Supreme Court of Canada
Fontaine v. Thompson, [1968] S.C.R. 626
Date: 1968-05-13
Peter Diaz Curbello
(Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
George Ronald
Thompson (Defendant) Respondent.
Lillian Fontaine (Plaintiff)
Appellant;
and
George Ronald
Thompson (Defendant) Respondent.
1968: April 30; May 13.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Martland,
Judson, Hall and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Motor vehicles—Negligence—Driver of truck
travelling at night at approximately 50 m.p.h., applying brakes and turning
slightly to avoid deer—Truck spinning counterclockwise and falling on car
coming from opposite direction—Pavement wet and very slippery—Excessive speed
in the circumstances.
While driving a heavy truck at night, at
approximately 50 m.p.h., on a section of the Trans-Canada Highway where
the posted speed was 60 m.p.h., the defendant noticed some deer on the shoulder
of the road and applied his brakes moderately. Almost immediately, one of the
deer bounded across the road. The defendant reacted by applying the brakes
harder and turning slightly to the left. Sensing
[Page 627]
that the truck was skidding to the right, he
attempted to counteract this movement by turning the wheel slightly to the
right. The truck continued to skid, spun counterclockwise more than 180 degrees
and toppled over on top of a car which was coming from the opposite direction
on its own side of the road. The driver of the car was killed and his passenger
was injured. The truck, the rear tires of which were substantially worn, was
carrying a near maximum load. The collision occurred on a straight stretch of
road and the pavement at the time was wet and very slippery.
The deceased’s widow brought action against
the defendant in her capacity as executrix of her husband’s estate and in her
own right. The passenger brought action on his own behalf. These actions were
consolidated and tried together. The trial judge, having found the defendant
wholly to blame for the accident, gave judgments in favour of the plaintiffs.
The defendant appealed these judgments to the Court of Appeal which, by a
majority, allowed the appeals. An appeal by the plaintiffs, limited to the
question of liability only, was then brought to this Court.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed and the trial judgments restored.
The trial judge rightly decided that the
defendant was driving at an excessive speed in the circumstances of this
particular case and because of this could not keep control of his vehicle when
he found it necessary to slow down.
Gauthier & Co. Ltd. v. The King, [1945)] S.C.R. 143, followed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for British Columbia,
reversing three judgments of Aikins J. in consolidated actions for damages for
negligence. Appeal allowed and trial judgments restored.
Richard P. Anderson, for the plaintiffs,
appellants.
Douglas McK. Brown, Q.C., for the
defendant, respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
HALL J.:—This is an appeal from the judgment of
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia1 which reversed (Davey
C.J.B.C. dissenting) three judgments given in favour of the appellants by
Aikins J. in the Supreme Court of British Columbia. The litigation arose out of
a road accident in which one Clifford Alley Fontaine was killed and a passenger
in his automobile, Peter Diaz Curbello, was injured. The appellant Lillian
Fontaine brought action against the respondent in her capacity as
administratrix of the estate of Clifford Alley Fontaine and in her own right.
Curbello brought action on his own behalf. The
[Page 628]
actions were consolidated for trial by order of
Ruttan J. and were tried together by Aikins J., who awarded the appellant
Fontaine damages in the sum of $38,287.85 in her personal action and $1,295.60
in her capacity as administratrix and the sum of $19,134.85 to the appellant
Curbello. This appeal is limited to the question of liability only. The amount
of the damages are not now in issue.
The facts are not in dispute and shortly are
that at about 1:30 a.m. on September 26, 1961, the deceased Fontaine was
driving his 1956 Chevrolet station wagon with the appellant Curbello as a
passenger. He was heading south on the Trans-Canada Highway from Yale to Hope
en route to Vancouver. He was driving on his own side of the road at a
reasonable speed of about 40 miles an hour. No allegation or suggestion of
negligence on the part of Fontaine is put forward.
The respondent was driving a four-ton G.M.C.
truck from Vancouver northwards. The truck was almost loaded to capacity, the
total weight of truck and load being 28,000 lbs.
The two vehicles met on the highway
approximately two miles south of Yale. As they met, the truck toppled over on
to the Fontaine vehicle while it was wholly on its own side of the road,
crushing it. Fontaine was killed and Curbello injured. The respondent was
uninjured. This event occurred on a straight stretch of road some 700 feet in
length. At the north end of this straight stretch the road curved to the west
and at the south end it curved to the east. The road was level, paved and 23 feet,
6 inches wide with a 10-foot gravel shoulder on each side of the pavement. The
posted speed was 60 miles an hour. The vehicles met at a point on the
straightaway about 200 feet north of the south curve. It was a cloudy night but
visibility was good. Rain had fallen earlier. The road surface was wet and very
slippery.
