Supreme Court of Canada
Bogoch
Seed Company v. C.P.R. and C.N.R., [1963] S.C.R. 247
Date:
1963-04-01
Bogoch Seed Company Limited Appellant;
and
Canadian Pacific Railway Company and Canadian
National Railways Respondents.
1962: November 27, 28; 1963: April 1.
Present: Taschereau, Fauteux, Martland, Judson and Ritchie
JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE BOARD OF TRANSPORT COMMISSIONERS FOR
CANADA.
Statute—Interpretation—Rapeseed—Whether
"grain" under Crow's Nest Pass Agreement and Crow's Nest Pass Act,
1897 (Can.), c. 5—Railway Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 234, s. 828 as amended, 1960-61
(Can.), c. 54.
The Board of Transport Commissioners dismissed the appellant's
application for an order declaring that rapeseed was a "grain" within
the meaning of the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement, and for an order directing the
establishment by the respondents and the Board of rates on rapeseed from
prairie points eastbound to Fort William and westbound to the Pacific coast on
the basis of the rates charged for the transportation of grain. The Crow's Nest
Pass Agreement was made between the Crown and the Canadian Pacific Railway
Company in 1897 pursuant to the Crow's Nest Pass Act, 1897 (Can.), c. 5,
and provided for certain rate reductions on grain and flour. The rates so fixed
were later extended in application by provisions added to the Railway Act in
1925, which now appear as subs. (6) and (7) of s. 328 of the present Act,
R.S.C. 1952, c. 234.
The issue for determination was as to whether the word
"grain", as it is used in the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement and in the Crow's
Nest Pass Act, was to be construed as meaning only those commodities which,
at the time the statute and the agreement came into existence, were, in the
ordinary sense, considered as grain, or whether it should be held to include a
commodity which, at a later date, had come to be regarded as a grain in the
ordinary sense. The Board, by a majority, decided that the word
"grain" in the Crow's Nest Pass Act and the Crow's Nest Pass
Agreement, and in s. 328 (6) and (7) of the Railway Act, did not include
rapeseed. Subsequent to this decision and to the order giving the appellant
leave to appeal, an amendment to s. 328 of the Railway Act, effective
August 1, 1961, was passed which provided that the expression "grain"
included rapeseed. Therefore the instant decision had relation only to the
situation which existed prior to that date.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed.
The principle of construction that was stated, with reference
to the British North America Act, in British Coal Corporation v. The
King, [1935] A.C. 500, i.e., in interpreting a constituent or
organic statute that construction most beneficial to the widest possible
amplitude of its powers must be adopted, could not properly be applied to the
statute in question in this case because its purpose was entirely different.
The Crow's Nest Pass Act was enacted so as to provide for the making of
an agreement. The agreement that followed was dealing with a reduction in the
existing rates on grain and flour and it seemed that the parties
[Page 248]
contemplated, and only contemplated, the effecting of a
reduction in rates then applicable on what both parties, at that time, regarded
as being grain. The Governments of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba v. The
C.P.R., [1925] S.C.R. 155, applied.
The words of a statute must be construed as they would have
been the day after the statute was passed, unless some subsequent statute has
declared that some other construction is to be adopted or has altered the
previous statute. Sharpe v. Wakefield (1889), 22 Q.B.D. 239, affirmed,
[1891] A.C. 173; Simpson v. Teignmouth and Shaldon Bridge Co., [1903] 1
K.B. 405; Kingston Wharves Ltd, v. Reynolds Jamaica Mines Ltd., [1959] 2
W.L.R. 40; Attorney-General for the Isle of Man v. Moore, [1938] 3 All
E.R. 263, referred to.
APPEAL from an order of the Board of Transport
Commissioners,
dismissing the appellant's application for certain orders. Appeal dismissed.
George H. Steer, Q.C., and G. A. C. Steer, for
the appellant.
W. R. Jackett, Q.C.,
and K. D. M. Spence, Q.C., for the respondent: Canadian Pacific Railway
Company.
Gordon W. Ford, Q.C., and E. B. MacDonald, for
the respondent: Canadian National Railways.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Martland J.:—This
is an appeal from an order of the Board of Transport Commissioners, which dismissed the appellant's
application for an order declaring that rapeseed is a "grain" within
the meaning of the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement, and for an order directing the
establishment by the respondents and the Board of rates on rapeseed from
Prairie points eastbound to Fort William and westbound to the Pacific coast, on
the basis of export rates applicable to grain from Prairie points to Fort
William and the Pacific coast as the case may be, and declaring the rates being
charged at the time of the application to be and to have been beyond the
jurisdiction of the respondents and of the Board, void and of no effect.
