Supreme Court of Canada
The Queen v. Board of Transport Commissioners, [1968]
S.C.R. 118
Date: 1967-11-20
Her Majesty The
Queen in the Right of the Province of Ontario Appellant;
and
Board of Transport
Commissioners Respondent.
1967: October 10, 11; 1967: November 20.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Fauteux,
Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and Pigeon JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE BOARD OF TRANSPORT
COMMISSIONERS
Constitutional
law—Jurisdiction—Railways—Commuter service operated by provincial government
using own rolling stock—Tracks of Canadian National Railways used—Whether tolls
charged by province subject to jurisdiction of Board of Transport
Commissioners—Whether commuter service within legislative jurisdiction of
Parliament of Canada—Desirable that Attorney General of Canada be represented
whenever constitutional validity of federal legislation in issue—Commuter
Services Act, 1965 (Ont.), c. 17—B.N.A. Act, 1867,
s. 92(10)—Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 158, s. 16—Railway Act,
R.S.C. 1952, c. 234.
The government of Ontario decided to operate a commuter train service, using its own rolling
stock but utilizing the Canadian National Railways tracks. The train crews
would be those of the Canadian
[Page 119]
National Railways performing services for the
government of Ontario on an
agency basis under terms and conditions to be provided for in a formal
agreement to be entered into in the near future. The Board of Transport
Commissioners, on an application by the Canadian National Railways to
discontinue certain passenger trains on that line, declared that it had
jurisdiction in respect of the tolls to be charged by the province in respect
of the proposed services. On appeal to this Court by the province of Ontario
against that declaration, two questions were raised: (1) Whether the Board of
Transport Commissioners has jurisdiction to set the tolls, and (2) Whether the
commuter service comes within the jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
As to the first question, the tolls to be
charged by the province of
Ontario are subject to the jurisdiction of the Board of Transport
Commissioners.
The Board has jurisdiction over tolls within
the meaning of the Railway Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 234, and the question is
whether the tolls to be charged by the province in this case are tolls within
the definition of that word in the Railway Act. The answer to the
contention that they will not be charged by the “company” but by Her Majesty is
that the definition applies not only to tolls charged by the “company” but also
to tolls charged “upon or in respect of a railway owned or operated by the
company, or by any person on behalf or under authority or consent of the
company, in connection with the carriage and transportation of passengers…”
While it is true that the the rolling stock belongs to the province of Ontario,
the railway on which this equipment runs is the “company’s” railway. Therefore,
the tolls cannot be said not to be “in respect of a railway owned” by the
Canadian National Railways.
As to the second question, the commuter
service comes within the legislative jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada
as being a local work or undertaking within the meaning of s. 92(10)(a)
of the B.N.A. Act, 1867.
The Canadian National Railways, extending
beyond the limits of the province of Ontario, is subject to the jurisdiction of the Parliament of
Canada, and the question is whether the commuter service can be said not to
form part of this railway. To come to this conclusion, it would be necessary to
hold that federal jurisdiction over inter-provincial railways extends only to
interprovincial services provided on such railways. It is not possible to so
hold. The constitutional jurisdiction depends on the character of the railway
line and not on the character of a particular service provided on that railway
line. The fact that for some purposes the commuter service should be considered
as a distinct service does not make it a distinct line of railway. From a
physical point of view, the commuter service trains are part of the overall
operations of the line over which they run. Parliament of Canada has jurisdiction over everything
that physically forms part of a railway subject to its jurisdiction.
Droit constitutionnel—Juridiction—Chemins de
fer—Service de trains de banlieue exploité par le gouvernement provincial en se
servant de son matériel roulant—Utilisation de la voie des Chemins de Fer
Natio-
[Page 120]
naux du Canada—Le tarif exigé par la
province est-il sujet à la juridiction de la Commission des Transports du
Canada—Le service de trains de banlieue tombe-t-il sous la juridiction
législative du Parlement du Canada—Désirable que le procureur général du Canada
soit représenté chaque fois qu’est soulevée la validité constitutionnelle d’une
législation fédérale—Commuter Services Act, 1965 (Ont.), c. 17—L’Acte de
l’Amérique du Nord britannique, 1867, art. 92(10) —Loi d’interprétation,
S.R.C. 1952, c. 158, art. 16—Loi sur les chemins de fer, S.R.C. 1952, c.
