Date: 20070629
Docket: T-363-01
Citation: 2007
FC 686
BETWEEN:
PETER
G. WHITE MANAGEMENT LTD.
Plaintiff
and
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF CANADA
Defendant
REASONS FOR ORDER
(Delivered from the Bench in Calgary, Alberta
on June 28, 2007)
HUGESSEN
J.
[1]
This
is an appeal from a decision of the prothonotary which dismissed the
defendant’s (Crown’s) motion to strike the plaintiff’s statement of claim.
[2]
Because
I am in agreement with the prothonotary, not only with his conclusion
but also with the reasons he gave in support thereof, it is not necessary that
I go in any detail into the standard of review applicable to appeals to a judge
from a decision of a prothonotary. I would only note, however, that with
respect and contrary to the submission that was made to me by Crown counsel,
the mere fact that what was sought before the prothonotary might have been
determinative of the final issues in the case does not result in the judge
hearing the matter entirely de novo. A reading of the decisions, and
particularly the key decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of Canada
v. Aqua-Gem Investments Ltd., [1993] 2 F.C. 425 (C.A.), makes it quite
clear that it is not what was sought but what was ordered by the prothonotary
which must be determinative of the final issues in order for the judge to be
required to undertake de novo review. I would add to that, that while I
am of course aware of the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of
Merck & Co. Inc. v. Apotex Inc. [2003] F.C.J. No. 1925 (C.A.) (QL),
where Justice Décary in reformulating the rule spoke of “the questions raised
in the motion”, but I am quite sure that he did not mean by that the motion
which was before the prothonotary but rather the motion (see Rule 51) which was
before the judge on appeal from the prothonotary. Put briefly, barring
extraordinary circumstances, a decision of a prothonotary not to strike out a
statement of claim is not determinative of any final issue in the case. In
determining the standard of review the focus is on the Order as it was
pronounced, not on what it might have been.
[3]
The Crown's
motion to strike, like its appeal before me, is based on the contention that
the action of the plaintiff is a disguised or collateral attack on an
administrative decision not to grant the plaintiff a business license for the
operation in summertime of its gondola on Mount Norquay in Banff National Park.
[4]
Relying
on the case of Grenier v. Canada [2005] F.C.J. No. 1778 (C.A.)
(QL), the Crown says the plaintiff should first have attacked the license
refusal by an application for judicial review.
[5]
A
reading of the statement of claim, the statement of defence and the
reply, however, leave me convinced, as was the prothonotary, that the action
against the Crown simply sounds in breach of contract.
[6]
The essence
of the plaintiff's claim is that the Crown by enacting a management plan for
Banff National Park, including a prohibition against summer operation of the
plaintiff's gondola on Mount Norquay, made it impossible for the plaintiff to obtain
a business license, and thus to have the quiet enjoyment of the leased
premises, something which the Crown by entering into the lease had engaged
itself contractually to grant to it.
[7]
I do
not need to pronounce on the validity of the plaintiff's claim or whether or
not its interpretation of the lease is accurate. Other than to say that it is
in no respect depends on the invalidity of the licensing decision.
[8]
On the
contrary, as I read the claim, it is the prohibition contained in the
management plan and the consequential, even if valid, refusal of the license
which form the basis of the allegation of deliberate breach by the Crown of its
contractual obligations.
[9]
In my
view, it is a gross misreading of the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal
in Grenier to hold that it requires that every time a Crown official
decides deliberately not to respect his employer's contractual obligations that
that “decision” must first be attacked by judicial review before an action in
damages may be brought. I respectfully suggest that that is not, and has never
been, the law.
[10]
The appeal
will be dismissed with costs to the plaintiff.
“James
K. Hugessen”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-363-01
STYLE OF CAUSE: PETER
G. WHITE MANAGEMENT LTD.
-and-
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF CANADA
PLACE OF
HEARING: CALGARY, ALBERTA
DATE OF
HEARING: JUNE
28, 2007
REASONS FOR ORDER: HUGESSEN J.
DATED: JUNE
29, 2007
APPEARANCES:
RICHARD B.
LOW, Q.C.
|
FOR THE PLAINTIFF
|
BRENDA
KAMINSKI
LAURA DUNHAM
|
FOR THE DEFENDANT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
BENNETT JONES
LLP
CALGARY, ALBERTA
|
FOR THE PLAINTIFF
|
JOHN H. SIMS,
Q.C.
DEPUTY
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
|
FOR THE DEFENDANT
|