Supreme Court of Canada
City of Montreal v. Cantin, (1904) 35 SCR 233
Date: 1904-10-31
THE CITY OF MONTREAL (PLAINTIFF)
Appellant;
And
JAMES B. CANTIN AND
OTHERS (OPPOSANTS)
Respondents.
1904: Oct 12; 1904: Oct 31
PRESENT:—Sir Elzéar
Taschereau C.J. and Girouard, Davies,
Nesbitt and Killam JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
KING'S BENCH, APPEAL SIDE, PROVINCE OF QUEBEC.
Municipal corporation—Assessment and taxes—Contestation of
roll—Limitation of actions—Interruption of prescription—Suspensive condition— Construction of statute—52 V. c. 79 (Q.)—62 V. c.
58, s. 408 (Q.) —Collection of taxes—Art. 2236 C.C.
The prescription of three years in respect of taxes provided
by the Montreal City Charter, 52 Vict. ch. 79 (Q.), runs from the date of the
deposit of the assessment roll, as finally revised, in the treasurer's office,
when the taxes became due and exigible, and the prescription is not suspended
nor interrupted by a contestation of the assessment roll, even although the
contestation may have been filed by the proprietor of the lands assessed.
Judgment appealed from affirmed, Girouard and Nesbitt JJ. dissenting.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of King's Bench, appeal
side, affirming the judgment of the Superior Court, District of Montreal, which
maintained the
[Page 224]
respondent's opposition to annul the
seizure of their lands in the City of Montreal in execution on levy of taxes
imposed thereon for ordinary rates and a special assessment.
The material facts of the case are fully stated in the
opinions of their Lordships on this appeal.
Atwater K.C. and Ethier K.C. for the appellant.
The prescription could not run against the city while the validity of the tax
was being contested in court. Art. 2236 C.C. The city was prevented taking
action during the pendency of the litigation ; contra non
valentem agere nulla currit prcescriptio. See City of Montreal v.
Montreal Land and Loan Co. ()
per Blanchet J. ; Dalloz, 1858, 1, 414; 1862, 1, 35-36 and note The
contestation of the roll was by the respondent's auteurs, the
owners of the lands assessed, and having, by their own proceeding, caused the
delay they cannot now plead the limitation after the failure of their
contestation. We also refer to Cass. 13 Avril, 1810, S. V. 10, 1, 175.
Bond and Lacoste for the
respondents. The taxes, if any were due, became exigible upon the deposit of
the revised roll in the treasurer's office, (sec. 231 of city charter) ; the
prescription provided by sec. 120, therefore, commenced to run from that date ;
no judicial demand, (art. 2224 C. C.) was made, and the full period of three
years had elapsed before proceedings for collection were begun. See O'Connor
v. Scanlan ().
The operation of sec. 408 of the amending act, 62 Vict. ch. 58, can have no
retroactive effect to revive the prescribed right. We refer to sects. 565 and
558 of the last mentioned Act, and also to Endlich on Statutes secs. 271-273;
18 DeLorimier, Code Civil, art. 2232, p. 536 ; Dalloz Rép. vo. Loi, nn. 183, 184, 205, 380 ;
[Page 225]
Supp. nn. 118, 124, 235; Fuchs
v. Legaré () ; Bulmer v.
Beaudry ()
; Les Ecclésiastiques de St. Sulpice v City
of Montreal ().
THE CHIEF JUSTICE.—The appellants, as empowered in such cases,
caused the sheriff, in August, 1902, to seize a certain lot of land belonging
to the respondents for the recovery of a special assessment imposed upon it by
an assessment roll which had been deposited in the office of the city treasurer
on the 20th of February, 1895, over seven years before.
The respondents by an opposition asked the annulment of the seizure
on the ground that the appellants' claim was prescribed and extinguished.
The judgment of the court of appeal, confirming the judgment
of the Superior Court, maintained that opposition and quashed the seizure.
These judgments are in my opinion unassailable.
Section 231 of the appellants' statutory charter of 1889 (52
Vict. c. 19 Que.) which, it is admitted, governs the case, provided that
the roll of assessment, when finally settled by the
commissioners, shall be filed and kept of
record in the treasurer's office ; and such special assessment shall thereupon become due and may be
recovered by the corporation.
By section 120 of the same Act, it was enacted that the right
to recover any tax or assessment imposed under the Act was to be prescribed and
extinguished unless the city within three years * * to be counted from the time at which such tax or assessment
became due, had commenced an action for the recovery thereof, or had
initiated legal proceedings for the same purpose under the provisions of the Act
[Page 226]
provided that in case any special assessment is made
payable by annual instalments, the prescription runs only from the
expiry of each such instalment.
These enactments were clear and unambiguous, and primâ
facie, the appellant's rights to the proceedings in question were
prescribed and extinguished in 1902 when they were initiated.
They contend, however, that it is not so, for the reason that
the respondents, availing themselves of the provisions of section 144 of the
Act, had filed within six months from the date of the deposit of the said roll
a contestation thereof, by which contestation, not finally determined till the
15th of June, 1901, they, the appellants, as they allege in their plea in
answer to the respondents' opposition
were hindered, impeded and delayed by the respondents in the
collection of the said assessment.
By that section 144 it was enacted that:
Any municipal elector, in his own name, may, by a petition
presented to the Superior Court, demand and obtain, on the ground of illegality,
the annulment of any by-law, resolution, assessment roll or apportionment ; but
the right-of demanding such annullment is prescribed by six months from the
date of the passing or completion of such by-law, resolution, assessment roll
or apportionment ; and, after that delay, every such by-law, resolution,
assessment roll or apportionment shall be considered valid and binding for all
purposes whatsoever, provided that the subject matter thereof be within the
competence of the corporation.
The appellants contend that they had not the right to take
proceedings for the recovery of the assessment in question until the final
adjudication, in June, 1901, of the respondents' said contestation of the roll
authorized by that section.
But, as held by the two courts below by the judgment now
appealed from, and previously by the judgments in The City of Montreal v.
The Land & Loan Co. ()
where the same question was raised, that contention
[Page 227]
cannot prevail. It is contrary to the plain words of the statute.
