Supreme Court of Canada
City of
Verdun v. Sun Oil Co., [1952] 1 S.C.R. 222
Date:
1951-12-03
City Of Verdun (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Sun Oil Company Ltd. (Petitioner) Respondent.
1951: October 31; 1951: December 3.
Present: Taschereau, Kellock, Estey, Cartwright and Fauteux
JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF KING'S BENCH, APPEAL SIDE,
PROVINCE OF QUEBEC.
Mandamus—Municipality—Refusal by Council to grant permit
for erection of service station—Section 76 of municipal by-law 128 of City of
Verdun gives Council discretion to grant or refuse permit—Whether such
discretionary power ultra vires—Whether mandamus is right procedure to have it
so declared—Whether petitioner has legal interest to bring action—Cities and
Towns Act, R.S.Q. 1941, c. 233, ss. 424, 426 and 429—Arts. 50, 77 and 992
C.P.C.
The respondent, pursuant to s. 76 of by-law 128 of the City of
Verdun, applied to the appellant for permission to erect a service station in
the City. In the immediate locality were then already located three like
establishments operated by different competitor companies. The application was
rejected by a resolution of the Council of the City, notwithstanding that all
the requirements of s. 76 had been fully complied with and that the Building
Inspector of the City had transmitted to the Council a favourable certificate.
Proceedings were then instituted by way of mandamus to challenge the validity
of s. 76 in so far as it purported to give the Council a discretionary power to
grant or refuse the permit, to ask that that portion of s. 76 be declared ultra
vires the powers of the City as delegated to it under the Cities and
Towns Act (R.S.Q. 1941, c. 233), and to compel the granting of the
permission. In the Superior Court, the City was successful, but the majority in
the Court of Appeal for Quebec declared null and void, as ultra vires,
the above mentioned portion of s. 76.
Held, dismissing the appeal, that the portion of s. 76
of by-law 128 of the City of Verdun, purporting to give the Council a
discretionary power to grant or refuse the permit, was ultra vires the
powers of the City as delegated to it by s. 426 of the Cities and Towns Act.
The municipalities, deriving their legislative powers from the provincial
Legislature, must frame their by-laws strictly within the scope delegated to
them; but the City, by enacting s. 76, effectively transformed its delegated
authority to regulate by legislation into a mere administrative and
discretionary power to grant or cancel by resolution the permit provided for in
the by-law. (Phaneuf v. Corp. du Village de St-Hughes (1) and Corp.
du Village de Ste-Agathe v. Reid (2) referred to).
Held further, that the City, having fought its case on
the assumption, sufficiently justified by the record, that the plaintiff had a
legal interest in the action, is now bound by the manner in which it conducted
its defence and cannot therefore gain a new ground in law. (The Century
Indemnity Co. v. Rogers (3) and Sullivan v. McGillis (4)
followed).
[Page 223]
APPEAL from the judgment of the court of King’s Bench,
Appeal side, province of Quebec , reversing St-Jacques and Barclay JJ.A.
dissenting, the decision of the trial judge and holding that part of s. 76 of
by-law 128 of the city of Verdun was ultra vires.
L. J. de la Durantaye K.C. and Maurice
Fauteux K.C. for the
appellant. The principle laid down in Phaneuf v. Corp. du
Village de St-Hughes is undisputed except as to the use of the
word "strictly". The legislator cannot anticipate every case down to
its smallest details. Therefore, in order to be intra vires, a by-law
need only to be within the general powers given by the Legislature.
Under the terms of Art. 426 of the Cities and Towns Act,
if the Council could determine by by-law the locality for a particular
industry, it certainly could authorize the Council to do so by resolution. If
Art. 426 did not authorize the Council to enact s. 76, then Art. 424 gives the
municipality powers general enough to enact it. This authority can also be
found under Art. 429(22) of the Cities and Towns Act. The good administration
of the City requires such a discretion which, the evidence reveals, was
properly exercised. Furthermore, if the Building Inspector, under the terms of
Art. 426 of the Act, has a discretion in the granting or refusing of the
permit, why not the Council?
