Authorson v. Canada (Attorney General), [2003] 2 S.C.R. 40,
2003 SCC 39
Attorney General of Canada Appellant
v.
Joseph Patrick Authorson, deceased, by his Litigation
Administrator, Peter Mountney, and by his Litigation
Guardian, Lenore Majoros Respondent
Indexed as: Authorson v. Canada (Attorney General)
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC 39.
File No.: 29207.
2003: April 10: 2003: July 17.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Major, Bastarache,
Binnie, Arbour and
LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Civil rights — Due process rights respecting
property — Expropriation without compensation — Veterans’ pension and
allowances — Government administering pensions and other benefits for war
veterans and failing to invest funds or pay interest — Legislation barring
claim to interest for the period prior to 1990 — Whether due process
protections of Canadian Bill of Rights guard against expropriation of property
by passage of valid legislation — Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960,
c. 44, ss. 1 (a), 2 (e) — Department of Veterans Affairs Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. V‑1, s. 5.1(4) .
The respondent was named representative plaintiff of
a class of disabled veterans who received pensions and other benefits from the
Crown under three different statutes. These funds were administered by
the Department of Veterans Affairs (“DVA”) because the veterans were deemed
incapable of managing their money. These funds were rarely invested or
credited with interest until 1990, when the DVA began paying interest on the
accounts. But Parliament chose to limit the Crown’s liability for past
interest by enacting s. 5.1(4) of the Department of Veterans Affairs
Act which provides that no claim shall be made after the coming into force
of the provision for or on account of interest on moneys held or administered
by the Minister during any period prior to January 1, 1990 pursuant to any
of the three relevant statutes. The class sued the Crown, alleging breach
of fiduciary duty and claiming that the s. 5.1(4) bar was inoperative
under the Canadian Bill of Rights, because it was inconsistent with the
right not to be deprived of the enjoyment of property except by due process of
law (s. 1 (a)) and the right to a fair hearing in accordance with
the principles of fundamental justice for the determination of one’s rights and
obligations (s. 2 (e)). The Ontario Superior Court of Justice held
that the Crown owed a fiduciary duty to the disabled veterans, and so was
obliged to either invest the funds on their behalf, or pay interest, and that
s. 5.1(4) of the Act was inoperative under the Bill of Rights.
The Court of Appeal upheld the decision.
Held: The appeal
should be allowed.
Where federal legislation conflicts with the
protections of the Bill of Rights, unless the conflicting legislation
expressly declares that it operates notwithstanding the Bill of Rights,
the Bill of Rights applies and the legislation is inoperative. The Bill
of Rights protects only rights that existed in 1960, prior to its passage.
Section 5.1(4) of the Act is not inconsistent
with either s. 1(a) or s. 2(e) of the Bill of Rights
and the veterans were lawfully denied interest on their pension and other
benefits. The due process protections in s. 1(a) of the Bill
of Rights do not require that the veterans receive notice and a hearing
before Parliament prior to the passage of expropriative legislation. Long‑standing
parliamentary tradition has never required that procedure, and due process
protections cannot interfere with the right of the legislative branch to
determine its own procedure. Such a power to interfere would effectively amend
the Canadian Constitution. Further, although due process protections of
property in the Bill of Rights do confer certain rights to notice and an
opportunity to make submissions in the adjudication of individual rights and
obligations, no such rights are at issue in this case. No adjudicative
procedure is necessary for the nondiscretionary application of a law to
incontestable facts. Lastly, while substantive rights may stem from due
process, the Bill of Rights does not protect against the expropriation
of property by the passage of unambiguous legislation. Parliament has the right
to expropriate property, even without compensation, if it has made its
intention clear and, in s. 5.1(4) , Parliament’s expropriative intent is
clear and unambiguous.
Section 2(e) of the Bill of Rights
applies only to guarantee the fundamental justice of proceedings before any
tribunal or administrative body that determine individual rights and
obligations. It does not impose on Parliament the duty to provide a hearing
before the enactment of legislation.
Cases Cited
Referred to: R. v. Drybones, [1970] S.C.R. 282; Miller v. The Queen,
[1977] 2 S.C.R. 680; R. v. Burnshine, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 693; Reference
re Resolution to Amend the Constitution, [1981] 1 S.C.R. 753; Wells
v. Newfoundland, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 199; Lapointe v. Association
de Bienfaisance et de Retraite de la Police de Montréal, [1906] A.C.
535; Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905); Curr v. The Queen,
[1972] S.C.R. 889; Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act, [1985]
2 S.C.R. 486; Florence Mining Co. v. Cobalt Lake Mining Co.
(1909), 18 O.L.R. 275; Manitoba Fisheries Ltd. v. The Queen,
[1979] 1 S.C.R. 101.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
An Act to amend the statute law
in relation to war veterans, S.C. 1990, c. 43,
s. 64(2).
Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44 [reproduced in R.S.C. 1985,
App. III], ss. 1 (a), 2 (e), 5 .
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms .
Constitution Act, 1867 , preamble.
Department of Veterans Affairs
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. V‑1, ss. 5 (d),
5.1(4) [ad. 1990, c. 43, s. 2].
Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑11, s. 21(2) .
Pension Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P‑6, s. 41(1) .
War Veterans Allowance Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. W‑3, s. 15 .
Authors Cited
Grand Robert de la langue
française, 2e éd. Paris: Le Robert,
2001, “cause”.
Hogg, Peter W. Constitutional
Law of Canada, 4th ed. Scarborough, Ont.: Carswell, 1997.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(2002), 157 O.A.C. 278, 58 O.R. (3d) 417, 215 D.L.R. (4th) 496, 92 C.R.R.
(2d) 224, 33 C.C.P.B. 1, [2002] O.J. No. 962 (QL), affirming a
judgment of the Superior Court of Justice (2000), 53 O.R. (3d) 221, 84 C.R.R.
(2d) 211, [2000] O.J. No. 3768 (QL). Appeal allowed.
Graham R. Garton, Q.C., John C. Spencer and Yvonne Milosevic,
for the appellant.
Raymond G. Colautti, David G. Greenaway and Peter Sengbusch,
for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Major J. — The deceased
respondent, Authorson, a disabled veteran of World War II, was the
representative of a large class of disabled veterans of Canada’s military
forces. He died in 2002, but the action continues to be prosecuted by his
litigation administrator and guardian.
2
This litigation raises difficult questions. The government of Canada,
through the appellant, the Attorney General of Canada, agrees that throughout
the relevant time it acted as a fiduciary for each of the veterans, that the
funds owed the veterans and administered by the government were rarely credited
with interest, and that a full accounting was never made to the respondent.
3
It is not in dispute that the respondent is owed interest, and that this
omission continued until legislation changing government practice was enacted
in 1990. The appellant, while agreeing that the respondent is owed money,
argues that Parliament has, by enacting legislation to that effect, made the
debt unenforceable.
4
The respondent submits that the Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C.
1960, c. 44 (reproduced in R.S.C. 1985, App. III) (the “Bill of Rights”),
ensures him due process in the expropriation of his property. The appellant’s
position is that the expropriative legislation was a valid exercise of its
legislative power, and that no remedy exists.
5
Do the due process protections of the Bill of Rights guard
against the expropriation of property by passage of valid legislation?
Although s. 1(a) of the Bill of Rights confers certain procedural
protections — and may also confer certain substantive protections — I have
concluded the answer is no.
6
The Bill of Rights allows the deprivation of the enjoyment of
property only through due process of law. At issue in this appeal is the
validity of a federal statute that purportedly extinguished the claims of
disabled veterans to interest on their governmentally administered pensions.
7
The facts of this appeal are not at issue. Joseph Authorson and
thousands of veterans received pension and other benefits from the Crown for
decades. The Department of Veterans Affairs (the “DVA”) would often administer
the funds on behalf of those who were deemed incapable of managing their
money. However, these accounts were not credited with interest. The subject
of this appeal is the Crown’s liability for that interest.
8
The Crown no longer denies that it had a fiduciary duty to the veterans
to pay interest on those accounts. However, the Crown claims that it is not
liable for its breach of trust because federal legislation, the Department
of Veterans Affairs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. V-1, s. 5.1(4) , bars claims for
interest before 1990 on veterans’ accounts. Both parties agree that if this
section is operative, the Crown has no liability for the accounting of and for
payment of the interest.
