Supreme Court of Canada
Mizinski v. Robillard and McLaughlin, [1957] S.C.R.
351
Date: 1957-04-12
William Mizinski (Plaintiff)
Appellant;
and
Wilbert Robillard and
Jack McLaughlin (Defendants) Respondents.
1957: March 29; 1957: April 12.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Trial judge dispensing with jury—Nature of
order—Discretion—The Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 190, s. 57(3)—The
Supreme Court Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 259, s. 44.
When a trial judge, in the course of a trial
by jury, decides to discharge the jury and complete the trial himself, under s.
57(3) of the Ontario Judicature Act, his order is a discretionary one
and was therefore not appealable to the Supreme Court of Canada under
s. 44 of the Supreme Court Act as it was before its amendment in 1956.
[Page 352]
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario affirming the judgment of Barlow J. at trial. Appeal dismissed.
A. Moloney, Q.C., for the plaintiff,
appellant.
David J. Walker, Q.C., for the defendant
McLaughlin, respondent.
W. Gibson Gray, for the defendant
Robillard, respondent.
The judgment of the Chief Justice and
Cartwright, Fauteux and Abbott JJ. was delivered by
CARTWRIGHT J.:—This is an appeal from a judgment
of the Court of Appeal for Ontario pronounced on May 12, 1954, dismissing an
appeal from the judgment of Barlow J. dated October 1, 1953, whereby the
appellant’s action was dismissed with costs.
The appellant suffered serious injuries in an
automobile accident which occurred on May 22, 1952. He brought action against
the respondents alleging that each of them had been guilty of acts of
negligence which had caused the accident. The action came on for trial before
Barlow J. and a jury in September 1953. The respondents were separately
represented. Evidence was called on behalf of the respondent McLaughlin but not
on behalf of the respondent Robillard and consequently at the conclusion of the
evidence Mr. Walker, counsel for McLaughlin, addressed the jury first
followed by Mr. MacDonald, counsel for the appellant, who would in the
ordinary course have been followed by counsel for Robillard.
At the conclusion of Mr. MacDonald’s
address Mr. Walker moved the learned trial judge to discharge the jury and
continue the trial himself without a jury. Counsel for the respondent Robillard
supported this motion. The motion, which was argued at length, was based on the
allegations (i) that counsel for the appellant had mis-stated the effect of the
evidence to the jury in several respects of which eight were specified, and
(ii) that the address was inflammatory. In opposing the motion,
Mr. MacDonald said in part:
My address was not inflammatory in any
sense of the word. All I tried to do was to discharge my duty as a plaintiff’s
counsel to his client. I would think that from the vast experience which your
Lordship has had,
[Page 353]
you would have stopped me if I had been
delivering an inflammatory address. I am not prepared to take the quotations
which Mr. Walker read to your Lordship as being my utterances, and if
there is any doubt about it I think there should be a transcript.
To this the learned trial judge replied: “I took
them down as Mr. Walker has stated them.” But on the argument before us
counsel for the appellant in a careful analysis of the transcript of
Mr. MacDonald’s address and of the complaints which had been made against
it showed that a number of the alleged mis-statements of fact complained of
before the learned trial judge had not in fact been made. In this connection it
may be noted that in the factum of the respondent McLaughlin filed in this
Court only four mis-statements are specified.
At the conclusion of the argument of the motion
the learned trial judge said:
Counsel for the defendants ask that I take
this case from the jury on the ground of mis‑statement of facts by
counsel for the plaintiffs, and also that the address was inflammatory.
It is the duty and the right of a trial
judge to deal with such a motion, the purpose being that justice may be done
between the parties. If, in the opinion of the trial judge, he considers that
the address of counsel for the plaintiffs is of such a nature that it may lead
to a verdict which is not warranted by the evidence, then it is quite proper
for him to take the case from the jury.
There is no doubt in my mind that the
address was of an inflammatory nature, and there were also various
mis-statements of fact made by counsel for the plaintiffs. I made a note of
some of them, and I made a note of some of the inflammatory statements, such
as, for example, “I suggest to you that there was guilt in his soul”, meaning
Mr. McLaughlin; “he knew in his heart that he had caused the accident”;
“was that the act of a man who had something on his conscience?” Those are only
some of the statements that are quite improper, in my opinion, so far as the
inflammatory nature of it is concerned.