As to the accident itself, the learned trial
judge said:
The two vehicles came to rest in these
positions: the station wagon was upright, that is resting on its wheels, and
facing south. The GMC truck had toppled over on its right side and the right
side of the freight box (that is the enclosed box built on the deck of the
truck for carrying freight) was resting on the top of the station wagon. The
GMC truck was facing south-east. The truck, if righted from the position in
which it lay resting on top of the station wagon, would have been brought
upright with its wheels all on the east side of the centre line.
[Page 629]
The evidence establishes that before and at
the time of the collision the GMC truck was sliding and out of the driver’s
control and that the truck during the course of sliding turned something better
than 180 degrees, so as to wind up at rest facing south-east.
These circumstances called for an explanation
from the respondent: Gauthier & Co. Ltd. v. The King.
The explanation given by the respondent was that
he was travelling at 48 miles an hour as he entered the straightaway, and
seeing a vehicle coming towards him from the north he dimmed his lights. Then
he saw some deer on the east shoulder at which moment he applied his brakes
moderately. Almost immediately, one of the deer bounded across the road. The
respondent reacted by applying the brakes harder and turning slightly to the
left. Sensing that the truck was skidding to the right, he attempted to
counteract this movement by turning the wheel slightly to the right. The left
front corner of the truck struck the deer, propelling it towards the west
shoulder. The respondent did not suggest that the impact with the deer had any effect
on the movement of the truck. There was little damage, if any, to the left
front corner of the truck. The truck continued northward, spinning
counterclockwise until it was facing south-east, having spun slightly more than
180 degrees by the time it toppled over on top of the Fontaine vehicle. The
respondent admitted that he knew the road was wet and slippery, but said that
he was not aware that it was very slippery until after the accident. He
testified that the truck was in excellent mechanical condition, including good
power brakes. The front tires were relatively new but the tires on the rear
dual wheels were about 80 per cent worn with minimal tread left in the centre.
The tires were still roadworthy and good for some 8,000 more miles according to
the evidence. Respecting these rear tires, the learned trial judge said:
The opinions of the witnesses that the rear
tires, despite their worn condition, were safe for highway use must be
considered as relative. These questions must be considered: At what speed are
such tires safe? Under what road conditions are they safe? What weight are such
tires capable of carrying with safety? These questions must be considered not
just separately but in combination. What may be safe at one speed on a dry road
may be unsafe at the same speed on a wet road. What may be a safe speed at one
load weight may be unsafe at another load weight. Patently, in my opinion,
tires which have practically no tread in the
[Page 630]
centre are less efficient in stopping a
vehicle without producing sliding than tires which have substantial tread on
all the tire surface which comes in contact with the road surface. I think it
probable, as I shall state later in these reasons, that the worn rear tires on
the truck played a part in causing the skid which resulted in the collision
with the station wagon.
The learned trial judge said that the respondent
impressed him as a truthful witness. He found that the respondent was driving
at a speed of approximately 50 miles an hour as he approached and rounded the
curve immediately south of the straight stretch on which the collision
occurred. Dealing with the actual impact, the learned trial judge said:
The defendant said that while sliding the
truck did not cross over the centre line; that his turning to the right to try
to get out of the skid or slide had the effect of keeping the truck on his
right hand side of the road. The over-all length of the truck was 24 feet. The
wheel base was 11 feet. Theoretically it is no doubt possible that the truck with
its wheel base of 11 feet could, as to its wheels, have made better than a 180
degree turn on the road, which was 23 feet 6 inches in width, without the
wheels crossing the centre line. There were no marks on the shoulders
indicating that the truck had gone on to either shoulder of the road. I think
it improbable that no part of the truck crossed the centre line. I think it
probable that some part of the truck crossed the centre line and hit the
station wagon and the truck then toppled over, coming to rest on top of the
station wagon. While it may be theoretically possible that the truck, wholly on
its own side of the road, toppled over because it was skidding and fell on the
station wagon which was entirely on its own side of the road, I think this unlikely,
and that some part of the turning and sliding truck struck the station wagon
while the latter was wholly on its proper side of the road, and that the truck
then toppled over on top of the station wagon. In any event I do not think it
makes any material difference whether the truck hit the station wagon and then
fell over, or, if, on the other hand it was wholly on its proper side of the
road and because of skidding and turning it upset and fell on the station wagon
without colliding with it before it started to topple over.
Having considered all the evidence, the learned
trial judge concluded:
Separate aspects of the defendant’s conduct
should not, however, in my opinion, be taken and considered in isolation. All
relevant aspects of the defendant’s driving should be considered together and
in relation to the existing relevant circumstances. The fact is that on braking
the truck’s speed in a quite ordinary way and on making a very slight turn to
the left, and on braking again, harder, but still in an ordinary way, the truck
went into a skid, and wholly out of control. It seems to me on a consideration
of all the evidence that the truck skidding and going out of control in this
case was due to a combination of circumstances which I summarize in this way:
(a) The truck was being driven at a
substantial although lawful speed: approximately fifty miles per hour.
