Date: 20080516
Docket:
T-1502-06
Citation:
2008 FC 616
Ottawa,
Ontario, the 16th day of May 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Harrington
BETWEEN:
JEAN-GILLES CHIASSON, MARC
COUTURE, PÊCHERIES JEAN-YAN II INC., AURÉLIEN HACHÉ, ROBERT F. HACHÉ, SUCCESSION
RICHARD ALLAIN, ROLAND ANGLEHART JR., HÉLIODORE AUCOIN, ALBERT BENOÎT, ROBERT
BOUCHER, ELIDE BULGER, GÉRARD CASSIVI, LUDGER CHIASSON, MARTIN M. CHIASSON,
LUCIEN CHIASSON, ROBERT COLLIN, ROMÉO G. CORMIER, CIE 2973-0819 QUÉBEC INC.,
LES CRUSTACÉS DE GASPÉ LTÉE, CIE 2973-1288 QUÉBEC INC., CIE 3087-5199 QUÉBEC
INC., LINO DESBOIS, DONALD DUGUAY, DENIS DUGUAY, CAROL DUGUAY, MARIUS DUGUAY,
CHARLES-AIMÉ DUGUAY, RANDY DEVEAU, EDGAR FERRON, LIVAIN
FOULEM,
SIMON J. GIONET, JOCELYN GIONET, CLAUDE GLONEST, AURÈLE GODIN, GREGG HINKLEY,
JEAN-PIERRE HUARD, DONALD R. HACHÉ, GUY HACHÉ, JACQUES E. HACHÉ, JEAN-PIERRE
HACHÉ, JASON-SYLVAIN HACHÉ, GAËTAN HACHÉ, RENÉ HACHÉ, RHÉAL HACHÉ, ALBAN
HAUTCOEUR, FERNAND HAUTCOEUR, JEAN-CLAUDE HAUTCOEUR, VINCENT JONES, RÉJEAN
LEBLANC, CHRISTIAN LELIÈVRE, ELPHÈGE LELIÈVRE, JEAN-ELIE LELIÈVRE, JULES
LELIÈVRE, DASSISE MALLET, DELPHIS MALLET, FRANCIS MALLET, JEAN-MARC MARCOUX,
ANDRÉ MAZEROLLE, EDDY MAZEROLLE, GILLES A. NOËL, LÉVIS NOËL, SERGE NOËL,
ONÉSIME NOËL, NICOLAS NOËL, MARTIN NOËL, RAYMOND NOËL, FRANCIS PARISÉ, DOMITIEN
PAULIN, SYLVAIN PAULIN, CLAUDE POIRIER, LES PÊCHERIES SERGE-LUC INC., PÊCHERIES
RAY-L. INC., LES PÊCHERIES DENISE QUINN SYVRAIS INC., PÊCHERIES FRANÇOIS INC.,
PÊCHERIES J.V.L. LTÉE, PÊCHERIES JIMMY L. LTÉE, PRODUITS BELLE-BAIE LTÉE, ROGER
PINEL, SUCCESSION JEAN-PIERRE ROBICHAUD, ADRIEN ROUSSEL, JEAN-CAMILLE ROUSSEL,
MATHIAS ROUSSEL, STEVEN ROUSSY, MARIO SAVOIE, JEAN-MARC SWEENEY, MICHEL
TURBIDE, RÉAL TURBIDE, DONAT VIENNEAU, FERNAND VIENNEAU, LIVAIN VIENNEAU, RHÉAL
VIENNEAU
Applicants
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
What
should be done with the proceeds of the essentially illegal sale of snow crab?
[2]
On
April 5, 2006, Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada, represented by
the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, reached an agreement with the Association
des Pêcheurs de Poissons de Fond Acadiens Inc. (APPFA) regarding
enhanced management of the snow crab fishery in Areas 12, 18, 25 and 26. The
APPFA was to implement various projects and pay the Minister $1,500,000 to be
spent on certain specific goals. In exchange, the APPFA was to be issued a
fishing licence with an allocation of 1000 metric tons of snow crab.
