SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation: Lumbermens
Mutual Casualty Co. v. Herbison, [2007] 3
S.C.R. 393, 2007 SCC 47
|
Date: 20071019
Docket: 31079
|
Between:
Lumbermens
Mutual Casualty Company
Appellant
v.
Harold
George Herbison, Mary Ann Herbison, and Jordan Daniel Herbison,
Joseph
Harold Herbison and Lydia Rachel Herbison, by their Litigation Guardian
Harold
George Herbison
Respondents
‑
and ‑
Insurance
Bureau of Canada
Intervener
Coram: McLachlin
C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and
Rothstein JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to
15):
|
Binnie J.
(McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and
Rothstein JJ. concurring)
|
______________________________
Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. v. Herbison, [2007] 3 S.C.R.
393, 2007 SCC 47
Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company Appellant
v.
Harold George
Herbison, Mary Ann Herbison, and
Jordan Daniel
Herbison, Joseph Harold Herbison and
Lydia Rachel
Herbison, by their Litigation Guardian
Harold George Herbison Respondents
and
Insurance Bureau of Canada Intervener
Indexed as: Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. v.
Herbison
Neutral citation: 2007 SCC 47.
File No.: 31079.
2006: December 11; 2007: October 19.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Insurance — Automobile insurance — Coverage of
owner’s policy — Hunter driving to his designated site before sunrise when he
stopped and shot at white flash thinking it to be a deer tail but it was
another member of his hunting party — Victim seeking to recover his damages
under tortfeasor’s automobile insurance policy — Whether victim’s injuries
arising “directly or indirectly from the use or operation” of an automobile —
Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. I.8, s. 239(1).
W, a member of a yearly deer-hunting party, was driving
to his designated hunting stand before sunrise when he thought he saw a deer.
He got out of his truck, removed his rifle, loaded it, and shot at a flash of
white, hitting H, another member of the hunting party. W was found liable in
negligence to H and H’s family. H and his family sought recovery from W’s
insurer under a standard motor vehicle liability insurance policy which, as
required by s. 239(1) of the Ontario Insurance Act, provides
coverage for loss or damage “arising from the ownership or directly or
indirectly from the use or operation” of an automobile owned by the insured.
The trial judge dismissed the claim against the insurer, but a majority of the
Court of Appeal set aside the decision and found the insurer liable.
Held: The appeal should
be allowed.
The insurance in this case is automobile insurance, and
s. 239(1) of the Insurance Act requires that the victim demonstrate
that the liability imposed by law upon the insured is for loss or damage
arising from the ownership or directly or indirectly from the use or operation
of the automobile. The questions are, firstly, whether the claim is in respect
of a tort committed while using a motor vehicle as a motor vehicle and not for
some other purpose, and secondly, whether there is an unbroken chain of
causation linking the injuries to the use and operation of the vehicle. While
the addition of “directly or indirectly” to s. 239(1) relaxed the
causation requirement, it did not eliminate the requirement of an unbroken
chain of causation. An intervening act may not necessarily break the chain of
causation if it arises “in the ordinary course of things” but, even under the
relaxed rule, merely fortuitous or “but for” causation is not sufficient. [10]
[12-14]
In this case, W was using his vehicle for
transportation, which is its ordinary use. However, in an act independent of
the ownership, use or operation of his truck, W interrupted his motoring to
start hunting thereby breaking the chain of causation. The injury cannot be
said to have arisen “directly or indirectly from the use or operation” of the
insured truck within the meaning of s. 239(1). W’s truck merely created
an opportunity in time and space for the damage to be inflicted, without any
causal connection, direct or indirect, to the legal basis of W’s tortious
liability. The “but for” approach taken by the majority of the Court of Appeal
did not give adequate weight to W’s separate, distinct and intervening act of
negligence. [1] [10-12]
Cases Cited
Applied: Citadel
General Assurance Co. v. Vytlingam, [2007] 3
S.C.R. 373, 2007 SCC 46; distinguished: Amos v. Insurance
Corp. of British Columbia, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 405; Lefor (Litigation
guardian of) v. McClure (2000), 49 O.R. (3d) 557; referred to: Consolidated-Bathurst
Export Ltd. v. Mutual Boiler and Machinery Insurance Co., [1980] 1 S.C.R.
