Date: 20120528
Docket: T-1543-11
Citation: 2012 FC 648
Ottawa, Ontario, May
28, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam
Justice Snider
BETWEEN:
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CHRISTOPHER
BRAZEAU
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Plaintiff
(Defendant
to Counterclaim)
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and
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THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Defendant
(Plaintiff
by Counterclaim)
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REASONS
FOR ORDER AND ORDER
I. Introduction
[1]
The Plaintiff, Christopher Brazeau, is an inmate in a
federal penitentiary in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. On September 15, 2011, he
filed a Statement of Claim seeking damages in relation to alleged sewage
flooding (the Flooding Incidents) and the shut off of water to his cell (the
Water Incident) while he was an inmate at Kent Institution in Agassiz, British
Columbia.
[2]
The Defendant, the Attorney General of Canada, has brought
this motion in writing to strike the Statement of Claim and the Defence to
Counterclaim of the Plaintiff. In the event that the Defendant is not
successful in striking the claims, the Defendant seeks an Order under Rule 8(2)
of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 [Rules] extending the
time for serving a list of documents.
II. Issues
[3]
The following issues arise on this motion:
1.
Should the Statement of Claim be struck, in whole or in part,
as it fails to disclose a reasonable cause of action?
2.
Should paragraphs 32 and 35 of the Defence to Counterclaim
be struck on the basis that they fail to disclose a reasonable defence?
[4]
For the reasons that follow, certain portions of the
Statement of Claim and Defence will be struck. However, I have determined that
the action will not be struck in its entirety.
III. The Pleadings
[5]
In his Statement of Claim, the Plaintiff claims damages for:
(a)
intentional infliction of mental suffering;
(b)
negligent infliction of mental suffering;
(c)
misfeasance in public office;
(d)
negligence;
(e)
breach of ss. 12, 8 and 7 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, being
Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (UK), 1982, c 11 [Charter];
and
(f)
harassment.
[6]
The total amount of damages claimed is unspecified but, as
set out in the Plaintiff’s Reply and Statement of Defence to Counterclaim at
paragraph 50, exceeds $50,000.
[7]
By Statement of Defence and Counterclaim filed October 24,
2011, the Defendant denied the Plaintiff’s allegations and asserted that all of
the Flooding Incidents were caused by the Plaintiff and other inmates, who
flushed towels, bed sheets, t-shirts, and other materials down the toilets. In
addition, the Defendant counterclaimed for damages in excess of $10,212.87 in
relation to cleaning, equipment, and overtime.
[8]
In his Reply, filed on February 21, 2012, the Plaintiff
provided further details and denied that he had caused or contributed to the
Flooding Incidents. In addition, the Plaintiff pleaded that the Counterclaim
should be struck because the Defendant has a statutory remedy, specifically, a
disciplinary procedure.
IV. Applicable Rules and Principles
[9]
Before embarking on an analysis of the pleadings, it is
helpful to outline the overarching principles applicable to a motion to strike.
[10]
Rule 221 of the Rules provides for striking
pleadings in an action:
221. (1) On motion, the Court may, at any time,
order that a pleading, or anything contained therein, be struck out, with or
without leave to amend, on the ground that it
(a) discloses no reasonable cause of action
or defence, as the case may be,
(b) is immaterial or redundant,
(c) is scandalous, frivolous or vexatious,
(d) may prejudice or delay the fair trial of
the action,
(e) constitutes a departure from a previous
pleading, or
(f) is otherwise an abuse of the process of
the Court,
and may order the action be dismissed or judgment entered
accordingly.
(2) No evidence shall be heard on a motion for an
order under paragraph (1)(a).
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221. (1) À tout moment, la Cour peut, sur requête, ordonner
la radiation de tout ou partie d’un acte de procédure, avec ou sans
autorisation de le modifier, au motif, selon le cas :
a) qu’il ne révèle aucune cause d’action ou de défense
valable;
b) qu’il n’est pas pertinent ou qu’il est redondant;
c) qu’il est scandaleux, frivole ou vexatoire;
d) qu’il risque de nuire à l’instruction équitable de
l’action ou de la retarder;
e) qu’il diverge d’un acte de procédure antérieur;
f) qu’il constitue autrement un abus de procédure.
Elle peut aussi ordonner que l’action soit rejetée ou
qu’un jugement soit enregistré en conséquence.
(2) Aucune preuve n’est admissible dans le cadre d’une
requête invoquant le motif visé à l’alinéa (1)a).
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[11]
Rules 174 and 181 are also relevant on this motion. Briefly
stated, Rule 174 requires that a pleading “shall contain a concise statement of
the material facts on which the party relies, but shall not include evidence”.