9
The respondent’s hope of success depends on being able to obtain the
protection of the Bill of Rights, which provides for due process against
loss by expropriation of property. It is uncontested that the veterans’ claims
for interest are property. By contrast, the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms does not contain any similar provision.
10
The Bill of Rights is a federal statute that renders inoperative
federal legislation inconsistent with its protections. It protects rights that
existed when the Bill of Rights was enacted, in 1960. If
Parliament wishes to circumvent the protections of the Bill of Rights,
it must do so explicitly by stating that the legislation in question operates
notwithstanding the Bill of Rights. In legislating the bar against
claims for interest, Parliament did not explicitly enact this
“notwithstanding” clause. As a result, the issue in this appeal is whether the
due process rights respecting property that existed in 1960 and were entrenched
by the Bill of Rights permit the Crown to deny its liability for the
missing interest based on validly enacted legislation.
11
What protections for property are provided by due process?
12
Due process does not require that the veterans receive notice and a
hearing before Parliament prior to the passage of expropriative legislation.
As unfortunate as it is for the respondent, long-standing parliamentary
tradition has never required that procedure.
13
Does due process in this case require an individual hearing before a
tribunal? If the effect of legislation requires a hearing or adjudication then
that must conform to Canadian jurisprudence demanding a fair hearing. But that
is not what was legislated. Here, there is no dispute that if the law is
operative, the veterans’ rights to damages for the lost interest are
extinguished.
14
Does the Bill of Rights require that Parliament give just
compensation to the veterans? The governmental expropriation of property
without compensation is discouraged by our common law tradition, but it is
allowed when Parliament uses clear and unambiguous language to do so.
15
The Department of Veterans Affairs Act, s. 5.1(4) takes a
property claim from a vulnerable group, in disregard of the Crown’s fiduciary
duty to disabled veterans. However, that taking is within the power of
Parliament. The appeal has to be allowed.
I. Facts
A. The Administration of Disabled Veterans’
Pensions
16
Since World War I, Canada has recognized an obligation to pay various
pensions and financial benefits to its disabled veterans. This appeal concerns
pensions provided under three statutes. Since 1915, the Pension Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. P-6 , has provided pensions to veterans disabled through
service. Since 1918, the Department of Veterans Affairs Act , has
provided money for veterans receiving medical treatment. And since 1930, the War
Veterans Allowance Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. W-3 , has provided income
supplements to indigent and/or elderly veterans.
17
Each of these statutes provides that if the veteran is incapable of
managing the funds, an administrator may be designated: Pension Act, s.
41(1) (allowing the Minister to designate the DVA, a person, or an agency as
administrator); Department of Veterans Affairs Act, s. 5 (d)
(empowering the Governor in Council to make regulations for the holding of
funds payable to veterans undergoing medical care); War Veterans Allowance
Act, s. 15(1) and (2) (allowing the Minister to designate himself, a
person, or an agency to administer the funds on behalf of the veteran). This
appeal concerns those moneys of veterans administered by the DVA up until 1990.
18
When the DVA was named the administrator of a veteran’s benefits, the
department would do the following: the veteran’s cheques were made out to an
official in the department and deposited in the government’s general account.
For accounting purposes, the funds were tracked as if they were in a special
purpose account held in the name of the veteran. The administrator made
payments on behalf of the veteran. If the veteran became capable of handling
his affairs, he would regain control over the fund. Occasionally, funds from
private sources, such as inheritances, would be deposited into the special
purpose account.
19
The funds in a disabled veteran’s special purpose account would
occasionally grow to substantial amounts. For example, a veteran hospitalized
for extended periods might have few expenses to pay, but would continue to
accumulate pension moneys. In the 1970s and 1980s, there were approximately
10,000 such special purpose accounts being administered by the DVA. Today, due
to the passage of time and a shift towards private administrators, there are
fewer than 1,000. Some of these accounts have contained varying sums as high
as many thousands of dollars.
20
Until 1990, these funds were rarely credited with interest. Various
governmental inquiries over the decades discussed this non-payment problem.
In 1990, the DVA began paying interest on these accounts, which it had been
authorized to do for decades, pursuant to the Financial Administration Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. F-11, s. 21(2) . However, Parliament chose to try and limit the
Crown’s liability for past interest by enacting s. 5.1(4) of the Department
of Veterans Affairs Act :
5.1 . . .
