Supreme Court of Canada
McKee v. Philip, 55 S.C.R. 287
Date: 1916-10-30
David A.
McKee (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
William
Philip (Defendant) Respondent.
1916: October 17; 1916:
October 30.
Present: Sir Charles
Fitzpatrick C.J. and Davies, Idington, Duff and Anglin JJ.
On
Appeal From The Court Of Appeal For British Columbia.
Sale—Recovery
of moneys paid—Evidence—Onus probandi—Estoppel by receipt.
The appellant, having sold a
property to one Arnold, purporting to act as agent for the respondent, received
in part payment a cheque for $1,300 of the Dominion Trust Company of which
Arnold was manager. The respondent, on the ground that the purchase was beyond
the powers vested in Arnold, resisted an action of the appellant for the
enforcement of the agreement and sued the appellant, by counterclaim, for the
reimbursement of the $1,300 so paid, alleging that this sum, which was borrowed
by Arnold from the Trust Company, was repaid by Arnold out of his moneys in the
hands of Arnold for investments. The trial judge and the Court of Appeal held,
and it was not disputed, that Arnold, in entering into the purchase in the name
of the respondent, exceeded his authority.
Held, Duff J. (dissenting), that the onus' probandi
as to the ownership of the moneys, was not on the respondent, and that, even if
it was so, the receipt in the agreement of sale and the facts leading up
thereto were sufficient proof that the money paid to the appellant was that of
the respondent.
Per Duff J. (dissenting).—Respondent can not repudiate
Arnold as his agent for the purchase and at the same time treat him as such in
connection with the advances. The receipt in the agreement for sale could only
constitute an estoppel in an action based upon the agreement and between
the parties to it. On respondent lies the onus of showing that the
moneys in question are his moneys; and the admission derived from the receipt
in the agreement did not constitute a prima facie case sufficient to
shift the burden of proof.
APPEAL from the judgment of
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia, reversing the judgment of Mac-
[Page 287]
donald J. at the trial, by
which the respondent's counterclaim was dismissed.
The material facts of the case
are fully stated in the judgments now reported.
E. L. Newcombe K.C. for
the appellant.
S. S. Taylor K.C. for the
respondent.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE.—The late W. R.
Arnold who held a power of attorney from the respondent purchased for him and
in his name certain lands in British Columbia. The consideration was $11,700 of
which $1,700 was paid in cash, the receipt being acknowledged in the agreement
for sale, and the balance was to be paid in future instalments. The $1,700 was
paid by a cheque of the Dominion Trust Co. of which Arnold was manager and on
which he could draw for any money he wanted.
It was held and it is not now
disputed that the purchase was beyond the powers vested in Arnold and is void.
The trial judge, however, refused to order the return to the respondent of the
$1,700 paid to the appellant because he was not satisfied that the moneys were
the moneys of the respondent; he held that the onus was on the respondent to
shew that they were his moneys. I can see no grounds for this decision. The
respondent, as he admits, is a man of small education and trusted his affairs
entirely to his friend Arnold. He states over and over again that he knew
nothing whatever about the transaction; it was useless therefore for the judge
to give him, as he says he did, an opportunity of proving that the money was
his.
But even if the onus was on the
respondent, I think that it has been sufficiently discharged. The respondent
has proved that some years previously he had
[Page 288]
placed in Arnold's hands a sum of
$1,700 and even if this had been invested there is nothing to shew that Arnold,
a man of endless speculations, had not realized the money again. Further there
is no doubt that very shortly after making this agreement for purchase Arnold
collected and had in his hands many thousand dollars belonging to the
respondent.
I do not know how you can
identify any particular moneys of the respondent in the hands of Arnold; men of
his type are not very particular about money coming into their hands from
whatever sources and I think it is likely that he used either the respondent's,
his own or his company's cash very indifferently.
I cannot see that there is
anything in the fact that the appellant was paid by a cheque of the Dominion
Trust Co. which will enable him to dispute that the money was received from the
respondent, the purchaser named in the deed, as by this writing under seal he
admitted was the case.