It probably is therein a casus omissus, the propriety of supplying which
has since been acknowledged by the legislature in the appellants' subsequent
charter of 1899 (62 Vic. c. 58, sec. 408, Que.). But the statute of 1889 must
be taken as it was. We cannot add to it or mend it, and by construction fill up
gaps and make up its deficiencies, however apparent they may be, and nowhere in
its various clauses is there the least indication that the law-giver intended
to suspend the appellants' right to take proceedings for the recovery of any
assessment for six months, or till after the determination of a contestation of
the whole roll. Quite the contrary. As it reads, it is unequivocal. The
prescription runs from the date that the assesment became due, says sec. 120,
in so many words.
Now, in this case, the assessment became due in 1895, and
might then have been recovered according to the plain language of sec. 231. If
the appellants then or at any time within three years thereafter had issued a
writ against the respondents, the sale would perhaps have been stayed by order
of the court or of a judge till the final determination of
the contestation of the roll. But they had the right to issue the writ were it
merely to interrupt the prescription. Art. 1086 C.C. ; 32 Laurent, Nos. 20 et seq. And no plea of lis
pendens could have prevailed against it. Bioche, Procédure vo. " Exception," No. 134. An order for
consolidation under Art. 291 of the Code of procedure would probably have then
been the proper proceeding The appellant vainly relies upon the maxim, "Contra
non valentem agere" The city had
the right to issue the writ ; therefore the maxim has no application.
This section 144 is nothing but an enactment as to the mode by
which, the time within which, and by
[Page 228]
whom, a common law right of action can be exercised. (There is
no such thing as a rule to quash in such cases in the province). And an action
impeaching the validity of such a roll would not suspend the prescription running
against the city's right to recover the assessments for the good reason that
its right to initiate proceedings for the recovery of the assessments would not
be affected by that, action. A debtor cannot have it in his power to deprive
his creditor of his right of action, as the appellants would contend.
Certainly, as argued by the appellants, prescription does not
run against a debt depending upon a condition until such condition happens. But
why? Because a conditional debt is not exigible until the fulfilment of the
condition. And the appellants beg the question in their argument on this point.
They assume that this is a conditional debt. But that is the very point in
controversy. And they have failed to establish that the statute imposed any
condition whatever upon the maturity of the assessment, or on their right to
recover it as soon as the roll was deposited. The forced construction of it
that they contend for is based on nothing else than the alleged
unreasonableness of enabling them to recover upon a roll which might subsequently
be set aside. But with that we have nothing to do. The law-giver has the power
to be unreasonable. And the courts are not at liberty to read into a statute
clauses or conditions that are not in it simply because they think that they
ought to be in it. When a statute is so plain, it has to be given effect to,
whatever may be the consequences.
Here the statute decrees not merely that the assessment became
due but also that it may be recovered immediately after the deposit of
the roll creating the debt, and gives the remedy, the right to collect it
[Page 229]
immediately. And when it adds that the prescription runs from
the date that the assessment became due, using the same expression, or
when payable by instalments from the date of the expiry of each such
instalment, that cannot but be construed as if it said, in so many words, that
the prescription runs from the date of the deposit of the roll, or from the
expiry of each instalment, if any, and this, whether the roll later on is
contested or not, for, if the legislature had intended such a contestation to
suspend the appellants' rights, it would have said so, as it has since said in
the statute of 1899.
Then, were the non-contestation or the dismissal of a
contestation to be considered as a condition, the legislature had the right to
say that the assessment would be due and could be recovered before the
fulfilment of the condition. And that is what it did, in the public interest,
by the enactments in question.
And what shews that there was a debt, a sum unconditionally
due upon the deposit of the roll and that could then be recovered, even if the
roll were to be subsequently contested and annulled, is the provision of sec.
241 that, in that case, the payments made under it, whether by the contesting
party or by anyone else, are not to be invalidated. The city is not then bound
to restore what it had received :—and why ? Because what it had received was
due, though the roll has been annulled. That shows clearly that the debt is not
a conditional one, depending upon the validity of the roll. Art. 1088 C. C.
What is called a special assessment roll is nothing but the apportionment of
the amount due to the city among the different proprietors of the immovables
belonging to the parties benefited by the local improvement. Secs. 209, 213;
sub-secs. 8, 14, 17, 18, 228, 238, 241.
[Page 230]
The appellant, I observe, claims, under sec. 118 of the Act,
interest on the amount of the assessment in question from 1895, or so much of
it as is not prescribed. Now, it can only be because the assessment was
unconditionally due and payable in 1895, according to the words of that
section, that they have a right to the interest from that date. And if it was
then due and payable so as to carry interest moratoires
because the respondents who were then liable for it, were in
default, en demeure, the appellants must have had
the right to take proceedings to recover it. And, as the prescription against
them began to run concurrently with their right to take such proceedings, and
as they did not take any until over three years after, they are out of court.
The appellants' further contention that this special
assessment is not such a tax or assessment as is, under any circumstances,
prescribed by three years, but that it is prescribed by thirty years only, must
also be dismissed. The words of sec. 120, " Any assessment under
this Act " include a special assessment made under the Act. Then when the
same section adds :
Provided that in case any special assessment is payable
by annual instalments, the prescription of three years runs only from the
expiry of such instalments
that makes it still clearer that special assessments like the
others are prescribed by three years. The contention that it is only when such
special assessments are payable by instalments that the three years
prescription applies, but that if they are payable en bloc, they are
prescribed only by thirty years, would be untenable. Yet that is what the
appellants' arguments on this point would lead to.
Further, the words "such special assessment " in
section 231 refer to the roll simply called assessment in that and the
preceding sections 228, 229, 230. Now if
[Page 231]
a special assessment is an assessment under the Act in those
sections, the word " assessment" in section 120 must likewise include
special assessments. And the right to contest an assessment roll given
by sec. 144 has, by the appellants themselves and by a uniform jurisprudence,
always been considered as applying to special assessment rolls.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
GIROUARD J. (dissenting) :—This appeal involves an important
question of prescription of a municipal tax and is far from being free from
difficulty. It has already divided the judges of the Province of Quebec, and it
is not surprising that the judges of this court are not unanimous. Briefly
told, the facts, which have been admitted by the parties, are as follows :—
On the 20th February, 1895, a roll of special assessment for
the widening of Notre Dame Street, west, section 2, was deposited in the
Treasurer's Office of the City of Montreal, by virtue of which a total sum of
$205,426.73 was assessed upon all the proprietors interested, and a sum of
$24,245.43, with interest amounting to $7,273.63 was claimed from the heirs
Cantin, grèves de substitution,
as their share. On the 8th Aug-est, 1895, they, together with a large
number of other proprietors, about twenty-five in number, presented to the
Superior Court a petition praying for the annulment of the roll, and in a
subsidiary manner that all the proprietors, and especially the petitioners,
" les propriétaires d'immeubles dans les dites limites et en
particulier vos requérants," were not subject to certain charges
and payments set forth in the petition, and finally that the said roll be sent
back to the commissioners for the preparation of a new roll, allowing a
deduction of said charges and payments
[Page 232]
à ce que le dit rôle soit renvoyé
devant les dits commissaires pour préparer un nouveau róle, en y faisant les réductions ci dessus indiquées.