234.
Le gouvernement de l’Ontario a décidé
d’exploiter un service de trains de banlieue, tout en se servant de son
matériel roulant mais en utilisant la voie des Chemins de Fer Nationaux du
Canada. Le personnel du train devait être celui des Chemins de Fer Nationaux en
service auprès du gouvernement de l’Ontario, sur une base d’agence en vertu des
termes et conditions devant faire partie d’un contrat formel à être passé tout
prochainement. La Commission des Transports du Canada, sur une demande des
Chemins de Fer Nationaux de discontinuer certains trains de voyageurs sur la
ligne en question, a déclaré qu’elle avait juridiction sur les tarifs devant
être exigés par la province relativement au service proposé. Sur appel devant
cette Cour par la province de l’Ontario à l’encontre de cette déclaration, deux
questions ont été soulevées: (1) La Commission des Transports du Canada
a-t-elle juridiction pour établir le tarif, et (2) Le service de trains de
banlieue tombe-t-il sous la juridiction du Parlement du Canada.
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être rejeté.
Quant à la première question, le tarif devant
être exigé par la province de l’Ontario est sujet à la juridiction de la
Commission des Transports du Canada.
La Commission a juridiction sur les tarifs
dans le sens de la Loi sur les chemins de fer, S.R.C. 1952, c. 234, et
le problème est de savoir si le tarif devant être exigé par la province dans le
cas présent est un tarif selon la définition de ce mot dans la Loi sur les
chemins de fer. La réponse à la prétention que le tarif ne sera pas exigé
par la «compagnie» mais par Sa Majesté est que la définition s’applique non
seulement au tarif exigé par la «compagnie» mais aussi au tarif exigé «sur un
chemin de fer que la compagnie possède ou tient en service, ou relativement à
ce chemin de fer, ou pour toute personne agissant au nom de la compagnie ou
avec son autorisation ou son consentement, pour le transport des voyageurs…» Il
est vrai que le matériel roulant appartient à la province de l’Ontario, mais la
voie ferrée sur laquelle ce matériel roule est la voie ferrée de la «compagnie».
En conséquence, on ne peut pas dire que le tarif n’est pas «relativement à un
chemin de fer possédé» par les Chemins de Fer Nationaux du Canada.
Quant à la seconde question, le service d’un
train de banlieue tombe sous la juridiction législative du Parlement du Canada
comme étant un travail ou une entreprise d’une nature locale dans le sens de
l’art. 92(10) (a) de L’Acte de l’Amérique du Nord britannique, 1867 .
Les Chemins de Fer Nationaux du Canada,
s’étendant au-delà des limites de la province de l’Ontario, sont sujets à la
juridiction du Parlement
[Page 121]
du Canada, et le problème est de savoir si on
peut dire que le service de trains de banlieue ne fait pas partie de ce chemin
de fer. Pour en venir à une telle conclusion, il serait nécessaire de décider
que la juridiction fédérale sur les chemins de fer interprovinciaux s’étend
seulement aux services interprovinciaux fournis sur ces chemins de fer. Il
n’est pas possible de décider de cette façon. La juridiction constitutionnelle
dépend du caractère de la ligne de chemin de fer et non pas du caractère des
services particuliers fournis sur cette ligne de chemin de fer. Le fait que
pour certaines fins le service de trains de banlieue doit être considéré comme
un service distinct n’en fait pas une ligne distincte de chemin de fer. Du
point de vue physique, le service de trains de banlieue fait partie de
l’exploitation entière de la ligne sur laquelle ces trains roulent. Le
Parlement du Canada a juridiction sur tout ce qui fait partie physiquement des
chemins de fer sujets à sa juridiction.