The respondent has lost all his
money which he confided to Arnold and the appellant has certainly no claim to
the $1,700 beyond the fact that it is in his possession. Under these
circumstances one might have supposed that he would have been content to pay it
over under the judgment by which, of course, he was fully protected, without
bringing the respondent before this court.
The judgment should be affirmed
and this appeal dismissed with costs.
DAVIES J.—A majority of the
learned judges of the Court of Appeal drew the inference that the money which
is in dispute in this case belonged to Phillip. Though at the close of the
argument I entertained some doubts upon the point, subsequent consideration,
[Page 289]
after reading the evidence, has
convinced me that the inference is a reasonable and proper one.
I have nothing to add to the
reasons of Chief Justice Macdonald and would dismiss the appeal with costs.
IDINGTON J.—I think there was
evidence furnished by the receipt in the agreement in question and the facts
leading up thereto and surrounding all the transactions in relation thereto
from which it should be inferred that the money paid to appellant was that of
the respondent which he is entitled to recover when repudiating the onerous
contract which he never had authorized. It certainly was not the money of
Arnold and could not be claimed honestly by appellant unless it was so which he
has failed to establish.
The appeal should, therefore, be
dismissed with costs.
DUFF J. (dissenting)—The
appellant's action was based upon a purported agreement, dated the 1st Nov.,
1909, for the sale of land near Vancouver. The instrument was executed by the
appellant as vendor and by one W. R. Arnold, who has since died, but was then
the manager of the Dominion Trust Co. in the name of the respondent and
professedly as the respondent's agent. The appellant claimed judgment against
the respondent for the unpaid instalments of the purchase money and, in the
event of nonpayment, for foreclosure of the interests of the respondent and
certain persons claiming by transfer from him. The respondent denied the
authority of Arnold to enter into the agreement on his behalf or in his name
and counterclaimed for the restitution to him by the appellant of certain sums
amounting in all to $1,300 which he alleged had
[Page 290]
been paid to the appellant as
part of the purchase money, but without authority, out of the moneys in
Arnold's possession for him. The trial judge held, and this is a point upon
which all parties are agreed, that Arnold had in fact no authority to execute
the so called agreement in the name of the respondent and dismissed the action
against the respondent. He held also that the respondent had failed to shew any
title to the moneys received by the appellant from Arnold and dismissed the
counterclaim. In the Court of Appeal Mr. Justice McPhillips concurred with the
trial judge in his view that the counterclaim should be dismissed; but the
majority of the court, the Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Martin, held that the
respondent had sufficiently established his title to the moneys claimed and
judgment was given accordingly.
I think the opinion of the
learned trial judge and that of Mr. Justice McPhillips is the opinion which
ought to prevail; and I think it right to state my reasons in full because the
points in controversy are not exclusively points of fact, the decision in
favour of the respondent having no unimportant relation to the proper
application of one of the leading principles governing the incidence of the
burden of proof. The agreement between Arnold and the appellant which the
document above mentioned professes to embody was made on the 1st of Nov. when
$200 was paid to the appellant on account of purchase money by means of the
cheque of the Dominion Trust Co. At that time the respondent's name was not
mentioned and nothing appears to have been said to indicate that Arnold himself
was not the purchaser. On the 12th Nov., when the residue of the cash payment
was due (nominally $1,500, but in reality $1,100, $400 being allowed, as it was
said, for a commission to the purchaser) Arnold
[Page 291]
informed the appellant that he
wished the agreement to be taken in the respondent's name and the document on
which the appellant's action was brought was produced and executed. The residue
($1,100) was also paid by means of the cheque of the Dominion Trust Co. These
sums of $200 and $1,100 paid in the manner mentioned were treated by the
Dominion Trust Co., as in fact they were, as advances for the purpose of the
purchase. The respondent had a personal account with the Trust Co. but the
moneys advanced were not charged to him in this account; nor was he there
charged with the Trust Co's share (1/2) of the sum allowed the purchaser as
commission (so called) which would have been $200. The only entries in the
Trust Co.'s books relating to the transaction are to be found in a book known
as the "real estate ledger" in which there is a description of the
transaction, the appellant being entered as vendor and the respondent as
purchaser and in which the sums advanced on Nov. 1st and Nov. 12th are entered
as debits against the transaction as well as the repayment of these advances on
July 12th, 1910, which is entered as a credit. This latter payment was made by
Arnold, a receipt being given to him as for money paid by him personally and
not in the character of agent. In the meantime, in April, 1910, Arnold,
professing to act under his power of attorney from Phillip, had transferred the
agreement to himself. Subsequently Arnold sold certain undivided interests
receiving therefor shares in the capital stock of a certain company. These
shares were taken in his name and treated as his own property.