After four years of unexplained delay, probably caused by a
hope that the Quebec legislature would pass a declaratory Act, namely, on the
26th October, 1899, the city pleaded to the petition which was finally
dismissed in toto by a judgment of the Court, rendered on the 29th of
June 1900, and confirmed in Review on the 15th of June 1901. That was the end
of the contestation of the roll so far as the petitioners and the respondents
in particular were concerned.
There remained, however, another contestation of the roll by
the Guy estate, which was likewise dismissed by the Superior Court and finally
by the court of appeal, by judgment of the 20th of January, 1903. This case may
yet be pending before the Privy Council, for what we know, and possibly the roll
may yet be annulled ; but it is certain that at that date and when the seizure
complained of was made, to wit, on the 1st of October, 1902, it was still
pending and undecided.
It was contended at the argument that this court cannot take
notice of this Guy contestation, as it is not pleaded by either party. I think
it is covered by the plea of the appellants, but it is undoubtedly set up by
both parties in written admissions which practically constitute a special or
stated case under article 509 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as they were made
in order to discuss the questions of law raised by the opposition and the
contestation of said opposition and The present cause. These admissions were
considered in the courts below, not only without objection, but by consent.
Even if I am mistaken in the view I take of the effect of these admissions, I
think it would be in the interest of justice and within the intention of the
[Page 233]
parties, as above expressed, to order an amendment of the
opposition.
On the 10th of September, 1902, the sheriff of Montreal seized
certain lands of the respondents to levy the amount of their special assessment
with interest. On the 2nd of October they fyled an opposition afin
d'annuler for two reasons. First, because the lands are not seized
and advertised to be sold subject to the substitution or substitutions with
which they were charged : Secondly, because the debt of assessment is
prescribed and extinguished.
The first ground has been rejected by all the courts, and
correctly rejected under article 781 of the Code of Procedure. The
substitutions alleged by the appellants, not being opened, cannot possibly be
affected by a sheriff's sale. The judges were unanimous upon this point, but
not so upon the second ground which affords a very remarkable conflict of
opinions. We will be able to appreciate them better after the clauses of the
charter of the City of Montreal are quoted.
Clause 231. The roll of assessment, when finally settled by
the commissioners, as aforesaid, shall be filed and kept of record in the city
treasurer's office ; and such special assessment shall thereupon become due and
may be recovered by the corporation in the same manner as the ordinary taxes
and assessments which it is authorized by this Act to impose and levy.
120. The right to recover any tax, assessment or water rate,
under this Act is prescribed and extinguished, unless the city within three
years, in addition to the current year, to be counted from the time at which
such tax, assessment or water rate became due, has commenced an action for the
recovery thereof, or initiated legal proceedings for the same purpose under the
provisions of this Act ; and the privilege securing such tax, assessment or
water rate avails to the city, notwithstanding any lapse of time, for the
recovery of any sum which may, by any judgment, be awarded to the city, for
such tax, assessment or water rate ; provided that in case any special
assessment is made payable by annual instalments, the prescription runs only
from the expiry of such instalment.
[Page 234]
144. Any municipal elector, in his own name, may, by a
petition presented to the Superior Court, demand and obtain, on the ground of
illegality, the annulment of any by-law, resolution, assessment roll or
apportionment ; but the right of demanding such annulment is prescribed by six
months from the date of the passing or completion of such by law, resolution,
assessment roll, or apportionment ; and after that delay, every such by-law:
resolution, assessment roll, or apportionment shall be considered valid and
binding for all purposes whatsoever, provided that the subject matter thereof
be within the competence of the corporation.
238. When any roll of assessment or apportionment made by
commissioners to defray, in whole or in part, the cost of any
improvement under the provisions of this Act, is annulled by competent
authority, the city may cause a new roll of assessment or apportionment to be
made by commissioners appointed and acting as hereinbefore provided with regard
to commissioners for expropriation. And all the provisions of this Act, with
respect to the making, revision and completion of any such assessment or
apportionment, and to all matters incidental thereto, shall apply to such
assessment or apportionment ; provided always that proceedings for the making
of any new roll of assessment or apportionment shall be commenced within six
months from the date of annulment of the previous roll.
241. Whenever a roll of assessment or apportionment for any
street improvement shall be annulled and set aside, the payments made under
authority of the same shall not be thereby invalidated ; but such payments,
with interest added, shall go to the discharge of the respective amounts to be
fixed by the new assessment roll, subject, on the part of the ratepayers, to
making good any deficiency, or to receiving back any surplus according to the
difference that may eventually exist between the old and the new roll of
assessment ; and the present provision shall apply as well to special assessment
rolls heretofore made as to those which may be made hereafter.
The contention of of the respondents in effect is that, if
under these enactments their petition for annulling the roll had been
maintained, they would still be liable for their due share of the cost of the
expropriation to be settled by a new roll, but as they set up an unfounded
opposition to the roll they are liberated in toto by lapse of time. This
result, if true, reminds me of the old game "qui perd
gagne ", which, I hope, will never hold good in a court of
justice.
[Page 235]
On two occasions the courts of Quebec have been called upon to
pronounce upon this question, and, although divided, they have maintained that
prescription commences to run from the day of the deposit of the roll under
section 231, and that it is not interrupted nor suspended by its contestation,
both as to ratepayers contesting or not.
The point came up first in the case of the City of Montreal
v. The Land and Loan Co. (),
a ratepayer who had not contested the roll. On the 15th January, 1903, Mr.
Justice Doherty decided that the prescription of three years was well taken.
The learned judge held that article 2232 of the Civil Code did not apply, as
the city could proceed to collect, notwithstanding the contestation. He makes
no reference to any other article of the code. In appeal, this judgment was
confirmed purely and simply, Bossé, Hall
and Wurtèle JJ., Blanchet and Ouimet JJ. dissenting (). Mr. Justice Bossé for the majority said :
Que dans les cas ordinaires, la prescription
ait été acquise, ne peut souffrir de doute.