The issue of law, on which leave to appeal was given in this
case, is stated in the order which gave to the appellant leave to appeal, and
is as follows:
Whether the majority of the Board, consisting of Chief
Commissioner Rod Kerr and Assistant Chief Commissioner H. H. Griffin, and
Commissioner W. R. Irwin, whose reasons for judgment were delivered by the said
Chief Commissioner erred, having found that rapeseed was now
[Page 249]
recognized as a grain, in not holding that rapeseed must be
included within the meaning of the word "grain" as used in the
Crowsnest Pass Act, being Chapter 5 Statutes of Canada, 1897, and the Railway
Act of Canada, Section 328 (6) and (7) ?
Commissioner Knowles and Commissioner Woodard, who
dissented, were of the opinion that rapeseed is now a "grain" within
the meaning of the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement.
The Crow's Nest Pass Agreement was made on September 6,
1897, between Her Majesty The Queen, acting in respect of the Dominion of
Canada, and the Canadian Pacific Railway Company (which is hereinafter referred
to as "C.P.R."). It was made pursuant to a statute commonly known as
the Crow's Nest Pass Act, 1897 (Can.), c. 5, which authorized a grant of
subsidy to the C.P.R. toward the cost of construction of a railway through the
Crow's Nest Pass on condition that the C.P.R. first enter into an agreement
with the Government containing certain stipulated covenants by the C.P.R.,
which included the following:
(a) That the Company will construct or cause to be
constructed, the said railway upon such route and according to such
descriptions and specifications and within such time or times as are provided
for in the said agreement, and, when completed, will operate the said railway
for ever;
* * *
(e) That there shall be a reduction in the Company's
present rates and tolls on grain and flour from all points on its main line,
branches, or connections, west of Fort William to Fort William and Port Arthur
and all points east, of three cents per one hundred pounds, to take effect in
the following manner:— One and one-half cent per one hundred pounds on or
before the first day of September, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-eight,
and an additional one and one-half cent per one hundred pounds on or before the
first day of September, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-nine; and that no
higher rates than such reduced rates or tolls shall be charged after the dates
mentioned on such merchandise from the points aforesaid.
The agreement, as executed, contained these covenants.
In the year 1924 the Board of Railway Commissioners had to
consider the issue as to whether the rate reductions provided for in the
agreement applied only to points which had been upon the railway's system in
1897, or whether they also applied to points to which the system had been
extended subsequently. The Board ruled that the rates stipulated in the
agreement were not binding upon the Board and, therefore, that it did not
require to consider this issue.
[Page 250]
An appeal by leave of the Board was taken to this Court,
which was argued in 1925 (The Governments of Alberta, Saskatchewan and
Manitoba v. The C.P.R.).
It was decided on that appeal that the statute and the agreement were
binding upon the Board, which had no power to change the rates thereby fixed,
but that the rates so fixed applied only to the carriage of freight between the
points which were on the C.P.R. system in 1897. Anglin C.J.C., at p. 171, said:
We now pass to the consideration of the second question: Do
the Crow's Nest Pass rates apply exclusively to the designated traffic between
points which were on the Canadian Pacific Railway Company's lines in 1897? The
terms in which the rate reduction clauses (d) and (e) were
couched seem to afford a conclusive answer in the affirmative. Both clauses
provide for a reduction in then existing rates and tolls—clause (d) by
deducting certain specified percentages from rates and tolls in respect to the
carriage of certain commodities as now charged or as contained in the present
freight tariff of the company, whichever rates are the lowest; clause (e)
by deducting from the present rates on eastbound grain and flour 3 cents per
one hundred pounds. It is obvious that the rates and tolls to be reduced
whether those actually charged, or those contained in the freight tariff, were
rates and tolls between points actually on the Canadian Pacific Railway as then
existing. There were—there could be—no rates or tolls in existence to or from
points not then on the system; and there could be no reductions in non-existing
rates and tolls.
Following that decision, Parliament promptly enacted c. 52,
Statutes of Canada 1925, which added provisions to the Railway Act which
now appear as subss. (5), (6) and (7) of s. 328 of the present Act, R.S.C.
1952, c. 234.
(5) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 3 the powers
given to the Board under this Act to fix, determine and enforce just and
reasonable rates, and to change and alter rates as changing conditions or cost
of transportation may from time to time require, are not limited or in any
manner affected by the provisions of any Act of the Parliament of Canada, or by
any agreement made or entered into pursuant thereto, whether general in
application or special and relating only to any specific railway or railways,
and the Board shall not excuse any charge of unjust discrimination, whether
practised against shippers, consignees, or localities, or of undue or
unreasonable preference, on the ground that such discrimination or preference
is justified or required by any agreement made or entered into by the company.