(4) No claim shall be made after this subsection
comes into force for or on account of interest on moneys held or administered
by the Minister during any period prior to January 1, 1990 pursuant to
subsection 41(1) of the Pension Act , subsection 15(2) of the War
Veterans Allowance Act or any regulations made under section 5 of this Act.
B. Joseph Authorson
21
Joseph Authorson, the deceased respondent, was born in Ontario in 1914,
and enlisted in the Canadian Armed Forces in 1939. He was disabled from
combat-related mental illness, and was discharged from military service in
1943. He spent time in various mental hospitals, and was surgically treated
with a pre-frontal lobotomy. He never married or had children.
22
He received pension and treatment moneys for 40 years. These were
administered by the DVA. He became competent to manage his funds in 1991, and
received $117,916 in pension and treatment allowance funds, and $166,248 in
personal funds. While the DVA had administered the funds, they had not been
invested, nor had they accrued interest.
23
Authorson was named the representative plaintiff of a class of disabled
veterans certified in 1999. The class sued the federal Crown in the Ontario
Superior Court of Justice, alleging breach of fiduciary duty. It sought
declaratory relief, an accounting, compensation for the interest lost on the
funds and costs. There was evidence to suggest that the amount of compensatory
interest claimed could be as high as $1 billion.
24
In 2002, Authorson died. A litigation administrator and a litigation
guardian were appointed to represent the interests of his estate.
II. Judicial History
A. Ontario Superior Court of Justice (2000),
53 O.R. (3d) 221
25
Brockenshire J., the trial judge, divided the litigation into two
separate proceedings. One action was for interest on funds administered by the
DVA. The other was for principal unpaid when veterans died while their funds
were still being administered by the DVA. Each action had both a liability and
a damages phase. This appeal is limited to the first action assessing the
liability of the Crown for interest on the funds.
26
Brockenshire J. determined that although the funds had been placed in
the Crown’s general account, they remained the property of the disabled
veterans. He held that the Crown owed a fiduciary duty to the disabled
veterans, and so was obliged to either invest the funds on their behalf, or pay
interest. On appeal, the Crown did not dispute these findings.
27
The Crown submitted that in spite of those facts, Department of
Veterans Affairs Act, s. 5.1(4) bars any claim for interest before 1990.
Brockenshire J. decided that this provision was inoperative under the Bill
of Rights, stating that s. 1 (a) guaranteed that any deprivation of
the enjoyment of property must occur through due process of law, and that s. 2 (e)
guaranteed a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental
justice.
B. Ontario Court of Appeal (2002), 58
O.R. (3d) 417
28
The Court of Appeal upheld Brockenshire J. and agreed that the Crown had
breached a fiduciary duty owed to the disabled veterans by not paying interest
on the funds.
29
The Court of Appeal considered the due process protection of property
rights in s. 1(a) of the Bill of Rights, but declined to hold
whether the provision conferred substantive protections in addition to
procedural protections. It concluded that passage of the expropriative
legislation violated the respondent’s due process rights because he had been
denied notice and an opportunity to contest the legislation. The Court of
Appeal also found this a violation of s. 2 (e), which provided fair
hearing rights.
III. Statutory Provisions at Issue
30
Department of Veterans Affairs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. V-1 , as
amended by S.C. 1990, c. 43, s. 2:
5.1 . . .
(4) No claim shall be made after this subsection
comes into force for or on account of interest on moneys held or administered
by the Minister during any period prior to January 1, 1990 pursuant to
subsection 41(1) of the Pension Act , subsection 15(2) of the War
Veterans Allowance Act or any regulations made under section 5 of this Act.
An Act to
amend the statute law in relation to war veterans, S.C. 1990, c. 43:
64. . . .
(2) Subsection 5.1(4) of the Department of
Veterans Affairs Act , as enacted by section 2 of this Act, shall be deemed
to have come into force on October 12, 1990.
Canadian
Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44 (reproduced in R.S.C. 1985, App. III):
1. It is hereby recognized and declared
that in Canada there have existed and shall continue to exist without
discrimination by reason of race, national origin, colour, religion or sex, the
following human rights and fundamental freedoms, namely,
(a) the right of the individual to life, liberty, security of
the person and enjoyment of property, and the right not to be deprived thereof
except by due process of law;
.