Les termes du statut, 52 Vic. ci-haut cités, ne sau raient être plus clairs, ni plus impératifs. Pas d'action, s'il n'a
été pris de procédures pour le recouvrement de la dette dans les trois ans. *
* * * * *
Chacun des contribuables a le droit de contester, et, contestant, il le fait pour son compte,
Il peut arriver, en pratique, que le jugement maintenant la contestation d'un seul contribuable réagisse sur la ligne de conduite et les procédures à être adoptées par
la corporation, mais en ceci il n'y a rien pour indiquer que les tiers
intéressés aient confié au contestant leurs intérêts et l'aient chargé de faire
décider leurs droits. Il n'y a là mandat ni exprès, ni tacite, et la
contestation faite par Joseph n'intéressait au procès que lui seul, sans
pouvoir en aucune manière lier les autres contribuables.
L'on objecte des raisons d'inconvénient ;
mais il ne peut y avoir inconvénient, car la corporation avait
trois ans pour réclamer contre les autres propriétaires, et elle ne doit s'en
prendre qu'à elle-même de la position qu'elle s'est faite.
[Page 236]
Mr. Justice Blanchet dissenting :
En permettant à tout intéressé de contester le
rôle, en son nom, et d'en demander la nullite (sec. 144)
non pas seulement quant à lui, mais pour le
bénéfice de ses cointéressés ainsi que le contestant l'a fait, la charte, par
exception au droit commun, confiait à celui qui conteste un mandat spécial qui
constitue en réalité tous les autres intéressés demandeurs conjoints. En effet,
le jugement qui mettra le rôle de côté
profitera à tous les intéressés et celui qui le maintiendra liera également
ceux-ci et aucun d'eux ne pourrait recommencer la même contestation pour les mêmes causes (Stevenson v. City of Montreal
()
La théorie de l'intimé que pour échapper à la
prescription invoquée, la cité était obligée de procéder contre tous les
intéressés, auraint forcé ceux-ci à se porter opposants ou "contestants,
en faisant valoir les mêmes moyens que ceux déjà invoqués
par le premier requéran, et,
comme dans le cas actuel il y a 44 contribuables, il y
aurait eu 44 procès au lieu d'un seul, et si le rôle avait
été annulé, la cité aurait été condamnée à payer les frais de 44 causes, que le3 intéressés eux-mêmes auraient en défénitive été obligés
de lui rembourser.
C'est ce résultats absurde que la charte voulait
prévenir, et celle-ci doit recevoir de la part des tribunaux une interprétation
large, libérale, propre à assurer l'accomplissement de son
objet et l'exécution de ses prescriptions suivant leurs véritables esprit et
intention. (S.R. Q. ch. 2, sec. 13.)
Mr. Justice Ouimet, also dissenting, was
of opinion that a special assessment for street improvements is not a tax or
assessment within the meaning of section 120 of the charter. We have decided
the contrary in Les Ecclésiastiques
de St. Sulpice v. The City of
Montreal ().
In the case under consideration, which is one between the city
and one of the rate prayers contesting, Mr. Justice Robidoux, who rendered the
judgment of the Superior Court, likewise maintained the prescription of three
years, and that it was not interrupted by the contestation; the question of
suspension was not considered :
Considérant qu'il est
édicté par Particle 231 de la charte de la Cité de
Montréal (1889) que les sommes payables en vertu d'un rôle
de
[Page 237]
cotisations spéciales
deviennent dues dès le moment que ce rôle a été déposé au
bureau du Trésorier de la Cité par les Commissaires qui après avoir d'abord été
chargés de procéder à l'expropriation, sont ensuite tenus de préparer le dit
rôle de cotisations spéciales.
Considérant que c'est le 20
février 1895 que le dit rôle de cotisation
spéciales a été déposé au bureau du dit Trésorier de la Cité par les dits
Commissaires.
Considérant que c'est à partir de la dite date du 20 février 1695 qu'a commencé à courir la prescription de la dite somme de $24,245.43.
Considérant qu'aux termes
de l'article 120 de la dite Charte de ]a Cité de Montréal (1889)
le droit de recouvrir toute cotisation en vertu des dispositions
de la dite charte est prescrit et éteint à moins que la dite Cité dans les
trois ans à compter de l'échéance de cette cotisation n'ait intenté une action
pour le recouvrement d'icelle.
Considérant que le 18
août 1902, date de la dite saisie du dit
immeuble—laquelle saisie paraît être la première et seule
procédure instituée aux fins de recouvrer la dite somme de $24.245.43 avec intérêt—il s était écoulé plus de trois ans
depuis que la dite somme était devenue due en vertu du dit rôle de cotisations
spéciales à savoir depuis le 20 février 1895, date où le
dit rôle de cotisations spéciales à été déposé comme
susdit par les dits Commissaires au bureau du dit Trésorier de la dite Cité de
Montréal ;
Considérant que les actes
faits par un débiteur dans le seul but de faire déclarer illégal et nul le
titre de son créantier ne son pas interruptifs de
prescription et que partant la requête en contestation du dit rôle de
cotisations spéciales produite le 8 août et dans laquelle
Dame Elizabeth Benning, l'un des auteurs des dits
opposants Cantin était en effet partie, n'a pas eu pour résultats d'interrompre
la prescription de la dite somme de $24,245.43 (Art. 2224
C.C.).
In appeal this judgment appears to have been unanimously
confirmed, Bosse, Blanchet, Hall, Ouimet and Charbonneau, ad
hoc, JJ., no special reason being given. Mr. Justice Blanchet observes,
however, that he only concurs in the result, entertaining the same views he
expressed in the former case, but as, at the time of the seizure, there was the
Guy contestation still pending, the city could not proceed to levy the
assessment from the respondents. Mr. Justice Charbonneau is of the same
opinion.
The clauses of the charter are undoubtedly ambiguous, but our
duty is to reconcile ambiguous enactments,
[Page 238]
by giving them a reasonable and even liberal interpretation,
so as to give effect to all. C. C. art. 12 ; Que. Rev. St., Int. Act. Pres. Title, ch. 2, s. 13. This sound principle, as old as
legislatures, was followed recently in a remarkable Privy Council case, where
the literal meaning of a clause of a statute was overlooked. Smith v. McArthur
().
All the cases agree that, in construing a section of an Act, regard must be had
first to the language of the clause itself, and second to other clauses in the
same Act, and that construction should be adopted which makes the whole Act
stand consistently together or reduces the inconsistency to the smallest
possible limits. See cases cited in Vol. 26, Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, vo.
