Date: 20090408
Docket: A-56-08
Citation: 2009 FCA 110
CORAM: NOËL
J.A.
NADON J.A.
PELLETIER
J.A.
BETWEEN:
ALLIANCE PIPELINE LTD.
Appellant
and
VERNON JOSEPH SMITH
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
NADON J.A.
[1]
This is an
appeal from a decision of O’Keefe J. of the Federal Court, 2008 FC 12, dated
January 4, 2008, dismissing the appeal brought by Alliance Pipeline Ltd.,
pursuant to section 101 of the National Energy Board Act, R.C.S. 1985,
c. N-7 (the “Act”), from the decision and award of the Pipeline Arbitration
Committee (the “PAC”) dated September 2, 2006, as corrected on November 6, 2006.
[2]
The issue
raised by the appeal pertains to the PAC’s determination of the respondent’s
entitlement to recover from the appellant the legal costs which he incurred in
proceedings commenced and disposed of in the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench and
in arbitration proceedings commenced before a previous panel of the PAC.
THE FACTS
[3]
In 1999,
Alliance Pipeline Ltd. (the “appellant”) constructed a pipeline across a
portion of the respondent’s farmland, located in the Mayerthorpe area of central
Alberta. This came as a result of the
approval that the appellant had received from the National Energy Board, in
November of 1998, for construction of a pipeline extending from the northeast
region of British
Columbia to a
point near Chicago, Illinois, and crossing the Canada-United
States border near Elmore, Saskatchewan.
[4]
Despite a series of
agreements between the parties with respect to the construction of the
pipeline, a dispute arose regarding the reclamation of a portion of the land
used for the pipeline. The respondent claimed that it was necessary to apply
manure to the entire right-of-way in order to return the land to its
pre-construction growing ability. The appellant disagreed.
[5]
Notwithstanding the
disagreement, the respondent began the reclamation work and applied manure to
the right-of-way in June and July 2000. The respondent submitted an invoice for
$9,829.00 to the appellant, which rejected the invoice and made a counter-offer
of $2,500.00. The respondent rejected the counter-offer and sent the appellant
a second invoice for $16,819.00.
[6]
On August 8, 2001, the
respondent issued a Notice of Arbitration pursuant to subsection 90(2) of the Act,
which was served on the appellant and on the Minister of Natural Resources (the
“Minister”), requesting compensation for the reclamation work performed. On
September 24, 2001, the respondent served its Reply to the Notice of
Arbitration, and argued, inter alia, that the damages claimed by the
respondent were covered by the release agreements entered into by the parties.
[7]
As a
result of the foregoing, by letter dated February 21, 2002, the Minister advised
both the appellant and the respondent that he had appointed three persons to
form an Arbitration Committee (the “first panel”), namely Mr. Raymond McKall,
Mr. John Gill and Mr. Robert P. James. The hearing before the first panel was
held on May 6, 2003 and its decision was reserved.
[8]
Meanwhile,
on July 10, 2003, the appellant filed a Statement of Claim in the Alberta Court
of Queen’s Bench, seeking among other things:
1. an
injunction against the respondent from interfering with the appellant’s rights
to unhindered access onto the easement;
2. a
declaration that the releases entered into between the parties included any and
all claims that the respondent had against the appellant up to November 1, 1999;
and
3. an
order directing the first panel not to render a decision until such time as the
issue pertaining to the releases could be determined.
[9]
The
application for an injunction was dismissed by order of Madam Justice Nation on
October 2, 2003, and party and party costs of the injunction application were
ordered to be paid by the appellant to the respondent. The appellant eventually
discontinued the action in March 2005 and paid the respondent’s party and party
costs in the action. However, the respondent’s solicitor-client costs for the proceedings
in the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench totalled $20,788.54. The party and party
costs paid by the appellant totalled $4,565.97, leaving $16,222.57 as
unrecovered legal fees.
[10]
In
February 2005, the first panel advised the parties that one of its members, Mr.
Justice John Gill, had been appointed to the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench and
that the other two members of the panel remained prepared to continue their
respective participation in the arbitration process. It appears that counsel
for the respondent was prepared to allow the first panel to complete the
process, but counsel for the appellant objected. Consequently, no decision was
rendered by the first panel.
[11]
By letter
dated August 11, 2005, the Minister informed the parties that he had appointed
a new Arbitration Committee (the “second panel”) to deal with the issues raised
in the arbitration proceedings, namely Mr. Jim McCartney, Mr. Doug Perras and
Mr. Ian C. Schofield. The Minister’s letter reads, in part, as follows:
…
I appreciate
that Mr. Smith, Alliance and yourself have already invested a
significant amount of time, energy and money in dealing with this case to date.
