Supreme Court of Canada
Oriole Lumber Ltd. v. Township of Markham et al., [1968]
S.C.R. 549
Date: 1968-04-29
Oriole Lumber
Limited (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
The Corporation of
The Township of Markham and F.J. Fudge (Defendants)
Respondents.
1968: February 27, 28; 1968: April 29.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Judson,
Ritchie, Hall and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Municipal corporations—Planning
legislation—Subsidiary land use bylaw—”Industrial” and “accessory” uses—Whether
lumber warehouse and wholesale and retail outlet a permitted use.
The appellant carried on a wholesale and
retail lumber business and having lost its premises through expropriation
planned to continue the business at a new location. The appellant filed an application
for the issuance of a permit for the erection of a building having a total
floor area of approximately 16,000 square feet of which 3,000 square feet or
approximately 18¾ per cent was to consist of “floor space to be used as a
showroom and retail sales space”. The respondent building inspector refused the
application for a permit being of the opinion that the erection of the building
was prevented by the provisions of a subsidiary land use by-law of the
respondent township. The appellant then moved for an order by way of mandamus
and the motion resulted in the granting of an order requiring the
respondents to issue a building permit in the terms of the application made by
the appellant. An appeal by the respondents from the order of the judge of
first instance was allowed by the Court of Appeal. The appellant then appealed
to this Court from the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The question to be determined was whether a
lumber warehouse and wholesale and retail business came within the extended
definition of the words “industrial” or “industrial use” in the by-law in
question. It was significant that neither wholesaling nor retailing was
mentioned in that extended definition so that the only way in which a wholesale
or retail lumber outlet could come within the permitted use would be that it
was an “accessory” use to “warehousing and storage within enclosed buildings”.
What was decisive, was that the wholesale and/or retail selling was not
accessory to the warehousing or storage but, in fact, the warehousing or
storage was incidental to the wholesale and retail selling. There could be no
other purpose for the building than to sell lumber therefrom at either
wholesale or retail, and for that purpose and that purpose only to store the
lumber which was to be sold.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, whereby that Court
allowed an appeal by the respondents from an order of Moorhouse J. granting the
appellant a mandamus requiring the respondents to issue a building
permit. Appeal dismissed.
[Page 550]
Peter deC. Cory, Q.C., for the appellant.
W.B. Williston, Q.C., and W.A. Kelly, for
the respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
SPENCE J.:—This is an appeal from the judgment
of the Court of Appeal for Ontario pronounced on October 17, 1966, whereby that Court allowed an appeal by the respondents from the
order of Moorhouse J. pronounced on May 7, 1966. By the latter order, the
learned judge of first instance had granted a mandamus requiring the
respondents to issue a building permit upon an application made by the
appellant.
The Corporation of the Township
of Markham had enacted an
official land use by-law with attached to and forming part thereof an official
land use plan. This land use plan covered the whole of the Township of Markham except certain
incorporated municipalities and was intended to be an over-all plan from which
more detailed plans would be involved for the various areas and communities.
One of those areas was subsequently covered by the enactment on October 9, 1962, of By-law 1957. That by‑law
affected, inter alia, lands on Woodbine Avenue in the said Township of Markham, a short distance north of Steeles
Avenue, being part of lot 2, concession 4 in the Township of Markham.
These lands were subsequently purchased by the appellant and the appellant
proposed to erect thereon the building the subject of the application for
permit.
The appellant had engaged in a wholesale and
retail lumber business with premises on the north side of Sheppard Avenue at Leslie
Street, and having lost those premises through
expropriation planned to continue the business at the premises in question.
The appellant filed an application for the
issuance of a permit for the erection of a building having a total floor area
of approximately 16,000 square feet of which 3,000 square feet or approximately
18¾ per cent was to onsist of “floor space to be used as a showroom and retail
sales space”. In the letter accompanying this application, the solicitors for the
appellant stated:
The proposed uses of the building comply
with your By-law under Clause 8(ii)(a) as to the major portion of the
building. However, you will see on the Plans that the building is to include a
part at the front for retailing products of Oriole Lumber Limited.
[Page 551]
The respondent Fudge, as building inspector of
the respondent Corporation of the Township of Markham, refused the application for a permit being of the
opinion that the erection of the building was prevented by the provisions of
By-law 1957. The relevant portions of the said By‑law 1957 are as
follows:
DEFINITIONS
2. (i) “Accessory” when used to describe a
use shall mean a use naturally and normally incidental, subordinate and
exclusively devoted to a main use and located on the same lot.
. . .
(xxvi) “Use” shall mean the purpose for
which land or a building is arranged, designed or intended or for which either
land or a building or structure is, or may be, occupied or maintained.
* *
*
PERMITTED LAND USE
8. No person shall hereafter use any
building, structure or land and no person shall erect any building or structure
in the area defined as shown on Schedule “A”, for any purpose other than one or
more of the following uses, namely:
(i) A dwelling for a caretaker of a manufacturing
or industrial undertaking permitted under Sub-section (ii) provided that
the requirements of By-law Number 1442 of the Township of Markham are complied
with or an apartment for a caretaker of a manufacturing or industrial
undertaking permitted under Sub-section (ii), provided that the total
ground floor area of the said manufacturing or industrial undertaking is not
less than 30,000 square feet.