APPEL d’une décision de la Commission des
Transports du Canada. Appel rejeté.
APPEAL from a decision of the Board of Transport
Commissioners. Appeal dismissed.
C.F.H. Carson, Q.C., J.R. Houston and
D.A. Crosbie, for the appellant.
J.M. Fortier, Q.C., and L. Salembier, for
the respondent.
The JOINT OPINION OF THE COURT:—This case arose
in the following way.
Under the authority of the Commuter Services
Act, 1965, Statutes of Ontario 1965, c. 17, the Minister of Highways for Ontario decided to operate a Government of
Ontario Commuter Service from Toronto westerly to Hamilton and easterly to Pickering utilizing Canadian National Railways’ trackage in the entire area
of its operation. Although no contract for that purpose has yet been signed,
the Canadian National Railways, on July 16, 1965, made an application to the
Board of Transport Commissioners for authority to discontinue four passenger
trains operating between Toronto and Hamilton. It
was stated in the application that the train crews on the Commuter Service
would be those of the Canadian National Railways performing services for the
Ontario Government on an agency basis under terms and conditions to be provided
for in a formal agreement to be entered into in the near
[Page 122]
future. By the order appealed from authority to
discontinue the four trains was given and in addition the Board declared that:
It has jurisdiction in respect of the tolls to
be charged by the Province of
Ontario in respect of the proposed services.
The appeal by Ontario is against that declaration only and raises two points:
1. Whether the tolls to be charged by Ontario in respect of the Commuter Service
are subject to the jurisdiction of the Board of Transport Commissioners;
2. Whether the Commuter Service comes within the
legislative jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada.
On the first question it is not disputed that
the Board of Transport Commissioners has jurisdiction over tolls within the
meaning of the Railway Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 234. The issue is whether
the tolls to be charged by Ontario in respect of the Commuter Service are tolls within the definition
of this word in the Railway Act. The material part of this definition is
as follows:
(32) ‘toll,’ or ‘rate,’ when used with
reference to a railway, means any toll, rate, charge or allowance charged or
made either by the company, or upon or in respect of a railway owned or
operated by the company, or by any person on behalf of or under authority or
consent of the company, in connection with the carriage and transportation of
passengers, or the carriage, shipment, transportation, care, handling or
delivery of goods, or for any service incidental to the business of a carrier;
and includes any toll, rate, charge or allowance so charged or made in connection
with rolling stock, or the use thereof, or any instrumentality or facility of
carriage, shipment or transportation, irrespective of ownership or of any
contract, expressed or implied, with respect to the use thereof;…
Appellant points out that the tolls in question
will not be charged by the “company” within the meaning of the definition since
they will be charged by Her Majesty in the right of the Province of Ontario.
The answer to this contention is that the definition applies not only to tolls charged
by the “company” but also to tolls charged “upon or in respect of a railway
owned or operated by the company, or by any person on behalf or under authority
or consent of the company, in connection with the carriage and transportation
of passengers…”. While it is true that the rolling stock used in operating the
Commuter Service belongs to Ontario, the railway on which this equipment runs is the “company’s”
railway. Therefore, the tolls
[Page 123]
cannot be said not to be “in respect of a
railway owned” by the Canadian National Railways; they are obviously a charge
for the transportation of passengers over this railway by means of such
equipment.
It is worth noting that under the Railway Act
the rolling stock, is not considered an essential part of the railway.
Although it is included in the definition of “railway” it is also included in
the definition of “traffic”:
(33) “traffic” means the traffic of
passengers, goods and rolling stock;
It should be further noted that under
s. 315 of the Railway Act, a railway company is obliged to furnish
“suitable accommodation for the receiving and loading of all traffic offered
for carriage upon the railway”. Therefore it cannot be said that the operation
of a commuter service by means of rolling stock owned by the Government of
Ontario is not an operation of the “railway” within the meaning of the Railway
Act. On the contrary, to the extent that the tolls charged to the
passengers can be said to be charged in connection with the use of the rolling
stock they are expressly covered by the last quoted part of the definition:
“and includes any toll… so charged in connection with rolling stock, or the use
thereof… irrespective of ownership”.