(6) Notwithstanding anything in subsection (5), rates on
grain and flour shall, on and from the 27th day of June, 1925, be governed by
the provisions of the agreement made pursuant to chapter 5 of the statutes of
Canada 1897, but such rates shall apply to all such traffic moving from all
points on all lines of railway west of Fort William to Fort William or Port
Arthur over all lines now or hereafter constructed by any company subject to
the jurisdiction of Parliament.
[Page 251]
(7) The Board shall not excuse any charge of unjust
discrimination, whether practised against shippers, consignees, or localities
or of undue or unreasonable preference, respecting rates on grain and flour,
governed by the provisions of chapter 5 of the statutes of Canada, 1897, and by
the agreement made or entered into pursuant thereto within the territory
referred to in subsection (6), on the ground that such discrimination or
preference is justified or required by the said Act or by the agreement made or
entered into pursuant thereto.
On August 26,1927, by Order 448, the Board ordered that the
rates on grain and flour from Prairie points to Vancouver and Prince Rupert for
export (to which the 1925 statute had not applied the Crow's Nest Pass
Agreement rates) be on the same basis as the rates to Port Arthur.
The application in the present case raised the issue as to
whether or not rapeseed was a "grain" within the meaning of the
Crow's Nest Pass Agreement and the Crow's Nest Pass Act. The application
was heard on March 8 and 9, 1960. Subsequent to the decision of the Board and
to the order giving to the appellant leave to appeal therefrom to this Court,
there was enacted, on July 13, 1961, and taking effect on August 1, 1961, an
amendment to s. 328 of the Railway Act, adding thereto subs. (8) as
follows:
(8) For the purposes of subsections (6) and (7) and the Act
and agreement therein referred to, the expression "grain" includes
rapeseed, and the rates applicable to the movement of rapeseed from any point
referred to in subsection (6) after the coming into force of this subsection
shall not exceed the rates applicable to flaxseed.
As from August 1, 1961, therefore, the issue before this
Court has been settled by the statute and the decision of the Court in this
case can only have relation to the situation which existed prior to that date.
The evidence before the Board showed that the rape plant is
a broad-leafed plant of the same genus as cabbage, brussels sprouts and
turnips. There is an annual variety and a biennial type. The latter was grown
in Canada as a forage crop as far back as the 1890's, but, as it could not
survive the winter in most parts of Canada, it produced only forage and not
seeds. The seed for it was imported into Canada.
The annual variety, which produces oil seed rapes, was not
produced commercially in Canada until 1943, when it was first grown to provide
a source of oil for certain naval requirements. It produces an edible oil,
useful for margarine and other foods, and has continued to be produced
commercially in Canada since 1943.
[Page 252]
The evidence indicated that this type of plant, for the
purpose of providing seeds for the production of oils, had been grown in Europe
for a hundred years or more. There was, however, no evidence as to whether it
had been considered, in the countries in which it was produced, as being a
grain crop.
There was evidence, which the Board accepted, that rapeseed
would not have been generally regarded in Canada in 1897 as a grain.
"Grain" is a term of general usage applied to certain agricultural
commodities by the trade. In 1943, when rapeseed came to be grown commercially,
with the seed sold as a commercial product for purposes other than the growing
of new plants, it did become recognized by the trade as a grain. The Board made
the following finding upon the evidence:
I find that the word "grain", as used and
understood today by farmers, agronomists, transportation people and what is
generally called the "grain trade" in Canada, in respect of such
undisputed grain as wheat, oats and barley also includes rapeseed, that
rapeseed to them is grain in the same sense that wheat, oats and barley are
grain, and that they include rapeseed in their common usage of the word
grain—and that it was so included, used and understood by them since 1943, but
not prior thereto.
Evidence was, given regarding the tariffs immediately prior
to and subsequent to the making of the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement. This
evidence is summarized in the reasons of the Chief Commissioner as follows:
When the Crow's Nest Pass Act was passed, Canadian Pacific's
present rates and tolls on grain and flour were contained in its Tariff No. 236
which came into effect on September 5, 1893, and was in effect through 1897.
The title page of that tariff had the following words:
"Special Tariff
on
Grain, Flour,
Oatmeal, Millstuffs
Flaxseed, Oilcake,
Potatoes and Hay,
in Carloads,
From Stations on the
above Railways in Manitoba,
Assiniboia,
Saskatchewan and Alberta,
Keewatin, Rat
Portage,
West Fort William,
Fort William
and
Port Arthur."