Arnold was an old friend of the
respondent's and in 1904 and 1905 had received some money from him for
investment which had then been invested. He seems to have acted as the
respondent's agent in vari-
[Page 292]
ous ways and the respondent seems
to have trusted him implicitly, not asking for accounts, and in fact the only
account he received appears to have been one rendered in 1912. This account did
not treat the property in question as a property held for Phillip. His power of
attorney admittedly did not confer authority to pledge the respondent's credit
in purchasing land or in borrowing money. There is no direct evidence and there
is no fact pointing to the conclusion that Arnold had any funds of the
respondent's in his possession either at the time the purchase was made or at
the time the advances were repaid in July, 1910. The respondent, it may be
added, did not become aware of this purchase or of the advances until after
Arnold's death and some little time before the appellant's action was brought.
The respondent's counsel rightly
assumed that he could make no progress towards establishing his claim without
first satisfying the tribunal of the fact that there were sufficient grounds
for judicially inferring either (1) that in taking over the agreement in April,
1910, and in repaying in July, 1910, the advances of Nov., 1909, as well as in
procuring these advances to be made Arnold was acting as the agent of the
respondent or (2) that in point of fact the advances were repaid out of moneys
belonging to the respondent in his possession. There is no evidence to support
either of these propositions, and it will be clear enough I think, from the
considerations I shall briefly mention, that the preponderance of probability
to be derived from the facts in evidence is against both of them. It will be
sufficiently clear also that even assuming the first proposition to be
established in fact that proposition can lead us nowhere in view of the
circumstance that the respondent's case made upon his counterclaim and in his
defence is wholly based upon the repudiation of
[Page 293]
Arnold's authority to act as his
agent; and, as to the second proposition, assuming it established, it is hardly
doubtful that it would afford no ground for relief to the respondent as against
the appellant.
Before proceeding to discuss
these propositions in detail it is well to emphasize the fact already mentioned
that the moneys in question were paid by the Dominion Trust Co. and that the
payment was treated by the Trust Co. and by Arnold as an advance for the
purpose of the purchase and that, eight months afterwards, this advance was
repaid by Arnold. The fact that these moneys were advanced and the advance was
running for a period of eight months is conclusive against any suggestion that
the sums in question were paid out of moneys in the Trust Co.'s possession for
the respondent or out of moneys at the time in Arnold's possession for him, the
advance having been made, as already mentioned, in the form of a payment direct
from the Trust Co. to the appellant. The respondent can therefore successfully
contend that these moneys were his moneys only on one of two assumptions;
first, that the advance was an advance to Arnold as the respondent's agent; or,
secondly, that the payment was a payment by the Dominion Trust Co. acting as the
respondent's agent, which latter assumption could only be supported upon the
theory that the Trust Co. had been employed to act as the agent of the
respondent in making the advance by Arnold acting as his agent. Admittedly
there was no communication between the respondent and the Trust Co. with regard
to this particular transaction and the Trust Co. had not been empowered by the
respondent himself directly to act for him in such transactions generally.
This brings us to the first of
the above mentioned propositions put forward on behalf of the respondent.
[Page 294]
There is one circumstance which
can be urged in support of the theory that Arnold in procuring the advance to
be made by the Trust Co. professed to act for the respondent, that is the fact
that the purchase was made in the respondent's name and that in the real estate
ledger of the Trust Company the transaction was entered as being, that which it
appeared to be on its face, a purchase by the respondent. As against this
theory, on the other hand, there are all the circumstances which seem to
indicate that Arnold was merely using Phillip's name as a convenience in a
transaction which in reality was, and was intended to be, his own.
