Supreme Court of Canada
McElroy v. Cowper-Smith and Woodman, [1967] S.C.R. 425
Date: 1967-05-23
Hector McElroy (Defendant)
Appellant;
and
David Cowper-Smith
and Robert Woodman (Plaintiffs) Respondents.
1967: March 2, 3; 1967: May 23.
Present: Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and
Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF ALBERTA,
APPELLATE DIVISION
Libel—Damages—Whether award so inordinately
large as to be wholly erroneous estimate—Mitigating circumstance negating award
of punitive or exemplary damages.
Practice—Default of defence—Proof of
publication of alleged libel not required.
In an action for libel alleged by the
plaintiffs (a lawyer and an insurance executive) to have been uttered in a
letter and in a document entitled “To whom it may concern” which accompanied
the said letter, the defendant filed no statement of defence. The plaintiffs
noted the pleadings closed and applied for a praecipe for entry for
trial for the assessment of damages. The plaintiffs’ solicitor served notice of
such entry personally upon the defendant. When the matter came up for trial,
the defendant neither appeared nor was represented by counsel, and the Court
proceeded under those circumstances to hear the action. The trial judge awarded
damages in the amount of $25,000 to both plaintiffs. On appeal, that judgment
was affirmed by the Appellate Division and a further appeal was then brought to
this Court.
Held (Spence
J. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed.
Per curiam: In
Alberta, upon default in defence the defendant is to be taken to have admitted
the facts set out in the statement of claim. Accordingly, the plaintiffs were
not required to prove publication of the alleged libel. Sulef v. Parkin and
Breno (1966), 57 W.W.R. 236, followed.
Per Martland,
Judson, Ritchie and Hall JJ.: Defamation of a professional man is a very
serious matter and ordinarily would be visited with an award of substantial
damages, including punitive or exemplary damages if the circumstances so
warrant. However, in the circumstances of this particular case, the award of
$25,000 to each of the plaintiffs was so inordinately large as to be a wholly
erroneous estimate. It was obvious that the plaintiff was temperamentally
unstable and that he was given to making unreasoned and extravagant statements
about the plaintiffs. No reasonable businessman would be likely to be affected
in his dealings with the plaintiffs by the defendant’s statements and as
reasonable businessmen constituted the most important source of potential
clientele for both the plaintiffs, their exclusion from the persons likely to
be affected by the alleged libels was a factor which should have been taken
into account as a mitigating circumstance negating an award of punitive or
exemplary damages.
[Page 426]
Per Spence J.,
dissenting: This Court is justified in interfering with an award if it
is of the opinion that the damages are so large that it must be considered that
the trial judge applied a wrong principle of law, or that the verdict is a
wholly erroneous estimate. As to the only question of principle which appeared
in the reasons of the trial judge, if that judge did include amounts for
exemplary and punitive damages in the awards of the two plaintiffs he was
entitled in law to do so and there appeared to be sound reason for awarding
such damages. As to whether the verdict was a wholly erroneous estimate, under
the circumstances the award was not so inordinately high that it represented an
altogether erroneous estimate of the damages which the plaintiffs had suffered.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Supreme Court
of Alberta, Appellate Division, dismissing an appeal from a judgment of Milvain
J. Appeal allowed, Spence J. dissenting.
R.J. Gibbs, for the defendant, appellant.
W.A. McGillivray, Q.C., for the
plaintiffs, respondents.
The judgment of Martland, Judson, Ritchie and
Hall JJ. was delivered by
HALL J.:—I agree with my brother Spence that
publication of the libel sued on was admitted when no defence was filed on
behalf of the defendant and also that exs. 3, 4 and 7 were properly received
when tendered in aggravation of damages.
The real question in this appeal is whether the
award of $25,000 to each of the respondents was so inordinately large as to be
a wholly erroneous estimate in the circumstances of this particular case. I
think it was. I would not, in any way, underestimate or discount the damage
that can be done to a lawyer or to an insurance executive by false allegations
of misconduct and dishonesty. Defamation of a professional man is a very
serious matter and ordinarily would be visited with an award of substantial
damages, including punitive or exemplary damages if the circumstances so
warrant.