Rule 181 provides further detail on the required elements of pleadings:
181. (1) A pleading shall contain particulars of
every allegation contained therein, including
(a) particulars of any alleged
misrepresentation, fraud, breach of trust, wilful default or undue influence;
and
(b) particulars of any alleged state of mind
of a person, including any alleged mental disorder or disability, malice or
fraudulent intention.
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181. (1) L’acte de procédure contient des précisions sur
chaque allégation, notamment :
a) des précisions sur les fausses déclarations, fraudes,
abus de confiance, manquements délibérés ou influences indues reprochés;
b) des précisions sur toute allégation portant sur l’état
mental d’une personne, tel un déséquilibre mental, une incapacité mentale ou
une
intention malicieuse ou frauduleuse.
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[12]
The Supreme Court of Canada recently explained the
rationale behind the power to strike out claims in R v Imperial Tobacco
Canada Ltd, 2011 SCC 42 at para 19, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 45 [Imperial]:
The power to strike out claims
that have no reasonable prospect of success is a valuable housekeeping measure
essential to effective and fair litigation. It unclutters the proceedings,
weeding out the hopeless claims and ensuring that those that have some chance
of success go on to trial.
[13]
In that case, the Court also restated the test for striking
out claims at paragraph 17:
A claim will only be struck if it
is plain and obvious, assuming the facts pleaded to be true, that the pleading
discloses no reasonable cause of action: Odhavji Estate v. Woodhouse, 2003 SCC
69, [2003] 3
S.C.R. 263, at para. 15; Hunt v. Carey Canada Inc., [1990] 2
S.C.R. 959, at p. 980. Another way of putting the test is that the
claim has no reasonable prospect of success. Where a reasonable prospect of
success exists, the matter should be allowed to proceed to trial: see, generally,
Syl Apps Secure Treatment Centre v. B.D., 2007 SCC
38, [2007] 3
S.C.R. 83; Odhavji Estate; Hunt; Attorney General of
Canada v. Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, [1980] 2
S.C.R. 735.
[14]
A court should read an impugned statement of claim as
generously as possible, and in a manner that accommodates any inadequacies in
the allegations that are merely the result of drafting deficiencies (Operation
Dismantle v The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 441 at para 14, [1985] SCJ No 22).
[15]
The jurisprudence also establishes that a statement of
claim does not disclose a cause of action where it contains bare assertions,
but no facts on which to base those assertions (Vojic v Canada (MNR),
[1987] 2 CTC 203, [1987] FCJ No 811 (CA)). Moreover, a conclusion of law
pleaded without the requisite factual underpinning to support the legal
conclusions asserted is defective, and may be struck out as an abuse of Court (Sauve
v Canada, 2011 FC 1074 at para 21, [2011] FCJ No 1321).
V. Issue
#1: Should the Statement of Claim be struck as it
fails to disclose a reasonable cause of action?
A. Parties’
submissions
[16]
The Defendant points to a number of alleged deficiencies in
the Statement of Claim. First, the Defendant submits that it violates Rules 174
and 181, as it discloses neither the material facts on which the Plaintiff
relies, nor the particulars of his allegations, but is instead “premised on
bare assertions of legal conclusions”. Second, the Defendant submits that the
Statement of Claim does not disclose a cause of action capable of succeeding
against the Crown, as it fails to name a Crown servant for each of the actions
or omissions alleged to give rise to a cause of action, as required under ss. 3
and 10 of the Crown Liability and Proceedings Act, RSC 1985, c C-50 [CLPA].
And third, the Defendant argues that the Plaintiff’s claims for negligence,
intentional infliction of mental suffering, misfeasance in public office,
harassment, and damages pursuant to s. 24(1) of the Charter should all
be struck for failing to disclose a reasonable cause of action.
[17]
In response, the main thrust of the Plaintiff’s submissions
is that he has pleaded the material facts in support of the allegations made in
the Statement of Claim and that he has represented himself to the best of his
ability, given that he has no legal training.
[18]
I will consider each of the alleged failings in the
pleadings.
B. Crown
liability/misfeasance in public office
[19]
The Defendant argues that, pursuant to ss. 3 and 10 of the CLPA,
a plaintiff seeking to establish the liability of the Crown in tort must
demonstrate that the person who committed the tort was a Crown servant, acting
within the course of his or her duties, and that there would be a cause of
action against the Crown servant personally. Moreover, the Defendant argues that
the Plaintiff has not pleaded material facts in support of the claim of
misfeasance in public office.
