Supreme Court of Canada
Byron v. Williams et al., [1968] S.C.R. 314
Date: 1968-02-09
Germaine Anne
Cecile Byron, as Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of Basil Joseph
Byron, deceased, and in her personal capacity (Plaintiff) Appellants;
and
Isobel May Williams
and Roger Barry Williams (Defendants) Respondents.
1967: December 14, 15; 1968: February 9.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Judson,
Ritchie, Hall and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Motor vehicles—Collision at intersection—Jury’s
findings as to negligence—Whether trial judge misdirected jury on question of
liability.
Damages—Negligence action—Charge to
jury—Ceiling and floor amounts mentioned in relation to amount to be
awarded—Whether misdirection requiring new trial on issue of damages.
As a result of a collision at an
intersection between two automobiles the plaintiff suffered injuries and
her husband, the driver of the car in which the plaintiff was a passenger, was
killed. The other car was owned by the defendant IW and was being driven by the
defendant RW. On the trial of the action subsequently brought by the plaintiff,
the jury found that there was negligence on the part of the defendant RW, which
caused or contributed to the accident. They gave the following particulars of
his negligence: 1. driving too fast in an unfamiliar area; 2. in view of
driving and road conditions—exercised poor judgment in passing a series of cars
on a hill. The jury further found that there was no negligence on the part of
the plaintiff’s husband.
The plaintiff’s damages for her own injury
were assessed at $2,500 and her claim for the death of her husband was assessed
at $27,000. Judgment was entered in favour of the plaintiff for the sums
awarded together with costs. An appeal was taken by the defendants to the Court
of Appeal. The whole Court found misdirection in the trial judge’s charge with
respect to damages. The majority of the Court found misdirection in the trial
judge’s charge with respect to the question of liability and a new trial was
ordered with respect to both questions save only that the new trial directed as
to damages was to be concerned only with the plaintiff’s claim under The
Fatal Accidents Act and there was to be no new assessment of her personal
damages. The plaintiff appealed to this Court from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed and the trial judgment restored.
The Court rejected the position taken by the
defendants that the trial judge “…failed to direct the jury that having regard
for all the evidence there must have been some negligence on the part of the
deceased, Basil Byron, which caused or contributed to the damages
[Page 315]
of the plaintiffs”. The trial judge, in his
charge to the jury, drew to the attention of the jury the obligations which the
law imposes upon a driver entering a through street and no objection was taken
to his charge in this respect, and having regard to the functions of an
appellate court when dealing with the verdict of a jury which were stated by Duff
C.J.C. in Canadian National Railways v. Muller, [1934] 1 D.L.R. 768,
this Court was of the view that the Court of Appeal was in error in holding
that there was misdirection in respect of liability.
As to the objection that the trial judge had
mentioned amounts which might be called both a ceiling and a floor in relation
to the amount to be awarded, it was held that, having regard to all the
evidence that was before the jury and the judge’s charge in relation to quantum
as a whole, there was no substantial misdirection here and certainly no error
constituting a miscarriage of justice within the meaning of The Judicature
Act.
Gray v. Alanco Developments Ltd. et al., [1967] 1 O.R. 597, referred to.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario allowing an appeal
from a judgment of Landreville J. and ordering a new trial in an action for
damages for negligence. Appeal allowed.
D.J. MacLennan, for the plaintiff,
appellant.
John J. Fitzpatrick, Q.C., for the
defendants, respondents.
The judgment of the Chief Justice and of Judson,
Hall and Spence JJ. was delivered by
HALL J.:—This is an appeal from the Court of
Appeal of Ontario which
directed a new trial both as to liability and quantum following a trial before
Landreville J. with a jury. The action arose out of a collision between two
automobiles at the intersection of Royal York Road and Lawrence Avenue West in the Municipality
of Metropolitan Toronto at approximately 11:50 p.m. on the night of December 25, 1963, in which the driver of one of
the cars, Basil Joseph Byron, was killed. The other car, a yellow Vauxhall
Cresta model, was owned by Isobel May Williams and then being driven by Roger
Barry Williams. The following questions relating to Roger Barry Williams were
put to the jury and answered as stated:
1.