For that reason, and also by reason of the
mis-statements of facts which are of such a nature that I could never expect to
correct them, and ought not to have to correct them in my charge to the jury, I
think that I would only be doing what is right and proper in the administration
of justice in taking this case from the jury and concluding it myself.
The learned judge then discharged the jury.
The appellant in his notice of appeal to the
Court of Appeal set up only the following grounds:
1. His Lordship, the trial judge, erred in
ruling that Counsel for the Plaintiffs had mis‑stated evidence in his
jury address and that the said jury address was of an inflammatory nature.
[Page 354]
2. His Lordship, the trial judge, erred in
ordering the jury dismissed and concluding the trial himself, and his action,
in so doing, was an improper exercise of his judicial discretion, and a denial
to the Plaintiffs of their right to have their causes tried by a jury.
No other ground was advanced in the appellant’s
factum or in his argument in this Court.
At the opening of the argument before us
Mr. Walker raised the preliminary objection that, the only ground of
appeal being that the learned trial judge erred in taking the case from the
jury, no appeal lies to this Court as the order discharging the jury was one
made “in the exercise of judicial discretion”, and the right of appeal is
denied by s. 44 of the Supreme Court Act. The Court decided to delay
consideration of this preliminary objection until after the argument of the
appeal. It will be observed that if this preliminary objection is entitled to
prevail this Court could not give leave to appeal as the action was commenced
before the amendment of s. 41(1) by 4-5 Eliz. II
(1956), c. 48, s. 3: see La Cité de Verdun v. Viau
In Ontario the power of a judge presiding at a
trial before a jury to discharge the jury and complete the trial himself is
found in subs. (3) of s. 57 of The Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1950,
c. 190, reading as follows:
(3) Notwithstanding the giving of the
notice [i.e., a jury notice] the issues of fact may be tried or the
damages assessed without the intervention of a jury if the judge presiding at
the sittings so directs or if it is so ordered by a judge.
The subsection has existed in its present
form since 1913 when it appeared as sub. (3) of s. 56 of 3 and 4 Geo. V,
c. 19.
Its predecessors were s. 18 of The
Administration of Justice Act of 1873, 36 Vic., c. 8, and s. 255 of The
Common Law Procedure Act, R.S.O. 1877, c. 50, which read respectively as
follows:
18. All other issues shall be tried as
heretofore, unless the court in which the action or proceeding is pending, or a
judge thereof, upon application being made before trial, or unless the
presiding judge upon the trial, directs or decides that the issue or issues
shall be tried and damages assessed without the intervention of a jury.
255. Notwithstanding anything in the two
next preceding sections contained, the Judge presiding at the trial may in
his discretion direct that any such action shall be tried or the damages
assessed by a jury; And upon application to the Court in which the action is
pending, or to a Judge thereof, by an order made before the trial, or by the
direction of the Judge presiding at the trial, the issues may be tried and
damages assessed without the intervention of a jury.
[Page 355]
The power given to the trial judge by the
subsection in its present form does not appear to me to differ in kind
from that conferred by the sections last quoted above. In Ontario, it has consistently been held that
the exercise of this power is committed to the discretion of the judge at the
trial.
In Brown v. Wood, Armour J. at the trial had struck out the
jury notice and tried the case without a jury against the protests of counsel
for the defendant. On appeal Boyd C., with whom Ferguson and Robertson JJ. concurred, said, at p. 200:
The difficulty is to get over sec. 255
of the C.L.P. Act. If this were an appeal from the order of a Judge in Chambers
striking out a jury notice, before the trial, the cases cited by Mr. Read
would be overwhelming in his favour, but the discretion of a Judge at the trial
is much larger… As no affidavit of merits has been filed, and the defendant has
not brought and does not seek to bring the amount of the verdict into Court,
and as the motion is against a discretion that the trial Judge undoubtedly has
to determine the method of trial, it should be dismissed, with costs.
In Wise v. Canadian Bank of Commerce, Middleton J., as he then was, said at p.
345:
It has been held that the discretion
conferred upon the Judge presiding at the trial is an absolute discretion, not
subject to review: Brown v. Wood (1887), 12 P.R. 198.
In Currie v. Motor Union Insurance Co., Latchford C.J., giving the judgment of the
Appellate Division in a case in which the trial judge had dispensed with the
jury, said at pp. 99-100:
Even before the enactment of
sec. 56(3) the discretion of a trial Judge in dispensing with a jury was
not interfered with by an appellate Court: Brown v. Wood (1887), 12 P.R.