[20]
Section 3 of the CLPA establishes the liability of
the Crown; paragraph (b) is relevant in this case, as each cause of action took
place outside of Quebec:
3. The Crown is liable for the damages for which, if
it were a person, it would be liable
…
(b) in
any other province, in respect of
(i) a
tort committed by a servant of the Crown, or
(ii) a
breach of duty attaching to the ownership, occupation, possession or control
of property.
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3. En matière de responsabilité, l’État est assimilé à une
personne pour :
…
b) dans les autres provinces :
(i)
les délits civils commis par ses préposés,
(ii)
les manquements aux obligations liées à la propriété, à l’occupation, à la
possession ou à la garde de biens.
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[21]
Section 10 of the CLPA applies where the Crown’s
liability is vicarious:
10. No proceedings lie against the Crown by virtue of
subparagraph 3(a)(i) or (b)(i) in respect of any act or
omission of a servant of the Crown unless the act or omission would, apart
from the provisions of this Act, have given rise to a cause of action for
liability against that servant or the servant’s personal representative or
succession.
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10. L’État ne peut être poursuivi, sur le fondement des
sous-alinéas 3a)(i) ou b)(i), pour les actes ou omissions de
ses préposés que lorsqu’il y a lieu en l’occurrence, compte non tenu de la
présente loi, à une action en responsabilité contre leur auteur, ses
représentants personnels ou sa succession.
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[22]
The decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in Merchant
Law Group v Canada (Revenue Agency), 2010 FCA 184 at para 38, 321 DLR (4th)
301 [Merchant], although not cited by the parties, is helpful as it
describes the degree of specificity required by Rule 174 and s. 10 of the CLPA
in the context of a claim for misfeasance in public office:
I do agree that the individuals
involved should be identified. The plaintiff is obligated under Rule 174 to
plead material facts and the identity of the individual who are alleged to have
engaged in misfeasance is a material fact which must be pleaded. But how
particular does the identification have to be? In many cases, it may be
impossible for a plaintiff to identify by name the particular individual who was
responsible. However, in cases such as this, a plaintiff should be able to
identify a particular group of individuals who were dealing with the matter,
one or more of whom were allegedly responsible. This might involve identifying
job positions, an organizational branch, an office, or a building in which
those dealing with the matter worked. Often such information is readily
available from the oral and written communications and dealings among the
parties that gave rise to the claim. In cases such as this, identification
at least at this level of particularity, will usually be sufficient. The
purposes of pleadings will be fulfilled: the issues in the action will be
defined with reasonable precision, the respondents will have enough information
to investigate the matter and the respondents will be able to plead adequately
in response within the time limits set out in the Rules.
[Emphasis added]
[23]
In this case, the Statement of Claim and Reply allege the
following facts:
•
Correctional Manager Don Labossiere instructed Corrections
employees to relocate the Plaintiff to a different cell; the Plaintiff was
ordered to carry his possessions through spilled sewage (Statement of Claim at
para 5);
•
“respondent corrections officers” turned off the
Plaintiff’s tap water and toilet water (Statement of Claim at para 11);
•
“[o]n or about August 27, 2011 during the 11:00 pm range
walk corrections officer refused the Applicant of his request to drink some
water and flush his toilet” (Statement of Claim at para 12);
•
“Correctional Manager Verville denied the [Plaintiff’s] resolution
to the security incident of allowing him a drink of water and to flush his
toilet” (Statement of Claim at para 14);
•
“[o]n August 27, 2011 … the corrections officer, upon
arriving for the overnight shift, informed the prisoner in J 010 the plumber
and hazmat personnel were not being summoned as the Correctional Manager felt
prompt cleanup of the sewage was not necessary” (Statement of Claim at para 17);
•
the Plaintiff “informed respondent Mark Kemball bio hazard
clean up was not being completed …” (Statement of Claim at para 19);
•
“[t]he Manager delegated to daily rounds responded … then
ordering [the Plaintiff’s] relocation to another Unit and cell. This order
resulted in [the Plaintiff] having to transport all [his] belongings through
raw sewage again, and delayed [his] access to a shower” (Statement of Claim at
para 19);
•
“intentional, calculated, negligent decisions of the Warden
and Correctional Managers, in directing, guiding and managing all Correctional
Staff and contractors at their discretion, in response to the incidents …”
(Reply at para 13);
•
page 6 of the Reply refers to “Warden and Correctional
Manager Labossiere”; and
•
paragraph 17 of the Reply refers to the “calculated
decisions of Prison Administrator Mark Kemball, Warden of Kent Institution”.