After careful consideration, the Government of Canada has determined that the
most appropriate manner to proceed is to appoint a new committee, consisting of
three new members, to review all outstanding issues.
[12]
Following
the appointment of the second panel, the respondent filed an Amended Notice of
Arbitration on November 14, 2005, and again on January 20, 2006. The Amended
Notice of Arbitration asserted the same core claims that had been before the
first panel, together with claims for additional relief, which included the
costs of the arbitration proceedings commenced before the first panel and the
unrecovered portion of his legal costs in the action commenced by the appellant
in July 2003 in the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench.
[13]
At the end
of December 2005, the appellant filed its Reply to the Amended Notice of
Arbitration.
[14]
The
hearing before the second panel was held on March 22 to 24 and April 3 to 4,
2006 and it rendered its decision on September 18, 2006, as corrected on
November 6, 2006.
DECISION OF THE SECOND PANEL
[15]
The second
panel concluded that the respondent was entitled to an award in the amount of
$9,829 (as corrected) for his reclamation work in the spring of 2000 and to an
award of $1,200 (as corrected) for the September 2000 trespass. These rulings,
as well as certain others, are not at issue in this appeal. The disputed
matters before the Federal Court and before this Court pertain to the second panel’s
determination that the respondent was entitled to compensation for the
unrecovered portion of his legal costs incurred in defending the injunctive
action and to the costs of the arbitration proceedings commenced before the
first panel.
[16]
The second
panel found that it had jurisdiction, under the Act, to determine all
compensation matters. It held that if a party was of the view that the Minister
had referred a Notice of Arbitration which included matters outside of its jurisdiction,
the objecting party was bound to seek judicial review of the Minister’s
decision.
[17]
With
respect to the costs of the action commenced in the Alberta Court of Queen’s
Bench, the second panel awarded the respondent $16,222.57 for his net legal
fees, disbursements and GST, stating that the respondent was entitled to his
solicitor-client costs as compensation for damages suffered as a result the
operations of the appellant. The second panel concluded that the appellant’s
legal action was directly related to the respondent’s attempt to obtain
compensation in respect of the appellant’s proposed activities and that it was thus
proper and reasonable for it to consider the expenses he had incurred and the inconvenience
which he had been put through in the circumstances. The second panel also noted
that the respondent’s out-of-pocket expenses for legal fees had been claimed in
his Amended Notice of Arbitration and that a PAC was required to determine matters
referred to in a Notice of Arbitration. The second panel thus found that it was
required to make provision for compensation of all damages suffered by the
respondent as a result of the operations of the appellant.
[18]
With respect
to the costs relating to the first arbitration proceedings, the second panel
awarded the respondent his legal fees and disbursements incurred in those
proceedings, except for those directly related to attendance at the first
hearing and subsequent correspondence regarding the status and effect of the
first hearing after the loss of quorum. In support of this view, the second
panel found that notwithstanding the fact that the arbitration proceedings had
to recommence, the parties’ agreement to arbitrate survived.
[19]
The
appellant brought its appeal to the Federal Court under section 101 of the Act,
claiming that the second panel had exceeded its jurisdiction and that it had
erred in law by awarding the respondent his costs incurred in the Alberta litigation and those in the
proceedings commenced before the first panel.
DECISION OF THE FEDERAL COURT
[20]
O’Keefe J.
dismissed the appeal on January 4, 2008, holding that the second panel had not
exceeded its jurisdiction and that it had not erred in awarding the respondent
the unrecovered part of his costs in the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench action,
nor in awarding him the costs incurred in connection with the arbitration
proceedings commenced before the first panel.
[21]
The
learned Judge held that the second panel was correct in concluding that it had
jurisdiction to consider the cost claims, as it was bound to consider all
compensation matters set out in the Notice of Arbitration.
[22]
O’Keefe J.
was not persuaded by the appellant’s submission that the issue of costs relating
to the action was res judicata, because the respondent “reasonable
incurred” these costs to ensure that he could continue with his claim for
compensation before the PAC.
[23]
Finally,
the Judge upheld the second panel’s cost award pertaining to the costs of the
first arbitration proceedings, after noting that the second panel had excluded
the costs directly related to attendance at the previous arbitration hearing and
subsequent correspondence in connection with the loss of quorum.
APPELLANT’S SUBMISSIONS
[24]
The
appellant submits that O’Keefe J. erred in finding that the second panel had
jurisdiction and in confirming its determinations with respect to the costs of
the action and the cost of the first arbitration proceedings (together, the
“cost claims”).