Was there any negligence on the part of the
defendant Roger Williams, which caused or contributed to the accident?
Answer “Yes” or “No”
Answer: Yes.
[Page 316]
2. If your answer to question 1 is “yes” of
what did such negligence consist? Answer fully, specifying each act of
negligence of the defendant, Roger Williams, which you find caused or
contributed to the accident.
Answer: 1. Driving too fast in an
unfamiliar area. 2. In view of driving and road conditions—exercised poor
judgment in passing a series of cars on a hill.
A further question relating to the deceased,
Basil Joseph Byron, was put to the jury to which the jury replied as shown:
3. Was there any negligence on the part of
the late Basil Byron?
Answer “Yes” or “No”
Answer: No.
There was abundant evidence to justify the
negligence found by the jury. The jury had heard Constable Downton, a member of
the Metropolitan Toronto Police Force who, on the night in question, was on car
patrol in the area in question and who was in a marked police car observing
traffic on Royal York Road south of Lawrence Avenue.
He was parked in a position where he could observe traffic on Royal York Road,
and as he sat there he saw the yellow Vauxhall Cresta model travelling
northward on Royal York Road at a speed which he considered excessive and he
immediately put his car in motion and took off after the Vauxhall. He describes
the condition of Royal York Road at the time as being wet and greasy and the area somewhat poorly
lighted. Royal York Road is
hilly at this point, and as he proceeded to follow the Vauxhall he saw it
overtake and pass four cars going in the same direction. He estimates the speed
of the Vauxhall as it overtook and passed these four cars to be close to double
the speed of the cars being overtaken and he estimates the speed of the cars
being overtaken as being 30 to 35 miles per hour. The Vauxhall remained on the
left side of the two-lane highway which was about 21 feet wide until it
approached the crest of a hill in the road to the north of which lay the
intersection with Lawrence Avenue. He did not actually see the collision as the intersection was
over the crest of the hill. The constable also testified that south of the
intersection and south of the crest of the hill there was a sign plainly visible
on the east side of Royal York Road which said “Reduce Speed Dangerous Intersection”.
The driver Williams in his testimony testified
that he had been travelling at about 35 miles an hour. He admit-
[Page 317]
ted having overtaken the cars referred to by
Constable Downton and said that when he was about 250 feet from the Lawrence
Avenue intersection a car emerged from that intersection and
proceeded southward on Royal York Road, and when he was about 100 feet from the
intersection the Byron car emerged. It was stationary when he first saw
it. He said he slammed on his brakes and “the car skidded on the wet road and
into the side of the Byron vehicle” which had reached the centre of the
intersection. It is obvious that the jury did not accept Williams’ testimony
and disbelieved his statement that he was only going at 35 miles an hour and
chose instead to accept the evidence of Constable Downton which indicated
driving in a highly negligent manner.
The basis of the appeal in respect of liability
was that the learned trial judge had
…failed to direct the jury that having
regard for all the evidence there must have been some negligence on the part of
the deceased, Basil Byron, which caused or contributed to the damages of the
plaintiffs.
and that was the position taken by the
respondent in this Court.
The part of the learned trial judge’s charge to
which the respondent objected and which found favour in the Court of Appeal
reads:
Likewise, the plaintiff comes in with a
reply and the plaintiff says, “Look, after all, you ran into the side of my
car. I didn’t run into you. I was broadside, and if I were in that
intersection, and if you had good lights on your car, my car would have been
visible to you, driver defendant, 200 feet away, for under the Highway Traffic
Act, headlights must be able to light up an object at that distance,
minimum. So either you had good lights, in which case you would have seen me,
or else your lights were so weak and poor on the low beam, that you saw me
through the lights of your car when you were 50-75 feet away, and too late
because of your faulty lights.” So, it is a dilemma that the plaintiff throws
back to the defendant.