[24]
While some paragraphs name individuals, it is unclear who
is responsible for certain decisions. For example, paragraph 5 of the Statement
of Claim names Correctional Manager Don Labossiere, but it is not clear who
ordered the Plaintiff to carry his possessions through the sewage. However, it
can be inferred that it was a Corrections employee working at Kent Institution.
Similarly, at paragraph 17 of the Statement of Claim, it is not clear who made
the “intentional decision” not to call the plumber.
[25]
In making the specific allegation that the Defendant was
negligent, the Plaintiff simply refers to the “Kent correctional officers” and
the “prison administrators of the Kent Institution” (Statement of Claim at
paras 20-23). Similarly, paragraph 24 of the Statement of Claim alleges that
“the correctional staff committed the tort of intentional infliction of mental
suffering”, while paragraph 25 claims that “the correctional staff” committed
the tort of misfeasance in public office. In paragraph 26, the Plaintiff again
simply accuses “the correction staff” of harassing him or breaching the duty of
care. Finally, with respect to the alleged Charter violations, the
Plaintiff simply refers to the conduct of the “Defendants” (Statement of Claim
at para 27).
[26]
Considering the teachings of the Court of Appeal in Merchant,
above, in my view, the Statement of Claim provides sufficient detail to allow
the Defendant to respond to the pleadings. The pleadings are sufficient, at
this early stage, to allow the claim of misfeasance in public office to
proceed. Moreover, I am not persuaded that ss. 3 and 10 of the CLPA
operate as a bar to these portions of the claim.
C. Negligence
[27]
A plaintiff must prove three things to succeed in an action
for negligence: (i) that the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty of care; (ii)
that the defendant breached that duty of care; and (iii) that damages resulted
from that breach (Odhavji Estate v Woodhouse, 2003 SCC 69 at para 44,
[2003] 3 S.C.R. 263 [Odhavji]). The Defendant asserts that the Plaintiff
has failed to plead sufficient material facts in respect of any of the three
branches.
[28]
The Supreme Court provided the following description of the
duty of care in Odhavji, above at paras 45-46:
45 It
is a well-established principle that a defendant is not liable in negligence
unless the law exacts an obligation in the circumstances to take reasonable
care. As Lord Esher concluded in Le Lievre v. Gould, [1893] 1 Q.B. 491
(C.A.), at p. 497, “[a] man is entitled to be as negligent as he pleases
towards the whole world if he owes no duty to them.” Duty may therefore be
defined as an obligation, recognised by law, to take reasonable care to avoid
conduct that entails an unreasonable risk of harm to others.
46 It
is now well established in Canada that the existence of such a duty is to be
determined in accordance with the two-step analysis first enunciated by the
House of Lords in Anns v. Merton London Borough Council, [1978] A.C.
728, at pp. 751-52:
First one has to ask whether, as
between the alleged wrongdoer and the person who has suffered damage there is a
sufficient relationship of proximity or neighbourhood such that, in the
reasonable contemplation of the former, carelessness on his part may be likely
to cause damage to the latter – in which case a prima facie duty of care
arises. Secondly, if the first question is answered affirmatively, it is
necessary to consider whether there are any considerations which ought to
negative, or to reduce or limit the scope of the duty or the class of person to
whom it is owed or the damages to which a breach of it may give rise.
...
[29]
The question, then, with respect to duty, is whether the
pleadings disclose material facts which could establish that, as between the
Plaintiff and the Defendant, there is a sufficient relationship of proximity
such that, in the reasonable contemplation of the former, carelessness on the
Defendant’s part may be likely to cause damage to the Plaintiff.
[30]
While the Defendant argues that paragraphs 20 to 23 of the
Statement of Claim merely plead that the staff and administrators of Kent
Institution responsible for the management and care of the institution owed him
a duty of care without specifying material facts, the pleadings arguably do
establish a duty of care. In particular, they disclose the fact that the
Plaintiff is an inmate and that the Defendant’s employees are prison
administrators and are alleged to be “responsible for the management and care
of Mr. Brazeau and all other inmates” (Statement of Claim at para 22). In my
view, this fact establishes a relationship of sufficient proximity that
carelessness on the Defendant’s part would foreseeably cause harm to the
Plaintiff. Further, the Plaintiff’s Reply alleges that he “is a uniquely
vulnerable dependant prisoner entrusted to the care of the defendant” (Reply at
para 24).
[31]
The Defendant’s assertion that the Statement of Claim fails
to specify how or whether the allegations contained in paragraphs 21 and 23
constitute breaches of the standard of care owed to the Plaintiff is also
without merit. Paragraphs 21 and 23 each allege that the prison administrators
and staff of Kent Institution were negligent in several respects in relation to
both the Flooding Incident and the Water Incident. While the Plaintiff uses the
word “negligent” rather than specifying that the staff and administrators
breached the standard of care, that is the clear implication of both
paragraphs.