In the present case it is obvious that the
appellant was temperamentally unstable and that he was given to making
unreasoned and extravagant statements about the respondents. The learned trial
judge made it apparent that he was aware of this instability and exs. 3, 4 and
7 are themselves additional proof of it.
[Page 427]
My brother Spence has indicated his opinion
“that the ordinary hard-headed businessman might be little affected by these
statements from someone he knew to be of unstable character”. I would be more
inclined to say that no reasonable businessman would be likely to be affected
in his dealings with the respondents by statements coming from the source which
they did in this case, and as I feel that reasonable businessmen constitute the
most important source of potential clientele for both the respondents, I think
that their exclusion from the persons likely to be affected by the alleged
libels is a factor which should have been taken into account as a mitigating
circumstance negating an award of punitive or exemplary damages.
I think the appeal should be allowed and the
case remitted to the trial division for an assessment of damages having regard
to the foregoing. The appellant should have such costs in this Court as are
taxable in a forma pauperis appeal and his costs in the Appellate
Division.
SPENCE J. (dissenting):—This is an appeal
from the judgment of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Alberta
which, by a judgment dated June 2, 1965, dismissed without reasons an appeal
from the judgment of Milvain J. made on May 11, 1964. In the latter judgment,
Milvain J. awarded damages in the amount of $25,000 to both respondents.
The action was one for libel alleged by the
plaintiffs to have been uttered in a letter dated January 21, 1964, and in a
document entitled “To whom it may concern” which accompanied the said letter.
The defendant, the present appellant, filed no statement
of defence. The plaintiffs noted the pleadings closed and applied for a praecipe
for entry for trial for the assessment of damages. The plaintiffs’
solicitor served notice of such entry for trial personally upon the defendant.
When the matter came up for trial, the defendant neither appeared nor was
represented by counsel, and the Court proceeded under those circumstances to
hear the action.
Counsel for the appellant took the position in
this Court that according to the practice in the Supreme Court of Alberta, such
a default of defence by a defendant did not amount to an admission of the
allegations of fact made in
[Page 428]
the statement of claim. However, counsel for the
respondents has cited Sulef v. Parkin and Breno, where the Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court of Alberta, per Smith C.J.A., at p. 239, held that in
the Province of Alberta upon default in defence the defendant is to be taken to
have admitted the facts set out in the statement of claim. This is a decision
of the highest Court in Alberta on a point of practice in the province, and
this Court will not interfere under such circumstances. Therefore, the
respondents, as plaintiffs at trial, were not required to prove publication of
the alleged libel. This Court does not deem it necessary to determine whether
publication was admitted in other correspondence of the defendant produced at
trial.
Counsel for the appellant also objected to the
admission of exs. 3, 4 and 7, and to the reception of the evidence of one
Alexander Sandy Chibree. Counsel for the appellant took the position that no
publication had been proved of exs. 3, 4 and 7.
Exhibit 3 was a letter addressed to the
solicitors for the plaintiffs dated February 17, 1964. The statement of claim
by which the action was commenced was issued on February 10, 1964. In evidence,
the plaintiff David Cowper-Smith identified the signature of the defendant to
such letter and also to the letter (ex. 4) which was addressed to the
Honourable Premier E.C. Manning and dated February 28, 1964, and to ex. 7,
another document, which was entitled “To whom it may concern as an Assembly of
Christian Believers” and dated May 5, 1964. These documents were produced at
trial, not to prove the libel or the publication thereof, as they were all
committed after the issuance of the statement of claim, but to prove the state
of mind of the defendant in uttering the libel on January 21, 1964, and his
motive in doing so.
Gatley on Libel and Slander, in the fifth
edition, at p. 556, says:
Other defamatory words. The plaintiff may urge in aggravation of damages that the defendant
has published other defamatory words about him not set out on the record,
whether such words were or were not connected with the subject-matter of the
action, whether they were prior or subsequent to such publication, or writ
issued, and whether they are actionable or not.