Assuming then that the Council could, in its discretion, grant
or refuse the permit, the Courts cannot intervene and substitute their
discretion to the Council's: Noël v. Cité de Quebec
and Quinlan v. City of Westmount .
Subsidiarily, even if the City had exceeded its jurisdiction,
the respondent could not by way of mandamus ask that the portion of s. 76 be
declared null. There is no act or duty incumbent upon the City by-law to grant
the permit (Art. 992 C.P.C.). Quite the contrary, s. 76 leaves it to the
discretion of the Council. Even if that part of s. 76 is erased, there is still
no stipulation of the law to oblige the Council to grant the permit. The
mandamus was not the most effectual remedy as required by Art. 992 C.P.C. (Kearns
v. Corp. of Low relied on).
[Page 224]
Furthermore, in order to proceed by mandamus, the respondent
needed to have at least an eventual interest which had to exist at the time of
the taking of the action. The respondent was not at that time owner nor lessee.
(Perron v. Corp. du Sacré-Coeur de Jésus ,
Noël v. Cité de Québec , Clegg
v. MacDonald and Re Workmen's Compensation Act
relied on).
G. C. Papineau-Couture K.C. and R. C. Harvey for the
respondent. A power to grant or refuse at will the permit is ultra vires.
So soon as an applicant has established fulfilment of all the requirements of
the by-law, the municipality is in duty bound to grant the permit by the
provisions of Art. 426 of the Cities and Towns Act. It matters not
whether the power to issue permits is given by by-law to a designated officer
or to the Council, the principle is the same. Clearly the City must proceed not
by resolution but by by-law. It must follow its prescriptions and cannot alter
or disregard the same. Otherwise, the Council administers and legislates by
simple resolution where the governing statute orders this to be done by by-law
and specifically forbids any change or alteration unless a modifying by-law is
adopted by the secret vote of the interested proprietors. (Phaneuf v. Corp.
du Village de St-Hughes supra). Such an arrogation of discretionary powers
was condemned in clear, strong and definite language in Corp. du Village de
Ste-Agathe v. Reid supra. The same principle was upheld in Baikie
v. City of Montreal and Murray v. District of
Burnaby .
The City has the right to regulate and locate establishments,
but this can only be done by a general by-law and not by a so-called discretion
under a building by-law. When the conditions of the by-law have been complied
with, a mandamus will lie to compel the granting of the permit: Rosenfelt
v. Biron . The way s. 76 has been interpreted, it
opens every door to arbitrariness, discrimination and injustice. The cases of Jaillard
v. City of Montreal and Phaneuf supra are also relied
on.
[Page 225]
The respondent's interest in obtaining a permit clearly
appears from a perusal of the petition and from the evidence. The appellant
never raised the ground up to now of lack of interest. By-law 128, s. 76, does
not restrict applications for a permit to any category of individuals. The
appellant knew that an option had been obtained on the site and that
considerable time and money had been spent in negotiating for the purchase of
the property. The interest of the respondent is evidenced by the prejudice
caused by the refusal of the permit: Quebec Paving Co. v. Senecal
;
Gingras v. Corp. du Village de Richelieu and Hyde
v. Webster .
L. J. de la Durantaye K.C. replied.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Fauteux J.—The
respondent, hereinafter also called "the Company", carries on
business throughout Canada and more particularly in the judicial district of
Montreal, as vendor and distributor of motor fuels and oils, auto accessories,
and as operator of motor vehicle service station, both as owner and lessee
thereof.
Towards the end of December 1949, and pursuant to section 76
of by-law 128 of the by-laws of the appellant, hereinafter also referred to as
"the City", the Company applied to the latter for permission to erect
a service station and sales shop on an emplacement at the intersection of
Bannantyne and Fifth Avenues in the city of Verdun. In this immediate locality
were then already located three like establishments operated by different
competitor companies.
Section 76 is entitled "Specially Restricted
Buildings". Briefly, paragraph (a) thereof prescribes that
Any person wishing to erect or use a building or any
premises or to occupy a lot of land for … gasoline stations … shall make an
application in writing to the City to do so.