" Statutes," (2 ed.) at page 616.
As I understand the above clauses of the charter, they mean
this :—A special assessment becomes due from the day of the deposit of the roll
in the city treasurer's office (s. 231), and immediately prescription commences
to run and continues to run, if the roll is not contested within six months. If
it is contested the prescription is suspended pending the final judgment. This
conclusion results from sections 144 and 238. It is not disputed if the
contestation is maintained and the roll annulled. A new roll may be then made
where the liability of the contesting ratepayer is continued, subjected to a
new prescription (sect. 238). But the statute is silent as to the effect upon
prescription of a judgment dismissing the contestation. Therefore, it is
contended by the respondents, it continued to run as if no contestation had
been made. This would certainly be a remarkable case of summum
jus summa injuria.
The court of appeal holds that, pendente lite, the city
was bound to proceed by action or seizure in order
[Page 239]
to interrupt prescription. If so bound as against the
contesting parties, a fortiori will it be against the ratepayers not
contesting. Hence the necessity of any number of actions or seizures, 100 or
200, or more—at least as many as there are ratepayers assessed—which would be
perfectly useless if the roll be annulled. The Court of Appeals calls this
state of affairs a mere inconvenience. It leads not only to great
inconvenience, but to most absurd consequences which cannot be supposed to have
been contemplated by the promoters of the charter or the legislature (26 Am.
& Eng. Encyl. of Law, p. 648).
Of course, as Lord O'Hagan said in a well known House of Lords
case :
We must take care that a hard case shall not make bad law ;
but . we must also take care that we do not attribute to Parliament the
intention of injustice so very flagrant, without coercive necessity. River
Wear Commissioners v. Àdamson () (H.
L. 1877).
In The Queen v. The
Judge of the City of London Court () Lord Esher M. R.said :
In my opinion, the rule has always been this—if the words of
an Act admit of two interpretations, then they are not clear ; and if one
interpretation leads to an absurdity, and the other does not, the court will
conclude that the legislature did not intend to lead to an absurdity, and will
adopt the other interpretation.
Is it not absurd to suppose that in order to accomplish one
object, namely, the determination of the liability of the proprietors, two or
more actions—in this instance at least twenty-five—would be necessary ; one by
the dissatisfied debtors to the effect that the instrument of indebtedness be
annulled, and the others by the creditor against all the debtors, contesting or
not, praying for the payment of the debt? Especially, is it not preposterous to
hold that prescription will be interrupted or suspended if the debtor's
[Page 240]
action be maintained, but that it will
not, if it be dismissed. With due deference, such a state of affairs is
contrary to reason, and cannot be attributed to men in their right senses, as
members of a legislature are presumed to be. (26 Am. & Eng. Encyl. of Law,
pp. 601, 648).
I therefore consider, independently of the provisions of the
Civil Code, and merely by giving a fair meaning to the statute, that
prescription was suspended during the pendency of the contestation and that
section 408 of the charter of 1899 is merely declaratory, to remove any
possible doubt :
Whenever any valuation and assessment roll, or special
assessment roll, is. attacked or contested by proceedings, such proceedings
shallbe held to interrupt prescription in respect to all such assessment rolls,
until the date of the final adjudication upon or determination of such judicial
proceeding.
The legislature has used the word "interrupt"
instead of the more correct one "suspend" ; but it is immaterial in
the present case, as both would preserve the right of the city to enforce the
collection of the assessment.
It is especially when viewed by the light of the Civil Code
that the true meaning of the above statutory enactments appears.
I quite agree with Mr Justice Robidoux, confirmed in appeal,
that article 2224 of the Civil Code does not apply, but not for the same
reason, namely, that the opposition afin d'annuler was
made " dans le seul but de
faire déclarer
illégal et nul le titre de son créancier." Something else was
demanded, namely, the confection of a new roll, and in any event, the
modification of the first one. It seems to me that the true and, probably, the
only reason why Art. 2224 C C. does not apply is to be found in Art. 2226 C. C., which declares that a judicial proceeding does not
interrupt
[Page 241]
prescription if it be dismissed, as undoubtedly it was here.
But can we not find a cause for interruption of prescription
in articles 2184, 2185 and 2221 of the Civil Code ? To my mind, the
petition to annul the roll of assessment contains not only tacit but express
allegations of an acknowledgement of the right to assess and a tacit
renunciation of the benefit of the prescription which had commenced to run. The
petitioners pray, first, that the roll be annulled ; but they knew that this
meant not a liberation or discharge from the payment of the cost of the
expropriation but the making of a new roll where the legal liability would be
continued and adjusted. Finally they pray, in a subsidiary manner, that certain
deductions be made from the first roll and, for that purpose, that it be
referred back to the commissioners "pour préparer un nouveau rôle." These
allegations of the respondents amount to this : We owe our due share of the
expropriation; but the roll is null and illegal and we demand that a new one be
made ; and if this cannot be granted, we pray for certain deductions. The
court, by judgment rendered in 1900, dismissed their demand and as a necessary
consequence declared that their share of the tax was as stated in the roll.
It may be said that the acknowledgement in the petition to
annul was of no avail to the appellants, as the prescription was not acquired.
This would be true if the proceedings had ended then ; but, in 1899, instead of
invoking prescription by an amendment to their petition or otherwise—prescription
being, available at any stage of the proceedings even in appeal— they joined
issue with the city, persisted in the prayer of their petition as framed and,
on the 7th of July, 1900, asked the Court of Review to reverse the judgment of
the Superior Court and grant the prayer of
[Page 242]
their demand to annul the roll. All this appears in written
admissions and establishes that the last act of interruption happened in 1901.
The seizure by the sheriff was made in 1902, when the interrupted prescription
was yet running. If these facts do not constitute tacit renunciation of
prescription, then I do not know what that word means. Arts. 2227, 2184, 2185,
2264, C. C.
Pothier, Oblig. n. 693 says :
Par quelque acte que le débiteur reconnaisse la dette, cet acte interrompt la prescription.
Dunod, p. 58, adds that
toutes les fois qu'il se fait quelque-chose
entre le créancier et le débiteur, le possesseur et le propriétaire, qui
emporte un aveu exprés ou tacite de la dette, du droit ou
de la propriété, ce sera une interpretation civile.