[Page 429]
The authority cited for such proposition is Pearson
v. Lemaitre, in
the Court of Common Pleas, where Tindal C.J. said at pp. 719-20:
And this appears to us to be the correct
rule, viz. that either party may, with a view to the damages, give evidence to
prove or disprove the existence of a malicious motive in the mind of the
publisher of defamatory matter; but that, if the evidence given for that
purpose, establishes another cause of action, the jury should be cautioned
against giving any damages in respect of it.
I see no reason in principle why the publication
of these subsequent defamatory words need be proved. In fact, they would be
admissible if they were merely spoken to the plaintiff after the writ had been
issued and had not been heard by any other person. They are not admissible for
the purpose of proving the libel but in aggravation of damages. I am of the
opinion, therefore, that these three exhibits were admissible apart from
whatever evidence of publication may be obtained from the record, upon which I
need not express any opinion.
The witness Alexander Sandy Chibree gave
evidence that in the late fall of 1964, i.e., after the statement of
claim had been issued, he had been invited to a meeting at which were present
the defendant Hector McElroy, his brother Morton McElroy, and other persons.
The witness gave it as his opinion that the meeting was called to gather
evidence, if possible, that would have helped the McElroys, and particularly
Hector McElroy the appellant, to regain certain farm property, such relief
being claimed in an action against the plaintiffs and others. Chibree, in his
evidence, said:
I was rather astounded in that the meeting
was opened up by a remark by Mr. Morton McElroy that they would make
sure—they would take action against the men of Melba Ranches which would cause
them no longer to be able to do business in this city or make it difficult for
them to live within this City and beyond that, of course, there was various
discussions that followed.
On the evidence of Chibree, this statement by
Morton McElroy took place in the appellant Hector McElroy’s presence, and there
was no dissent from him at all. The witness continued:
In fact, there was several statements
followed that where the two—Hector and Morton, signified that they had always
worked as a team and that they would continue to do so in the future.
[Page 430]
The statement made by Morton McElroy would
certainly have been admitted in evidence had it been made by Hector McElroy.
Again, this evidence goes to show his motive in uttering the libels which are
the subject of the evidence. Although the statements were not made by the
appellant but by his brother, they were made at a meeting called for the
purpose of helping the appellant in his action for recovery of possession of
the farm property.
Phipson on Evidence, in the eighth edition, at
p. 240, gives the principle in these words:
Statements made in the presence and hearing
of a party, and documents in his possession, or to which he has access, are
evidence against him of the truth of the matters stated, if by his answers,
conduct, or silence he has acquiesced in their contents.
And at p. 241, the author states:
So, a party’s silence will render
statements made in his presence (or hearing only) evidence against him of their
truth, provided he is reasonably called on to reply thereto: Wiedemann v.
Walpole [1891] 2 Q.B. 534 at 539, and Richards v. Gellatly, L.R. 7
C.P. 127 at 131.
Certainly the appellant Hector McElroy was
called upon to dissent from such a statement made by his brother at a meeting
called for the purpose of assisting the appellant in his action for possession.
If he did not agree with the statement, his failure to dissent is, therefore,
in my view, admissible with the statement to which he gave his assent by
silence, again to explain the motive of the appellant in uttering the alleged
libel.
Counsel for the appellant submitted that the
learned trial judge permitted counsel for the respondents to give evidence
although, of course, not sworn, and cites this statement by the said counsel:
Mr. McGillivray: But, unfortunately…if
you had an opportunity of seeing this gentleman in the witness box your
Lordship might well see that he is not so insane at all. This is just planned
and deliberate and calculated to try and drive these people out of this
lawsuit, which is our statement which, of course, makes this a very, very
vicious thing. (The word “statement” is probably a misprint for “submission”.)
I am in agreement with counsel for the
respondent that that statement was not the giving of evidence by counsel but
was argument and was argument particularly in view of the testimony of Chibree
which was supported by the evidence adduced.