[32]
Similarly, although the Defendant argues that the Plaintiff
fails to plead that any damages were caused by the alleged breach, paragraph 29
of the Statement of Claim states that,
The conduct of the Defendant
caused extreme harm to the Plaintiff including but not limited to, physical,
psychological and emotional trauma …
[33]
In addition, the Plaintiff elaborates at paragraph 20 of
his Reply that,
The plaintiff has repeatedly
described the embarrassment, hate, frustration and resentment, the cognitive
distortions, auditory hallucinations, the difficulties in concentrating, the
loss of emotional control and the associated depression, fear, personal
disarray and distress, his difficulties socializing/reintegrating into the
general population, the negative changes to his personality and personal
appearance, the fear he is losing his mind and going insane, the constant
feelings of subtle anger and distrust, the increased sensitivity and startle
response, he feels/felt both during the incidents and subsequent to them. The
effects are long lasting ….
[34]
Further, at paragraph 26 of his Reply, the Plaintiff
alleges that,
To further remove any doubt
surrounding the plaintiffs loss. injury and damage, the plaintiff states his
psychiatric diagnosis’s, symptoms and conditions have been severely exacerbated
accumulating in separate incapacitating, and potentially permanent injuries, as
a direct result of the defendants conduct both during the alleged conduct and
after. The plaintiff has been and is currently seeking expert psychiatric and
psychological opinions and definitions as to the material damages and durations
of such….
[35]
In my view, the pleadings disclose a cause of action in
negligence, despite deficiencies in their drafting.
D. Intentional
infliction of mental suffering
[36]
The Plaintiff claims damages for intentional infliction of
mental suffering. To succeed in a claim for intentional infliction of mental
suffering, a plaintiff must prove the following: (i) flagrant or outrageous
conduct; (ii) calculated to produce harm; and (iii) resulting in a visible and
provable illness (Prinzo v Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care (2002), 215 DLR (4th) 31 at para 48, 60
OR (3d) 474 (Ont CA)).
[37]
Paragraph 24 of the Statement of Claim makes the following
allegation:
By virtue of the matters referred
to in paragraph 17, the correctional staff committed the tort of intentional
infliction of mental suffering by deliberately preventing / refusing to employ
lawful, appropriate, warranted response to the Plaintiffs exposure to raw
sewage.
[38]
The Defendant submits that the Plaintiff has failed to
plead any material facts that would establish a flagrant or outrageous act
committed by officials of Kent Institution, and, in particular, that the
Plaintiff’s allegation at paragraph 17 that officials twice chose not to
arrange for prompt clean up of sewage floods does not rise to the level of
being flagrant, outrageous or extreme (Cooper v Hobart, 2001 SCC 79,
[2001] 3 S.C.R. 537).
[39]
Even if I assume, without deciding, that the actions of the
officials were “flagrant or outrageous”, the Plaintiff fails to meet the second
requirement for a claim of intentional infliction of mental suffering.
Specifically, the pleadings do not contain material facts that show that the
“flagrant or
outrageous conduct” was “calculated to produce harm”. At paragraph 16 of his
Reply, the Plaintiff alleges that
[T]he defendant ought reasonably
have known that any, let alone such repeated exposures, and durations, would
likely result in, at minimum, extreme psychological harm, given the defendants
personal knowledge of the plaintiffs’ mental health issues and vulnerable
state.
[40]
Similar statements can be found at paragraphs 12, 13(e) and
20. At best, these statements may create an inference that the Defendant’s
conduct was reckless. However, I do not believe that they demonstrate that the
Defendant’s conduct was “calculated to produce harm”.
[41]
In sum, the Statement of Claim and Reply do not plead
sufficient material facts to support the Plaintiff’s allegation of intentional
infliction of mental suffering.
E. Misfeasance
in public office
[42]
The Plaintiff claims damages with respect to “misfeasance
in public office”. The Supreme Court summarized the elements of the tort of
misfeasance in public office in Odhavji, above at paragraph 32, as
follows:
[T]he tort of misfeasance in a
public office is an intentional tort whose distinguishing elements are twofold:
(i) deliberate unlawful conduct in the exercise of public functions; and (ii)
awareness that the conduct is unlawful and likely to injure the plaintiff.
Alongside deliberate unlawful conduct and the requisite knowledge, a plaintiff
must also prove the other requirements common to all torts. More specifically,
the plaintiff must prove that the tortious conduct was the legal cause of his
or her injuries, and that the injuries suffered are compensable in tort law.