(ii) Industrial Uses which shall include:
(a) Warehousing and storage within enclosed
buildings, and the assembly of manufactured products, such as textiles, wood,
paper, light metal sections, radio and television equipment and other similar
products, and also the manufacture within enclosed buildings of radio and
television equipment, drugs, cosmetics, jewellry, and watches, toys, publishing
and bookbinding, office equipment, sanitation products and any other light
manufacturing operations which are not obnoxious by reason of the erosion or
emittance of any noise, smoke, odour, dust, gas fumes, refuse or water carried
waste;
(b) Shops for the repair or manufacturing
within enclosed buildings, of small goods and wares, laundries and dry-cleaning
plants, bakeries, printers, dyers, storage warehouses, chemical products, paper
and paper boxes, electrical products, canning and food plants, aluminum
products, and any other manufacturing or industrial establishment within an
enclosed building
[Page 552]
which is not obnoxious by reason of the
emission of odour, dust, smoke, noise, gas fumes, cinders, vibration, refuse matter,
water carried waste, or unsightly open storage;
Public Utilities
(iii) All public utilities and essential
public services including railway trackage, industrial spurs and supporting
tracks, but not including schools.
The learned judge of first instance granted the
application for the mandamus without written reasons. Schroeder J.A.,
giving the judgment for the Court of Appeal, was of the opinion that the word
“industrial” by ordinary definition intended a use which was primarily one
involving the art of production or manufacture of some item, and that it
involved activity or labour whereby a saleable commodity was created or
produced. Of course, it is not intended that in this warehouse and wholesale
and retail lumber outlet there should be activity or labour resulting in the
creation of a product but merely the storing of such products and their sale at
wholesale or retail. Schroeder J.A. continued to point out that the ordinary
meaning of “industrial use” had been expanded by By-law 1957 in para. 8(ii)(a)
to include matters well beyond the ordinary definitions of “industrial” or
“industrial use” by including warehousing and storage “within enclosed
buildings”. He dealt with the proposition of the appellant that wholesaling and
retailing of lumber was “an accessory use” of warehousing premises so as to
bring it within para. 2(i) of the said by-law quoted above by pointing out that
although the respondent had, without conceding, refrained from urging that a
wholesale lumber business was not “an accessory” to a warehouse and storage
business, nevertheless, a retail business could only be characterized as an
accessory to a wholesale and that therefore to permit the building proposed was
to engraft an accessory upon an accessory.
It was the basis of the official plan that there
should be a series of categories of use of premises and to those categories the
municipal council assigned various designations. It is these designations which
are the vocabulary of the legislative scheme for use of lands within the township
and which should govern the primary determination of whether a proposed
building is in accordance with the various subsidiary land use by-laws such as
By-law 1957. There was
[Page 553]
produced as ex. “E” to the affidavit of Hein
Cats filed upon the application for permit, a copy of the official plan of the
township. That plan shows a designation of all lands within the township under
various designations, i.e., urban residential, rural residential, rural,
major open space, institutional and transportation, highway frontage,
industrial, and community commercial (the order of the naming is not
significant). That such designations do not always accurately reflect ordinary
definitions may be illustrated by noting that there are shown on the final plan
several golf and country clubs which all bear the hatch marking indicating that
they are for “institutional and transportation use”. Therefore, without having
to refer to the dictionary definitions of the word “industrial” it is
sufficient to note that the legislators intended to distinguish between
“industrial use” and “commercial use”.
In my view, much of the argument before this
Court as to whether a lumber warehouse and wholesale and retail business was
industrial has become academic. That type of business would certainly have been
commercial in the allocation of it to either a “commercial” or “industrial”
classification. So it matters not whether it could ordinarily have been termed
“industrial” as well as “commercial”. The question therefore to be determined
is whether this business comes within the extended definition of the words
“industrial” or “industrial use” in s. 8, para, (ii) of the by-law. It is
significant that neither wholesaling nor retailing is mentioned in that
extended definition so that the only way in which a wholesale or retail lumber
outlet could come within the permitted use in the said 8(ii)(a) would be that
it was an accessory to “warehousing and storage within enclosed buildings”.
Whether warehousing should be confined, as was
argued by the respondent, to providing a building for the storage of goods of
others consigned to one’s care and custody for a fee, or whether it has a much
wider connotation, need not, in my opinion, be decided, although the additional
words “and storage within enclosed buildings” would seem to indicate the wider
definition. What is decisive, is that the wholesale and/or retail selling is
not accessory to the warehousing or storage but, in fact, the warehousing or
storage is incidental to the wholesale and retail selling. There can be no
other purpose for the building as illustrated graphi-
[Page 554]
cally by the plan filed by the appellant than to
sell lumber therefrom at either wholesale or retail, and for that purpose and
that purpose only to store the lumber which is to be sold. It is the place
where the stock-in-trade of the business is kept to. be sold just as much as it
is in the case of a retail hardware store. I am, therefore, of the opinion that
there can be no inclusion within the permitted use of a wholesale and retail
lumber outlet by any allegation that it is accessory to a warehousing business.
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal
with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Rohmer,
Cory & Haley, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondents: Mingay
& Shibley, Toronto.