[3]
On
June 23, 2006, after the APPFA had paid the money to the Minister, the Federal
Court of Appeal disallowed a similar arrangement for the 2003 fishing season (Larocque v. Canada
(Minister of Fisheries and Oceans), 2006 FCA 237,
[2006]
F.C.J. No. 985). Writing for the Court,
Mr. Justice Décary cited the Supreme Court of Canada in Comeau’s Sea Foods Ltd. v. Canada (Minister of Fisheries and
Oceans), [1997] 1 S.C.R. 12, stating that “Canada’s fisheries are a
‘common property resource’, belonging to all the people of Canada” and that “it
is the Minister’s duty to manage, conserve and develop the fishery on behalf of
Canadians in the public interest.”
[4]
In
Larocque,
supra, Décary J. reached the following conclusion:
[26] In
short, I determined that the Minister financed his scientific research program
without first appropriating the funds necessary and by misappropriating, for
all intents and purposes, resources that do not belong to him. He confused
public funds and the public domain. Without appropriating public funds he
appropriated public domain. This cannot be.
[27] I
would allow the appeal, I would set aside the judgment by the Federal Court, I
would allow the application for a declaratory order and I would declare that
the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans did not have the power to finance his
Department’s scientific research by issuing licences to fish and sell snow
crab. I would award costs to the appellant in this Court and in Federal Court.
[5]
At
that point, the Minister had already spent $477,326 of the amount of
$1,500,000 received from the APPFA, with a balance remaining of $1,022,674. The
Department completed the remaining projects for the 2006 fishing season by
financing them with public funds, which the Federal Court of Appeal held should
have been done in the first place. Immediately following Larocque, the
applicants contacted the Department, arguing that the amount received from the
APPFA in exchange for an allocation of 1000 metric tons did not belong to the
Department, and that it should have been distributed among the licence-holders
for the 2006 fishing season given the reduction in their share of the
allocation.
[6]
It
is worth noting that several of the applicants identified in the notice had
been parties in Larocque and had been represented by the same counsel.
[7]
The
Department referred the matter to the Department of Justice, which refused the
request in letters dated July 18 and 24, 2006. Counsel representing the
Minister of Justice pointed out that Larocque did not affect the 2006
project and that the deadline for appealing to the Supreme Court had not yet
passed. Leave to appeal had never been sought.
[8]
This
application for judicial review was filed on August 16, 2006, and
subsequently amended twice. As the case currently stands, the applicants are
seeking a) a declaration that the Minister illegally used or sold 1000 metric
tons of snow crab to finance departmental research activities and that he is
illegally holding the proceeds of the sale of snow crab; b) a writ of mandamus
forcing the Minister to return the illegally held money to the applicants in
proportion to the percentage of the total allowable catch (TAC) allocated to
each applicant according to the distribution formula set out in the Management
Plan announced on March 30, 2006; and c) if necessary, an order
extending the time limit set out in subsection 18.1(2) of the Federal Courts
Act.
THE ISSUES
[9]
The
first issue is which decision should be judicially reviewed. If it is the
decision dated April 5, 2006, in which an agreement was reached with the
APPFA, the deadline for applying for judicial review has passed, since the
application had to be filed within 30 days following the decision.
Nevertheless, the Court has discretion to extend this time limit. However, if
the decision is the one set forth in the letters from the Minister of Justice,
the application for judicial review was filed within the prescribed time
limits.
[10]
As
for the second issue, the applicants are seeking to determine whether the
Minister illegally used or sold 1000 metric tons of snow crab to finance its
research activities. This is a settled issue. In Association des crabiers
acadiens v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 FC 1241, 301 F.T.R.
297 rendered on October 18, 2006, Mr. Justice Martineau, following Larocque,
held that the policy implemented in 2005 was also illegal. This policy was the
same as the one implemented in 2006, except that the third party was different
and the fishing licence was for a different harvest. As for what was done in
2006, the Minister now recognizes that he acted in excess of the powers
conferred by Parliament in the Fisheries Act.
[11]
The
third point is to determine who is entitled to the amount of $1,500,000. Does
all or part of this amount belong to the applicants? If yes, is it a claim for
damages, and therefore not available as a remedy in the context of a judicial
review? Or if not, is there reason to issue a writ of mandamus?