There was no specific reference to rapeseed in that tariff.
To find the rate for rapeseed it would be necessary to go to "Canadian
Joint Freight Classification No. 10(a)", which took effect on
September 1, 1897, and use it in conjunction with C. P. Tariff No. 270, which
provided for mileage
[Page 253]
class rates effective on October 1, 1894. There was no
specific reference to rapeseed in Classification No. 10(a) and one would
have to use the item "Seed, Field, not otherwise specified". The classification
contained the item "Grain" and under it are specified only
"Barley, Beans, Buckwheat, Corn, Malt, Oats, 'Peas, Rye, Wheat", and
the statement "The general term 'Grain' will not apply on Pot and Pearl
Barley, Beans, Buckwheat or Split Peas on special 'grain' Tariffs, unless these
articles are enumerated thereon as included in the Special Grain Rates."
The carload ratings in the classification on seed, including rapeseed, were
fifth class, and the fifth class rates to Fort William were considerably higher
than the rates on grain to Fort William in Tariff No. 236 above referred to.
The first reduction on grain and flour made by Canadian
Pacific under the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement was by its Tariff No. 494,
effective August 1, 1898, and its title page was similar to the title page of
Tariff 236 above described.
The second reduction under the Agreement was made by C.P.
Tariff No. 543, effective September 1, 1899, and it was entitled as follows:
"Special Tariff
on
Grain, Flour,
Oatmeal, Mill Stuffs."
and did not include flax, oilcakes, potatoes and hay which
were put in another tariff without the second reduction in rates.
Rapeseed was first listed specifically when it appeared in
Supplement No. 1 to Canadian Freight
Classification No. 15, effective August 15, 1911, where it appeared under the
item "Seeds" as "Rape, in barrels …", taking fifth class
carload rating.
In 1925, the position was that rapeseed was listed in
Canadian Freight Classification No. 16, under the item "Seed" among
such other seeds as clover, mustard, timothy, sugar beet, etc., with fifth
class carload rating.
Supplement No. 39 to C.P.'s Tariff No. W-4933, C.R.C.
W-2641, effective June 18, 1925, and Supplement No. 36 to C.N.'s Tariff
W-1-183-B, C.R.C. W-251, effective June 18, 1925, each of them on grain and
grain products, were in effect when the 1925 amendment to the Railway Act was
passed. Neither the supplements nor the original tariffs which they
supplemented provided rates on rapeseed.
In 1927, pursuant to Board's General Order No. 448, rates
were published on the Crow's Nest Pass basis on grain and grain products but
they did not apply on rapeseed, the rates on rapeseed being the fifth class
rates as provided in the Canadian Freight Classification under the heading
"Seed".
Rapeseed has never taken the Crow's Nest Pass rates on
grain, instead it has taken substantially higher rates.
The legal issue which has to be determined is as to whether
the word "grain", as it is used in the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement and
in the Crow's Nest Pass Act, is to be construed as meaning only those
commodities which, as at the time the statute and the agreement came into
existence, were, in the ordinary sense, considered as grain, or whether
[Page 254]
it should be held to include a commodity which, at a later
date, has come to be regarded as a grain in the ordinary sense.
The appellant, in supporting the latter view, relies upon s.
10 of the Interpretation Act:
10. The law shall be considered as always speaking, and
whenever any matter or thing is expressed in the present tense, the same shall
be applied to the circumstances as they arise, so that effect may be given to
each Act and every part thereof, according to its spirit, true intent and
meaning.
Reliance was placed upon the decision of the Privy Council
in Attorney-General for Alberta v. Attorney-General for Canada, in which there was
considered the meaning of the word "banking" in s. 91 of the British
North America Act and the question as to whether that term was confined to
the activities of banks as conducted in 1867. Viscount Simon, at p. 516, said:
The question is not what was the extent and kind of business
carried on by banks in Canada in 1867 but what is the meaning of the term
itself in the Act.