[Page 631]
(b) The truck was carrying a heavy load,
and was in fact loaded close to its maximum capacity.
(c) The highway surface was wet and
slippery.
(d) The rear tires were substantially worn
so that there was minimal tread in the centre of the tires. Patently I think
such tires to be less efficient than tires with substantial tread over all the
tire surface in contact with the road. In my view it is probable that the worn
rear tires contributed to the truck skidding.
The truck skidded and went out of control
on the driver applying the brakes in a quite ordinary way, and on the driver
making a slight turn to his left, which involved nothing more than a vehicle
moving closer to the centre line, and on a further and harder application of
the brakes. I think it apparent that the defendant Thompson was driving at an
excessive speed in the circumstances: he was driving at a speed at which he
could not keep control of his vehicle when he found it necessary to apply his
brakes, turn slightly to his left, and apply his brakes harder to slow down
more quickly. The defendant driver must be held to have been negligent. I am
satisfied that his negligence was the cause of the collision between the two
vehicles.
In the Court of Appeal, Davey C.J.B.C. agreed
with the learned trial judge, saying:
He (the trial judge) found that the truck
skidded and went out of control because of the combination of speed, its near
maximum load, the slippery surface of the road, and the worn rear tires which
had substantially less traction on the road than ones with the whole tread
intact; that because of those factors Thompson could not keep control of the
truck when he attempted to make an ordinary manoeuvre of a slight turn to the
left and a quick reduction in speed. From that the learned trial Judge
concluded that Thompson’s speed, although not exceeding the speed limit, was
excessive in the circumstances. Those were all circumstances within Thompson’s
knowledge. He knew that the road had been seal coated; he knew it was wet; he
ought to have known it was slippery, and he knew his rear tires were somewhat
worn.
It was his duty to drive his vehicle at a
speed which would permit him, under those conditions, to keep it under proper
control when meeting the ordinary exigencies of highway travel. His speed was
too great to allow him to swerve slightly and to slow the truck down quickly
without skidding and losing control. In that he was negligent. That is what I
understand the learned Judge’s reasoning to be, and on the evidence I am unable
to say that he was wrong in drawing that inference.
Lord and Maclean JJ.A. disagreed with Davey
C.J.B.C., but it is of great importance to note that both erroneously appear to
have accepted the following paragraph in the judgment of Aikins J.:
As I understood counsel for the defendant’s
argument, he put it that there was no one thing which the defendant driver did
nor any one thing which the defendant driver failed to do which could be
considered as amounting to negligence. Taking various aspects of the defendant
driver’s conduct each in isolation I could not find negligence
[Page 632]
on the part of the defendant driver. Taken
by itself the defendant driver’s speed of approximately fifty miles an hour on
a main highway was not excessive. The defendant driver was keeping a reasonably
careful lookout. The defendant driver, before the skid, was certainly driving
on his proper side of the highway. The GMC truck was properly loaded and was
not loaded beyond its proper carrying capacity. The truck was in excellent
mechanical condition. The rear tires of the truck were substantially worn so
that there was little tread left in the centre of the tires, but the evidence supports
the conclusion that they were safe for use, although, as I have said, I think
this to be a wholly relative conclusion. The defendant driver’s reaction on
seeing the deer, in braking and turning slightly to the left and braking again,
does not indicate any lack of reasonable care. Taking all these aspects of the
defendant driver’s conduct individually and in isolation one could not say that
he was guilty of any negligence.
as conclusions arrived at by him. The paragraph
just quoted is patently a recapitulation of counsel’s argument. The learned
trial judge rejected the argument that these several aspects of respondent’s
conduct should be considered in isolation because immediately after so
summarizing counsel’s argument he said:
Separate aspects of the defendant’s conduct
should not, however, in my opinion, be taken and considered in isolation.
It was also argued on behalf of the respondent
that the learned trial judge found liability by the application of the doctrine
of res ipsa loquitur in his determination of the case. It is clear to me
that he did not do so but that he rightly decided the case on the evidence that
was before him, concluding that the respondent was driving at an excessive
speed in the circumstances of this particular case and because of this could
not keep control of his vehicle when he found it necessary to slow down in the
circumstances described by the respondent himself.
The appeal should, accordingly, be allowed with
costs here and in the Court of Appeal. The judgments of Aikins J. in the
Supreme Court of British Columbia should be restored.
Appeal allowed and trial judgments restored.
Solicitors for the plaintiffs,
appellants: Boughton, Anderson, Dunfee & Mortimer, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the defendant, respondent:
Russell and DuMoulin, Vancouver.