These circumstances include the
fact, according to the appellant's testimony which the learned trial judge
seems to have accepted, that Arnold approached the appellant in the guise of
being himself the purchaser but taking the purchase in Phillip's name for his
own convenience; they include also the facts that no notice was given to
Phillip that Arnold was pledging his credit for large deferred payments; that
the agreement was afterwards taken over by Arnold without notice to Phillip;
that the advances were repaid in a manner which indicated that he treated them
as advances to himself personally; that he treated the property as his own
making no reference to it or to the proceeds of the sale of an interest in it
in the subsequent account rendered to the respondent. These circumstances all
point to an intention on the part of Arnold not to throw the burden of the
purchase on Phillip, but rather to use Phillip's name in a transaction which
was his own and the burden of which he intended to carry.
There is the additional
circumstance already mentioned that the respondent had a personal account with
the Trust Company and that in this account no mention is made either of the
advances or of the sum of $200.00
[Page 295]
(commission) which the Trust
Company was entitled to charge against the real purchaser. Add to these the
circumstances that Arnold in fact had no authority to borrow money from the
Trust Company on behalf of Phillip and that as between the Trust Company and
himself he treated the loan as his own (see receipt of July 21st, 1910) and it
seems sufficiently clear that the weight of evidence is distinctly in favour of
the view that the advance was not procured by Arnold intending to act as the
respondent's agent and was not made by the Trust Company intending to act as
the respondent's agent at Arnold's request.
If indeed it could have been
shewn, either by direct evidence or through a well founded inference, that the
advance was in fact repaid out of the moneys in Arnold's possession on behalf
of the respondent, then a different colour would be given to the whole business
and it would not then, I think, have been open to Arnold to say as against the
respondent that he had not acted for the respondent in all these dealings with
the Trust Company as well as with the appellant and it would have been open to
the respondent to adopt these dealings as his own. But in truth, as I have
already said, there is no direct evidence and there is no fact which indicates
that Arnold at any time in the course of these transactions had funds of the
respondent's in his possession, still less that the advances were repaid out of
any such moneys. The suggestion that this was so cannot be put in any higher
category than mere guesswork; as against it there are all the circumstances
above mentioned indicating that Arnold was merely using the respondent's name
as a convenience, in which case the use of the respondent's money for the
repayment of the advances could only be classed as intentional
misappropriation.
[Page 296]
But with respect to all these
theories as grounds for supporting the respondent's claim, the respondent is in
hopeless difficulties by reason of the position he is obliged to take up as the
very foundation of his claim. The respondent now repudiates the authority of
Arnold to enter into the purchase on his behalf or in his name. Arnold, as
already mentioned, was equally without authority either to enter into the
purchase or to procure advances on behalf of the respondent; and it is
impossible to draw a line between the purchase and the arrangement resulting in
the advances in such a way as to enable the respondent at one and the same time
to repudiate the purchase and to adopt as his own act the act of Arnold in
procuring the Trust. Company to make the payments. As against Arnold it could
not be done and therefore as against the appellant, with whom Arnold was
professing to deal in the respondent's name with the respondent's authority, it
cannot be done. The respondent, by repudiating Arnold's authority to pledge his
credit in respect of the purchase (thereby escaping all responsibility to the
appellant under the professed agreement), has incapacitated himself from
alleging as a ground of his claim against the appellant that the moneys in
question were borrowed by Arnold for him and that they became in consequence
his moneys in the appellant's hands.
The respondent cannot insist upon
adopting any one of Arnold's acts from that by which he procured the advances
to that of repaying the advances without treating Arnold as his agent for
making the purchase.