. .
2. Every law of Canada shall, unless it is
expressly declared by an Act of the Parliament of Canada that it shall operate
notwithstanding the Canadian Bill of Rights, be so construed and applied
as not to abrogate, abridge or infringe or to authorize the abrogation,
abridgment or infringement of any of the rights or freedoms herein recognized
and declared, and in particular, no law of Canada shall be construed or applied
so as to
.
. .
(e) deprive a person of the right to a fair hearing in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice for the determination of
his rights and obligations;
IV. Analysis
A. Background on the Bill of Rights
31
It is useful to consider the limited jurisprudential history of the Bill
of Rights. The Bill of Rights is a federal statute, applicable only
to federal law. Although the Bill of Rights remains in force, it has
received little judicial notice since its passage in 1960. This is so in spite
of the fact that it has been referred to as quasi-constitutional.
32
Where federal legislation conflicts with the protections of the Bill
of Rights, unless the conflicting legislation expressly declares that it
operates notwithstanding the Bill of Rights as required by s. 2 , the Bill
of Rights applies and the legislation is inoperative; R. v. Drybones,
[1970] S.C.R. 282 (the s. 1 (b) equality guarantee of the Bill of
Rights rendered inoperative a provision of the Indian Act which made
it an offence for a status Indian to be intoxicated off a reserve).
33
Section 1 of the Bill of Rights declares and recognizes various
rights, including the due process right to the enjoyment of property that is at
issue here. The Bill of Rights protects only rights that existed in
1960, prior to passage of the Bill of Rights. See, e.g., Miller v.
The Queen, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 680, at pp. 703-4 (no absolute right to life
existed prior to the Bill of Rights, so a death penalty statute was not
inoperative); R. v. Burnshine, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 693, at p. 705 (a right
to uniform sentencing across different regions of Canada did not exist prior to
1960, and was therefore not protected by the Bill of Rights).
34
With the constitutional amendment and the adoption of the Charter
in 1982, many of the protections of the Bill of Rights gained
constitutional status. The Bill of Rights, however, provides two
protections not expressly available in the Charter . Section 1 (a)
protects the enjoyment of property, the deprivation of which must occur through
the due process of law. Section 2 (e) guarantees a fair hearing in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice for the determination of
rights and obligations. These two provisions are the essence of this appeal.
B. Section 1(a) of the Canadian Bill of
Rights
35
Section 1(a) of the Bill of Rights recognizes “. . . the
right of the individual to life, liberty, security of the person and enjoyment
of property, and the right not to be deprived thereof except by due process of
law”.
36
The respondent submitted that s. 5.1(4) of the Department of Veterans
Affairs Act took away his right to interest on his funds without due
process of law. The question is what process is guaranteed by the Bill of
Rights when property rights are extinguished? The respondent’s argument
encompasses three types of due process:
(i) procedural rights before parliamentary enactment of a law;
(ii) procedural rights before the application of a statute to his
individual circumstances; and
(iii) substantive protections against governmental expropriation of his
property.
None of the
claims help the respondent.
(1) Procedural Rights in Legislative
Enactment
37
The respondent claimed a right to notice and hearing to contest the
passage of s. 5.1(4) of the Department of Veterans Affairs Act .
However, in 1960, and today, no such right exists. Long-standing parliamentary
tradition makes it clear that the only procedure due any citizen of Canada is
that proposed legislation receive three readings in the Senate and House of
Commons and that it receive Royal Assent. Once that process is completed,
legislation within Parliament’s competence is unassailable.
38
In Reference re Resolution to Amend the Constitution, [1981] 1
S.C.R. 753, at p. 785, it was stated that:
How Houses of Parliament proceed, how a provincial
legislative assembly proceeds is in either case a matter of self‑definition,
subject to any overriding constitutional or self‑imposed statutory or
indoor prescription. It is unnecessary here to embark on any historical review
of the “court” aspect of Parliament and the immunity of its procedures from
judicial review. Courts come into the picture when legislation is enacted and
not before (unless references are made to them for their opinion on a bill or a
proposed enactment). It would be incompatible with the self‑regulating —
“inherent” is as apt a word — authority of Houses of Parliament to deny their
capacity to pass any kind of resolution. Reference may appropriately be made
to art. 9 of the Bill of Rights of 1689, undoubtedly in force as part of
the law of Canada, which provides that “Proceedings in Parliament ought not to
be impeached or questioned in any Court or Place out of Parliament”.