It is argued that, although the provisions of
the Railway Act respecting tolls might be applicable in such a situation
if the rolling stock was owned by and operated on the account of any other
person or corporation, they cannot be applied to Her Majesty in right of the
Province of Ontario by reason of s. 16 of the Interpretation Act that
was in force at the time the order was made, R.S.C. 1952, c. 158. This
section is as follows:
16. No provision or enactment in any Act
affects, in any manner whatsoever, the rights of Her Majesty, her heirs or
successors, unless it is expressly stated therein that Her Majesty is bound
thereby.
It should be pointed out that this
section does not provide that no enactment applies to Her Majesty unless
it is expressly stated therein that Her Majesty is bound thereby but only that
no enactment affects the rights of Her Majesty unless it is so stated.
Therefore, in order to rely on the rule to exclude Her Majesty from the
application of an enactment, it must be shown that Her rights are affected
thereby.
[Page 124]
It was held by the Privy Council in Dominion
Building Corporation, Limited v. The King,
with respect to a similar enactment of the Ontario Legislature that, at
page 549:
The expression “the rights of His Majesty”
in this context means, in their Lordships’ view, the accrued rights of His
Majesty, and does not cover mere possibilities such as rights which, but for
the alteration made in the general law by the enactment under consideration,
might have thereafter accrued to His Majesty under some future contract.
This observation is applicable to the present
case. Her Majesty in right of Ontario has, apart from an agreement in principle with the Canadian
National Railways, no right to operate the Commuter Service and therefore no
right to levy tolls for the carriage of passengers over part of the Canadian
National Railways lines. Such rights as Ontario has are derived either from
such agreement or from the Railway Act and therefore are subject to the
conditions prescribed in that Act, one of these being that tolls are within the
jurisdiction of the Board of Transport Commissioners.
It appears to us that Ontario can no more
claim to be exempt in the operation of the Commuter Service from the
application of the general provisions of the Railway Act respecting
tolls than British Columbia could claim to be exempt from the general
provisions of the Customs and Excise Acts in the operation of its Liquor
Control Board, as was held in Attorney-General of British Columbia v.
Attorney-General of Canada, It
is true that in that case, the claim to exemption was based on s. 125 of
the B.N.A. Act, however, the decision also involves the application to a
provincial government of the general provisions of the Customs and Excise
Acts.
On the second question, it is urged that the
Commuter Service is operated exclusively within the Province of Ontario and reference is made to the following sentence in the
reasons for judgment of the Board:
The service to be provided will be a
service of the Government of Ontario and will not form part of the Canadian
National Railway operations.
[Page 125]
It must first be pointed out that this sentence
comes immediately after the following: “It will use existing C.N.R. trackage”.
It is therefore apparent that, when the service is said not to “form part of
the Canadian National Railways operations” this must be taken in a special
sense in considering the operations from an accounting or financial point of
view. It cannot be taken as meaning that the Commuter Service will not form
part of the physical operations of the railway seeing that the equipment runs
on the railway tracks. That this is of substantial importance in the physical
operation of the railway appears in the record from uncontradicted evidence.
John Howard Spicer, Manager of the Toronto area said:
We are presently expanding the capacity of
our plant to ensure that we can handle this new traffic adequately and also
protect the existing traffic that moves on the line. This is one of our more
important lines in Ontario and
we must ensure that we can handle the traffic well. The new design for
facilities will permit this.
How important “the trackage” is in the operation
of the Commuter Service appears from what the same witness also said respecting
the limited service provided to Hamilton.
Q. Now, if this facility was constructed at
Bayview, Mr. Spicer, would it in any way enable the Ontario Government
utilizing C.N. facilities to operate more frequent commuter trains into Hamilton?