[25]
First, the
appellant submits that the Judge erred in law when he found that the second
panel had jurisdiction over the cost claims because these were not “compensation
matters” under the Act. The appellant also argues that it was not obliged to
apply for judicial review of the Minister’s decision to refer the matter to a PAC
in order to challenge the second panel’s jurisdiction with respect to the cost
claims. The appellant alleges that a PAC’s power to decide submissions on its
own jurisdiction, subject to a right of appeal to the Federal Court, was an
adequate alternative legal remedy.
[26]
Second,
the appellant submits that the Judge erred in law and made a palpable and
overriding error of fact when he found that the second panel’s award of costs
in the action was reasonable. The appellant argues that the costs incurred in
the action were the sole jurisdiction of the Court of Queen’s Bench of Alberta,
and that the Alberta Court’s decision made the costs issue res judicata
before the Judge. The appellant also argues that the second panel did not have
jurisdiction with respect to the costs of the action and that the award of such
costs cannot be reasonable, considering that the second panel did not hear nor
decide the action commenced before the Alberta Court.
[27]
Finally,
the appellant contends that the Judge erred in law and made a palpable and
overriding error of fact when he found that the second panel’s award of the costs
incurred in the first arbitration proceedings was reasonable. According to the
appellant, the second panel did not have jurisdiction to award any costs
incurred in the first arbitration proceedings because these proceedings were a
nullity and, more particularly, because it did not hear nor decide the first
arbitration proceedings.
RESPONDENT’S SUBMISSIONS
[28]
The
respondent submits that the second panel had jurisdiction to consider the cost
claims because it was necessary for him to incur these costs in order to assert
his claim for compensation. He contends that the second panel had to determine
the cost issues because the panel, according to the Act, had to “determine all
compensation matters referred to in a Notice of Arbitration”.
[29]
With
respect to the costs incurred in the first arbitration proceedings, the respondent
submits that he was entitled to these costs because the issues before the first
panel were essentially the same as those before the second panel and because
the second panel carefully parsed out and did not award him those costs that
related exclusively to the first arbitration proceedings. The respondent also
contends that O’Keefe J.’s decision and that of the second panel are consistent
with the objectives of the Act, which have been identified as ensuring that
landowners are not prejudiced in their ability to seek legal and other advice,
by virtue solely of their relatively weaker financial position.
[30]
Finally,
the respondent submits that the Judge was correct in finding that the second
panel had jurisdiction to award the costs of the action to him because these
costs were “reasonably incurred” by him in asserting his claim for compensation.
The respondent further argues that his solicitor-client costs were payable as
compensation for damages suffered as a result of the appellant’s operations and
that the second panel was required to consider, when determining a compensation
matter, the factors listed in subsection 97(1) of the Act, including “such
other factors” as the second panel “considers proper in the circumstances”
(para. 97(1)(i) of the Act). The respondent further submits that the costs
issue was not res judicata because although the order of the Alberta Court
was final and the parties were the same, the question decided in the action was
not the same as the one before the second panel, i.e. whether the respondent
was entitled to costs under the Act.
THE ISSUES
[31]
The issues
in this appeal, as formulated by the parties, are the following:
1.
Did the
Judge err in concluding that the second panel had jurisdiction to consider the
cost claims?
2.
Did the Judge
err in determining that the second panel’s determination of the cost claims was
reasonable?
LEGISLATION
[32]
The
relevant provisions of the Act read as follows:
84. The
provisions of this Part that provide negotiation and arbitration procedures
to determine compensation matters apply in respect of all damage caused by
the pipeline of a company or anything carried by the pipeline but do not
apply to
(a) claims
against a company arising out of activities of the company unless those
activities are directly related to
(i) the
acquisition of lands for a pipeline,
(ii) the
construction of the pipeline, or
(iii) the
inspection, maintenance or repair of the pipeline;
(b) claims
against a company for loss of life or injury to the person; or
(c) awards of
compensation or agreements respecting compensation made or entered into prior
to March 1, 1983.
[…]
91. (1) Where
the Minister is served with a notice of arbitration under this Part, the
Minister shall,
(a) if an
Arbitration Committee exists to deal with the matter referred to in the
notice, forthwith serve the notice on that Committee; or
(b) if no
Arbitration Committee exists to deal with the matter, forthwith appoint an
Arbitration Committee and serve the notice on that Committee.
(2) The Minister shall
not take any action under subsection (1) where the Minister is satisfied that
the matter referred to in a notice of arbitration served on the Minister is a
matter
(a) solely
related to the amount of compensation that has been previously awarded by an
Arbitration Committee and that, under the award, the amount is not subject to
a review at the time the notice is served; or
(b) to which
the arbitration procedures set out in this Part do not apply.
(3) The Minister may,
of his own motion and without having been served with a notice of arbitration
referred to in subsection (1), appoint an Arbitration Committee.