There was also cited the decision of the Court of Appeal of
Ontario in Re McIntyre Porcupine Mines Limited and Morgan, in which the Court had to
consider the meaning of the word "concentrators" for the purposes of
the Assessment Act. In that case Hodgins J.A., at p. 219, said:
The rule laid down in the Interpretation Act, R.S.O. 1914,
ch. 1, sec. 10, is that statutes shall "receive such fair, large, and
liberal construction and interpretation as will best ensure the attainment of
the object of the Act, and of the provision or enactment, according to the true
intent, meaning and spirit thereof." It is therefore open to the Court to
adopt the larger or later meaning of the word in question, if it be true, as I
think it is, that the Assessment Act in this particular aims at exempting such
means as may be adopted in the mining location to aid in the concentration of
the ore-mass, even if that progresses to the point of using chemical means as
well as those mechanical, and in so doing draws within its scope some part of
what may be alternatively described as amalgamation or reduction:
Section 10 of the Interpretation Act refers to the
"spirit, true intent and meaning" of an Act and, in construing the
meaning of the Assessment Act, Hodgins J.A., in the passage just quoted,
gave effect to the purpose which he found for the section in question in the Assessment
Act.
In The Attorney-General for Alberta v. The
Attorney-General for Canada the Court was considering the meaning of a term
in the British North America Act, which the
[Page 255]
learned Chief Commissioner, in his reasons, has described as
"an organic statute conferring legislative powers". In his reasons
the Chief Commissioner went on to refer to British Coal Corporation v. The
King,
in which, at p. 518, Viscount Sankey said:
Indeed, in interpreting a constituent or organic statute
such as the Act, that construction most beneficial to the widest possible
amplitude of its powers must be adopted.
I do not think that the same principle of construction can
properly be applied to the statute in question in the present case because its
purpose was entirely different. The Crow's Nest Pass Act was enacted so
as to provide for the making of an agreement. It is true that the rates
established by that agreement had statutory effect, as was pointed out by this
Court in 1925 in the case of The Governments of Alberta, Saskatchewan and
Manitoba v. The C.P.R., previously mentioned. But, none the less, it was an
agreement which was being made in 1897 between two parties, the Crown and the
C.P.R., and under its terms, in consideration of a grant from the Crown to the
C.P.R., the latter agreed to reduce its rates on certain commodities. That was
the essence of the agreement, which provided that "there shall be a
reduction in the Company's present rates and tolls on grain and
flour". It then went on, after providing how and when such reductions
should be effected, to provide: "and that no higher rates than such
reduced rates or tolls shall be charged after the dates mentioned." In
other words, the reduction in rates was not temporary in nature, but would
continue. The agreement was dealing with a reduction in the existing rates on
grain and flour and it seems to me that the parties contemplated, and only
contemplated, the effecting of a reduction in rates then applicable on what
both parties, at that time, regarded as being grain.
I am reinforced in this opinion by the reasons of Anglin
C.J.C., already cited, in the case of The Governments of Alberta,
Saskatchewan and Manitoba v. The C.P.R. The reasoning which he applied, in
deciding that the agreement related only to points existing on the C.P.R. lines
as at the date of the agreement, applies, by analogy, in considering what was
meant by the word "grain", and, just as the agreement did not cover
points subsequently added to the system, so it did not cover commodities which
were not considered
[Page 256]
as grain at the time of the making of the agreement, even
though they subsequently came to be considered as grain in the trade.
In my opinion, the rule which is applicable in this case is
that which was stated by Lord Esher in his judgment in Sharpe v. Wakefield:
Now what is the rule of construction to be applied? It is
that the words of a statute must be construed as they would have been the day
after the statute was passed, unless some subsequent statute has declared that
some other construction is to be adopted or has altered the previous statute.
The judgment of the Court of Appeal in that case was
affirmed by the House of Lords.
In Simpson v. Teignmouth and Shaldon Bridge Company, the issue was as to
whether a bicycle was a "carriage" within the meaning of a statute of
George IV which imposed certain bridge tolls. The Earl of Halsbury L.C. said at
p. 413:
The broad principle of construction put shortly must be
this: What would, in an ordinary sense, be considered to be a carriage (by
whatever specific name it might be called) in the contemplation of the
Legislature at the time the Act was passed?
This passage was cited in the Privy Council decision in Kingston
Wharves Ltd. v. Reynolds Jamaica Mines Ltd. The same principle was
applied by the Privy Council in Attorney-General for the Isle of Man v.
Moore.
Applying that rule in the present case, it is my opinion
that the Board, having found that the word "grain" did not include
rapeseed prior to 1943, properly decided that the word "grain" in the
Crow's Nest Pass Act and the Crow's Nest Pass Agreement, and in s.
328(6) and (7) of the Railway Act, did not include rapeseed.
In my opinion, therefore, the appeal should be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Milner, Steer, Dyde,
Massie, Layton, Cregan & Macdonnell, Edmonton.
Solicitor for the respondent, Canadian Pacific
Railway Co.: K. D. M. Spence, Montreal.
Solicitor for the respondent, Canadian National
Railways: W. G. Boyd, Montreal.