888; Alchimowicz v. Continental Insurance Co. of Canada (1996), 37
C.C.L.I. (2d) 284; Kangas v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 235 N.W.2d
42 (1975); Derksen v. 539938 Ontario Ltd., [2001] 3 S.C.R. 398, 2001 SCC
72; Chisholm v. Liberty Mutual Group (2002), 60 O.R. (3d)
776; Stevenson v. Reliance Petroleum Ltd., [1956] S.C.R. 936.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. I.8, ss. 239(1), 258(1).
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(Borins, Feldman and Cronk JJ.A.) (2005), 76 O.R. (3d) 81, 255 D.L.R. (4th) 75,
198 O.A.C. 257, 26 C.C.L.I. (4th) 161, 23 M.V.R. (5th) 1, [2005] O.J. No. 2262
(QL), setting aside a decision of Manton J. (2003), 2 C.C.L.I. (4th) 44, [2003]
O.J. No. 3024 (QL). Appeal allowed.
Mark O. Charron and
Jaye E. Hooper, for the appellant.
Barry D. Laushway and
Scott D. Laushway, for the respondents.
Alan L. W. D’Silva, Danielle K.
Royal and Ellen Snow, for the intervener.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Binnie J. — Can it be said
that when a hunter steps away from his pick-up truck under cover of darkness,
leaving the engine running, and negligently shoots at a target he cannot see
1,000 feet away, and hits a companion in the leg thinking him to be a deer,
that the injury arose “directly or indirectly from the use or operation” of the
insured truck within the meaning of s. 239(1) of the Insurance Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c. I.8? A majority of the Ontario Court of Appeal gave an
affirmative answer to this question: (2005), 76 O.R. (3d) 81. It reasoned that
the addition in 1990 of the phrase “indirectly or indirectly” to s. 239(1)(b)
of the Insurance Act “effectively removed the requirement of an unbroken
chain of causation” (para. 102). It was sufficient, in its view, if the use or
operation of a motor vehicle “in some manner contributes to or adds to
the injury” (para. 105 (emphasis added by Borins J.A.)). The dissent, on the
contrary, concluded that not every “circumstance or activity associated with
the use or operation of a motor vehicle will . . . engage
s. 239(1) of the Act and the corresponding coverage condition of a motor
vehicle liability insurance policy” (para. 38), and that the negligent shooting
“was an act independent of the ownership, use or operation of” the hunter’s
truck (para. 62). I agree respectfully with the dissent. In my view, the
appeal should be allowed.
I. Facts
2
As a member of a yearly deer-hunting party, Fred Wolfe (who is not a
party to this appeal) was driving to his designated hunting stand when he
thought he saw a deer. It was before sunrise. He stopped and got out of his
truck. He removed his rifle, loaded it and, seeing a flash of white in the
headlights (which he concluded was the tail of a deer about to take flight), he
shot. Unfortunately, he hit another member of the hunting party, the
respondent Harold George Herbison.
3
At a previous trial, Wolfe was found liable in negligence to Herbison
and members of the Herbison family. Damages were assessed at $832,272.85 plus
interest and costs.
4
Wolfe is the named insured under a standard motor vehicle liability
insurance policy issued by the appellant, the Lumbermens Mutual Casualty
Company. The Herbisons sued Lumbermens, seeking to have the insurer satisfy
their judgement against Wolfe. As required by s. 239(1) of the Insurance
Act, Wolfe’s automobile policy provides coverage for loss or damage
“arising from the ownership or directly or indirectly from the use or
operation” of an automobile owned by the insured. Section 258(1) of the Insurance
Act provides, in part, that any person who has a claim against an insured
for which indemnity is provided by a motor vehicle liability policy may have
the insurance money paid over in satisfaction of the judgment. At trial, the Herbisons
argued that Harold’s injuries arose “directly or indirectly” from the use or
operation of Wolfe’s truck because:
(a) Wolfe was using a 4 wheel drive truck which is commonly used by
game hunters to access difficult terrains and drive in the bush.
