Supreme Court of Canada
Prince George (City of) v. Payne, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 458
Date: 1977-05-17
The Corporation of
the City of Prince George Appellant;
and
Joseph E. Payne Respondent.
1976: December 13, 14; 1977: May 17.
Present: Laskin C.J. and Ritchie, Dickson,
Beetz and de Grandpré JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Municipal corporations—Refusal of business
licence—Council not empowered to refuse licence on basis it seeks to protect
community’s moral welfare—Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 255,
s. 455, as amended by 1964, c. 33, s. 35; 1968, c. 33,
s. 122.
Respondent applied to the appellant
corporation for a business licence permitting the respondent to conduct an
adult boutique. Council of the corporation passed a resolution withholding the
licence. Respondent was given an opportunity to show cause why the licence
should not be withheld. By a two-thirds vote, as required by s. 455 of the
Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 255, Council rejected a resolution
to grant the licence. Moral implications would seem to have been the
determining consideration of Council.
A motion for an order quashing the resolution
and for a writ of mandamus to compel issuance of the licence was
dismissed. This judgment was reversed on appeal to the Court of Appeal. The
corporation appealed to this Court.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The discretion contained in s. 455, wide
as it is, must be exercised judicially. It is not a judicial exercise of
discretion to rest decision upon an extraneous ground. The common law right of
the individual freely to carry on his business and use his property can be
taken away only by statute in plain language or by necessary implication.
The power to refuse a licence, embodied in
s. 455, is undoubtedly phrased in broad terms. It is limited only by the
stricture that the granting or renewal of a licence shall not be unreasonably
withheld. Nonetheless, the section must be construed and applied in
conformity with the Municipal Act within which the section is found
and the relevant authorities. Save for s. 870(n) respecting
prevention of vice and s. 870(m) referring to posters tending to
corrupt or demoralize, the Act does
[Page 459]
not authorize moral evaluation by city
councils. Sections 870(n) and (m) do not assist the appellant.
In exercising its licensing function, Council
passed a resolution the effect of which was to refuse a licence to a particular
land use. That was not a judicial exercise of Council’s function. A statutory
power conferred upon a municipal council to make by-laws for regulating and
governing a trade does not, in the absence of an express power of prohibition,
authorize the making it unlawful to carry on a lawful trade in a lawful manner.
Council of the appellant corporation did not
have statutory power to prohibit the trade which the applicant sought to
conduct. Council was empowered by s. 455 to refuse a licence “in any
particular case” but those words do not mean and cannot be so construed to
extend to any particular type of business. They do not suggest a blanket right
to prohibit generally so‑called “adult boutiques” which are not ex
hypothesi illegal. The words “particular case” mean peculiar to the
applicant and not to the type of business which he wishes to conduct.
Sunshine Valley Co-operative Society v.
City of Grand Forks, [1949] 1 W.W.R. 165; Regina
ex rel. Canadian Wire-Vision Ltd. v. City of New Westminster (1965), 53
W.W.R. (N.S.) 373, aff’d. 54 W.W.R. (N.S.) 238; Active Trading v. City
of New Westminster, [1974] 5 W.W.R. 354, distinguished; Wilcox v.
Township of Pickering, [1961] O.R. 739; Tresnak v. City of Oshawa, [1972]
1 O.R. 727; Re Smith and Municipality of Vanier (1972), 30 D.L.R. (3d)
386, followed; Municipal Corporation of the City of Toronto v. Virgo, [1896]
A.C. 88, applied; Brampton Jersey Enterprises Ltd. v. The Milk Control
Board of Ontario (1955), 1 D.L.R. (2d) 130, referred to.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for British
Columbia,
allowing an appeal from a judgment of Fulton J. Appeal dismissed.
M.H. Thomas, for the appellant.
J.D. McAlpine and W.R. Hibbard, for the
respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
DICKSON J.—The issue in this appeal is whether a
municipal council is empowered to refuse a business licence on the basis that
it seeks to protect the community’s moral welfare.