A. Not without the expansion of the
physical plant between Bayview and Burlington. The main problem we have at the present time is that the stretch
of track between Burlington and
Bayview is our highest traffic density portion of the entire line. Over that
stretch of track we have all the traffic coming out of our hump yard, down the
Halton Subdivision connecting into the Oakville Subdivision at Burlington. And of course we have all the
trains going to London and Chicago and also down to Niagara Falls. So that over that short
stretch of line we have an extreme density of trains. We don’t feel that our
existing plant has sufficient capacity to handle anything like the proposed
commuter service. This is why we were forced to restrict our operations to two
trains in each direction, the equivalent of our present commuter service to
this area. To handle more trains than this or any significant more larger
number of trains than this we would have to add lines, new rail lines, and of
course they would have to be fully signalled, crossover networks would have to
be put in to tie into the existing main lines that we have through here. So
this would be a very expensive part of the entire project and I believe we made
an estimate on it that the cost of extending the commuter service through this
approximately three‑mile stretch would equal the entire capital cost of
installing the commuter service on the rest of the area,…
[Page 126]
On the basis of what has just been said as to
the nature of the Commuter Service it remains to be seen whether it can be said
to be a local work or undertaking within the meaning of head 10 of s. 92
of The British North America Act:
10. Local Works and Undertakings other than
such as are of the following Classes:—
(a) Lines or Steam or other Ships,
Railways, Canals, Telegraphs, and other Works and Undertakings connecting the
Province with any other or others of the Provinces, or extending beyond the
Limits of the Province:
(b) Lines of Steam Ships
between the Province and any British or Foreign Country:
(c) Such Works as, although wholly
situate within the Province, are before or after their Execution declared by
the Parliament of Canada to be for the general Advantage of Canada or for the
Advantage of Two or more of the Provinces.
It is, of course, admitted that the Canadian
National Railways extends beyond the limits of the Province of Ontario. Therefore it is clear that this railway is subject to
the jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada. The only question is whether the
Commuter Service can be said not to form part of this railway. To come to this
conclusion, it would be necessary to hold that federal jurisdiction over
interprovincial railways extends only to interprovincial services provided on
such railways. This is clearly not possible. In Winner v. S.M.T. (Eastern)
Ltd., Rand
J. said at p. 923:
The analogy of railways and telegraphs was
pressed upon us. These works are specifically named, and it is the clear
implication that their total functioning was to be under a single legislature.
But even they are limited to essential objects: Attorney General for British
Columbia v. C.P.R. (1950 A.C. 122), in which a hotel operated by the
company was held not to be part of the railway…
Kellock J. said at p. 929:
The words, ‘Lines of ships’ and ‘railways,’
as used in the section, no doubt include all traffic carried by such means, but
that is because these undertakings are specifically mentioned and, being
mentioned, include everything normally understood by those words…
In the Privy Council the judgment of this Court
was varied by taking a wider view of the operations included in an
international or interprovincial bus service. No doubt
[Page 127]
was cast on the correctness of the views
expressed in the passages just quoted (Attorney‑General for Ontario v.
Winner):
Their Lordships might, however, accede to
the argument if there were evidence that Mr. Winner was engaged in two
enterprises, one within the province and the other of a connecting nature.
Their Lordships, however, cannot see any evidence of such a dual enterprise.
The same buses carried both types of passenger along the same routes; the journeys
may have been different, in that one was partly outside the province and the
other wholly within, but it was the same undertaking which was engaged in both
activities.
In the present case, the constitutional
jurisdiction depends on the character of the railway line not on the character
of a particular service provided on that railway-line. The fact that for some
purposes the Commuter Service should be considered as a distinct service does
not make it a distinct line of railway. From a physical point of view the
Commuter Service trains are part of the overall operations of the line over
which they run. It is clearly established that the Parliament of Canada has
jurisdiction over everything that physically forms part of a railway subject to
its jurisdiction. In Canadian Pacific Railway v. Notre-Dame de Bonsecours, Lord Watson said at p. 372:
… the Parliament of Canada has, in the
opinion of their Lordships, exclusive right to prescribe regulations for the
construction, repair, and alteration of the railway, and for its management,…
In Attorney General for Alberta v.