39
As well, see Wells v. Newfoundland, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 199, at para.
59:
. . . legislative decision making is not subject to any known duty of
fairness. Legislatures are subject to constitutional requirements for valid
law-making, but within their constitutional boundaries, they can do as they see
fit. The wisdom and value of legislative decisions are subject only to review
by the electorate. The judgment in Reference re Canada Assistance Plan
. . . was conclusive on this point in stating that: “the rules governing
procedural fairness do not apply to a body exercising purely legislative
functions”.
40
The submission that a court can compel Parliament to change its legislative
procedures based on the Bill of Rights must fail. The Bill of Rights
purports to guide the proper interpretation of every “law of Canada”, which s.
5 of the Bill of Rights defines to mean “an Act of the Parliament of
Canada enacted before or after the coming into force of this Act”
(emphasis added). Court interference with the legislative process is not an
interpretation of an already enacted law.
41
Due process protections cannot interfere with the right of the
legislative branch to determine its own procedure. For the Bill of Rights
to confer such a power would effectively amend the Canadian constitution,
which, in the preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867 , enshrines a
constitution similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom. In the United
Kingdom, no such pre-legislative procedural rights have existed. From that, it
follows that the Bill of Rights does not authorize such power.
(2) Procedural Rights in Application of the
Law
42
What procedural protections for property rights are guaranteed by due
process? In my opinion, the Bill of Rights guarantees notice and some
opportunity to contest a governmental deprivation of property rights only in
the context of an adjudication of that person’s rights and obligations before a
court or tribunal.
43
In Miller, supra, at p. 704, Ritchie J. held that s. 1(a)
of the Bill of Rights conferred procedural protections existing at its
enactment in 1960, namely protection against the deprivation of life without a
fair trial and conviction by a “properly instructed jury”.
44
Similarly, s. 1(a) may be seen as conferring procedural
protections against the deprivation of property that existed in 1960. Certain
procedural rights in this regard have long been recognized. In Lapointe v.
Association de Bienfaisance et de Retraite de la Police de Montréal,
[1906] A.C. 535, the Privy Council recognized a right to have notice of
accusations made and an opportunity to make a defence where the board of
directors of a pension board stripped a police officer, who had resigned, of
his pension. Where the law requires the application of discretion or judgment
to specific factual situations, notice and an opportunity to contest may be
required. For example, such rights may exist where the government eliminates a
veteran’s benefits because it believes he is no longer disabled, or because it
believes he was never a member of the armed forces. However, notice and an
opportunity to make a defence are not required where the government legislates
to completely eliminate such benefits.
45
The respondent submitted that the clear, uncontested interpretation of
s. 5.1(4) of the Department of Veterans Affairs Act is that it is an
expropriation of disabled veterans’ interest on DVA-administered pensions, and
as such is inoperative. But no adjudicative procedure is necessary for the
non-discretionary application of a law to incontestable facts. A taxpayer
could not claim procedural protections against a change in income tax rates that
adversely affected him.
46
Section 1(a) of the Bill of Rights does guarantee a degree
of procedural due process in the application of the law in an individualized,
adjudicative setting. But no such application took place here, and no further
procedure was due.
(3) Substantive Due Process Rights
47
The respondent claimed a right — based on a broad conception of the rule
of law — against the expropriation of property (or against expropriation
without just compensation). Does the due process guarantee of the Bill of
Rights confer substantive protections in this regard?