THE IMPUGNED DECISION
[12]
I
am satisfied that the decision subject to judicial review is not contained in
the letters from the Minister of Justice from July 2006. The purpose of those
letters was to deny any responsibility; they did not constitute an
administrative decision. To hold otherwise would mean that any letter refusing
a request related to allegations of tort or breach of contract must be a
decision subject to judicial review! Thus, the impugned decision originated in
a news release issued on March 30, 2006. The relevant excerpt is the
following:
The total allowable catch (TAC) will be
set at 25,869 tonnes (t) if enhanced management activities are in place. “I am
aware that industry was looking for a higher level of TAC. However, I believe
it is important to apply a prudent approach, as the biomass is currently
decreasing and a more cautious approach is likely in 2007,” stated the
Minister. The Department is presently reviewing proposals received for enhanced
management activities. If these activities do not proceed, the TAC will be set
at 20,862 t. The Department’s review will be completed in the coming days and
further information will be provided to industry.
[13]
The
condition that a management activity be enhanced was satisfied by the contract
signed with the APPFA on April 5, 2006. The applicants were well
aware of this decision and were late in filing their application for judicial
review in August 2006.
SHOULD AN EXTENSION BE
GRANTED?
[14]
The
case usually cited is Canada (Attorney General) v. Hennelly, [1999]
F.C.J. No. 846, 244 N.R. 399. In that decision, the Federal Court of Appeal set
out a non-exhaustive list of criteria for determining whether granting the
necessary extension of time is justified. At
paragraph 3 of the judgment, Mr. Justice McDonald wrote the following:
The proper
test is whether the applicant has demonstrated
a.
a continuing intention to pursue his or her application;
b.
that the application has some merit;
c.
that no prejudice to the respondent arises from the delay;
and
d.
that a reasonable explanation for the delay exists.
[15]
In
that case, the extension was denied because there was no continuing intention
to pursue the application. The applicants had inadvertently neglected to file
the application within the prescribed time limit. Paragraph 4 of the judgment
is equally important:
Any determination of whether
or not the applicant’s explanation justifies the granting of the necessary
extension of time will turn on the facts of each particular case.
[16]
The
Federal Court of Appeal had already dealt with this concept in greater detail
in Grewal v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1985]
F.C.J. No. 144, [1985] 2 FC 263. In that case, the Court of Appeal found that there
was a period of at least several months in respect of which it was not
established that Mr. Grewal or his counsel had a continuing intention to
pursue the application. The applicant was caught up in an imbroglio of
immigration affairs and was pursuing several files simultaneously, much like in
this case, where the applicants, or at least most of them, have challenged
almost every action of one minister after another over the intervening years.
In Grewal, as in this case, a final judgment was rendered while part of
the dispute was still outstanding.
[17]
Mr.
Chief Justice Thurlow, with whom Mr. Justice Mahoney agreed, wrote as follows:
“The underlying consideration, however, which, as it seems to me, must be borne
in mind in dealing with any application of this kind, is whether, in the
circumstances presented, to do justice between the parties calls for the grant
of the extension.”
[18]
In
his concurring reasons, Mr. Justice Marceau added that the applicant’s
justification for his delay is subject to the consideration of whether “in view
of all of the circumstances of the case and in order to do justice between the
parties, the grant of the extension is called for.” He went on to state the
following:
My difficulty in placing
reliance on the general principles here comes from the fact that this
application is intended to regularize the proceedings already properly before
the Court aimed at setting aside the deportation order which was the immediate
and necessary consequence of the decision of the Board, a decision that, we now
know, was made in contravention of the supreme laws of Canada.
[19]
The
Minister now admits that his 2006 decision, like his 2003 and 2005 decisions,
was ultra vires.
[20]
I
shall grant the extension. As my analysis will show, I am of the view that the
applicants have successfully made their case, that there is no prejudice to the
respondent and that there exists a reasonable explanation. Filing an
application for judicial review in April or May 2006, before the Court of
Appeal had rendered its decision in Larocque, would have been a waste of
judicial resources. The state of the law in April 2006 was such that Mr.
Justice de Montigny held in Larocque, 2006 FC 694, [2005] F.C.J. No.