198. It was within the power of the trial judge to determine the method of
trial, and his determination was not open to review.
In Owens v. Martindale, Ferguson J.A. with whom the
majority of the Court agreed left open the question whether such an order could
be reviewed by the Court of Appeal. He said at p. 97:
I am clearly of the opinion that the
circumstances disclosed in evidence and particularly the situation pointed out
by Mr. Slaght in his second proposition justified the learned trial Judge
in exercising his discretion in the manner he did, and that it is therefore
unnecessary to express an opinion as to our right to review an order made by a
trial Judge striking out a jury notice.
[Page 356]
In Telford v. Secord; Telford v. Nasmith, judgment had been entered for the
plaintiff at the trial pursuant to the verdict of a jury; the Court of Appeal
set this judgment aside and directed that a new trial be had without a jury.
This Court affirmed the judgment of the Court of Appeal in so far as it set
aside the trial judgment but directed that the new trial should be before a
jury. Kellock J. in giving the unanimous judgment of this Court said at p. 282:
There rests with the trial judge sufficient
power and authority to conduct the trial as it should be conducted, and, should
he see reason to try the action without a jury or to dispense with the jury at
any stage, his discretion is not subject to review.
I have quoted from the above judgments, and
there are many others containing expressions to the same effect, for the
purpose of indicating that the order of a trial judge dispensing with a jury
during the course of the trial is consistently treated as the exercise of a
discretion vested in him by the statute. There may be cases in which the order
could be shown to have been made otherwise, as for example if the judge in his
reasons made it clear that he had discharged the jury only because he had
erroneously decided that he was bound as a matter of law to do so. Logan et
al. v. Wilson et al. was a
case of this sort.
In the case at bar counsel for the appellant
contends that it has been shown (i) that in reaching his decision to discharge
the jury the learned trial judge was proceeding, in part at least, on a
mistaken view as to what had in fact been said by Mr. MacDonald in his
address as to the evidence, and (ii) that there was nothing in that address
which could properly be held to be inflammatory. From this he seeks to draw the
conclusion that the order was not one made in the exercise of judicial
discretion.
I am unable to reach that conclusion. The
reasons of the learned trial judge quoted above show that he directed his mind
to the question whether the address of the plaintiff’s counsel was of a nature which
might lead the jury to an unwarranted verdict and for that reason he should
dispense with the jury. His conclusion that he should do so
[Page 357]
was based on some mis-statements actually,
although no doubt unintentionally, made by the plaintiff’s counsel and on
several passages which in my opinion it was open to the learned judge to regard
as “inflammatory”. The circumstances that the learned judge mistakenly thought
that there had been additional mis-statements and that on reading the written
record an appellate tribunal might regard the passages said to be inflammatory
as not going beyond the bounds permitted to counsel do not make the order one
made otherwise than in the exercise of his discretion. At the most those
circumstances, assuming their existence, would afford grounds for submitting
that the learned judge had exercised his discretion mistakenly.
The decision which the learned trial judge was
called upon to make appears to me to have required the exercise of discretion
within the definition of that term in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary which was
adopted by Cannon J. in Glesby v. Mitchell:
That part of the judicial function
which decides questions arising in the trial of a cause, according to the
particular circumstances of each case, and as to which the judgment of the
court is uncontrolled by fixed rules of law.
The power exercised by courts to determine
questions to which no strict rule of law is applicable but which, from their
nature, and the circumstances of the case, are controlled by the personal
judgment of the court.
I have concluded that the order of the learned
trial judge was made in the exercise of the judicial discretion given to him by
s. 57(3) of The Judicature Act and that we have no jurisdiction to
entertain the appeal, even if we should be of opinion that his discretion was
exercised mistakenly.
I do not intend by anything I have said above to
express an opinion as to whether the discretion of the learned judge was or was
not rightly exercised in the particular circumstances of this case.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs as of a
motion to quash.
[Page 358]
LOCKE J.:—In my opinion, the order complained of
was made in the exercise of a judicial discretion within the meaning of s. 44
of the Supreme Court Act and, accordingly, we are without jurisdiction.
I would dismiss this appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the plaintiff, appellant:
W.E. MacDonald, New Toronto.
Solicitors for the defendant Robillard,
respondent: Borden, Elliot, Kelly, Palmer & Sankey, Toronto.
Solicitor for the defendant McLaughlin,
respondent: David J. Walker, Toronto.