Immediately before the extract just quoted from
the learned trial judge’s charge, he had dealt with the defendant’s (Williams’)
case as follows:
The defendant says, “Well now, why did you
not wait there allowing me to pass to go by on the through street, and obey
that Section 64.” He says, “There are two things. Surely, I did not come
out of a blue sky, and I must have been visible.” Here the argument is twisted
around to the advantage of the defendant, “I must have been visible for 150
feet. If you
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blame me for not applying my brakes 150
feet away, I can say that you must have seen me 150 feet away, or 200 feet
away. And if you did, you did not see me or see the car.” He says, “It is a
reasonable inference that you must have seen the reflection of my lights coming
up the hill and, thus, you were under an obligation of waiting and not starting
across the intersection for I hit you a second or two after you moved.”
The defendant says, “There was nothing I
could do in that circumstance.” Because you might argue, and that argument
hasn’t been advanced, but you might argue that it might be one of logic, “your lights—your
car being sideways to me, I did not see your lights as they did not shine on
me, but I was visible when you started moving sideways, and only my lights
could pick up the side of your car, and when my lights picked them up, I did
everything I could to avoid the accident and applied my brakes and skidded. It
is your fault.”
So there you have the strength, in essence,
of the defendant’s case. The defendant has a right, at law, to presume that
other people will obey the law. And when you are driving down the street, and
there is a stop sign, and you see a car approaching that stop sign and you are
close to the intersection yourself, you don’t have to stop. You have the
right to presume that the other driver is going to stop, and if he disobeys
that stop sign and comes in front of you, and that is clearly proven, then that
other driver has failed in his duty.
Likewise, if the driver has stopped and he
starts off in front of you, when you are in that vicinity clearly visible, then
he has no business coming across your path of travel, and it is his fault.
Those are arguments which fall on the side of the defence.
He said later, in dealing with the plea of
contributory negligence:
I have entirely forgotten something in
discussing the law. We were discussing the cause of this accident. Sometimes,
in a given set of circumstances, while there may be a cause, another person has
contributed to that as a cause to the accident, and this brings in the Negligence
Act of Ontario.
The Negligence Act sets out that
where you find an accident to have been caused by two persons, two drivers, and
you say that one has contributed to the accident; in short, the analysis is of
the question, first of all, to find out if the plaintiff, Basil Byron, was
negligent—excuse me, was the defendant negligent. And if you arrive at the
conclusion that he wasn’t—let us assume that—if you say he was not negligent,
then the plaintiff’s action fails.
If you find that the defendant driver was
negligent, you go one step more and you say, “Now, was the late Basil Byron
also negligent? Was there something he could have done to avoid this accident?
Was he alert? Was he cautious? Did he fail to advance sufficiently in the
intersection to see if there were lights coming or cars, or anything?” You
analyze all the acts of Basil Byron, and if you arrive at the conclusion that
there was some negligence on his part, then the Negligence Act applies,
and you have the right to apportion the liability between the plaintiff and the
defendant.
In my view the extract referred to in the
judgment of the Court of Appeal must be read in the light of what the
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learned trial judge said immediately before, and
when so read I am unable to see that there was any misdirection. McLennan J.A.,
in the Court of Appeal, while agreeing that there had been misdirection, went
on to say:
In view of the clear position put to the
jury that he is just offering them arguments that might be put forward and had
previously made it clear elsewhere in his charge that it is entirely a question
for them to decide, I do not think that constitutes any error constituting a
miscarriage of justice within the meaning of the Judicature Act. The
findings of the jury with respect to the negligence of the defendant are—(1)
driving too fast in an unfamiliar area, (2) in view of driving and road
conditions, exercised poor judgment in passing a series of cars on a hill.
There is nothing in the findings related to what is said to be misdirection.