[43]
The Defendant submits that the Plaintiff has failed to
plead material facts in support of any of these elements, or, more broadly, in
support of his claim that his reasonable expectation of freedom from
intentional injury was threatened.
[44]
Paragraph 25 of the Statement of Claim contains the
following allegation with respect to the tort of misfeasance in public office:
By virtue of the matters referred
to in paragraph 17 and 14, 11 and 12 the correctional staff committed the tort
of misfeasance in public office.
[45]
In brief, paragraphs 11, 12, 14 and 17 of the Statement of
Claim allege that water to the Plaintiff’s tap and toilet were turned off and
that a corrections officer and Correctional Manager Verville refused to give
him either drinking water or water to flush his toilet; and that the
Correctional Manager twice refused to promptly arrange for the clean up of
sewage floods.
[46]
Also relevant to this tort, the Statement of Claim alleges
that:
•
correctional officers and prison administrators are federal
government employees (“employees of Canada”) (Statement of Claim at paras 20,
22);
•
correctional officers “are required to carry out their
duties in a professional, effective manner with due regard to the welfare of
[the Plaintiff] and other inmates” (Statement of Claim at para 20);
•
prison administrators are “responsible for the management
and care of [the Plaintiff] and all other inmates” (Statement of Claim at para
22); and
•
prison administrators and correctional staff violated ss.
69 and 70 of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act, SC 1992, c 20
[CCRA] and s. 83 of the Corrections and Conditional Release
Regulations, SOR/92-620 [CCRR] (Statement of Claim at paras 23, 26).
[47]
Further, the Plaintiff’s Reply alleges that:
•
“the defendant is well aware their conduct was in direct
contravention of a wide array of nearly all Post Exposure Protocals,
guidelines, procedures, related policies and their mandates, which the
defendant is obligated to be knowledgeable of as per the CCRR 3 (a-b)” (Reply
at para 10); and
•
“the defendant is aware of his mandate and Direction under
the Commissioner of Corrections Service of Canada to do these very things [regarding
decontamination]. The plaintiff pleads and relies on the Commissioners Directives
(“CD’s”), [the CCRA], [the CCRR] and amendments thereto. Which
the defendant is mandated to be aware of as per CCRR 3 (a-b)” (Reply at para
12).
[48]
While some of these facts are alleged in respect of other
torts, that is arguably a drafting deficiency and not a basis for striking the
Statement of Claim. In my view, these allegations satisfy the requirements of
deliberate unlawful conduct in the exercise of public functions.
[49]
As noted above, paragraph 16 of the Reply contains the
allegation that,
[T]he defendant ought reasonably
have known that any, let alone such repeated exposures, and durations, would
likely result in, at minimum, extreme psychological harm, given the defendants
personal knowledge of the plaintiffs’ mental health issues and vulnerable
state.
[50]
In my opinion, this allegation, coupled with those
summarized in the preceding paragraph, satisfies the requirement of awareness
that the conduct is unlawful and likely to injure the plaintiff.
[51]
In sum, I do not believe that there is a basis for striking
the Plaintiff’s claim of misfeasance in public office.
F. Harassment
[52]
The Plaintiff claims damages for “harassment”. Paragraph 26
of the Statement of Claim alleges that,
[T]he correctional staff harassed
and/or breached the duty of care they owed to the Plaintiff by:
(a) prolonging circumstances
which were degrading and failed to maintain dignity.
(b) subjecting the Plaintiff to
cruel inhumane and degrading treatments contrary to section 69 of the CCRA
(c) failing to take all
reasonable steps to ensure that the environment of the institution and the
living conditions of the inmates were safe, healthful and free of practices
that undermine a person’s sense of personal dignity as required by section
70 of CCRA;
(d) failing to provide the basic
living requirements of access to drinking water, running toilet and an
environment necessary for personal health and cleanliness as required by section
83 of CCRR SOR/92-620.
[53]
The Defendant argues that there is no independent tort of
harassment in Canada and that, even if there were, the Statement of Claim does
not satisfy the elements that have been suggested for that hypothetical tort.
Further, while acknowledging that ongoing acts of harassment may form the
outrageous conduct required to support the tort of intentional infliction of
mental suffering, the Defendant argues that the Statement of Claim fails to
plead the cause of action of intentional infliction of mental suffering.