(a) Substantive Due Process
48
Canadian courts have been wary of recognizing such protections, in part perhaps
because of the American experience with the substantive due process enforcement
of property and contract rights. Professor Hogg has summarized the
constitutional crisis that resulted from what many at the time and since felt
to be extreme judicial policy making. The occasion of this historical episode
was Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905) (striking down state
legislation setting maximum work hours in New York bakeries on due process
grounds). See P. W. Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada (4th ed. 1997),
at p. 1070:
Between 1905, when Lochner v. New York was decided, and
1937, when the case was overruled, the Supreme Court of the United States
protected the liberties of the owners of factories and mines against the
efforts of Congress and the state Legislatures to limit hours of work, to
require the payment of minimum wages, to impose health and safety standards and
to protect union activity. As Oliver Wendell Holmes pointed out in his
brilliant dissenting opinions, the Court used the Constitution to enforce a
laissez-faire economic theory that had been rejected by the elected
legislators. The Court had taken sides in a political conflict that was
suitable for resolution only by elected legislators. In 1937, after an
exasperated President Roosevelt had proposed his court-packing plan, the Court
changed its mind and reversed these decisions. Since then, the Court has been
extremely reluctant to review social and economic regulation, despite its
inevitable interferences with the property and contract rights that the
Constitution of the United States expressly guarantees.
49
The experience surrounding the Lochner case might have cast a
shadow over the recognition of substantive due process rights in Canadian
jurisprudence. Curr v. The Queen, [1972] S.C.R. 889, asked whether the Bill
of Rights s. 1(a) guarantee against deprivation of security of the
person except through due process of law protected against a compulsory breath
test. In holding that it did not, Laskin J., at p. 902, suggested “extreme
caution” in importing substance into the due process guarantees of the Bill
of Rights:
The very large words of s. 1(a), tempered by a phrase (“except
by due process of law”) whose original English meaning has been overlaid by
American constitutional imperatives, signal extreme caution to me when asked to
apply them in negation of substantive legislation validly enacted by a
Parliament in which the major role is played by elected representatives of the
people.
Laskin J.
stated that to read substantive protections into these due process rights would
require “compelling reasons” relating to “objective and manageable standards by
which a Court should be guided . . .” (pp. 899-900).
50
In Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486, Lamer
J. (as he was then) considered s. 7 of the Charter ’s guarantee
that liberty be deprived only “in accordance with the principles of fundamental
justice”. Although there had been evidence that “fundamental justice” was to
have given only procedural protections, Lamer J. held that fundamental justice
could also contain the substantive right not to be imprisoned for an absolute
liability offence. Although this Court has not yet recognized substantive
rights stemming from due process, Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act indicates
its willingness to recognize that, in the proper circumstances, guarantees of
process or justice may confer substantive protections.
(b) Substantive Due Process Rights in
Property
51
The Bill of Rights does not protect against the expropriation of
property by the passage of unambiguous legislation. It is unnecessary to
decide now exactly what other substantive protections, if any, might be
conferred by the Bill of Rights’ s. 1(a)’s property guarantees.
52
The Bill of Rights protects only rights that existed at the time
of its passage, in 1960. At that time it was undisputed, as it continues to be
today, that Parliament had the right to expropriate property if it made its intention
clear.
53
This right has long been recognized. At the turn of the century,
Riddell J. of the Ontario High Court recognized the Crown’s right to take
property without compensation. The dispute involved a mining company that had
failed to properly stake a claim. The claim had subsequently been sold by the
Crown. Riddell J. wrote:
In short, the Legislature within its jurisdiction
can do everything that is not naturally impossible, and is restrained by no
rule human or divine. If it be that the plaintiffs acquired any rights, which I
am far from finding, the Legislature had the power to take them away. The
prohibition, “Thou shalt not steal,” has no legal force upon the sovereign
body. And there would be no necessity for compensation to be given. [Emphasis
added.]
(See Florence Mining Co. v. Cobalt Lake Mining Co. (1909), 18
O.L.R. 275, at p. 279.)
54
In Manitoba Fisheries Ltd. v. The Queen, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 101, the
Court ordered compensation for the loss of goodwill to a fishing company caused
by the passage of the federal Freshwater Fish Marketing Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. F-13, which created a Crown corporation that would have exclusive
extraprovincial marketing rights for all Canadian fish. Although the Court
ordered compensation in that case, Ritchie J. made clear that Parliament could
effect a taking without just compensation if it did so specifically (at p. 118
(citing Attorney-General v. De Keyser’s Royal Hotel, [1920] A.C. 508
(H.L.), at p. 542)).