The learned trial judge, in his charge to the
jury, drew to the attention of the jury the obligations which the law imposes
upon a driver entering a through street and no objection was taken to his
charge in this respect, and having regard to the functions of an appellate
court when dealing with the verdict of a jury which were succinctly stated by
Duff C.J.C. in Canadian National Railways v. Muller as follows:
We premise that it is not the function of
this Court, as it was not the duty of the Court of Appeal, to review the
findings of fact at which the jury arrived. Those findings are conclusive
unless they are so wholly unreasonable as to show that the jury could not have
been acting judicially;
I am of the view that the Court of Appeal was in
error in holding that there was misdirection and I would allow the appeal in
respect of liability.
The appellant also appealed on the damage issue
alleging misdirection and in this regard all three members of the Court of
Appeal which heard the appeal were of opinion that a new trial should be had on
the question of quantum and ordered a new trial accordingly.
It is a question of whether there was evidence
upon which the jury, properly instructed, could arrive at the amount awarded or
whether the amount awarded was such that twelve sensible men could not have
reasonably arrived at that sum.
I think the amount awarded was reasonable in the
circumstances and supported by the evidence.
[Page 320]
However, the respondents objected to the
following statement by the learned trial judge in his charge to the jury:
When the actuary gives us how much money
would be required to purchase a five and a quarter annuity to produce $1,000.00
each year, and he gives us a sum of $13,364.00, and then you jump to the figure
of $3,000.00. Let us say he makes $3,500 a year. You multiply that by $3,500.00
and you would arrive at an amount close to $45,000.00. So now I want to tell
you that do not be misled by the figures of the actuary in that respect. They
are intended as a guide; but a guide that is very far off because they do not
take into account a multitude of contingencies that might arise, if the man had
lived, and any amount in that area, in my opinion, would be overly generous.
Just as much as if you award this lady $5,000.00 or $10,000.00, I would say you
are starting to be cheap and picayune on that score. So that there is a limit,
but that I give you a very wide margin, depending on your appraisal of those
facts, of these contingencies of which I have spoken, and then you can
determine what might be a financial security for this woman, to replace the
financial security which she had in her husband.
It is to be noted, however, that the statement
objected to was preceded by the following:
The most important aspect of her claim is
as of executrix of the estate. We have heard a considerable body of evidence as
to her husband, Basil Byron. There is no doubt that starting with the basis of
it, it is a shock for a woman to lose her husband, and it’s the same matter for
a man to lose his wife, but we are not here, and neither is it your function,
to analyze and award damages for sentimentalities. You must not proceed out of
sentiment for the plaintiff, or on sentiment of revenge against the defendant,
if you find him liable.
The amount that must be fixed is based on
the pecuniary loss, expectation of life, economic gain, security and stability
of life, which this woman had when she had her husband, and which she has not
now.
You are entitled to take into account the
character of the man, and you must take into account that whether he was a good
worker, because on that hinges stability, and also his habits, living habits,
his relationship with his own wife.
I can only summarize by saying that
generally speaking, Basil Byron has been shown by the witnesses to be an
ordinary, sound, good-living man, getting along reasonably well with his wife.
There is a presumption that people, husband and wife, do get along, and not the
contrary presumption that he was a man who carried certain complexes from his
war service. That he appeared to be a good worker, according to the witnesses.
I, unfortunately, and you might not view it with a great deal of understanding,
those changes of jobs all the time. This may be explained that he wanted to
improve his income and wanted to learn in a new field, but a rolling stone many
times does not gather any moss. The man had been off work for some—one employer
said one month, and there was some evidence about three months. But be that as
it may, over all their married life it is not substantial. You may take that
into account—the future of that man which would be reasonably expected.
You must not be generous, and you must not
be picayune in awarding that amount, because there are all sorts of
contingencies that may arise.
[Page 321]
Mrs. Byron might die, and we hope that
that definitely isn’t true. In a few years time, there may be a possibility
that Mrs. Byron might marry, and that is a possibility, in the light of
seeing her and how she has spoken to you, and how the medical reports are.