Paragraphs (b), (c) and (d), in which
the parts more relevant to this issue are underlined, may conveniently be
quoted in full:—
(b) Any person who
wishes to obtain such permission shall make an application to that effect
to the Building Inspector who shall transmit a copy of such application to the
City Clerk. The latter
[Page 226]
shall give at least ten (10) days
public notice of said application by means of an advertisement in at least two
local newspapers, one English and one French, in which the City usually
publishes its advertisements, the said notice to be also posted by the
applicant in a conspicuous place on the lot of land, building or premises
proposed to be used for such purpose, so that the neighboring proprietors or
residents or other parties interested may have an opportunity of opposing the
granting of such a permission. The above mentioned poster shall be supplied by
the Building Inspector Department. No such application shall be entertained by
the City unless notice thereof be previously given as hereinabove provided nor
unless applicant binds himself, in writing, to equip the boilers, engines,
motors or furnaces which he proposes to set up with smoke and gas consumers
such as will efficiently free the same from smoke and all that may, in their
use, be harmful to the public.
(c) Upon the receipt of
any such application the Building Inspector shall inspect the lot of land,
building or premises, or examine the plan of the building or premises proposed
to be used for any of the purposes set forth in Section 76 of this By-Law and,
if satisfied that such building or lot of land meets the requirements of this
By-Law and that the permission applied for may be granted without in any way
endangering life or property, he shall transmit a certificate to this effect to
the City Council, which may, at its discretion, grant or deny the permission
applied for.
(d) Whenever any such
application is made to the Building Inspector, the applicant shall deposit at
the City Treasurer's Office a sum of ten dollars ($10) to cover the cost of
advertisements and other expenses incurred by the City in connection with such
application.
First considered on the 14th of February 1950, and again—the
Company having protested the first decision—on April 2, 1950, the application
of the latter was, on each occasion, rejected by a resolution of the Council of
the City. No reason for such refusal was expressed in the resolutions or, then,
otherwise conveyed to the Company. It was however conceded, before this Court,
by counsel for the appellant, that all the requirements of the section had been
fully complied with by the Company and that the Building Inspector of the City
had issued and transmitted to the Council a favourable certificate, i.e., a
certificate attesting that the requirements of the by-law were met and that the
permission applied for could "be granted without, in any way, endangering
life or property." The refusal of the Council of the City rested,
therefore, solely on the exercise of such discretion as it may have under
paragraph (c) to grant or deny the permission applied for.
[Page 227]
The respondent thereupon instituted proceedings by way of
mandamus, challenging the validity of the section insofar as it purports to
vest in the Council of the City the right to grant or deny, at its discretion,
the permission applied for notwithstanding that, admittedly, all the
requirements of the by-law had been met, prayed the Court to declare the same ultra
vires the powers of the City as delegated to it under the Cities and
Towns Act (R.S.Q. 1941, c. 233), and requested an order for the issue of a
peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the granting of the permission.
Before the Superior Court, the City successfully contested
these proceedings. Briefly it was held that the Court could not declare section
76 ultra vires the City, the evidence, in the premises, failing to
reveal any abuse of powers, or unlawful or arbitrary action on behalf of the
Council of the City; that the reasons—traffic density and hazards—given in
defence by the City for such refusal, were well founded; and that, in the
circumstances, the discretion was properly exercised.
By a majority judgment (Gagné, McDougall and Bertrand
JJ.A.), the Court of King's Bench (Appellate Division) declared
null and void, as ultra vires, that portion of section 76 of by-law 128,
which purports to give a discretion to the Council to grant or deny permission
under the said by-law; annulled likewise the two resolutions of the Council
refusing to grant a permit to the Company; and ordered the issue of a
peremptory writ of mandamus. St-Jacques and Barclay JJ.A., dissented; holding,
the former, that the Company had not established its right to the issue of a
permit, and the latter, that the Company had not established any right or interest
entitling it to bring the action.
Challenging the judgment of the Court of Appeal, counsel for
the appellant rested his case on only two grounds.
As to the first: Counsel contented himself with asserting
that, under paragraph (c) of the section, the Council had discretion to
grant or deny the permission. Of that there can be no doubt. But the real
point, successfully pleaded by the Company before the Court of Appeal, is
that—and precisely for that reason and to that extent—the section
[Page 228]
is ultra vires of the City. In this respect, the
Judges of the minority in the Court below said nothing, nor did counsel for the
appellant, before us, make any attempt, though invited, to challenge the
majority judgment of the Court of Appeal. In the appellant's factum, however,
this point is dealt with and must, therefore, be considered.