[Page 431]
One of the main contentions made by the
appellant is that the learned trial judge in making his award of damages
included in his award an allowance for punitive or exemplary damages and that
such damages are not allowed in a libel action. Counsel cites Rookes v.
Barnard, a
decision of the House of Lords.
Before considering that decision, it is
important to consider the actual words in which the learned trial judge
expressed himself. Giving judgment at the close of the argument Milvain J., in
the opening paragraph, said:
I have no hesitation on the evidence before
me in reaching the conclusion that the defamation in this instance is of the
nature and proportions that justify a Court in awarding heavy damages in which
there is involved an element of punitive damages.
Then he continued:
In my view Courts should take a very
serious view of defamation that affects the character of men in professional
life and of men in walks of life where they occupy a position of trust as does
a lawyer and as does the manager of an insurance company. There is nothing more
valuable to members of the human race than their reputation and a vile and
deliberate attack on reputation that is designed as is the case before me to
reach other ends through ulterior purposes, that in my view makes the action
all the worse.
In the first part of the second paragraph which
I have quoted above, the learned trial judge was emphasizing the serious nature
of the libel to the persons libelled and not dealing with the punitive element.
In Paffard v. Cavotti, the Appellate Division (as it was
then known) of the Supreme Court of Ontario considered a case where the trial
judge had estimated the actual damages which naturally flowed from the
defendant’s wrong doing, deliberate and flagrant trespass by cutting down trees
and depositing sand and silt on the plaintiff’s lands, at $3,500 and then,
taking into account the defendant’s whole course of conduct and persistence in
the wrong doing, fixed the total damages under the circumstances at $4,500.
Masten J. said at p. 176:
Mr. Cartwright’s argument in the
present case is that the trial judge was entirely unwarranted in law in his
finding that $1,000 should be added to the $3,500 on account of the arrogant
and improper conduct of the defendant towards this plaintiff.
In my opinion, every intendment is to be
made in favour of this judgment. No valid objection could be made to the
judgment if the Judge
[Page 432]
had simply said in his reasons that, taking
all the facts into consideration, he fixed the damages at $4,500. The
circumstance that the trial Judge, in giving his reasons, thought aloud and
expressed in words his method of arriving at the $4,500 cannot in my opinion
prejudice the validity of the resulting judgment.
So in this case, certainly if the trial judge
had confined himself to a recital of the seriousness of the damages to the
persons libelled then, in my view, the use of the one word “punitive” would not
have been sufficient reason to vary the quantum of the damages. The learned
trial judge, however, continued with reference to “…a vile and deliberate
attack on reputation that is designed as is the case before me to reach other
ends through ulterior purposes…” and I am ready, therefore, to consider this a
case in which the trial judge did award punitive damages.
If the law in effect in Alberta is that set
forth in the judgment of Lord Devlin in Rookes v. Barnard, then he at
p. 410 outlined the two cases where an award of punitive damages in a tort
action would be justified. The first category is the oppressive, arbitrary or
unconstitutional action by the servants of the government. That category is not
applicable in the present case. Dealing with the second class, Lord Devlin
continued:
Cases in the second category are those in
which the defendant’s conduct has been calculated by him to make a profit for
himself which may well exceed the compensation payable to the plaintiff. …This
category is not confined to moneymaking in the strict sense. It extends to
cases in which the defendant is seeking to gain at the expense of the plaintiff
some object,—perhaps some property which he covets,—which either he could not
obtain at all or not obtain except at a price greater than he wants to put
down.
In the present case, the evidence given by Chibree,
as I have said, tends to show that the purpose of the appellant in uttering
these libels, which are the basis of the action, was to affect the respondent’s
defence to the appellant’s action for possession of the farm land. In short, it
was a case “in which the defendant is seeking to gain at the expense of the
plaintiff some object—some property…” and even if the award of punitive damages
in tort actions is as limited as outlined by Lord Devlin then the present case
would fall within the second class which he sets out.