[…]
93. (1) Three
members of an Arbitration Committee constitute a quorum and may perform any
function of the Committee and, when performing such a function, have all the
powers and jurisdiction of the Committee.
[...]
97. (1) An
Arbitration Committee shall determine all compensation matters referred to in
a notice of arbitration served on it and in doing so shall consider the
following factors where applicable:
(a) the market
value of the lands taken by the company;
(b) where
annual or periodic payments are being made pursuant to an agreement or an
arbitration decision, changes in the market value referred to in paragraph
(a) since the agreement or decision or since the last review and adjustment
of those payments, as the case may be;
(c) the loss
of use to the owner of the lands taken by the company;
(d) the
adverse effect of the taking of the lands by the company on the remaining
lands of an owner;
(e) the nuisance,
inconvenience and noise that may reasonably be expected to be caused by or
arise from or in connection with the operations of the company;
(f) the damage
to lands in the area of the lands taken by the company that might reasonably
be expected to be caused by the operations of the company;
(g) loss of or
damage to livestock or other personal property or movable affected by the
operations of the company;
(h) any
special difficulties in relocation of an owner or his property; and
(i) such other
factors as the Committee considers proper in the circumstances.
(2) For the purpose of
paragraph (1)(a), "market value" is the amount that would have been
paid for the lands if, at the time of their taking, they had been sold in the
open market by a willing seller to a willing buyer.
[…]
99. (1) Where
the amount of compensation awarded to a person by an Arbitration Committee
exceeds eighty-five per cent of the amount of compensation offered by the
company, the company shall pay all legal, appraisal and other costs
determined by the Committee to have been reasonably incurred by that person
in asserting that person’s claim for compensation.
(2) Where the amount
of compensation awarded to a person by an Arbitration Committee does not
exceed eighty-five per cent of the amount of compensation offered by the
company, the legal, appraisal and other costs incurred by that person in
asserting his claim for compensation are in the discretion of the Committee,
and the Committee may direct that the whole or any part of those costs be paid
by the company or by any other party to the proceedings.
[…]
101. A
decision, order or direction of an Arbitration Committee may, on a question
of law or a question of jurisdiction, be appealed to the Federal Court within
thirty days after the day on which the decision, order or direction is made,
given or issued or within such further time as that Court or a judge thereof
under special circumstances may allow.
|
84. Les
procédures de négociation et d’arbitrage prévues par la présente partie pour
le règlement des questions d’indemnité s’appliquent en matière de dommages
causés par un pipeline ou ce qu’il transporte, mais ne s’appliquent pas :
a) aux
demandes relatives aux activités de la compagnie qui ne sont pas directement
rattachées à l’une ou l’autre des opérations suivantes :
i)
acquisition de terrains pour la construction d’un pipeline,
ii)
construction de celui-ci,
iii)
inspection, entretien ou réparation de celui-ci;
b) aux
demandes dirigées contre la compagnie pour dommages à la personne ou décès;
c) aux
décisions et aux accords d’indemnisation intervenus avant le 1er mars 1983.
…
91. (1) Dès
qu’un avis d’arbitrage lui est signifié, le ministre :
a) si un comité
d’arbitrage a déjà été constitué pour régler la question mentionnée dans
l’avis, signifie à celui-ci l’avis d’arbitrage;
b) dans le
cas contraire, nomme un comité d’arbitrage et signifie l’avis à celui-ci.
(2) Le paragraphe (1)
ne s’applique pas dans les cas où le ministre est convaincu que la question
mentionnée dans l’avis d’arbitrage qui lui a été signifié :
a) soit ne
porte que sur le montant de l’indemnité accordé antérieurement par un comité
d’arbitrage, lequel montant n’était pas, aux termes de la décision,
susceptible de révision à la date de signification de l’avis;
b) soit est
exclue de la procédure d’arbitrage.
(3) Le ministre peut
constituer un comité d’arbitrage de sa propre initiative, sans qu’aucun avis
d’arbitrage ne lui ait été signifié.
…
93. (1) Le
quorum du comité d’arbitrage est constitué de trois membres; ceux-ci peuvent
exercer des fonctions du comité et, à cette fin, ils sont investis de la
compétence et des pouvoirs du comité.
[...]