(b) [Wolfe was in] poor physical condition, having a heart condition
and difficulty walking, [he] was dependent on his truck to get to his hunting
stand . . . .
(c) The muffler on the Wolfe truck was in poor condition and noisy,
and had it not been, it is possible that Wolfe could have heard Herbison and
his nephew talk.
(d) Although Wolfe says he was not intending to use the headlights on
his truck to illuminate the target, he does not believe that he would have
taken that shot had it not been for the headlights of the truck illuminating
the general area to some extent.
((2003), 2 C.C.L.I. (4th) 44, at para. 11)
5
Lumbermens argued that Wolfe’s shot was not related in any relevant way
to the use or operation of his truck.
II. Relevant
Statutory Provisions
6
Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. I.8
239.—(1) Subject to section 240, every
contract evidenced by an owner’s policy insures the person named therein, and
every other person who with the named person’s consent drives, or is an
occupant of, an automobile owned by the insured named in the contract and
within the description or definition thereof in the contract, against liability
imposed by law upon the insured named in the contract or that other person for
loss or damage,
(a) arising from the ownership or directly
or indirectly from the use or operation of any such automobile; and
(b) resulting from bodily injury to or the
death of any person and damage to property.
258.—(1) Any person who has a claim against
an insured for which indemnity is provided by a contract evidenced by a motor
vehicle liability policy, even if such person is not a party to the contract,
may, upon recovering a judgment therefor in any province or territory of Canada
against the insured, have the insurance money payable under the contract
applied in or towards satisfaction of the person’s judgment and of any other
judgments or claims against the insured covered by the contact and may, on the
person’s own behalf and on behalf of all persons having such judgments or
claims, maintain an action against the insurer to have the insurance money so
applied.
III. Judicial
History
A. Ontario
Superior Court of Justice (Manton J.) (2003), 2 C.C.L.I. (4th) 44
7
In a brief judgment, the trial judge concluded that “[t]he negligent
shooting by Wolfe constituted an intervening act that was merely incidental to
the use and operation of the vehicle” (para. 23). Moreover, “[t]he fact that
the noisy muffler may have drowned out the victim’s chatter amounts to mere
speculation and is, in any event, an incidental use to the accident at the core
of the litigation” (para. 23). Finally, “[e]ven if it was accepted that Wolfe
would not have fired his gun but for the illumination of the headlights . . .,
the illumination still amounts to an ancillary act in Wolfe’s negligent
misfiring. Wolfe’s negligence was in firing a shot toward a target that he
could not see. The operation of the headlights in no way contributed to that
negligent act. In fact, one would expect a hunter to be less negligent when a
target becomes illuminated” (para. 24). The claim against the insurer was
dismissed.
B. Ontario
Court of Appeal (2005), 76 O.R. (3d) 81
8
Borins J.A., for the majority, allowed the appeal. He referred to Amos
v. Insurance Corp. of British Columbia, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 405, which, at
para. 17, in the context of no-fault motor vehicle benefits, set out the
following two-part test:
1. Did the accident result from the ordinary
and well-known activities to which automobiles are put? [The “purpose” test.]
2. Is there some nexus or causal relationship
(not necessarily a direct or proximate causal relationship) between the
appellant’s injuries and the ownership, use or operation of his
vehicle, or is the connection between the injuries and the ownership, use or
operation of the vehicle merely incidental or fortuitous? [The “causation”
test.] [Emphasis added; emphasis in original deleted.]
