, J. , he permitted an amendment at the
trial to set up a claim in nuisance he made no finding on that issue. He found
Piche to have been negligent in failing to set out the flares in the manner
required by regulations made under the provisions of the Public Service
Vehicles Act (c. 276, R.S.A. 1942) and in failing to remove the trailer
from the highway which, he considered, could have been accomplished with the
assistance of the other truck of the appellant company. The learned trial judge
also expressed the view that as the trailer could have been repaired on the
highway by taking out repairs from Edmonton this should have been done.
The regulations relating to the setting out of warning
lights passed under the provisions of the Public Service Vehicles Act read
as follows:—
When during the period between sunset and sunrise or any
other time when things are not plainly visible at a distance of 500 feet a
Public Service or Commercial Vehicle becomes stationery for any reason whatever
upon any highway outside the boundaries of a city, town or village, and
(a) the lighting equipment
required by The Public Service Vehicles Act and/or The Vehicles and Highway
Traffic Act is disabled, the driver or other person in charge of such vehicle
shall immediately cause two red lanterns, fusees, flares or approved
[Page 75]
reflectors to be placed on the
highway in line with the vehicle, one at a distance of approximately one
hundred (100) feet in front of the vehicle and one at a distance of
approximately one hundred feet at the rear of the vehicle.
(b) the lighting equipment
is not disabled, the driver or person in charge of such vehicle shall after a
period not exceeding ten (10) minutes, proceed to set out flares, lamps,
lanterns, reflectors, or fusees as provided for above.
In dealing with this aspect of the matter the learned trial
judge said in part :—
In fixing the distance of approximately 100 feet at which
flares must be set out under circumstances such as we have here it is presumed
that this distance of approximately 100 feet is the minimum required for safety
but in this case the flares were at the most placed not more than 50 ft. from
the parked trailer. This surely was negligence on the part of Piche for which
he and his employer, the other defendant, must be held responsible.
It was, however, not the fact that the flares were put out
less than one hundred feet from the vehicle that caused or contributed to the
occurrence of the accident but the fact that they were extinguished when
Pollock arrived there on his return journey. Unless, therefore, as contended
for the respondent, the placing of the flares on the highway at less than the
prescribed distance from the vehicle was a contributing factor to their being
extinguished by passing vehicles striking them, the fact that this was done is
an irrelevant circumstance.
The flares in question were described by Piche as being
round pot flares burning kerosene and having a screw top wick in them and they
were, according to him, in good condition and full of oil. Constable McLean of
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said that they were the usual type used for
this purpose and he considered them to be standard equipment. According to
Piche, he had placed one flare on the highway to the east of the center line
about twenty paces to the north of the trailer, a second one close to the back
of it and a third some twenty paces to the south of it. This witness had said
at the coroner's inquest that he had placed the flares thirty feet to the north
and to the south of the trailer and this discrepancy in his evidence is
commented on adversely by the learned trial judge. With respect, however, I
think it can make no difference in considering what caused the flares to be
extinguished whether the one to the north and the one
[Page 76]
farthest to the south were thirty feet or fifty feet (estimating
a pace as Piche did as two and a half feet) from the trailer. As to the
distance such flares are visible, Holcombe, an experienced bus driver employed
by the Western Canadian Greyhound Lines and who passed the trailer in the early
morning hours of August 20 when it was very foggy, said that they were visible
at a distance of three hundred yards and that the vehicle itself was visible
when he was about seventy-five yards distant. Engel, an experienced driver,
said that he could see such flares in a fog in ample time to stop: if it was
really foggy he considered they could be seen from one hundred to two hundred
feet distant. Fricker, who said that there was fog as he described it "in
patches" when they passed the trailer going south, stated that at that
time the flares could be seen a quarter of a mile away. There is no
contradiction of this evidence in the record. Constable McLean said that flares
of this type when set out at night were very good as warning signals, but he
was unable from any experience to say how effective they were in a fog.