97. (1) Le
comité d’arbitrage doit régler les questions d’indemnité mentionnées dans
l’avis qui lui a été signifié, et tenir compte, le cas échéant, des éléments
suivants :
a) la valeur
marchande des terrains pris par la compagnie;
b) dans le
cas de versements périodiques prévus par contrat ou décision arbitrale, les
changements survenus dans la valeur marchande mentionnée à l’alinéa a) depuis
la date de ceux-ci ou depuis leurs derniers révision et rajustement, selon le
cas;
c) la perte,
pour leur propriétaire, de la jouissance des terrains pris par la compagnie;
d)
l’incidence nuisible que la prise des terrains peut avoir sur le reste des
terrains du propriétaire;
e) les
désagréments, la gêne et le bruit qui risquent de résulter directement ou
indirectement des activités de la compagnie;
f) les
dommages que les activités de la compagnie risquent de causer aux terrains de
la région;
g) les
dommages aux biens meubles ou personnels, notamment au bétail, résultant des
activités de la compagnie;
h) les
difficultés particulières que le déménagement du propriétaire ou de ses biens
pourrait entraîner;
i) les autres
éléments dont il estime devoir tenir compte en l’espèce.
(2) Pour l’application
de l’alinéa (1) a), la valeur marchande des terrains correspond à la somme
qui en aurait été obtenue si, au moment où ils ont été pris, ils avaient été
vendus sur le marché libre.
…
99. (1) Si
l’indemnité accordée par le comité d’arbitrage est supérieure à
quatre-vingt-cinq pour cent de celle qu’elle offre, la compagnie paie tous
les frais, notamment de procédure et d’évaluation, que le comité estime avoir
été entraînés par l’exercice du recours.
(2) Si, par contre,
l’indemnité accordée est égale ou inférieure à quatre-vingt-cinq pour cent de
celle offerte par la compagnie, l’octroi des frais visés au paragraphe (1)
est laissé à l’appréciation du comité; celui-ci peut ordonner que les frais
soient payés en tout ou en partie par la compagnie ou toute autre partie.
…
101. Appel
d’une décision ou d’une ordonnance du comité d’arbitrage peut être interjeté,
sur une question de droit ou de compétence, devant la Cour fédérale dans les
trente jours du prononcé ou dans le délai ultérieur que le tribunal ou un de
ses juges peut accorder dans des circonstances spéciales.
|
ANALYSIS
[33]
Before addressing the
questions raised by the appeal, a few words regarding the standard of review
are in order. Because of the conclusions which I have reached with respect to
the second panel’s determination of the cost claims, i.e. that the second panel
made errors of law which justify our intervention, the result of this appeal is
not affected by the choice of standard of review, be it that of correctness or
of reasonableness. On either standard, the second panel’s decision cannot stand
and, as a result, the Judge ought to have intervened.
1. Did the Judge err in concluding that the
second panel had jurisdiction to consider the cost claims?
[34]
The appellant submits
that the second panel had no jurisdiction to deal with the cost claims and,
hence, that it erred in law in so doing. In my view, the errors made by the
second panel are errors of law and not errors of jurisdiction.
[35]
It is not disputed
that the PAC has jurisdiction to award costs pursuant to section 99 of the Act.
It is also not disputed that the PAC has jurisdiction to determine, under the
Act, all compensation matters. More particularly, the PAC finds its
jurisdiction in regard thereto under sections 84, 97 and 98 of the Act.
[36]
The question which
arises in this appeal is, in my view, simply whether the cost claims made by
the respondent fall within the ambit of the above provisions. If so, then the
second panel was clearly entitled to make the award it made and, if not, the
second panel fell into error.
[37]
At paragraph 61 of
his Reasons, the Judge concluded that the second panel had made no error in
finding that it had jurisdiction to determine whether the respondent was
entitled to the costs claimed. In my view, the Judge made no error in so
deciding because, as I have just indicated, there clearly is jurisdiction under
the Act for the PAC to determine cost issues and compensation matters. The fact
that the PAC must consider those matters of compensation which are sought by a
claimant in his or her Notice of Arbitration does not obviously predetermine
the issues before it.
[38]
I will therefore not
deal any further with the issue of jurisdiction, but will move on to the
question of whether or not the second panel erred in making the costs award.
2. Did the Judge err in determining that the
second panel’s determination of the cost claims was reasonable?
(a) Did the second panel err
in awarding the costs of the action in the Court of Queen’s Bench of Alberta?
[39]
The second panel
concluded that the respondent was entitled to $16,222.57 for his net legal
fees, disbursements and GST. In its view, these costs were payable to the
respondent as compensation for damages suffered by reason of the appellant’s
operations and thus, it was “proper and reasonable” for it to consider them.
The second panel reached this conclusion for the following reasons.
[40]
First, by reference
to section 84 of the Act, the second panel stated that the arbitration
procedures to determine compensation applied with respect to “all damage caused
by the pipeline”.
[41]
Second, it pointed
out that the respondent’s legal fees had been claimed in his Notice of
Arbitration and that, as a result, it was obliged to determine all compensation
matters referred to therein.