[Page 460]
I
On October 5, 1974, Joseph E. Payne applied to
the City of Prince George, in British Columbia, for a business licence
permitting him to conduct under the firm name of Garden of Eden an adult
boutique at 230 George Street in that city. The property was zoned
C1—Commercial Comprehensive Core—and its intended use did not breach the zoning
by-law of the City. The City Clerk advised Mr. Payne by letter, dated
October 23, 1974, that on instructions of the City’s Mayor the matter had been
referred to Council at their meeting on October 21, and that Council had
unanimously passed a resolution to withhold the licence under s. 455 of
the Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 255. That section, the
application of which is central to this appeal, reads:
455.
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act or in the by-laws of the
municipality, the Council may, upon the affirmative vote of at least two-thirds
of all the members, refuse in any particular case to grant the request of an
applicant for a licence under this Division, but the granting or renewal of a
licence shall not be unreasonably refused.
The letter of October 23 also informed
Mr. Payne that he would be given an opportunity to appear before Council
on November 4 and show reason why his licence should not be withheld. On that
date he attended council meeting with one Kelly Covin, President of Garden of
Eden Boutique Ltd. Mr. Covin furnished the councillors with information
respecting the proposed business, following which the matter was laid over to
the next council meeting, to be held two weeks later. At that later meeting a
representative of the Prince George Ministerial Association addressed Council
and likened the products of the adult boutique to heroin and other cultural
poisons. In the debate which followed one of the aldermen declined to peruse
the catalogues depicting the items to be sold in the boutique, concluding “from
what I see on the streets, this town doesn’t need any instruction in this
matter.” Another alderman observed “I guess you’d have to say I carry my
narrow-mindedness to Council with me” while a third, who also opposed the
granting of the licence, stated that a community “has to take a stand on the
matter,”
[Page 461]
and went on to observe that “some of this sex is
better left in the barnyard.” One of the aldermen favouring the granting of the
licence noted that a boutique of like nature was operating in Victoria, British Columbia, and that persons under 19 were precluded from entering. Two aldermen
voted in favour of the resolution to grant the licence while four aldermen,
being two-thirds of the members as required by s. 455 of the Municipal
Act, voted against the resolution. The licence was denied.
The moral implications, not the physical implications,
would seem to have been the determining consideration of Council.
II
Mr. Payne thereafter moved in the Courts
for an order quashing the resolution and for a writ of mandamus to
compel issuance of the licence. Mr. Justice Fulton, before whom the matter
first came, dismissed the motion. He held that the Prince George Council, in
refusing to grant the licence, had acted on grounds of public policy, in the
maintenance and protection of moral standards in Prince
George. He concluded that the words of s. 455 of
the Municipal Act conferred upon a municipal council authority to
consider the moral welfare of the municipality in exercising a discretion for
or against a licence application.
Mr. Payne appealed the judgment of
Mr. Justice Fulton and the appeal was heard by Branca, McIntyre and
Carrothers JJ.A. The Court divided. Mr. Justice Branca would have
dismissed the appeal and upheld the conclusion of Mr. Justice Fulton. In
doing so, he chose very narrow ground, which in argument in this Court counsel
for the City of Prince George did not attempt to defend, holding that the
licence refusal was only in reference to the address, 230 George Street. He
conjectured that Council might well issue a licence for another location for
the same business and the refusal therefore could not be regarded as an act of
[Page 462]
prohibition. The ratio of his judgment is to be
found, I think, in the following passage:
In this appeal the appellant has submitted
that the action of Council constituted a prohibition of a particular type of
business and added that there was no express statutory power to prohibit the
lawful type of business proposed to be carried on. I cannot agree. I construe
the resolution of Council as only a refusal to grant a licence to the applicant
to the address at 230 George Street in the City of Prince George. It may well
be that Council had not the power to prohibit this type of business but
specifically Council had the power to refuse a licence at that address as that
power is expressly given by statute.