In endeavouring to come to a conclusion as to what caused
the flares to be extinguished, it is of importance to consider the condition
and the various locations in which they were found after the accident. Constable
McLean found one of the flares about twenty feet south of the trailer on the
east side of the highway. The wick had been knocked out and the container was
damaged. He also found one about twenty or thirty feet to the north of the
trailer in the ditch on the west side of the highway. A third flare was seen by
the witness Holcombe between the rear wheels and under the back of the trailer
which, he said, had been "up ended." Constable McLean found a skid
mark on the highway commencing forty-eight feet south of the van and leading to
the left rear corner which, in his opinion, had undoubtedly been caused by
Pollock's motorcycle. Holcombe who said that one of the flares was burning at a
point some forty to fifty feet south of the trailer when he passed that vehicle
going south, said that it had apparently been hit by some vehicle at about the
point where the skidmark commenced and coal oil was spilled on the highway. The
evidence of both of these witnesses, it
[Page 77]
may be noted, supports Piche's statement that he had placed
the most southerly flare about twenty paces or fifty feet distant from the
trailer.
Since it was proven as part of the plaintiff's case that the
flares were out at the time of the accident, the only reasonable inference to
draw from this evidence is, in my opinion, that the most southerly flare was
struck by Pollock's motorcycle and the one placed immediately to the south of
the vehicle also struck as it skidded towards the rear of the van. As to the
flare which had been placed to the north of the trailer, in view of the
evidence of the visibility of such flares, the proper inference is, I think,
that after it had ceased to burn it had been struck and knocked to the side by
some passing vehicle. Nothing in any of this evidence, in the view I take of
this matter, supports the idea that the distance at which they were placed from
the vehicle had any bearing on their being extinguished. The finding of
liability based upon an infringement of the regulations cannot, therefore, be
supported.
The second ground of negligence found was that the trailer
could, without difficulty, have been removed from the highway within a short
time after it became disabled as the equipment to do so was available. The
learned trial judge was of the opinion that if Piche and his fellow truck
driver had hooked up their two trucks to the trailer they could have removed it
from the highway without difficulty shortly after it became disabled. There was
conflicting evidence upon this point. While the evidence of Engel, the driver
of the powerful wrecker sent to the scene, would indicate the contrary, the
admissions made by Piche on cross-examination that while he considered it would
have injured the axle of the vehicle the two tractors could have moved the
trailer off the highway were accepted by the learned trial judge. It was shown
that very close to the place where the trailer was halted there was a roadway
leading into an elevator to which the trailer might have been moved and the
possibility of danger to passing traffic avoided. It is to be remembered that
while this large trailer was equipped with clearance lights which would have
served as an additional warning to traffic upon the highway these were
extinguished, of necessity, when the tractor was disconnected. Flares of the
required type if in condition
[Page 78]
should, upon the evidence, have burned throughout the night
and the fact that these flares went out in the circumstances above detailed is
consistent only, in my opinion, with the fact that they were in a defective
condition when they were placed upon the highway. It was the duty of the
appellants, I think, since they proposed to leave the vehicle standing upon the
highway to see that the flares set out were in proper condition to continue
burning throughout the hours of darkness, particularly in view of the absence
of any other lights upon the vehicle. These circumstances, together with the
negligence found by the learned judge, suffice, in my opinion, to sustain a
finding of liability on the part of the appellants.
It is further argued for the appellants that the cause of
the accident was the negligence of Pollock and, alternatively, that he was
guilty of negligence which contributed to the
occurrence. On these issues the learned trial judge has found for the
respondent and the Appellate Division has dismissed the appeal from this
finding. The argument addressed to us has not satisfied me that there has been
any error in dealing with this aspect of the case.
The appellants contend further that the damages awarded
under the Fatal Accidents Act are excessive and bear no reasonable
relation to the actual financial loss suffered by the parents of the deceased.
The respondent Annie Pollock is the mother of the deceased boy who was born out
of wedlock: the father William Bruno and the respondent, it appears, have lived
together for about twenty years and there is another child of which they are
the parents who was seven years old at the time of the trial. While unmarried
they have maintained a home together and the boy lived with them and went to
school until he was fourteen years old, after which he worked for his father in
his business of trucking and dealing in scrap metal. The father was paying his
son $60 a month for his services and the boy paid $7 a week to his mother for
board. Had he lived he would have attained the age of seventeen years on
September 6, 1948. Neither the age of the father or the mother was proven and
no evidence given as to the financial circumstances of either of them.