[42]
Third, the second
panel expressed the view that these costs were expenses which had been made
necessary by the operations of the appellant and, thus, that they constituted
“damages”. It concluded its reasoning on this point by stating, at page 25 of
its Reasons (Appeal Book, Vol. I, p. 156):
[…] Clearly, the Alliance attempt to accept the
ROW [right of way] across Mr. Smith’s other land, and the resulting litigation,
were the operations of the company. Mr. Smith’s out-of-pocket expenses were
part of the result.
[43]
The second panel then
held, in the alternative, that the respondent’s solicitor-client costs for the
litigation in the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench were costs which had been reasonably
incurred by the respondent in asserting his claim for compensation. As a
result, these expenses were recoverable as costs pursuant to section 99 of the
Act.
[44]
The Judge dealt with
this issue at paragraphs 62 to 70 of his Reasons. In particular, he stated at
paragraph 69:
[69] I am of the
opinion that the PAC did not err in allowing the respondent the balance of his
expenses in defending the action as I believe subsection 99(1) of the Act
applies on the facts of this case. The respondent “reasonably incurred” this
expense to make sure that he could continue with his claim for compensation. If
he did not defend the action, the Court could have declared that he had
released his claims for compensation. As such, I find nothing unreasonable with
the PAC’s award of costs.
[45]
Thus, the Judge
confirmed the second panel’s alternative conclusion that the respondent’s
litigation costs were recoverable as costs under section 99 of the Act. With
respect to whether these costs could be recovered by the respondent as
compensation for damages, the Judge made no determination.
[46]
In my view, both the
Judge and the second panel were wrong in concluding as they did that the
respondent’s litigation costs were recoverable.
[47]
I begin with section
99 of the Act, which provides at subsection (1) that where a PAC awards
compensation to a person which exceeds eighty-five percent of the amount of
compensation offered by a company, the company shall, as a result, pay all
costs which the PAC finds “to have been reasonably incurred by that person in
asserting that person’s claim for compensation”.
[48]
As to subsection
99(2), it provides that, where the amount of compensation awarded to a person
by the PAC does not exceed eighty-five percent of the amount of compensation
offered by the company, the PAC may, in its discretion, order the company to
pay the whole or part of the costs incurred by that person.
[49]
In my view, the
simple answer is that the costs incurred by the respondent in the Alberta litigation are not costs incurred by him “in asserting his
claim for compensation”. Those words, found at subsection 99(1) of the Act, can
only mean the person’s claim for compensation made in the arbitration
proceedings before, in this case, the second panel. Thus, the legal costs
incurred in the Alberta proceedings do not fall within the ambit
of the subsection and, as a result, the second panel erred in law in determining
that the respondent’s litigation costs were allowable under subsection 99(1).
[50]
In their Law of
Bilingual Interpretation, 1st ed. (Toronto: LexisNexis, 2008),
Michel Bastarache et al express the view that: “When two versions of a
provision are not in conflict, courts are consistently prepared to refer to one
version in order to confirm an interpretation reached on the basis of the other.”
To the same effect is the
view of Pierre-André Côté found in The Interpretation of Legislation in
Canada, 3d ed., (Toronto: Carswell, 2000), where he says at page
324: “Often
the meaning in one language is confirmed by the other.”
[51]
I therefore turn to
the French wording of subsection 99(1), which reads as follows:
99. (1) Si
l’indemnité accordé par le comité d’arbitrage est supérieure à quatre-vingt-cinq
pour cent de celle qu’elle offre, la compagnie paie tous les frais, notamment
de procédure et d’évaluation, que le comité estime avoir été entraînés par
l’exercice du recours.
[Emphasis
added]
[52]
The words “par
l’exercice du recours”, which literally translated mean “by the exercise of the
recourse”, can only be a reference to the recourse brought before the second
panel by way of the respondent’s Amended Notice of Arbitration. Thus, the
French wording of the subsection supports entirely my view of the meaning of
subsection 99(1).
[53]
I am therefore of the
opinion that both the English and French wording of subsection 99(1) are to the
same effect. As Ruth Sullivan, in Sullivan on the Construction of Statutes,
5th ed., (Toronto: LexisNexis, 2008), says at page 102:
… Although the two
versions of bilingual legislation may not be identical in every respect, for
practical purposes they usually say much the same thing. In these
circumstances, the shared meaning is usually the ordinary meaning of the words
as established in both languages. Thus, the effect of relying on both versions
is to lend further weight to the presumption in favour of ordinary meaning.
[54]
I now turn to the
second panel’s main finding that the respondent’s litigation costs were
damages. In my view, the panel also erred in law in making this finding.