As I have indicated, counsel for the City did
not regard the action of the Council as involving only a refusal of a licence
for the location at 230 George Street. He took the position that the licence
was not being refused because it related to any particular location or because
of anything derogatory to the applicant as a person. His argument proceeded on
the broad basis that Council was empowered to refuse a licence to any
particular business and it was not unreasonable for Council to act in defence
of the moral quality of the City.
Mr. Justice McIntyre in the Court of Appeal
agreed with Mr. Justice Fulton that the Council of Prince George in
refusing the licence had acted to protect public morals but, differing from
Mr. Justice Fulton, he was of opinion that Council’s view that the moral
welfare of the community required protection was an alien and irrelevant
consideration in deciding whether a business licence should be granted or
withheld. To withhold a licence on other than licensing considerations would be
to withhold the licence unreasonably, in his view. Mr. Justice Carrothers
described the so-called “marital aids” to be vended by the proposed adult
boutique as encompassing “a wide range of masturbatory and erotic devices and
substances not entirely consistent with heterosexual activity let alone
conducive to or in furtherance of connubial bliss” and to his mind there was a
genuine basis for concern by the Council to protect the public interest.
Refusal of the licence was not activated, in his opinion, by capricious motives
or unduly rigorous moral concepts. Notwithstanding, Mr. Justice Carrothers
regarded the denial of licence as intended not
[Page 463]
simply as a refusal to a particular applicant
for a particular location, but as a general prohibition against a particular
type of business throughout the City of Prince George and therefore
incompatible with the licensing function. Leave to appeal to this Court was
granted by the British Columbia Court of Appeal.
Let me say, at the outset, that one might well
be inclined to support Council’s evident distaste with sex businesses. But it
is no part of a Court’s task to determine the wisdom of Council’s decision,
assuming a power to deny the licence inhered in the Council. The Court’s sole
concern is whether the Council acted within the four corners of its
jurisdiction. The discretion contained in s. 455, wide as it is, must be
exercised judicially. It is not a judicial exercise of discretion to rest
decision upon an extraneous ground. The common law right of the individual
freely to carry on his business and use his property can be taken away only by
statute in plain language or by necessary implication.
The power to refuse a licence, embodied in
s. 455 of the Municipal Act of British Columbia, is undoubtedly phrased
in broad terms. It is limited only by the stricture that the granting or
renewal of a licence shall not be unreasonably withheld. Nonetheless, the
section must be construed and applied in conformity with the Municipal
Act within which the section is found and the relevant authorities.
The Courts are loathe to interfere with
decisions made in good faith by statutory bodies, the members of which are
voted or appointed to office because others have confidence in their experience
and integrity. But when such bodies err by acting in excess of their statutory
powers, the Courts will control them.
III
Section 870(n) of the Municipal Act provides
that the Council of a municipality may by by-law prevent vice, drunkenness,
profane swearing, or
[Page 464]
indecent, obscene or grossly insulting language
or other immorality and indecency. That section does not assist the City
in the present proceedings because there is no such by-law.
Part X of the Municipal Act is entitled
“Licensing and Regulating.” Section 458 of that part provides that the Council
may by by-law delegate to any official designated in the by-law the power to
grant a licence where he is satisfied that the applicant has complied with the
by-laws of the municipality regulating building, zoning, health sanitation and
business. There is no mention of moral considerations.
Division (4) of Part X, entitled “Regulation of
Business” is important as indicating a limited power of regulation and an even
more limited power of prohibition. Section 458M (1) states that the Council may
by by-law regulate the carrying on of business within the municipality, to the
extent not inconsistent with the Municipal Act or any other Act, for the
purpose of protecting the public or preventing or minimizing nuisances and
misleading business practices. Council, by s. 458N, is empowered by by-law
to prohibit (a) the operating of any public show, exhibition, carnival or
performance and (b) the operation of any public poolroom, billiard-hall,
cabaret, skating rink, bowling-alley, dance-hall or other place of amusement.