[54]
To date, there has been no acceptance of the tort of
harassment in Canadian law. I agree with the Defendant that, if such a tort did
exist, it would require a demonstration of the elements of outrageous conduct
by the defendant, the defendant’s intention of causing or reckless disregard of
causing emotional distress, the plaintiff’s suffering of severe or extreme
emotional distress and actual or proximate causation of that emotional distress
by the defendant’s outrageous conduct (Mainland Sawmills Ltd et al v
IWA-Canada et al, 2006 BCSC 1195 at para 17, [2006] BCJ No 1814; Prince
George (City) v Riemer, 2010 BCSC 118 at para 59, 5 BCLR (5th) 166).
[55]
These requirements substantially mirror the elements of the
tort of intentional infliction of mental suffering. As I have found above, the
Statement of Claim and Reply do not plead sufficient material facts to support
the Plaintiff’s allegation of intentional infliction of mental suffering. It
follows that, whether or not there is a tort of harassment in Canada, in this case, the Plaintiff has not pleaded all of the requirements or indicia to
support such a claim.
G. Alleged
Charter violations
[56]
The Plaintiff claims that his rights under ss. 7, 8 and 12
of the Charter have been violated and that he is entitled to damages
under s. 24 of the Charter for such violations. Specifically, in paragraphs
27 and 28 of the Statement of Claim, the Plaintiff alleges that,
27. The Defendants conduct
violated the Plaintiffs rights and those of the other inmates under sections
7, 8 and 12 of the Charter and caused him and others severe harm.
28. Pursuant to section 24(1)
of the “Charter” the Plaintiff seeks damages as the appropriate remedy
for the aforesaid violation of his Charter rights.
[57]
The Defendant argues that the Statement of Claim does not
describe any events that could support the claim that the Plaintiff’s rights
under ss. 7, 8 and 12 of the Charter have been violated, and that the
Plaintiff has not pleaded any facts to support the award of damages in this
case.
[58]
The analysis required to determine whether s. 24(1) damages
should be awarded has been described by the Supreme Court, in Vancouver
(City) v Ward, 2010 SCC 27 at para 4, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 28 [Ward], as
follows:
[D]amages may be awarded for Charter
breach under s. 24(1) where appropriate and just. The first step in the inquiry
is to establish that a Charter right has been breached. The second step
is to show why damages are a just and appropriate remedy, having regard to
whether they would fulfill one or more of the related functions of
compensation, vindication of the right, and/or deterrence of future breaches.
At the third step, the state has the opportunity to demonstrate, if it can,
that countervailing factors defeat the functional considerations that support a
damage award and render damages inappropriate or unjust. The final step is to assess
the quantum of the damages.
[59]
Turning to the first step of the analysis taught by the
Supreme Court, I observe that the most relevant facts pleaded in the Statement
of Claim and Reply with respect to the Plaintiff’s allegations are that:
•
the Plaintiff was forced to walk through sewage (Statement
of Claim at para 5);
•
the Plaintiff was denied drinking water (Statement of Claim
at paras 11-14);
•
the Defendant’s employees chose not to perform a prompt
clean up following the Flooding Incidents (Statement of Claim at para 17);
•
the Plaintiff was not permitted to shower for 62 hours
after being forced to move his belongings through raw sewage (Statement of Claim
at para 19);
•
“the defendant is well aware they did not humanely respond,
interrupt, alter or address the plaintiffs being repeatedly involuntarily
confined, for prolonged periods to hazardous materials, daily movements through
the contaminated areas to prevent cross contamination … of other parts of the
institution and re contamination of the plaintiff and his personal living
space” (Reply at para 11; see also para 16);
•
“the defendant had, at all material times, full knowledge
of the plaintiffs: vulnerable psychiatric state, diagnosis’s and conditions,
complete dependence upon the defendant, that he was being repeatedly exposed
and confined to hazardous materials for prolonged periods” (Reply at para 12;
see also para 13);
•
the sewage “was routinely in excess of one foot in depth”
(Reply at 6); and
•
the Plaintiff alleges that he “is a uniquely vulnerable
dependant prisoner” (Reply at para 24).
[60]
The problem for the Plaintiff is that the facts pleaded,
even if assumed true, cannot establish that the Plaintiff’s rights have been
violated under either ss. 7 or 8. The Plaintiff’s alleged treatment cannot be said
to offend his right to life, liberty and security of the person (s. 7); nor has
the Plaintiff alleged that any search or seizure took place (s. 8). These
claims should be struck. The only claim that appears to have material facts
pleaded is the Plaintiff’s claim that his s. 12 Charter rights to
protection against cruel and unusual treatment or punishment may have been
violated. In my view, the Plaintiff has pleaded sufficient facts in relation to
s. 12 of the Charter to allow this claim to stand.
[61]
As noted above, if a plaintiff can establish that his Charter
rights have been violated, the second step in the analysis is to show why s.