These are things you are entitled to take into consideration.
The plaintiff has produced an actuary’s
testimony showing, on the basis of the average, on the given basis of the age
of the wife, and on the basis of the age of the husband, what is the expectancy
of life—the expectancy of life, and that is 22.5 years. That is, again, a
probability on the average, but it does not mean that it will be an actual fact
that he would have lived to 22.5 years. One or the other may have died—the male
28.1, and the female 29.5. You take it all into consideration, therefore, the
probability and you have to analyze, and you are entitled to take and to
consider that he was a man five feet, ten and 135 pounds in weight; his
physical condition—his reported health, his energy, his living habits—these are
the things to consider.
The objection is to the learned trial judge
having mentioned amounts which might be called both a ceiling and a floor in
relation to the amount to be awarded. It would have been better if the learned
judge had not been as specific as he was in this instance, but the real
question is whether what he did say was misdirection of a nature requiring a
new trial on the issue of damages. Having regard to all the evidence that was
before the jury and the judge’s charge in relation to quantum as a whole, I am
of opinion that there was no substantial misdirection here and certainly no
error constituting a miscarriage of justice within the meaning of The
Judicature Act.
I have decided this case without reference to
the decision of the Court of Appeal of Ontario in Gray v. Alanco
Developments Ltd. et al. I
have proceeded solely on the ground that in this particular case the assessment
of the jury is, in my opinion, reasonable and one that ought to be supported. I
would reserve Gray v. Alanco Developments Ltd. et al. for further
consideration when the occasion arises.
I would, accordingly, allow the appeal and
restore the trial judgment with costs here and below.
RITCHIE J.:—I have had the advantage of reading
the reasons for judgment prepared by my brother Hall with which I am in full
accord, but I would like to say also that this case is in my view clearly
distinguishable from that of
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Gray v. Alanco Developments Ltd. et al.2, to which reference was made
by counsel for the respondents. The unanimous decision of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario in the latter case was rendered on the day after the decision was
handed down in that Court in the present appeal and the Court there ordered a
new trial limited to the assessment of general damages on the ground that the
trial judge had expressed his personal view as to the upper and lower limits of
damages to be awarded under this head in that case. I think it important to
observe that the decision in that case was limited to precluding a trial judge
from expressing his personal opinion based on figures awarded in other cases as
to the proper quantum of damages to be awarded, for example, for pain and
suffering or for loss of the amenities of life.
The limited effect of the decision in that case
is disclosed in the following passage from the reasons for judgment at p. 603
where it is said:
What has been stated is applicable to those
headings of general damages where there can be no evidence as to the value in
monetary terms of the loss sustained, for example damages, claimed for pain and
suffering or the loss or diminution of the amenities of life.
In the present case the learned trial judge was
commenting on the effect to be given to the evidence of an actuary as to life
expectancy and the amount that would be required to purchase an annuity, and
having pointed out to the jury that these figures were only intended as a
guide, he went on to speak of the hazards of life which would have existed even
if the husband had not been killed and which should be taken into consideration
in making an award to the widow. In so doing he, in effect, indicated that the
jury would be “overly generous” if they considered awarding an amount in the
area of a figure based entirely on the actuarial tables and he also expressed
the opinion that if they only awarded $5,000 or $10,000 they would, in his
opinion, be starting to be “cheap and picayune on that score”.
These remarks of the trial judge in the present
case do not appear to me to come within the category referred to in Gray v.
Alanco Developments Ltd. et al., supra, and I
[Page 323]
agree with my brother Hall that reading the
trial judge’s charge as a whole, the mention of his opinion as to amounts to be
awarded was in no way a fatal defect.
As I have indicated, I would dispose of this
appeal as proposed by my brother Hall.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, appellant:
MacMillan, Rooke, MacLennan & Avery, Toronto.
Solicitors for the defendants,
respondents: Gardiner, Roberts, Anderson, Conlin, Fitzpatrick, O’Donohue & White, Toronto.