Zoning is covered in Part XXI of the Act. By
means of a zoning by-law the Council may regulate the use of land and building
and such regulation includes the power to prohibit any use or uses in any
specified zone or zones. In making such regulations the Council is to have due
regard to, amongst other things, the promotion of the health, safety,
convenience and welfare of the public. A public hearing, with due notice
and an opportunity to be heard, must precede the adoption of a zoning by-law.
Section 870 contains lengthy and detailed
provision whereby the Council may by by-law prevent and abate nuisances and
disturbances; prohibit the posting of placards or advertising which is indecent
or may tend to corrupt or demoralize; prohibit the
[Page 465]
carrying on of any noxious or offensive trade,
business or manufacture. Section 871 empowers the Council by by-law to prohibit
certain activities such as the keeping of kennels or bee-keeping or mushroom
growing.
The powers are spelled out in the greatest
detail and in every case are exercisable only by by-law. Save for s. 870(n)
respecting prevention of vice and s. 870(m) referring to posters
tending to corrupt or demoralize, the Act does not authorize moral evaluation
by city councils. Sections 870 (n) and (m) do not assist the
City, which must fall back upon s. 455.
IV
Section 455 and kindred legislation have been
judicially considered in a number of the cases. The three cases which feature
prominently in the judgments in the Courts below are Sunshine Valley
Co-operative Society v. City of Grand Forks;
Regina ex rel. Canadian Wire-Vision Limited v. City of New Westminster and Active Trading v. City of New
Westminster. In
the Sunshine Valley Co-operative Society case, the members of the
society were Doukhobors who had opposed to them other sects known as the Sons
of Freedom. The Co-operative Society carried on a wholesale flour and feed
business in the business centre of the City of Grand Forks. The premises were
destroyed by a massive explosion and fire. On the following morning the Society
applied for a renewal of its trade licence which was refused. The City Council
acted pursuant to a section of the Municipal Act similar to all
intents to the present s. 455. In upholding the refusal, Sloan C.J.B.C.,
delivering the judgment of the Court, said, p. 167:
[Page 466]
It is the prerogative of the council to
make the decision one way or the other provided its discretion is exercised
within the limitations imposed by law and is not activated by indirect or
improper motives or based upon irrelevant or alien grounds or exercised without
taking relevant facts into consideration.
The Canadian Wire Vision case stands for
the proposition that in exercising the power conferred by s. 455 the council
of a municipality may discriminate between applicants for a licence to operate
a business but the power to discriminate must be exercised judicially. The case
is not of great assistance. In Active Trading the applicant had applied
to the municipality for a licence to operate a scrap metal business or junk
yard. Refusal was sought to be justified on the authority of a section of
the zoning by-law of the City which the British Columbia Courts held to be ultra
vires. Alternatively, it was contended that Council acted properly under
s. 455 of the Municipal Act in rejecting the licence
application. Taggart J.A. in delivering the judgment of the British Columbia
Court of Appeal noted that the section conferred broad powers on Council
but that those powers must be exercised within the general scope of its
licensing powers. Because Council had acted upon zoning rather than licensing
considerations, the resolution refusing the licence was quashed. The judge of
first instance had directed the issuance of a writ of mandamus. The
Court of Appeal set aside that direction and permitted the applicant to proceed
either upon its old application or to submit a new application for a business
licence.
More apposite than the authorities to which I
have referred is the decision of McRuer C.J.H.C. in Wilcox v. Township of
Pickering, in
which the application was for a mandamus directed to the Township of
Pickering to issue a licence to the applicant to permit him to operate a
salvage yard. The Township had passed a by-law precluding any person from
operating a salvage yard without first having taken out a licence. Section 396
of the
[Page 467]
Municipal Act, R.S.O.