24(1) damages are a just and appropriate remedy, having regard to whether they
would fulfill one or more of the related functions of compensation, vindication
of the right, and/or deterrence of future breaches (Ward, above at para
4). I am not persuaded that the Plaintiff’s claim to s. 24 Charter
damages in respect of a violation of his s. 12 Charter rights should be
struck at this early stage. The second stage of the analysis will require a
more complete examination than can or ought to be carried out in the context of
this motion.
[62]
Accordingly, I would strike the claims with respect to s. 7
and 8 of the Charter and allow the claim of violation of the Plaintiff’s
s. 12 rights to stand, along with the claim to damages for such breach under s.
24 of the Charter.
VI. Issue
#2: Should paragraphs 32 and 35 of the Defence to
Counterclaim be struck on the basis that they fail to disclose a reasonable
defence?
[63]
In his Statement of Defence to Counterclaim, at paragraphs
32 and 35, the Plaintiff (Defendant by Counterclaim) submits that the “the
plaintiff has available to him a disciplinary procedure as outlined in sections
40 and 44 of the CCRA to address the material complaints concerns, issues and
claim for damages”. The Defendant (Plaintiff by Counterclaim) argues that
paragraphs 32 and 35 of the Plaintiff’s Defence to Counterclaim should be
struck as there is no basis in law for the Plaintiff’s claim that the Defendant
is barred from pursuing an action in Federal Court for property damage because
the Plaintiff could have been charged pursuant to provisions in the CCRA.
[64]
In the impugned passages of the Plaintiff’s Defence to
Counterclaim, the Plaintiff seeks to plead that the Defendant is required to
invoke the disciplinary system established under the CCRA before it can
pursue a claim against the Plaintiff in this Court. Nothing in ss. 38 to 44 of
the CCRA creates such a requirement. Indeed, s. 41(2) is permissive in
nature, providing that an institutional head “may” issue a charge. Further,
there is no general principle of law that requires a plaintiff to exhaust
statutory remedies before pursuing litigation. Accordingly, I agree with the
Defendant that paragraphs 32 and 35 of the Plaintiff’s Statement of Defence to
Counterclaim should be struck on the basis that they fail to disclose a
reasonable defence.
VII. Conclusion
[65]
For the above reasons, I would strike paragraphs 1(a), 1(e)
as it pertains to ss. 7 and 8 of the Charter, and 1(f) of the Statement
of Claim. In addition, I would strike paragraphs 32 (as it appears at p. 15 of
the Reply and Statement of Defence to Counterclaim) and 35 of the Plaintiff’s
Statement of Defence to Counterclaim.
[66]
With respect to the balance of the pleadings, I return to
the test for striking pleadings set out in Imperial, above, at paragraph
17. Paraphrasing the language of the Supreme Court, it is not plain and
obvious, assuming the facts pleaded by the Plaintiff to be true, that the
pleadings that remain disclose no reasonable cause of action. Stated
differently, I cannot conclude that the claims (except for those struck) have
no reasonable prospect of success. Accordingly, the matter should be allowed
to proceed to trial.
[67]
The Defendant has asked that he be permitted an extension
of time to serve his list of documents. This extension of time will be granted
to both parties.
[68]
In paragraph 15 of his submissions on this motion, the
Plaintiff seeks a number of additional remedies. With the exception of the
requested relief found at paragraphs 15(c) (motion of Defendant to be
dismissed) and 15(e) (costs in the amount of $150), the Court denies the relief
requested in this paragraph on the basis that none of the requests are
supported by the motion record.
[69]
I observe that the pleadings of the Plaintiff are far from
ideal. It may well be that, as the process unfolds, further facts or
clarification will create a situation where a continuation of one or more aspects
of the claim would not be in the interests of justice. Further motions to
strike or for summary judgment may be warranted. However, at this stage, I am
prepared to allow the majority of the claims to stand.
[70]
Since the Defendant was partially successful in this
motion, no costs will be awarded to either party.
ORDER
THIS COURT ORDERS that:
1.
paragraphs 1(a), 1(e) (as it pertains to ss. 7 and 8 of the
Charter) and 1(f) of the Statement of Claim are struck, without leave to
amend;
2.
paragraphs 32 (as it appears at p. 15 of the Reply and
Statement of Defence to Counterclaim) and 35 of the Plaintiff’s Statement of
Defence to Counterclaim are struck without leave to amend;
3.
the parties are granted an extension of time to permit the
serving of their documents within 15 days of the date of this Order; and
4.
no costs are awarded on this motion.
“Judith A. Snider”