Borins J.A.
applied the test to indemnity insurance and held that the evidence here
satisfied both the purpose and the causation branches. In his view, the 1990
amendment to s. 239(1), which added the words “directly or indirectly”, had
“effectively removed the requirement of an unbroken chain of causation from the
causation test” (para. 102). Borins J.A. observed that “Mr. Wolfe’s truck took
on a special purpose as its use was the only way that he could travel to the
site to join the deer hunting party” (para. 113), and that,
[w]hile Mr. Wolfe had not reached the deer-hunting stand when he shot
Mr. Herbison, it is significant to the causation analysis that the reason that
Mr. Wolfe had set out in his vehicle was to go deer hunting. He was engaged in
deer hunting when, tragically, he shot Mr. Herbison, having mistaken him for a
deer. While Mr. Herbison’s damages did not arise directly from Mr. Wolfe’s use
or operation of his pick-up truck, there was a sufficient nexus between its use
or operation and the damages sustained by Mr. Herbison to find that his damages
arose indirectly from the use or operation of the truck. In my view, this is
sufficient to satisfy the causation test. [para. 116]
9
Feldman J.A., concurring, considered this case not to be distinguishable
from Lefor (Litigation guardian of) v. McClure (2000), 49 O.R. (3d) 557
(C.A.), adding that
the injury at some point may be sufficiently remote from the insured
vehicle, perhaps in time, in physical proximity, or in some other way, that it
could not be considered to have arisen directly or indirectly from the
ownership, use or operation of the vehicle. However, I agree with Borins J.A.
that based on the existing case law, the circumstances of this case fall within
coverage under the statutory language. [para. 123]
Cronk J.A.,
dissenting, stated that “when Mr. Herbison was shot, the Wolfe vehicle was not
being used for a purpose from which the injuries resulted” (para. 54).
Moreover,
Mr. Wolfe’s negligent shooting of Mr. Herbison was an act independent
of the ownership, use or operation of the Wolfe truck and the ownership, use or
operation of the truck was merely incidental to the injuries sustained by Mr.
Herbison. In my opinion, there was no nexus or causal connection, direct or
indirect, between these injuries and the ownership, use or operation of the
pick-up truck. [para. 62]
She would have
dismissed the appeal.
IV. Analysis
10
In a tragic case like the present, it is tempting to look to an
insurer’s deep pockets as the only available source of compensation for a
seriously injured and innocent victim. However, the insurance in this case is automobile
insurance, and s. 239 requires the victim to demonstrate that the “liability
imposed by law upon the insured [Wolfe]” is for “loss or damage . . . arising
from the ownership or directly or indirectly from the use or operation of [the
insured Wolfe’s] automobile”. Can it be said that Wolfe’s negligent shooting
was fairly within the risk created by his use or operation of the insured
truck, or did the use of the truck merely create an opportunity in time and
space for the damage to be inflicted, without any causal connection direct or
indirect to the legal basis of Wolfe’s tortious liability? Clearly, I think,
the latter is the case. As Estey J. observed in Consolidated-Bathurst
Export Ltd. v. Mutual Boiler and Machinery Insurance Co., [1980] 1 S.C.R.
888, “the courts should be loath to support a construction which would either
enable the insurer to pocket the premium without risk or the insured to achieve
a recovery which could neither be sensibly sought nor anticipated at the time
of the contract” (pp. 901-2).
11
In my view, Cronk J.A. was correct to uphold the finding of the trial
judge that the shooting was an act independent of the ownership, use or
operation of Wolfe’s truck. The approach taken by the majority did not give adequate
weight to Wolfe’s separate, distinct and intervening act of negligence in
firing the rifle at a target 1,000 feet away that he could not see, and which
turned out to be the unfortunate Mr. Herbison. As the Ontario Court of Appeal
remarked in Alchimowicz v. Continental Insurance Co. of Canada (1996),
37 C.C.L.I. (2d) 284, “[a]s liberally as one may choose to interpret
legislation which provides benefits to persons who are injured, it must be
remembered that this is automobile legislation” (para. 9). Amos itself
rejected a simple “but for” test. In para. 21, Major J. quoted with approval
from Kangas v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 235 N.W.2d 42 (1975),
where the Michigan Court of Appeals stated, at p. 50:
. . . there still must be a causal connection between the injury
sustained and the ownership, maintenance or use of the automobile and which
causal connection is more than incidental, fortuitous or but for. [Emphasis
added.]