That the municipalities derive their legislative powers from
the provincial Legislature and must, consequently, frame their by-laws strictly
within the scope delegated to them by the Legislature, are undisputed
principles. In the very words of Sir Mathias Tellier, the then Chief Justice of
the Province of Quebec, in Phaneuf v. Corporation du Village de
St-Hughes :
En matière de législation, les corporations municipales
n'ont de pouvoirs que ceux qui leur out été formellement délégués par la Législature;
et ces pouvoirs, elles ne peuvent ni les étendre, ni les exoéder.
In the present issue, it appears, from the factum of the
appellant, that sections 424, 426 and 429 of the Cities and Towns Act,
R.S.Q. 1941, c. 233—admittedly governing the City of Verdun—are the only ones
upon which any reliance is placed as authority, delegated by the Legislature to
the City, to enact the portion, here in issue, of section 76 of by-law 128. The
parts of the sections relied on are:—
424.—The Council may make by-laws:
1. To secure the peace, order, good government, health,
general welfare and improvement of the municipality, provided such by-laws are
not contrary to the laws of Canada, or of this Province, nor inconsistent with
any special provision of this Act or of the charter;
426.—The Council may make by-laws:
1. To regulate the height of all structures and the
materials to be used therein; to prohibit any work not of the prescribed
strength and provide for its demolition; to prescribe salubrious conditions and
the depth of cellars and basements; to regulate the location within the
municipality of industrial and commercial establishments and other buildings
intended for special purposes; to divide the municipality into districts or
zones of such number, shape and area as may appear suited for the purpose of
such regulation and, with respect to each of such districts or zones, to
prescribe the architecture, dimensions, symmetry, alignment and use of the
structures to be erected, the area of lots, the proportion which may be
occupied by and the distance to be left between structures; to compel
proprietors to submit the plans of proposed buildings to a designated officer
and to obtain a certificate of approval; to prevent or suspend the erection of
structures not conforming to such by-laws and to order the demolition, if
necessary, of any structure erected contrary to such by-laws, after their
coming into force.
[Page 229]
429.—The Council may make by-laws:
Subsection 22. To remove and abate any nuisance,
obstruction, or encroachment upon the side-walks, streets, alleys and public
grounds, and prevent the encumbering of the same with vehicles or any other
things;
In the formal judgment of the Court of Appeal, it is stated
that section 426 above is the only provision, under the Cities and Towns
Act, from which the authority to enact section 76 of the by-law, or a one
similar, may be derived. And there is no doubt that amongst the sections quoted
above and invoked in the appellant's factum, it is the only one which specially
deals with the subject matter of the questioned by-law. It is common ground, it
may be added, that, except in the measure in which it purports to have done so
under section 76 of by-law 128, the City has not seen fit to adopt any by-law
regulating the location, within the municipality, of industrial and commercial
establishments, and other buildings intended for special purposes, nor did it,
in any manner, attempt to divide the municipality into districts or zones.
The mere reading of section 76 is sufficient to conclude
that in enacting it, the City did nothing in effect but to leave ultimately to
the exclusive discretion of the members of the Council of the City, for the
time being in office, what it was authorized by the provincial Legislature,
under section 426, to actually regulate by by-law. Thus, section 76 effectively
transforms an authority to regulate by legislation into a mere administrative
and discretionary power to cancel by resolution a right which, untrammelled in
the absence of any by-law, could only, in a proper one, be regulated. This is
not what section 426 authorizes. Furthermore, the second paragraph of the
latter section prescribes that "no by-law made under this paragraph 1 may
be amended or repealed except by another by-law approved by the vote, by secret
ballot, of the majority in number and in value of the electors who are owners
of immoveable property situated in each district or zone to which the proposed
amendment or repeal applies." This provision supports the proposition
that, once exercised, the delegated right to regulate, in the matters mentioned
in paragraph 1 of section 426, is to be maintained at the legislative level and
not to be brought down exclusively within the administrative field, as it was
in the present instance. If it was within the power of the City to do
[Page 230]
what it did, this prohibition, prescribed in the second
paragraph of section 426, would be nugatory.