Baudry-Lacantinerie, Droit 'Civil, Vol. 25,
n. 520, (2 éd.):
La reconnaissance interruptive de prescription résulte de tout acte ou de tout
fait contenant ou impliquant l'aveu de l'existence d'un droit. Elle peut être,
en effet, expresse ou tacite.
Fuzier-Herman, Code Annoté,
art. 2221, Vol. 4, pp. 1262,
1263, summarizes the jurisprudence upon this point in the following paragraphs :
7. Il faut observer d'ailleurs
que les juges du fait peuvent induire la renonciation, tant des circonstances
particulières de la cause que du
silence gardé par le défendeur en première instance relativement au moyen de
prescription. Case. 21 mai, 1883, Touchet,
précité, Paris 1er mars, 1893 (D. p. 93,
2, 296). Sic. Baudry-Lacantinerie et Tissier n. 51.
14. La renunciation tacite à une prescription acquise peut résulter de déclarations consignées
dans des actes de procédure, par example dans un exploit introductif
d'instance, ou dans une requête d'avoué, aussi bien que de declarations personnelles, Paris, 16 janvr, 1865 (S. 65,
2, 123, P. 65, 583). Sic,
Baudry-Lacantinerie et Tissier, n. 79 ; Aubry et Rau, t, 8,
p. 452, par. 776. Contrà,
Troplong, t. 1, n. 55.
27. Celui qui, sans contester l'existence de sa dette, en discute la quotité, ou l'époque de 1' exigibilité, sollicite des
réductions ou des
[Page 243]
délais, renonce, par là même, à opposer la prescription. Troplong, t. 1, n. 67 et 68
; Aubry et Rau, t. 8, p. 453, par. 776 ; Baudry-Lacan-tinerie et Tissier, n. 73.
V. suprà, art. 2220, n. 11.
Prescription was not only interrupted, but it was also
suspended. These two expressions are not synonymous. All the commentators of
the French Code, similar in this matter to the Quebec Code, establish that they
have a different meaning and effect. See Quebec Civil Code, arts. 2222 to 2231,
and 2232 to 2239, also 2264; 32 Laurent, n. 77 ; 25 Baudry-Lacantinerie,. n. 365.
Interruption means the entire destruction of the prescription running which
recommences to run for the same time as before. Suspension, as the word
indicates, merely suspends the running prescription. The expression is used to
indicate cases in which the statute, after having begun to run, is suspended in
its operation so that the time during which the statute ran prior to the period
of suspension and the time elapsing after are alone to be counted against the
creditor.
Mr. Justice Doherty and the majority of the court of appeal
held in the case of City of Montreal v. The Land and Loan Company (), that the
contestation of the roll does not constitute the absolute impossibility to collect required by art. 2232 C. C. I believe that practically it does. What valid reason can
be advanced to force the city to take hundreds of cases ruinous to all ? As
many suits or seizures of a similar character and for the same object as there
were proprietors, contesting or not, would be necessary. Such an absurd result
could not have been contemplated by the legislature. It may be that the learned
judges were right in the case before them, that of a ratepayer who did not
contest the roll ; I express no opinion upon that case which is not before us ;
but it seems to me that
[Page 244]
the parties who have contested the roll are bound by this
contestation and its result. Evidently the city could not force the collection
of the assessment against them until the contestion was finally disposed of. If
undertaken by an action or a seizure, it would probably have been met by a plea
of lis pendens setting forth all the grounds of nullity alleged in the
petition to annul the roll, and its demand would be not simply stayed, but
dismissed with costs under article 173 of the new Code of Procedure, or article
136 of the old Code. At all events, the ratepayer contesting the roll will be
entitled by dilatory exception to a stay of proceedings till the rendering of
the decision of the court on his contestation, and will thus prevent the city from
enforcing the payment of the assessment pendente lite (art. 177 C. P.
Q.) The same course would be necessary at least against all proprietors
contesting, a most absurd state of affairs which, in my opinion, amounts to
absolute impossibility to proceed. The present case, therefore, falls strictly
within the exception of article 2232, namely, that it was absolutely impossible
for the city, in law, to act effectively, utilement, to
use the expression of French decisions quoted later on. It is the application
of the old well known Roman law maxim which is to be found in all systems of
jurisprudence: "Contra non valentem agere
nulla currit prœscriptio"
The French Code, art. 2251, different from art. 2232 of our Code,
did not retain the maxim. It merely declares that prescription runs against all
persons, unless they fall within some exception established by law. The
jurisprudence has however maintained the old rule with the limitation resulting
from the word "absolute" contained in our article.
On the 21st of May, 1900, the Cour de Cassation
held that :
[Page 245]
La prescription ne court pas contre celui qui
est dans l'impassibilité absolue d'agir par suite d'un
empêchement quelconque résultant soit de la loi, soit de la convention ou de la
force majeure. P. F. 1900, 1,431.
See also Troplong, Pres. vol. 2, n. 701 ; 5 Zacharié, par. 848;
Merlin, Rép. S. 1, par. 7, art. 2, quest. 10 and 11 ; Dalloz.
Rép. Supp. vo. Prescription, n. 454, Vol. 13, p. 178 (1893) ; Pandectes Fr. vo. Prescription,
nn. 970 to 975, Vol. 45 (1903) p. 507,
508; Sirey, Rép. 1902, 1,133, note 1-2.
It would seem that article 2232 C.C. is
sufficient to suspend prescription, if the debt depends upon a condition. Here
again the reason of the exception is the absolute impossibility for the creditor
to move. The code has, however, specially provided for this particular case.
Article 2236 C.C. says :
Prescription of personal actions does not run with respect to
debts depending on a condition, until such condition happens.
As I read the various statutory enactments relating to the
prescription of a special assessment in the City of Montreal, I find that they
are subject to the happening of an event which may or may not come, namely, the
contestation of the roll. If no contestation be lodged within six months, the
prescription continues its course till accomplished. If a contestation be made,
prescription will be suspended pending the litigation. This necessarily results
from sections 144 and 238.
The provision of article 2236 C.C. was borrowed, word for
word, from article 2257 of the Code of France, where its scope and effect have
been fully considered by the highest courts and jurists. I will refer to a few
of these decisions: Cass. 20th Feby. and 15th July 1839 ; S.V. '39,1,215,575 ;
26th May, 1856 ; S.V. 57, 1,820 ; Cass. 14th Feby. 1888 ; S.V. 90, 1,313 ;
Cass. 28th Oct. 1889 ; S.V. 91, 1,293 ; Troplong, Pres. Vol.