According to William Bruno, it would have cost him $120 a month for a man to
replace his son as his assistant in carrying on his
[Page 79]
business at the date of the trial
which was December 19, 1950, more than two years after the time of the
accident. It was also shown that at times the boy used to buy small presents
for his mother and for the little girl. He was a strong healthy lad and had had
nothing other than minor illnesses during his life.
Upon this evidence the learned trial judge awarded damages
under the Fatal Accidents Act of $6,000. The learned Chief Justice of
Alberta, in delivering the judgment of the Court, said as to this:—
While we might not have awarded so large a sum under the
Fatal Accidents Act, we are not prepared to find that the trial judge
assessment under that Act did not bear a reasonable proportion to the loss
sustained.
The principles which govern awards under statutes of this
nature have long since been settled. In my opinion, they cannot be more
concisely and accurately stated than in the following passage from the judgment
of Killam, C.J. in Davidson v. Stuart :
The damages are not to be allowed for injury to the feelings
of the survivors, but for the loss of a life of substantial pecuniary value to
the relatives entitled under the statute; there must be evidence reasonably
warranting the inference that the relatives have sustained a loss of that
character. It need not appear that the deceased was under any legal liability
to the survivors of which his death has prevented performance; it is sufficient
that the circumstances were such as should give them a reasonable expectation
of pecuniary benefit from the continuance of the life.
Section 2 of the Fatal Accidents Act provides that
the expression "child" in the statute shall, unless the context
otherwise requires, include an illegitimate child: but for this there would
have been no claim by either parent (Town of Montreal West v. Hough ). In addition to the damages claimed
under the provisions of that Act the plaintiff claimed under the
provisions of the Trustee Act and the learned trial judge awarded a sum
of $1,000 which, we were informed by counsel for both parties, was for loss of
life expectancy, and the sum of $340 for funeral expenses. The deceased boy
left other estate to the amount of $750 which amount, together with the damages
awarded under the Trustee Act, go to the mother under the provisions of
the Intestate Successions Act (c. 211, R.S.A. 1942), the net amount so
received being $1,750. From the damages
[Page 80]
awarded under the Fatal Accidents Act it was directed
that this amount be deducted, leaving a sum of $4,250 to be divided equally
between the father and the mother.
The onus lay upon the plaintiff in the present matter to
establish that those on whose behalf the claim was advanced had a reasonable
expectancy of pecuniary benefit from the continued life of Pollock and this, in
my opinion, was done in so far as the claim was made on behalf of the mother
and the father. It was, however, further the obligation of the plaintiff to
prove the facts from which a fair estimate of the damage sustained could be
made. The fact that at a time two years after the event the father was required
to pay a man $60 a month more than the amount he had paid to his son does not,
of course, establish a loss in any such amount. The period when this was done
was two years later when all wage earners were being paid increased amounts and
a full grown man would presumably be able to do more and effective work than a
boy of seventeen. The boy had gone to work when taken out of school and, while
it is perhaps fair to assume that for some time he would work for his father
for less than he could obtain elsewhere, in the normal course of events within
two or three years he would either establish himself elsewhere or expect the
same wages as other men for the work done. It is not necessary in claims under
the Act that it should be shown that the person on whose behalf the claim
is made has a claim in law to maintenance or assistance but the fact that this
boy was illegitimate is, in my opinion, a factor which must be considered in
dealing with the claim advanced on behalf of his father. The age of the parents
and the financial circumstances of each of them were also material facts to be
considered in estimating what value should be attributed to the support which
the father and mother might reasonably expect to receive from their son in the
future and neither point was touched in the evidence.
The question of the quantum of the award under the Fatal
Accidents Act is to be considered as standing by itself. The evidence is,
in my opinion, inadequate to enable the Court to properly estimate the amount
of the loss sustained
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by the boy's death. Upon the evidence as it stands, I think
the amount of $6,000 is so excessive as to bear no reasonable relation to such
loss as was shown to have been sustained.
In these circumstances, I think there should be a new trial
restricted, however, to the amount of damages to be awarded under the Fatal
Accidents Act. As the appeal should otherwise fail, in my opinion, and
success thus be divided between the parties I think there should be no costs
either in this Court or in the Appellate Division.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Wood, Buchanan,
Campbell, Moir & Hope.
Solicitors for the respondent: Maclean &
Dunne.