[55]
Section 84 of the Act
sets out the framework applicable to the determination of compensation matters
by the PAC. It provides that compensation may be awarded in respect of damages
caused by a pipeline, but excludes claims against a pipeline company “arising
out of the activities of the company unless those activities are directly
related to: (i) the acquisition of lands for a pipeline, (ii) the construction
of the pipeline, or (iii) the inspection, maintenance or repair of the
pipeline”. Thus, damages that are caused by the activities of the company are
only compensable if they are directly related to those matters enumerated at
subparagraphs 84(1)(a)(i), (ii) and (iii).
[56]
In addition,
subsection 97(1) of the Act provides that the PAC must determine “all
compensation matters” which are referred to in a Notice of Arbitration and, in
so doing, the PAC must consider the factors set out at paragraphs 97(1)(a)
to (i). These factors include, for example, damage to lands and damage
to livestock or other personal property affected by the operations of the
company. However, the factors which are set out at subsection 97(1) clearly
have no relevance to the costs which the respondent incurred in the Alberta legal proceedings.
[57]
Therefore, it is to
section 84 that one must turn to in order to determine the boundaries of the
matters which are compensable, and in my respectful view, the costs incurred by
the respondent defending the appellant’s action in the Alberta Court cannot
possibly be characterized as a claim against the appellant arising out of its
activities directly related to either the acquisition of lands for the
pipeline, the construction of the pipeline, or the inspection, maintenance or
repair thereof.
(b) Did the second panel err in its
determination regarding the costs of the first arbitration proceedings?
[58]
As I indicated
earlier, the second panel allowed the respondent’s costs of the first hearing,
except for the costs “of actual appearances before the Previous PAC and
correspondence with the Previous PAC” (Appeal Book, Vol. I, p. 159). The second
panel came to its conclusion on the basis of its finding that the only portion
of the arbitration proceedings which had been nullified was “the involvement of
the Previous PAC” (Appeal Book, Vol. I, p. 159).
[59]
The Judge dealt
briefly with this finding at paragraphs 71 and 72 of his Reasons. After stating
that the first panel had lost quorum, he indicated that “the arbitration
process was a nullity”. He then stated that, in his view, the award made by the
second panel reflected “the fact that the first proceedings resulted in a
nullity”. He thus confirmed the second panel’s finding. At paragraph 72 of his
Reasons, he sets out his reasoning:
[72] As noted by the applicant, the power of
the PAC to award costs under section 99 is premised upon the issuance of an
award. The previous PAC lost quorum and did not render an award with respect
to the first hearing. As a result, the arbitration process was a nullity. In
my view, the award of the PAC reflects the fact that the first proceeding
resulted in a nullity, in that costs directly related to attendance at the
first hearing and subsequent correspondence with respect to the first hearing
after its loss of forum [sic] were explicitly excluded from the award. I
do not agree with the appellant’s argument on this issue.
In
my view, the Judge erred in law in so concluding.
[60]
In “The Law and
Practice of Commercial Arbitration”, R.H. McLaren and E.E. Palmer (Toronto;
1982), the learned authors state on page 12 that “statutory arbitration” is a
type of arbitration established by legislation to deal with certain types of
disputes: for example, a conflict between the state and individuals where
property is expropriated for government purposes. As opposed to other types of
arbitration, such as consensual arbitration, the authors explain on pages 14-15
that “...statutory arbitrations may only deal with the matters within the scope
and limitations of the enabling statute.” The authors further state on page 92
that, “[o]bviously,
when the arbitration is pursuant to a specific statute, costs will be awarded
according to the directions set out in the governing statute.”
[61]
Since arbitration
under the Act is clearly statutory arbitration, it is therefore necessary to
refer to the Act in order to determine whether the second panel could award the
costs of the first arbitration proceedings. Although the Act does not deal
expressly with the consequence of a truncated PAC, an interpretation which I
believe is consistent with the language of the Act is that the power of a PAC
to award costs is premised on the issuance of an award, and that these costs
may only relate to the proceedings which were before the same members who made
the award.
[62]
I come to this
conclusion, in part, by reference to section 93 of the Act, which provides that
three members of an arbitration committee constitute a quorum. In addition, I
rely on section 91 of the Act, which stipulates that when the Minister is
served with a Notice of Arbitration, the Minister shall appoint an arbitration
committee and serve the notice on that committee.
[63]
In this case, when
the first panel lost its quorum and did not render a decision, the Minister had
no choice but to appoint a second panel, and the arbitration process, in
effect, had to recommence with the filing of an Amended Notice of Arbitration.
It is clear from the Minister’s letter dated August 11, 2005 (see para. 11 of
these Reasons) that in appointing a second panel, the Minister was conscious of
the hardship which might result to the parties. This notwithstanding, the Minister
indicated that “after careful consideration”, it had been determined that the
proper course of action in the circumstances was to appoint a second panel.