From all this it is quite evident
that even if the respondent had been able to shew that Arnold had used his
funds in July, 1910, in repaying the Trust Company the respondent would still
have one or more difficult bridges to cross before making good his claim
[Page 297]
against the appellant. The root
of the difficulty is that the respondent's position in repudiating Arnold's
authority and the Trust Co.'s authority to make payments for him, that is to
say, in his behalf, necessarily separates any misappropriation by Arnold of his
funds for the purposes of the transaction from the transaction itself and he
could only make good his claim to moneys of his misappropriated by Arnold as
far as he could trace these moneys (if in fact such moneys had passed into the
hands of the Trust Company). He might have remedy against the Trust Company but
he cannot trace his moneys further. It was not his funds, but the Trust
Company's funds which went to pay the appellant. He cannot allege that the
Trust Company paid out his moneys eight months before it received them because
he has repudiated any authority on the part of the Trust Company to act for him
in making payments. Whether or not the Trust Company in such circumstances
might have had a claim against the appellant would be a profitless inquiry for
many reasons, the most conclusive for the present being that the whole
discussion is hypothetical, there being as already said nothing to indicate
that the Trust Company was repaid out of the respondent's moneys, and much to
indicate the contrary.
On behalf of the respondent the
judgment below is supported on two other grounds. The first is the ground upon
which the Chief Justice in the court below proceeded, namely, that the
agreement of the first of November, 1909, contains a statement in the following
words:—
The sum of $1,700 (Seventeen
Hundred Dollars) on the execution of this agreement, the receipt whereof the
vendor doth hereby admit and acknowledge,—
[Page 298]
and that this constitutes an
admission by the appellant who executed the agreement of the receipt of the sum
in question for the respondent. This admission is said to constitute a primâ
facie case in favour of the respondent and as the learned Chief Justice
puts it in his judgment, it is said that there are no other facts in evidence
which "displace" this primâ facie case. There are two reasons
which force me to reject this line of reasoning:—First, the statement of fact
upon which it is based could only constitute an estoppel in an action between
the parties to the agreement and based upon it. The respondent's counterclaim
is not an action based upon the agreement, it is an action in repudiation of
the agreement. Then if this so called admission is to be treated as a piece of
evidence simply it must be construed and weighed for the purpose of appraising
its value with reference to the circumstances in which it is said to have been
made. It is not at all a point in controversy that the appellant, in executing
the agreement, acted on the representation made to him by Arnold that Arnold
had the respondent's authority for using his name. What then does this
statement, which, be it observed, is not a statement that the appellant has
received the sum mentioned from the respondent, amount to? Neither expressly
nor by implication can it be read as a declaration of anything more than this—that
in a transaction in which Arnold professes with the respondent's authority to
be using the respondent's name as purchaser, the appellant as vendor has
received a certain sum as part of the purchase money. The so called admission
in other words does not carry us a step beyond the fact that Arnold did profess
to have authority to enter into the transaction and to make these payments, in
the name of the respondent. The so called admission
[Page 299]
then being an admission only of
certain undisputed facts is not of the least assistance to us. The second
reason is this:—The so called admission being nothing but a piece of evidence,
it does not shift the burden of proof as determined by the pleadings, which
cast on the respondent (plaintiff by counterclaim) the onus of shewing that the
moneys in question are his moneys. An admission may, of course, without
shifting the burden of proof in that sense, constitute a primâ facie
case and thereby shift the burden of proof in the other sense, namely, the
burden of going on with the evidence, with the consequence that if the
defendant fails to give further evidence judgment may be given to the
plaintiff. In the case before us the so called admission in itself could not
constitute a primâ facie case for the respondent (plaintiff by
counterclaim) and shift the onus in this last mentioned sense. That is so for
the simple reason that the very document containing the admission taken by
itself alone, instead of establishing the respondent's right to recover the
money back from the appellant, would have established the appellant's right not
only to retain the money paid but to hold the respondent for the still unpaid
purchase money. But, assuming a primâ facie case to be established, it
is quite a misconception to suppose that (except in special cases where, for
example, the facts proved give rise to a presumption of law in the plaintiff's
favour) the effect of a primâ facie case is to cast upon the defendant
the burden of disproving the plaintiff's allegation of fact in the sense of
negativing that allegation by a preponderance of evidence in favour of the
defendant. The real effect, as I have indicated above, is that if further
evidence is not given the plaintiff is entitled to judgment; if further
evidence is given, whether by the plaintiff or the defendant, then
[Page 300]
the evidence being complete, the
plaintiff must fail unless the evidence as a whole is sufficient to establish
the allegation of fact upon which his case depends. The burden of establishing
remains on him to the end and if at the end the scales are even, he must fail.