2, n. 686 ; Leroux de Bretagne, n. 512,592.
[Page 246]
A decision of the Cour de Cassation of
the 22nd June, 1853, is quite in point. A doubt having arisen as to the
applicability of a canal tax or toll, both parties referred the case to the Conseil d'Etat, the competent tribunal, for determination,
it being agreed that, in the meantime, no other proceeding would be taken. The
court held, 1st: That prescription had been suspended pending the decision in
consequence of the said agreement ; and 2ndly, that independently of the
agreement and by force of law, prescription was suspended by the proceeding or instance
before the State Council, where the validity of the title of the creditor
was at stake. Dalloz 1853, 1,302 :
La Cour : Sur le premier
moyen: Attendu que l'arrêt attaqué a reconnu
et constaté, en fait, qu'il était intervenu entre les parties des conventions
dont le but était de suspendre toutes poursuites jusqu'à ce que le conseil
d'Etat eût statué sur la portée du titre en vertu duquel le droit était réclamé
: qu'en induisant de ces conventions que la prescription
n'avait qu'à courir au profit des demandeurs, l'arrêt attaqué n'a violé ni
faussement interpreté les
articles invoqués ; Que c'est
avec la même raison que le dit arrêt a décidé que la prescription avait été
suspendue par suite du litige soulevé sur le titre lui-même, puisque, pendant
cette instance, la personne du débiteur étant incertaine, le créancier ne
pouvait utilement agir.
The commentators and arrêtistes who have noted this decision, refer only to the last
moyen which they express as follows :
Jugé que
la prescription d'un droit qui repose sur un
titre dont la validité est contestée demeure suspendue pendant l'instance en
validité du titre. Gilbert sur Sirey, Code Annoté, ed. 1870, p. 573, art. 2257 ; Marcadé,
art. 2257. See also Cass. 27th May, 1857, D. 57,
1,290.
The issue and the facts of the case as detailed in the report
lead to no other conclusion, and no authority can be quoted which gives another
meaning to this decision of the highest court of France. I am not aware that
its soundness has been questioned by either courts or commentators. It is cited
as law by the
[Page 247]
best authorities : Fuzier-Herman, Rép. 1903, Vo. Pres.; vol. 31, p. 265 ;
Pand. Fr. Rép. 1903, Vo. Pres. vol.
45, p. 507 ; S.V. 1902, 1,133, note 1-2.
With regard to the Guy contestation, Mr.
Justice Blanchet and Mr. Justice Charbonneau held that as long as it is not
finally disposed of, the city cannot levy the tax even from the respondents who
have been unsuccessful in their petition to annul. It is true that, if the Guy
estate succeeds, a new roll may become necessary as to all the proprietors, the
respondents included ; but this does not mean that they are parties to that
case, and that the assessment is not payable as to all who did not contest, or
at least those who having contested have been put out of court. As to the
latter at least, there is chose jugée and they have no other
course to adopt than to pay. If the roll be annulled at the suit of the Guy
estate or any other proprietor, then the respondents will find their relief in
section 241 of the charter. This clearly results from our judgment rendered
last December on a motion to quash an appeal for want of jurisdiction in the
case of The City of Montreal v. The Land and Loan Company ().
For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the appeal should
be allowed and the opposition afin d'annuler of the
respondents dismissed with costs before all the courts.
DAVI ES J.,
concurred in the judgment dismissing the appeal with costs.
NESBITT J. (dissenting):—I must say I have felt very great
doubt and difficulty as to this case, but I have come to the conclusion that
the opinion of my brother Girouard is the correct one. It appears to me that
the debt does not become due on the roll when a
[Page 248]
person assessed properly disputes it until that dispute is
solved and that, in any event, the person so disputing cannot be h
ead to say at the time the court declares the roll valid and binding on
him that no debt is due from him in respect to it.
KILLAM J.—I agree entirely with the reasons given by the
learned Chief Justice for the dismissal of this appeal ; but on account of the
importance of the case and the differences of opinion in this court and the
courts below, I desire to add some further considerations.
The prescription given by section 120 of the city charter of
1889 applied to,
the right to recover any tax, assessment or water rate under
this Act.
Section 81 of the Act authorized the council to make by-laws
to impose and levy an assessment on immovable property liable to taxation in
the city, not to exceed one and a quarter per cent of the assessed value of
such property, and also to impose and levy a business tax on trades,
professions, etc., and certain special taxes upon those engaged in particular
kinds of business. By section 82 these assessments and taxes were to be payable
annually and at the times fixed by such by-laws.
Section 260 authorised the imposition of rates for the use of
water.
Sections 228-231 provided for the making of special
assessments of the kind now in question.
By section 1 of the Act :—
Whenever the following words occur in this Act, they shall,
unless the context otherwise requires, he understood as follows : * * * * * * *
The word "assessment" shall mean the rates annually
levied upon immovable property in the city generally ;
[Page 249]
The words "special assessment" or
"apportionment" shall mean the assessment levied, from time to time,
upon certain proprietors for local improvements;
The word "tax" shall mean the personal duty or
license fee levied upon trades, business professions or occupations generally.
The "special assessment" is certainly within the
generic term "assessment". While there was an advance by the city of
the whole cost of an improvement, one half of which was eventually to be borne
by certain property holders only, their proportion of the cost was to be
imposed upon them by the sovereign authority vested for the purpose in the
governing body of the city. It was as much an assessment upon them as was the
imposition of any contribution for ordinary municipal purposes. The benefit
being considered to be greater to them than to the city at large, they were
made liable to the imposition of a greater proportion of the burden. That was
deemed the fairest mode of apportioning the cost of a particular civic
improvement.
When a general term, like "assessment," is assigned
in a statute a narrower meaning than it would have in its ordinary sense,
excluding some of its species, the draftsmen requires to exercise great care to
escape its use in the general sense. In such a case a slight indication may be
sufficient to warrant the ascribing to it of its full natural meaning. The
definition is qualified. It is " unless the context otherwise
requires."
Section 120 refers to
the right to recover any tax, assessment or water rate under
this Act.
And the proviso at the end refers to a "special
assessment" as if it had been included under the previous language. It is
not merely an enactment that, in case of a special assessment payable by
instalments, there shall be a similar period of prescription running from the
maturity of each instalment. It seems to assume that
[Page 250]
special assessments are included in the previous part of the
section ; it is a proviso apparently framed to qualify or explain the prior
terms ; it speaks of " the " prescription, as if that previously
provided was applicable ; it states that it is to run u
only from the expiry," etc., as if otherwise it would be different. In
my opinion the context sufficiently indicates that a special assessment of the
kind now in question comes within the word " assessment " where first
used in the section.