12
In this appeal, of course, we are not concerned with no-fault statutory
accident benefits payable to an insured. In Amos, the focus was
necessarily on the use of the claimant’s car; the focus here is on the use of
the tortfeasor’s vehicle. The questions are, firstly, whether the Herbison
claim is in respect of a tort committed by Wolfe in using his motor vehicle as
a motor vehicle and not for some other purpose and, secondly, whether there is
an unbroken chain of causation linking the Herbison injuries to the use and
operation of the Wolfe vehicle which is shown to be more than simply fortuitous
or “but for”. The first question is easily disposed of. Wolfe was using his
vehicle for transportation, which is its usual and ordinary use. It is the
second question (causation) that is the claimant’s difficulty. Wolfe
interrupted his motoring to start hunting. Herbison does not complain about
Wolfe’s use and operation of the insured truck. He complains about the gunshot
that put the bullet in his knee.
13
In reaching the opposite conclusion, i.e. that the addition of the words
“directly or indirectly” eliminated the requirement “of an unbroken chain of
causation” (para. 102), Borins J.A. relied on Lefor. In that case, the
driver of a car, a mother hurrying to a concert, intended to drop her two young
children at their grandmother’s house for the evening. On arrival, she parked
her car on the opposite side of the street, left the engine of her car running,
and got out of the car with both of her children. Her daughter, while crossing
the street, was struck and injured by an approaching vehicle. The insurer was
held liable to indemnify the mother from the daughter’s claim because, as I
read the decision of Sharpe J.A., the mother’s negligence in crossing the street
did not break the chain of causation. He writes:
Ms. Lefor’s decision to park her car on the opposite side of the road
from her mother’s house and leave it running while she and her children darted
across the street placed Netasha in a situation of danger and triggered the
sequence of events that resulted in Netasha’s injuries. The alleged negligence
of Karen Lefor after she left her vehicle does not preclude coverage . . . .
[para. 8]
It is in the
ordinary course of things for a child dropped on the wrong side of the street
to “dart” to the other side to get to her grandmother’s house, with all the
foreseeable risks that such a crossing entails. Lefor, in my view, is a
very different case from the present case. In Derksen v. 539938 Ontario
Ltd., [2001] 3 S.C.R. 398, 2001 SCC 72, the Court accepted that an
intervening act may not necessarily break the chain of causation if the
intervention can be considered “a not abnormal incident of the risk” created by
use of the vehicle or is likely to arise in “the ordinary course of things”
(para. 33). The same point is made by Laskin J.A. in Chisholm v. Liberty
Mutual Group (2002), 60 O.R. (3d) 776 (C.A.), at para. 29. This reasoning
applies to Lefor. The mother’s post-vehicle conduct was so closely
intertwined with her negligent parking that from the perspective of causation,
direct or indirect, the two were not “severable”; see Stevenson v.
Reliance Petroleum Ltd., [1956] S.C.R. 936, at p. 940.
14
All the judges in the Ontario Court of Appeal considered that in the
interpretation of s. 239, they were bound to apply the “no-fault” test set out
in Amos. However, for the reasons set out in Citadel General
Assurance Co. v. Vytlingam, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 373, 2007 SCC 46, released
concurrently, I believe their interpretation of Amos goes too far. Amos
was a no-fault benefit case. Although the language of the “injuries arising”
term in Amos is similar to the language of s. 239(1), that phrase does
not exhaust the requirements of indemnity insurance. It is simply not enough
to find that the use or operation of the tortfeasor’s motor vehicle “in some
manner contributes to or adds to the injury” (Amos, at para.
26, cited by Borins J.A., at para. 105). While I agree with the Ontario Court
of Appeal that the addition of the “directly or indirectly” language to s. 239
relaxed the causation requirement, nevertheless, some causation link
must be found and it must constitute a link in an unbroken chain. I agree with
the dissenting judgment of Cronk J.A. that here the source of Wolfe’s liability
to the Herbisons was a tort quite independent of the use and operation of his
truck.
V. Disposition
15
I would therefore allow the appeal but, in the circumstances, with each
side bearing its own costs here and in the courts below.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Williams McEnery, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the respondents: Laushway Law Office, Prescott,
Ontario.
Solicitors for the intervener: Stikeman Elliott, Toronto.