The matter is stated very succinctly by Lord Esher in the following passage
from his judgment in Abrath v. The North Eastern Railway Co.
.
It is contended (I think
fallaciously) that if the plaintiff has given primâ facie evidence,
which unless it be answered, will entitle him to have the question decided in
his favour, the burden of proof is shifted on to the defendant as to the decision
of the questian itself. . .It seems to me that the proposition ought to be
stated thus:—the plaintiff may give primâ facie evidence which, unless it
be answered either by contradictory evidence or by the evidence of additional
facts, ought to lead the jury to find the question in his favour; the defendant
may give evidence, either by contradicting the plaintiff's evidence or by
proving other facts; the jury have to consider upon the evidence given upon
both sides, whether they are satisfied in favour of the plaintiff with respect
to the question which he calls upon them to answer. . . Then comes this
difficulty—suppose that the jury, after considering the evidence, are left in
real doubt as to which way they are to answer the question put to them on
behalf of the plaintiff; in that case also the burden of proof lies upon the
plaintiff, and if the defendant has been able by the additional facts which he
has adduced to bring the minds of the whole jury to a state of doubt, the
plaintiff has failed to satisfy the burden of proof which lies upon him.
Taking all the facts before us as
a whole, the preponderance appears to be rather in favour of the appellant
(defendant by counterclaim).
The second ground upon which the
respondent relies is the fact that the Dominion Trust Company, the executor of
Arnold, both as executor and personally, disclaims in its pleading any interest
in the moneys in question. The respondent founds upon this fact the argument
that the moneys were not provided by Arnold himself and it follows, he
contends, that they must have been taken from the funds in Arnold's hands for
him.
[Page 301]
This argument is not wanting in
audacity although as a ground supporting the judgment below it seems to be
lacking in everything else. It is an extraordinary proposition that the
disclaimer by Arnold's executor of any interest in these moneys should in
itself be considered to establish as against the appellant, who, of course, is
no way responsible for the pleading of any fact of any description whatever. If
there was any fact within the knowledge of those responsible for the pleading
which would have added to the weight of the respondent's case there is not the
slightest reason for supposing that evidence of that fact would not have been
forthcoming. But quite apart from that it would be a most unlawyerly proceeding
to treat this pleading as of any judicial relevancy in the dispute between
McKee and Phillip.
This is a conclusive answer to
the suggestion, but it is only just, I think, to add that the course taken by
the Trust Company as executor in making no claim to these moneys is not in the
least difficult to understand; and indeed it would be difficult to suppose the
experienced professional gentlemen who were advising the Trust Company taking
any other course. The moneys in question had been paid by Arnold under an
agreement executed by the appellant in consequence of Arnold's representation
that he had authority to enter into it in the name of the supposed purchaser.
Arnold's executor advancing a claim now to recover these moneys would be
exposed to a conclusive defence in the estoppel created by Arnold's
representation or, if the appellant chose to rely upon the true facts, to a
counter-attack upon the ground that Arnold was responsible in damages under his
warranty of authority, a field of litigation obviously not presenting an
inviting prospect to a judicious representative of Arnold's
[Page 302]
estate. Personally the Trust
Company having been repaid has no interest.
ANGLIN J.—This case is, no doubt,
very close to the line and there is not a little to be said in support of the
position taken by Mr. Newcombe that the respondent (plaintiff by counterclaim)
can only succeed upon the strength of his own title and that he has failed
affirmatively to establish that it was his money that Arnold paid to McKee. On
the other hand, it is certain that the money in question does not belong to
McKee and that his only right to retain it is that of possession. It is also
clear that the money belonged either to the respondent Phillip or to Arnold or
to the Dominion Trust Company. The Dominion Trust Company in its own right and
as executor of Arnold is a party to this litigation and in both capacities
disclaims all right or title to the money. Under these circumstances, I am not
convinced that the inference drawn by the majority of the judges in the Court
of Appeal that the money belonged to Phillip is so clearly erroneous that we
should reverse the judgment rendered in his favour. I would, therefore, dismiss
this appeal.
Appeal dismissed with
costs.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Bowser, Reid & Wallbridge.
Solicitor for the
respondent: C. S. Arnold.