55
And more recently, in Wells, supra, at para. 41, the Court
held that a senior provincial civil servant whose position was statutorily
eliminated still had a contract law remedy against the province. However, the
Court reiterated the law on expropriation in Canada. Such expropriations are within
the power of legislatures where that intent is clearly and unambiguously
stated:
While the legislature may have the extraordinary power of passing a law
to specifically deny compensation to an aggrieved individual with whom it has
broken an agreement, clear and explicit statutory language would be required to
extinguish existing rights previously conferred on that party.
56
Here, to the disadvantage of the respondent, Parliament’s expropriative
intent was indeed clear and unambiguous. Section 5.1(4) of the Department
of Veterans Affairs Act states:
No claim shall be made after this subsection comes into force for or on
account of interest on moneys held or administered by the Minister during any
period prior to January 1, 1990 pursuant to subsection 41(1) of the Pension
Act , subsection 15(2) of the War Veterans Allowance Act or any
regulations made under section 5 of this Act.
57
The provision leaves no doubt that the respondent has no claim for
interest. Since he would have had no substantive right against a clear and
unambiguous expropriation in 1960, the Bill of Rights can offer him no
such protection today.
C. Section 2(e) of the Bill of Rights
58
Section 2(e) of the Bill of Rights guarantees that “. . .
no law of Canada shall be construed or applied so as to . . . (e)
deprive a person of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice for the determination of his rights and
obligations.” Counsel for the respondent submitted that he was guaranteed such
a hearing prior to Parliament expropriating the interest on his pension moneys.
59
However, s. 2(e) applies only to guarantee the fundamental
justice of proceedings before any tribunal or administrative body that
determines individual rights and obligations. That this is the case becomes
more obvious by examining the other guarantees of s. 2, which confer:
(i) protections against arbitrary
detention and cruel and unusual punishment;
(ii) upon arrest, the right to
information about charges laid, the right to counsel and the right to habeas
corpus;
(iii) evidentiary rights and rights
against self-incrimination;
(iv) the presumption of innocence;
(v) the right to an impartial
tribunal;
(vi) the right to reasonable bail; and
(vii) the right to an interpreter in
proceedings.
All of these
protections are legal rights applicable in the context of, or prior to, a
hearing before a court or tribunal.
60
The French version of s. 2(e) makes this distinction clearer. A
fair hearing is translated as “une audition impartiale de sa cause”.
According to Le Grand Robert de la langue française (2nd ed. 2001), the
term “cause” means “[a]ffaire, procès qui se plaide”.
This definition confirms the legalistic nature of the “fair hearing”.
61
Section 2(e) of the Bill of Rights does not impose upon
Parliament the duty to provide a hearing before the enactment of legislation.
Its protections are operative only in the application of law to individual
circumstances in a proceeding before a court, tribunal or similar body.
V. Conclusion
62
The respondent and the class of disabled veterans it represents are owed
decades of interest on their pension and benefit funds. The Crown does not
dispute these findings. But Parliament has chosen for undisclosed reasons to
lawfully deny the veterans, to whom the Crown owed a fiduciary duty, these
benefits whether legal, equitable or fiduciary. The due process protections of
property in the Bill of Rights do not grant procedural rights in the
process of legislative enactment. They do confer certain rights to notice and
an opportunity to make submissions in the adjudication of individual rights and
obligations, but no such rights are at issue in this appeal.
63
While the due process guarantees may have some substantive content not
apparent in this appeal, there is no due process right against duly enacted
legislation unambiguously expropriating property interests.
64
I would allow the appeal without costs. I would not disturb the order
as to costs below.
65
I would answer the constitutional questions as follows:
(1) Is s. 5.1(4) of the Department
of Veterans Affairs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. V-1 , as amended, inconsistent with
s. 1 (a) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44 ?
Answer: No.
(2) Is s. 5.1(4) of the Department
of Veterans Affairs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. V-1 , as amended, inconsistent with
s. 2 (e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44 ?
Answer: No.
(3) If the answer to question 1 or 2
is in the affirmative, is s. 5.1(4) of the Department of Veterans Affairs
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. V-1 , as amended, inoperable by reason of such
inconsistency?
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer
this question.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitor for the appellant: Attorney General of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the respondent: Raphael Partners, Windsor.