Moreover, I am of the opinion that in Canada the
jurisdiction to award punitive damages in tort actions is not so limited as
Lord Devlin outlined in Rookes v. Barnard.
[Page 433]
In Knott v. Telegram Printing Co., this Court was considering an
appeal in an action for libel. Anglin J., giving judgment for himself and the
Chief Justice, said at p. 341:
The damages are large and were, no doubt,
awarded upon a punitive or exemplary rather than on a purely compensatory
basis. It was, however, within the province of the jury so to deal with this
case.
Davies J., although of the opinion that the
damages were so excessive that a new trial was required, said at p. 336:
I have not failed in reaching this
conclusion to consider all the facts and circumstances in this case which would
justify exemplary damages being given…
And Duff J., although he also would have
directed a new trial, said at p. 339:
It is emphatically a case for the exercise
of the punitive jurisdiction with which the primary tribunal is endowed in
cases of defamation.
In Ontario, in two cases in recent years,
exemplary damages for trespass have been allowed without evidence that the
trespasser intended any profit for himself but only on the basis that he was
acting in a high-handed fashion with open disregard for the plaintiffs’ rights:
Carr‑Harris v. Schacter and Seaton
and Pretu et al. v. Donald Tidey Co. Ltd.
In the latter case, an appeal from the decision of Brooke J. was dismissed
without written reasons and an application for leave to appeal to this Court
was also dismissed. It is worthy of note that the latter application was made
after the decision of the House of Lords in Rookes v. Barnard had been
reported.
I am, therefore, of the view that if the trial
judge did include amounts for exemplary and punitive damages in the awards in
favour of the two plaintiffs then he was entitled in law to do so.
The problem still remains whether the damages
are so excessive that this Court should direct a new trial on the question of
damages. The awards were in the sum of $25,000 in favour of each plaintiff
which were the exact amounts claimed in the statement of claim. It is certainly
not a valid ground for interfering with an award of damages in such an action
that none of the members of this Court, had they been sitting at the trial,
would have al-
[Page 434]
lowed such a sum: Youssoupoff v.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Ltd.; Knott
v. Telegram Printing Co., supra, at p. 341.
If, however, this Court is of the opinion that
the damages are so large that it must be considered that the trial judge
applied a wrong principle of law, or that the verdict is a wholly erroneous
estimate, the Court is justified in interfering.
I have dealt with the only question of principle
which appeared in the reasons of the learned trial judge.
I turn now to whether the award was so
inordinately large as to be a wholly erroneous estimate.
The plaintiff Cowper-Smith was a solicitor
practising in Calgary in a small firm. He had no partner but retained one
junior solicitor. The plaintiff Woodman was the manager, in Calgary, of the
Excelsior Life Insurance Company. The libels alleged and, in my view, proved
were:
My charge, made by my lawyer…is to the
effect that these men have committed an act (or acts) whereby they are legally
charged with conspiracy to defraud.
In an examination by a psychiatrist to
determine why I would trust these men, I would ask my Elders if men of
Gideons, namely Mr. Jespersen and Woodman, who used our pulpit and who
claimed to love the same Lord and Saviour as I do, cannot be trusted…
It was brought to my attention that at a
recent meeting of the Gideons, Mr. Cowper‑Smith was present, and one
of the Gideons rebuked a member for allowing Mr. Cowper-Smith to attend,
knowing this individual’s Christian testimony left much to be desired…
I have been informed by Mr. Claude
Cameron, a member of the local Alliance Church, who was very disturbed by their
lack of Christian ethics in their business dealings, through personal
experience, that one of their speakers at their C.B.M.C. campaign in the fall
of 1962, left the city prematurely because he discovered the reputation of one
or two of these men. Rev. Smith, you have mentioned to me your feelings
regarding the spiritual deficiency of C.B.M.C. here in Calgary.