The period of prescription ran from the time at which the
"tax, assessment or water rate became due." It did not run from the
time that proceedings could be taken to collect the tax, assessment or water
rate. Different methods and different times were fixed for recovery from
different sources. In order to a sale of immovables, there must, whether under
the Act of 1889 or under that of 1899 (which was the one in force when these
proceedings were taken), have been some tax, assessment or rate in arrear for a year.
In respect of all these various taxes, rates and assessments
express provisions were made either directly fixing or authorizing the council
to fix the times when they should respectively become due. And in the case of a
special assessment the time was explicitly fixed by the statute. Section 231
required the assessment roll to be filed with the city treasurer, and provided
that "such special assessment shall thereupon become due."
If there had been nothing in the Act to qualify these
provisions it would be absolutely clear that the period of prescription would
run from the times thus respectively fixed for the maturity of the claims.
The argument for the city is, however, that section 144 of the
Act of 1889 postponed the commencement of the period of prescription, either by
postponing
[Page 251]
the due date of the assessment or by interposing an obstacle
to its enforcement. The section was as follows :
144. Any municipal elector, in his own name, may, by a petition
presented to the Superior Court, demand and obtain, on the ground of
illegality, the annulment of any by-law, resolution, assessment roll or
apportionment ; but the right of demanding such annulment is prescribed by six
months from the date of the passing or completion of such by law, resolution,
assessment roll, or apportionment ; and after that delay, every such by-law,
resolution, assessment roll, or apportionment shall be considered valid and
binding for all purposes whatsoever, provided that the subject matter thereof
be within the competence of the corporation.
This section did not relate exclusively to assessments. It had
not for its object to fix the times of their maturity. It was general and dealt
with other than financial matters.
The sections numbered from 140 to 148 came within a portion of
the Act designated as "Title XV." having the heading "
By-laws" and beginning with section 140 which authorized the city council
to make by-laws on a great variety of subjects.
It appears to me that nothing in section 144 affected in any
way the time of the coming into force of valid by-laws, resolutions, assessment
rolls or apportionments. It dealt with the method of attacking such matters for
illegality and fixed a limit of time within which this could be done. The
portion of the section making them valid and binding after the specified delay
was not needed in order to make valid and binding by-laws, resolutions, etc.,
which were legal and valid when made. And it could not have been intended for
that purpose. They would be so without any such provision. To hold the
council's by-laws and resolutions suspended in their operation until the expiry
of the six months, and then until the disposition
[Page 252]
of proceedings attacking them, would. be to paralyze
the hands of the civic authorities.
The proceedings to annul for illegality the assessment roll in
question failed. This established that the roll was valid and legal from the
beginning. The proceedings were begun within the necessary six months, so that
the expiration of six months gave the roll no greater force than it had when
filed with the treasurer.
The last of the conditions upon which it could be said that
the debt depended, under art. 2236 of the Civil Code, happened with the filing
of the roll. It was not a debt with a term, but one payable immediately upon
its coming into existence.
Articles 2222-2231 C. C. deal with the causes which interrupt
presenption articles 2232-9 C. C. with the causes which suspend the course of
prescription.
The causes of interruption are divided into
"natural" and "civil." By its definition "natural
interruption" does not apply to a case like the present. The specified
causes of civil interruption are judicial demands, renunciation of the benefit
of a period elapsed and acknowledgement by the debtor.
The judicial demand, under article 2224 C. C is one served on
the person whose prescription it is sought to hinder, not upon the person whose
claim may be prescribed. And as the petition was dismissed, it cannot, by the
terms of article 2226. C. C., be treated as having interrupted the
prescription. Seizures, set-offs, interventions and oppositions are considered
as judicial demands. Even if the contestation of the petition to annul the roll
could be treated as an opposition within this article, that contestation was
not put in until after the expiration of the period of prescription. "The
result of the proceeding was only the dismissal of the petition, which merely
established the
[Page 253]
validity of the assessment roll when made and filed and
involved no adjudication upon the continuance of its effect.
The petition did not acknowledge the right. It contested it.
By article 2232 C. C.,
prescription runs against all persons, unless they are included
in some exception established by this code, or unless it is absolutely
impossible for them in law or fact to act by themselves or to be represented by
others.
I am quite unable to discover any reason for believing that
the petition to annul the assessment roll interposed any obstacle to
proceedings for the enforcement of the assessment either against the
petitioners or against other property holders affected. It seems to me that, if
they had been taken in time and opposition entered, the only relief would be by
an appeal to the discretion of the court, which might have stayed the
proceedings if the petition had seemed to raise sufficiently substantial
questions.
If the mere filing of a petition to annul an assessment roll
would suspend its operation or effect, equally a petition to annul a by-law or
resolution would suspend the operation or effect of the by-law or resolution, a
result which would leave the city at the mercy of any elector in cases in which
a short delay might be of serious importance.
Notwithstanding the authorities to which my brother Girouard
has referred, I am unable to agree with him that the pendency of this petition
had the effect of either interrupting or suspending the prescription.
The summary in Dalloz, 1853,1, 302, of the case there
mentioned, does not appear to me to show the circumstances sufficiently to
warrant its being taken as a direct decision that the pendency of any
collateral litigation
[Page 254]
questioning the title to or existence of a right or debt
operates ipso Jacto to prevent the
owner or creditor from taking direct proceedings to enforce the right or debt.
The reason there given
puisque, pendant cette instance,
la personne du débiteur étant incertaine, le
créancier ne pouvait utilement agir,
appears to limit the decision to a case of that character,
although the summary of the case does not clearly show in what the uncertainty
of the person consisted, And further it was thought that le créancier ne pouvait utilement agir. It was not that it was
absolutely impossible for him to act, as the Quebec code requires.
In the present case the prescription was expressly made to run
from the time at which the assessment became due, not from the accrual of the
right to enforce it, which would be a year later. Neither the city charter nor
the Civil Code expressly interposed any obstacle to proceedings upon the claim
or to the running of the prescription ; and, in the absence of any clear,
well-known principle of law to that effect, I cannot think that the existence
of such an obstacle should be implied.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant : Coyle & Tétreau.
Solicitors for the respondents: Brosseau, Lajoie, Lacoste
& Quigley.