The comments of Sir Melbourne Tait, then A.C.J., in Corporation
du Village de Ste-Agathe v. Reid , quoted by Gagné J.A.,
and approved by McDougall and Bertrand JJ.A., are to the point. At page 337,
the learned jurist, speaking for the Court of Review, said:
A by-law is passed after certain formalities, and while in
force is general in its application; it is published and is known to the
ratepayers of the municipality, whereas a resolution may be passed without such
publicity. Moreover, the composition of the council changes from time to time,
the conditions might be changed from, meeting to meeting, and the council would
then have it in its power to permit one person to erect a saw-mill propelled by
steam, upon certain conditions, and in a certain locality, and refuse the same
rights to others.
* * *
The permission to erect and conditions would thus be subject
to the mere whim of the persons who might form the council of any particular
meeting … It (the by-law) opens the door to discrimination and arbitrary,
unjust and oppressive interference in particular cases. It is not really a
by-law at all, but a declaration that the council may permit the erections
referred to in art. 648 upon such conditions as it may think proper to make at
any particular meeting. The rights of those who may desire to erect such
manufactories or machinery are left uncertain, and it appears to me this
so-called by-law is drawn contrary to the elementary principles upon which an
ordinance of that kind ought to be made, … For this reason alone, … I am of
opinion that the judgment should be reversed …
These considerations are sufficient to dismiss the first
ground raised by the appellant.
The second ground, advanced against the judgment of the
Court of Appeal, appears in the reasons of the minority Judges .
Briefly, it was argued before us that, there being no allegation in the
declaration nor any evidence on record that it had any kind of property rights
within the territory of the City and particularly on the lot of land upon which
it proposes to erect a gasoline station, the Company was denuded of the legal
interest required under section 77 of the Civil Code of Procedure to
bring the action.
The section reads:—
No person can bring an action at law unless he has an
interest therein.
Such interest, except where it is otherwise provided, may be
merely eventual.
As stated in the reasons for judgment of Gagné J.A., with
whom McDougall and Bertrand JJ.A., agreed, this
[Page 231]
ground was never raised by the City at trial or even in its
factum before the Court of Appeal, nor was it dealt with in the judgment of the
trial Judge, but appeared for the first time in the reasons for judgment of the
minority. Indeed, and having disposed of the other points in the case, Mr.
Justice Gagné says:—
Depuis que ce qui précède
est écrit, j'ai reçu les notes de M. le Juge St-Jacques et M. le Juge Barcley où
l'on soulève, pour la première fois, la question d'intérêt de la requérante.
It is quite true that, the provisions of section 77 of the Civil
Code of Procedure being provisions of public order, the absence of interest
to bring an action may be raised at any stage of the proceedings by the
parties, or even by the Court proprio motu. The City, however, has
fought the case on the manifest assumption that the plaintiff had a legal
interest in the action, and the appropriateness of this assumption is further
sufficiently justified by the material in the record. Thus, amongst other
facts, it appears: that the Company has "spent considerable time and money
in negotiating the purchase" of the property; that on its application for
the permit, it described itself as "future owner"; that through
counsel, it protested in a lengthy letter to the City the first refusal of its
application and thus obtained a reconsideration of it; that the second refusal
was followed by the present action. A reasonable inference of all these facts
is that the Company had, when it brought its action, a jus ad rem with
respect to the land. And there is nothing in the pleadings or on the evidence
suggesting that this inference was not common ground between the parties. The
City cannot now adopt, before this Court, a different view on the facts to gain
a new ground in law; it is bound by the manner in which it conducted its
defence. (The Century Indemnity Company v. Rogers . Sullivan v. McGillis and others
).
I would dismiss the appeal, maintain and re-affirm the
conclusions of the formal judgment of the Court of King's Bench (Appellate
Division); the whole, with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Fauteux, Blain &
Fauteux.
Solicitors for the respondent: Campbell, Weldon,
McFadden & Rinfret.