Supreme
Court of Canada
Elk Lumber Co. v.
Crow's Nest Pass Coal Co., (1907) 39 S.C.R. 169
Date: 1907-06-24
The
Elk Lumber Co. (Plaintiffs) Appellants;
snd
The
Crow's Nest Pass Coal Co. and Others (Defendants) Respondents.
1907: May 21;
1907 June 24
Present: Fitzpatrick
C.J. and Davies, Idington, Maclennan and Duff JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM
THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.
Agreement
for sale of land—Principal and agent—Estoppel—"Land Commissioner"—Specific
performance.
The
plaintiffs, as assignees, claimed specific performance of an alleged agreement
for the sale of lands based upon the following letter:—
"Fernie,
B.C., June 5th, 1900.—D. V. Mott, Esq., Fernie, B.C.:— Re sale to you of mill
site.—Dear Sir:—The Crow's Nest Pass Coal Company hereby agree to sell to you a
piece of land at or near Hosmer Station, on the Crow's Nest line, to contain at
least one hundred acres of land, at the price of $5.00 per acre; payable as
follows: When title issued to purchaser, title to be given as soon as the
company is in a position to do so. Purchaser to have possession at once. The
land to be as near as possible as shewn on the annexed sketch plan. Yours
truly, W. Fernie, "Land Commissioner."—The lands claimed were not
those shewn on the sketch plan but other lands alleged to have been substituted
therefor by verbal agreement with another employee of the defendant company, at
the time of survey.
Held, affirming the
judgment appealed from (12 B.C. Rep. 433) but on different grounds, that
specific performance could not be decreed in the absence of any proof of
authority of the agent to sell the lands of the defendant company, and that the
mere fact of investing their employee with the title of "Land
Commissioner" did not estop the defendants from denying his power to sell
lands.
APPEAL
from the judgment of the Supreme Court of British Columbia affirming the
judgment of
[Page 170]
Morrison
J. by which the plaintiffs' action was dismissed with costs.
The
facts of the case and questions at issue on this appeal sufficiently appear from
the head-note and the judgments now reported.
Nesbitt
K.C. and Deacon for the appellants.
Marsh
K.C. and J.A. Macdonald K.C. for the respondents.
THE
CHIEF JUSTICE.—This appeal is dismissed with costs. I concur for the reasons
given in the court below.
DAVIES
J.—At the conclusion of the argument I was of the opinion that this appeal was
a hopeless one.
The
action was one for specific performance and the contract relied upon to bind
the company was a letter written to one Mott, plaintiff's assignor, by an
official of the company who signed himself "W. Fernie, Land
Commissioner." The letter purported to agree to sell to Mott a piece of
land at or near Hosmer Station on the Crow's Nest line to contain at least 100
acres of land at the price of $5 per acre, and contained the following:
The
land to be as near as possible as shewn on annexed sketched plan.
Now
as a fact the plan of the piece of land as surveyed by plaintiffs produced in
evidence and a conveyance of which was sought to be enforced shewed a plot of
land, alike it is true in acreage, but altogether different in its boundaries
from the land shewn on
[Page 171]
the
sketch plan attached to Fernie's letter. It was contended on the appellants'
part that Tonkin, a general manager of the company, had subsequently orally
authorized a survey to be made of the lands for which specific performance was
sought to be enforced under the alleged agreement made by the land
commissioner, Fernie.
I
am quite unable to put any construction upon the evidence with respect to
Tonkin's position or powers, or as to what he told the surveyor when he was
going to make the survey which would justify the court in assuming or
concluding that Tonkin had made or intended to make or had authority for making
a new agreement entirely altering the boundaries of the lands referred to in
Fernie's letter relied upon as a binding agreement. I do not see how it is
possible to construct a binding agreement against the company by combining
Tonkin's statement with Fernie's letter and substituting for the lands
described in the letter other quite different lands.
On
this ground alone the action would fail. But I fully agree with respondents'
contention that there was no evidence shewing any authority in Fernie to bind
the company to any agreement for the sale of their lands or of any other lands
excepting perhaps it might be in the town-site of Fernie, or any evidence by
which the company held him out to the person to whom the letter was written or
to the public as one who possessed such authority.
The
respondents were not a land company and had not authorized any one to sell the
lands which they were acquiring from the railway company and they had never
offered so far as appeared any lands for sale outside of their town-site lots.
Whatever author-
[Page 172]
ity
to sell lands Fernie may have had on the date of the; writing by him of the
letter relied upon was confined to the town site and it is not contended that
these lands in question were within these confines.
Fernie
it is alleged did make a sale of a lot within the town site to one Mott but
that was not until some months after the alleged agreement in this case.
Then
is there anything in the agreement that the company by investing him with the
title of "Land Commissioner" necessarily and in absence of other
evidence estopped themselves from denying his power to sell their lands? I do
not think so. I do not think the title necessarily implies any such power and
under the facts of this case I cannot find any good grounds for supporting the
agreement arising out of estoppel. I agree with respondents' counsel that in
itself and apart from other evidence the title has no legal significance and
that at any rate it does not per se imply an authority to sell lands. No
such extrinsic. evidence was given. See Hobbs v. Esquimault and Nanaimo Ry.
Co..
For
these reasons and without expressing any opinion on the point as to its having
been a condition of the agreement for sale that Mott should build a mill upon
the property at any early date and that he abandoned all idea of doing so, I
think the appeal must be dismissed with costs.
IDINGTON
J.—I think this appeal should be dismissed with costs.
I
do not find any authority for Mr. Fernie to bind the company to such an
agreement. Not do I find
[Page 173]
any
evidence of his having been so held out by the company as their agent to sell
the lands in question as to entitle the appellants to claim relief as the
result thereof.
The
uncertainty of the land in respect of which the negotiations were had, the want
of identity of the lands referred to in the memorandum (even if it be otherwise
sufficient to comply with the Statute of Frauds,) with those claimed, the want
of authority in Tonkin to make a new agreement, and the legal impossibility, as
it seems to me, to construct, as submitted to us, a case from what Tonkin said,
coupled on to what Fernie wrote and did, and refer the acts of possession
thereto so as to entitle the plaintiffs, if that case had been made on the
pleadings, to relief on the ground of part performance of an oral contract,
render the appeal hopeless.
MACLENNAN
J.—I agree that the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
DUFF
J.—I concur in the judgment dismissing the appeal with costs for the reasons
stated by my brother Davies.
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
Solicitor
for the appellants: W. R. Ross.
Solicitors
for the respondents: Herchmer & Herchmer.