1960, c. 249, permitted passage of by-laws for licensing, regulating and
governing salvage shops. By s. 247 the granting or refusing of a licence
to carry on a particular business was in the discretion of Council; Council was
not bound to give a decision for refusing a licence nor was its action open to
question or review by any Court. The main question which arose in the case was
whether the Municipal Council, by the exercise of its licensing powers, could
restrict land use pending passage of a restrictive by-law. It was argued on
behalf of the municipality that the Council had an unlimited discretion to
refuse a licence on any ground and that the Court could not inquire into the
matter. That, in effect, is the submission of counsel for the City in the
present case. Chief Justice McRuer concluded his judgment in these words,
p. 745:
My conclusion is that it is not within the
power of the Municipal Council to refuse to grant a licence with the sole
object of restricting the user of land. As I said in effect in the Cities
Service case, it would give to municipalities the power in the guise of
licensing to restrict the use of land which is a power that is exercised with
many safeguards to the rights of the proprietor of the land.
In Tresnak v. City of Oshawa, an application was made for a
licence to operate a public hall for the purpose of staging strip-tease shows.
Council of the City of Oshawa refused the licence, believing shows of this type
to be immoral, and wishing to protect citizens therefrom. Galligan J. held that
in so doing Council exceeded its jurisdiction. See also Re Smith and
Municipality of Vanier, where
Pennell J. directed the issuance of an order of mandamus where the
Council was induced to refuse the application for a licence to operate a public
hall on grounds of morality.
V
In the case at bar, the Council of the City of
Prince George sought to prohibit land use through the mechanism of a licensing
regulation. The
[Page 468]
action was not related to a particular person or
to a particular location. In exercising its licensing function, Council passed
a resolution the effect of which was to refuse a licence to a particular land
use. In my opinion, that is not a judicial exercise of Council’s function. It
has long since been decided, in Municipal Corporation of the City of Toronto
v. Virgo, that
a statutory power conferred upon a municipal council to make by-laws for
regulating and governing a trade does not, in the absence of an express power
of prohibition, authorize the making it unlawful to carry on a lawful trade in
a lawful manner. Argument in this Court proceeded on the basis that the
proposed trade was lawful and for the purposes of this appeal I assume it to be
so.
The Prince George Council, in my opinion, did
not have statutory power to prohibit the trade which the applicant sought to
conduct. Council was empowered by s. 455 to refuse a licence “in any
particular case” but those words do not mean and cannot be so construed to
extend to any particular type of business. They do not suggest a blanket right
to prohibit generally so‑called “adult boutiques” which are not ex
hypothesi illegal. The words “particular case” mean peculiar to the
applicant and not to the type of business which he wishes to conduct.
Interdiction of particular types of business is
carried out by zoning or other by-laws in pursuance of clear authority in the Municipal
Act. Perusal of the Act makes it clear that when the legislature intended
to give power to restrict land use or to prevent or prohibit a particular type
of business activity it did so in express words. Municipal officers are not
given a discretion whether, as a matter of policy, one type of lawful business
can be carried on within a municipality while another cannot. See Brampton
Jersey Enterprises Ltd. v. Milk Control Board of Ontario.
[Page 469]
VI
The facts are capable of raising an issue over
the application of natural justice rules. Before giving the applicant a hearing
Council decided against the application. The applicant was then called upon to
show reasons why the licence should not be withheld. One of the aldermen
decided to refuse the application without perusing the catalogues depicting the
items to be sold. The applicant was denied an opportunity to speak in reply to
the representative of the Prince George Ministerial Association. Interesting
questions arise as to burden and audi alterem partem but I do not deem
it necessary to consider them in view of the conclusion which I have reached on
other aspects of the case.
For the foregoing reasons, I would dismiss the
appeal, with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Thompson
& McConnell, White Rock.
Solicitors for the respondent: J.D.
McAlpine & Assoc, Vancouver.