As well in the document enclosed with that
letter there was set out in some detail an alleged transaction between the
plaintiff Cowper-Smith and the defendant in which it was said that he agreed to
make certain charges for carrying out a transfer of property and then attempted
to deduct more from the proceeds of the sale which he had improperly directed
should be paid to himself. I am in agreement with the view expressed by the
learned trial judge that these are very serious accusations to make
[Page 435]
against men who are in the position of trust of
solicitor and local manager of an insurance company. It is true that the
evidence reveals that the appellant was, to put it quite conservatively, of a
somewhat fanatical view in matters with reference to religion and it is true
that the ordinary hard-headed businessman might be little affected by these
statements coming from someone he knew to be of an unstable character. The
letter, however, purported to be addressed to a Rev. Herman L.G. Smith, District
Superintendent of the Church of the Nazarene, and copies were directed to the
Rev. Harold Griffin of the North Hill Church of the Nazarene, the Rev. Charles
Muxworthy, First Church of the Nazarene, and to all organizations mentioned in
the letter. The latter organizations included the Pastor’s Gospel Fellowship,
the Gideons, C.B.M.C. (said to be Christian Business Men’s Club), the Youth for
Christ, and the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. Those persons and those
organizations were those who knew well both the appellant and the respondents.
The respondent Cowper‑Smith could expect people such as these as being
those with whom he dealt either as clients or for clients. Those persons and
the members of those organizations could well be amongst those whom the
respondent Woodman would wish to solicit as policyholders in the company which
he represented. There is nothing to indicate that the damages which they would
suffer would be lessened by any recognition of the extreme religious beliefs of
the appellant. The persons to whom he addressed the libels might well be
persons with similar extreme religious beliefs.
In Ley v. Hamilton, Lord Atkin said at p. 386:
It is precisely because the “real” damage
cannot be ascertained and established that the damages are at large. It is
impossible to track the scandal, to know what quarters the poison may reach: it
is impossible to weigh at all closely the compensation which will recompense a
man or a woman for the insult offered or the pain of a false accusation…
It is, of course, well nigh impossible to give
any evidence of either special damages or evidence which will allow an exact
calculation of general damages. The plaintiff Cowper‑Smith was very
moderate in dealing with this matter in his evidence. I quote a few questions
of such evidence:
Q. Now, first of all,
Mr. Cowper-Smith, can you tell his lordship whether—of what effect that
you are aware of as to the publication
[Page 436]
of the matters alleged in the statement of
claim, what effect that has had on you if you have any knowledge?
A. Well, I only have one or two concrete
examples of business lost because of it and that has come to me sort of as a
chain event. Aside from that it received such wide publication amongst the
people that I associated with that it was extremely embarrassing and when you
met someone you didn’t sort of feel like being friendly because you didn’t know
what they had heard.
Q. You did mention something about you have
a couple of instances of business loss, would you give—
A. Well, these are—there is one in
particular small but I got the details on it just recently, this McElroy—this,
as I say, it is sort of a chain event, it is semi-hearsay—
Q. Well, if it was—
A. Yes, I know it has affected business but
it is impossible to say how much.
It is interesting to note that the plaintiff
Woodman actually belonged to the Alliance Church and the Gideons International,
two of the organizations which received copies of the libel.
Under these circumstances, I have come to the
conclusion that I cannot say that the award was so inordinately high that it
represented an altogether erroneous estimate of the damages which the
plaintiffs have suffered, even apart from the jurisdiction to award punitive
damages which, as I have said, I believe the trial Court did possess.
As to the latter, there would seem to be sound
reason for awarding punitive damages. Firstly, there is the evidence as to the
purpose which the defendant had in uttering the libels, and secondly, exs. 3, 4
and 7, which demonstrated that after the action had been commenced the
defendant continued to utter defamatory statements and if anything increased
the venemous nature thereof.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal allowed with costs, SPENCE J. dissenting.
Solicitors for the defendant, appellant:
Prothroe, Gibbs, McCruden and Hilland, Calgary.
Solicitors for the plaintiffs,
respondents: Fenerty, Fenerty, McGillivray, Robertson, Prowse, Brennan and
Fraser, Calgary.