891, at the trial level, that the program for issuing fishing licences fell
within the Minister’s authority under section 7 of the Fisheries Acts.
IS THERE AN OBLIGATION
TO PAY THE APPLICANTS?
[21]
As
the illegality of the Minister’s action is no longer an issue, a decision must
be made regarding what is to be done with the amount of $1,500,000. There are
three possibilities: a) that the money remain in the hands of the Department;
b) that all or part of the money be returned to the APPFA; or c) that the money
be distributed proportionally among those who had their allocations reduced to
enable the Minister to issue a fishing licence to the APPFA for 1000 metric
tons of snow crab.
[22]
I
am of the view that the applicants who are part of the traditional midshore
fleet (Quebec and New Brunswick) have successfully made their case. The Minister
publicly announced that they would receive 65.182% of the TAC, which they
received. However, the TAC was reduced by about 4% to accommodate the contract
signed with the APPFA.
[23]
It
is true that the applicants have no proprietary right in the snow crab and that
under section 7 of the Fisheries Act, the Minister had the
authority to revoke earlier indications that fishing licences would be issued (Comeau’s
Sea Foods Ltd., supra). However, in Comeau’s Sea Foods Ltd.,
the Minister had not revoked his decision in order to finance a project
illegally, as is the case here. Mr. Justice McIntyre wrote the following
at paragraph 9 of Maple Lodge Farms Ltd. v. Canada, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 2:
Where the statutory discretion has been
exercised in good faith and, where required, in accordance with the principles
of natural justice, and where reliance has not [page 8] been placed upon
considerations irrelevant or extraneous to the statutory purpose, the courts
should not interfere.
The Court
would normally apply the standard of patent unreasonableness (Toronto (City) v. Canadian Union of Public Employees (C.U.P.E.), 2003 SCC 63, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 77), but the applicable standard must now be
that of reasonableness simpliciter (Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] S.C.J. No. 9).
[24]
I
am also of the opinion that an analogy can be drawn with the decision of the
Supreme Court in Kingstreet Investments Ltd. v. New Brunswick (Finance),
2007 SCC 1, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 3.
In that decision, the Court decided that
taxpayers who had paid ultra vires taxes were entitled to recover them,
thereby rejecting the rule formulated by Mr. Justice La Forest in Air Canada v. British
Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1161 prohibiting the recovery of
unconstitutional taxes. The action is based more on a constitutional principle
than on the concept of unjust enrichment. In this case, the applicants
did not pay directly, but it is arguable that they paid indirectly through the
reduction of their allocations.
[25]
An
examination of the applicants’ record was necessary because it is one of the
criteria to be considered in determining whether the Court should grant the
extension. However, it would be inappropriate for me to make any comment beyond
my finding that they have made their case, since I would be getting into the
area of damages, and this Court lacks jurisdiction to order such a remedy in
the context of an application for judicial review.
[26]
The Minister did not
specifically argue that the Crown should retain the fees charged for the
fishing licence. However, the logical conclusion of the argument that the
applicants had not applied within the time limit is that the amount must remain
in the hands of the Crown. Based on Larocque, supra, I do not
hesitate to find that the Crown has no right to an amount belonging to a third
party. It is analogous to the concept of escheat.
[27]
Nor did the Minister argue that the amount
should be returned to the APPFA. He expressed concern about the possibility
that the APPFA might begin legal proceedings. The APPFA was not a party in
these proceedings, so it would be inappropriate to comment on any rights it may
have. However, it should be noted that the Minster may “refer any question or
issue of law, of jurisdiction or of practice and procedure to the Federal
Court” under section 18.3 of the Federal Courts Act and
rules 320 and following of the Federal Courts Rules regarding
references from a federal board, commission or other tribunal.
DAMAGES
[28]
The
applicants who lost the opportunity to fish could only be in a better position
if they were the owners of the snow crab. An owner with a right to possess the
property also has the right to recover it from a third party who has unlawful
possession of it. In reality, these snow crab no longer exist. It is arguable
that the APPFA never had a right to fish properly speaking because the Minister
did not have the right either (Nemo Dat Quod Non Habet). An owner would
have a claim in restitution against the Minister to recover the proceeds of the
sale of the snow crab. This would involve a claim in tort for the proceeds (see
Benjamin’s Sale of Goods, 7th edition, paragraphs 7-001 and following;
and Remedies: The Law of Damages, 2nd edition, Jamie Cassels and
Elizabeth Adjin-Tettey, chapter 7).