[64]
I should point out as
well that the first arbitration proceedings ended through no fault of either
party, and that they did not benefit either party in that the evidence adduced
before the first panel was not placed before the second panel and the evidence
adduced before the second panel was “called afresh” at the hearing.
[65]
Finally, I refer to
subsection 99(1) of the Act, and to the interpretation of this subsection which
I have given earlier (see paras 47 to 51 of these Reasons). As I stated above,
the costs that may be awarded by the PAC under this subsection are the costs
incurred by the respondent in asserting his claim for compensation made in the
arbitration proceedings before, in this case, the second panel. It follows that
the costs incurred in the first arbitration proceedings, like the costs
incurred in the Alberta proceedings, do not fall within the
ambit of the subsection.
[66]
The reasons for which
the power of a panel to order costs does not extend to those proceedings over
which it did not preside are not insignificant. Indeed, since the second panel
did not hear or decide the first arbitration proceedings, it is not in a
position to determine what award would have been made by the first panel. For
instance, one cannot speculate as to whether the first panel would have awarded
compensation to the respondent, and if the amount of compensation, if any,
would have exceeded eighty-five percent of the amount of compensation offered
by the appellant. Equally, since the second panel did not preside over the
first arbitration, it cannot assess the reasonableness of the costs claimed in
light of all the circumstances of the first arbitration proceedings, nor can it
determine what, if any, exercise of discretion the first panel would have
implemented in considering the costs of the first hearing.
[67]
Thus, based on an
interpretation of the relevant provisions of the Act, I come to the conclusion
that the second panel was in error in excluding only those costs pertaining to
the hearing and the correspondence which followed it. The arbitration
proceedings recommenced upon the serving of the Amended Notice of Arbitration
in November 2005 and, as a consequence, all costs incurred prior thereto cannot
be recovered.
DISPOSITION
[68]
I would therefore
allow the appeal with costs, set aside the judgment of the Federal Court and,
rendering the judgment which ought to have been rendered, I would allow the
appellant’s appeal from the PAC’s decision of September 18, 2006, and I would
quash the awards of the second panel in regard to the cost claims.
“M. Nadon”
“I agree.
Marc
Noël J.A.”
PELLETIER J.A. (CONCURRING)
[69]
I come to the same
conclusion as my colleague as to the proper disposition of this appeal. That
said, I am of the view that Alliance's conduct in this matter has not been
honourable and that it has caused Mr. Smith to incur unnecessary expenses. The
fact that those expenses are not recoverable under the statutory scheme in
issue in the appeal ought not to be taken as a vindication of Alliance's course of conduct.
[70]
The expenses that are
the subject of this appeal are the direct result of Alliance's disavowal of the position it took before the first
Arbitration Committee. In its response to the first Notice of Arbitration, Alliance raised the issue of the effect of the releases that it had
in hand (A.B., p. 175). At the hearing itself, Alliance
abandoned that position and the hearing proceeded on the merits of the claim
(A.B., p. 207-208). In spite of the fact that it had abandoned its reliance on
the releases before the Arbitration Committee, Alliance then brought an
application before the Court of Queen's Bench seeking, inter alia, a
declaration that the releases in question were a complete answer to Mr. Smith's
claim for compensation (A.B., p. 201-202) and an order directing the
Arbitration Committee not to rule on Mr. Smith's claim until the issue of the releases
was determined (A.B., p. 202). At the same time, Alliance
wrote to the Arbitration Committee, asking it to refrain from deciding Mr.
Smith's claim until the Court proceedings were completed (A.B., p. 205).
[71]
Notwithstanding the
fact that the injunction application was dismissed in October 2003 (A.B., p.
748), the Arbitration Committee did not render an award with respect to Mr.
Smith's claim and eventually, in January 2005, one of its members was appointed
to the Court of Queen's Bench for Alberta (A.B., p. 879). The two remaining
members of the Arbitration Committee were prepared to proceed to dispose of the
case, but Alliance insisted that a new Arbitration
Committee be appointed (A.B., p. 881-891).
[72]
Alliance was perfectly entitled to plead the effect
of the releases at the hearings before the first Arbitration Committee. It was
under no obligation to abandon that position. However, having abandoned that
argument before the first Arbitration Committee, it was unbecoming of Alliance to effectively stonewall Mr. Smith by reneging on its
earlier position and commencing the proceedings which it did in the Court of
Queen's Bench. In my view, Mr. Smith and the public are entitled to expect a
higher standard of conduct from those who purport to act for the convenience of
the public.
“J.D. Denis Pelletier”