Attorney-General for Canada, Lord
Moulton said at p. 370:
By s. 8 of the Dominion Railway Act
Parliament treats in a special manner the crossing of Dominion railways by
provincial railways. These portions of the provincial railways are made subject
to the clauses of the Dominion railway legislation, which deal also with the
crossings of two Dominion railways, so that the provincial railways are in such
matters treated administratively in precisely the same way as Dominion railways
themselves. The Parliament of the Dominion is entitled to legislate as to these
crossings because they are upon the right of way and track of the Dominion
railway as to which the Dominion Parliament has exclusive rights of
legislation, and moreover, as the provincial railways are there by permission
and not of right, they can fairly be put under terms and regulations.
Hotels operated by railways were held to be
separate undertakings only because they are not “a part of, or used
[Page 128]
in connexion with the operation of a railway
system”. Canadian Pacific Railway v. Attorney‑General for British Columbia.
Counsel for appellant did not contend that the
Commuter Service wholly escaped federal legislative jurisdiction, he conceded
that for such matters as signals and safety, the commuter trains would be
subject to the same rules as other trains. It is, of course, obvious that no
railway could be operated with trains on the same line not governed by the same
set of rules; as Davies J. said in City of Toronto v. Grand Trunk Railway
Company:
There cannot be two conflicting tribunals
legislating at the same time upon such a vital subject as the public safety at
railway crossings.
Counsel for appellant also felt obliged to concede
that the train crews would be subject to federal labour laws not provincial.
This cannot be true on any other basis than that the commuter service is not a
distinct undertaking but part of the railway operations from the physical point
of view. The criterion for the application of the labour laws as well as for
the application of the safety rules is the same: whether the undertaking
connects the province with any other.
The decision in Luscar Collieries, Limited v.
McDonald et al, shows
that even a work which is of itself local, such as a provincial railway, may
become a part of a federal undertaking by being put under the same management
through an agreement with the latter. It thereby becomes part of a railway
connecting the province with other provinces. There again the criterion of the
jurisdiction is the fact that the operations are a part of the interprovincial
system.
It must also be noted that in this last
mentioned case, the order of the Railway Board which was affirmed on appeal to
this Court was, as in the present case, an order declaring only that the Board
had jurisdiction.
Before concluding, two observations should be
made.
In his reasons for judgment, the dissenting
Commissioner said: “I am of the opinion the requirements of the
[Page 129]
Railway Act can
be adequately and properly met by the simple process of the railway filing with
the Board, as a tariff, the agreement which it has or will have with the
Province and which must contain a full disclosure of the remuneration the
railway will receive for the carriage and services it performs”. It may well be
that after considering all relevant circumstances the Board will come to the
conclusion that it need not exercise its jurisdiction over the tolls charged to
passengers and will find it sufficient to consider the adequacy of the charges
made by the railway company to Ontario under the terms of the contemplated
agreement. However, the question on this appeal is not whether the Board should
in fact exercise its jurisdiction but whether it does have jurisdiction.
In the second place, it must be said that while
at the hearing of this appeal the Court had the benefit of a thorough argument
from both sides on the first question, no one appeared to oppose appellant on
the constitutional issue. Counsel for the Board of Transport Commissioners
declined to offer argument on that point in view of the Board’s practice to
refrain from dealing with such issues and the Attorney-General of Canada was not represented at the hearing.
It is undesirable that this Court should be obliged to rule upon constitutional
issues without the benefit of argument for both sides and the hope is expressed
that, in the future, whenever the constitutional validity or application of
federal legislation is in issue, this Court will always have the benefit of
argument by counsel on behalf of the Attorney-General of Canada.
On the whole, we are of opinion that the appeal
should be dismissed. There should be no order as to costs.
Appeal dismissed; no order as to costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Tilley, Carson, Findlay & Wedd, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: J.M.
Fortier, Ottawa.