[29]
It
is trite law that the remedy of a claim for compensation in damages is beyond
the Federal Court’s jurisdiction in the context of an application for judicial
review under section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act (Chaudhry
v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FCA 310, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1624; Al-Mhamad
v. Canada (CRTC), 2003 FCA 45, [2003] F.C.J. No. 145; Raymond Lussier
v. Robert Collin, [1985] 1 FC 124 (FCA)).
WRIT OF MANDAMUS
[30]
It
follows that the writ of mandamus is not applicable in this case. In any
case, I am not satisfied that the criteria for ordering a writ of mandamus have
been met (Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 FC 742,
[1993] F.C.J. No. 1098 at paragraph 42; aff’d [1994] 3 S.C.R. 1100). One of the
criteria is that the applicant have no other recourse. In my opinion, such
recourse exists, namely, a tort action seeking damages; indeed, many of the
applicants have commenced such an action (Anglehart, T-2171-07).
DECLARATION
[31]
In
this case, I am prepared to declare that the Minister illegally used or sold
1000 metric tons of snow crab to finance departmental research activities and
is illegally holding the proceeds of the 2006 sale.
[32]
The
significance of such a declaration, stating that the Minister acted in excess
of his authority, should not be underestimated. We can safely assume that once
a statute, regulation or particular course of conduct has been declared ultra
vires, the Minister will respect the state of law and that further
proceedings such as applications for judicial review will not be necessary.
[33]
Madam
Justice Mactavish held as follows in Tihomirovs v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FC 197, [2006] 4 F.C.R. 341:
[119] As the respondent pointed out,
the Minister is obliged to follow the law. As a consequence, should the Court
ultimately declare that the regulation in question is ultra vires, and
that members of the proposed class are entitled to have their applications for
permanent residence assessed in accordance with the criteria set out in the Immigration
Act, the Minister will be obliged to act accordingly. This will be the
case, whether or not individual members of the proposed class assert their
right to have their applications treated in this fashion.
[120] As a result, there is no need to
ensure that all of the members of the proposed class be party to a class action
in order to derive a benefit from a favourable decision in Mr. Tihomirovs’
case. Moreover, requiring that notice be given of the litigation and of the
court's resolution of the common question will only add unnecessary cost and
delay to the process.
[34]
The
leading case in this area is LeBar v. Canada, [1989] 1 FC 603, [1988]
F.C.J. No. 940, in which Mr. Justice MacGuigan of the Federal Court of Appeal
reviewed the fundamental principles of the declaratory judgment, starting with
the original decision in Dyson v. Attorney General, [1911] 1 KB 410. He
stated the following at paragraph 11 of his decision:
In my
opinion, the necessity for the Government and its officials to obey the law is
the fundamental aspect of the principle of the rule of law, which is now
enshrined in our Constitution by the preamble to the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982,
Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982 c. 11 (U.K.)]. This aspect was
noted by A.V. Dicey, Introduction to the Study of the Law of the
Constitution, 10th ed., E.C.S. Wade, 1959, pages 193, 202-203, and was
authoritatively established by the Supreme Court in its per curiam decision
in Reference re Manitoba Language Rights, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 721, at page
748: 1
The rule
of law, a fundamental principle of our Constitution, must mean at least two
things. First, that the law is supreme over officials of the government as well
as private individuals, and thereby preclusive of the influence of arbitrary
power.
COSTS
[35]
Given
that the reasons are favourable in part to both parties, I will not rule as to
costs.
ORDER
THE COURT
ORDERS AND DECLARES that:
1. The extension
of time requested for filing this application for judicial review is granted.
2. The
application for judicial review is allowed in part.
3. The Minister
illegally used or sold a fishing licence for 1000 metric tons of snow crab to
finance departmental research activities.
4. The Minister
is illegally holding the proceeds of the 2006 sale of 1000 metric tons of snow
crab.
5. There is no
need for a writ of mandamus.
6. Without
costs.
“Sean Harrington”