Supreme Court of Canada
Attorney General (Ontario) v. Policy Holders of Wentworth Insurance et al., [1969]
S.C.R. 779
Date: 1969-06-30
The Attorney
General for Ontario (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Policyholders of
Wentworth Insurance Company and others Claiming for Losses, Policyholders of
Wentworth Insurance Claiming for Refund of Unearned Premiums, The Clarkson
Company Limited as Liquidator of Wentworth Insurance Company (Defendants)
Respondents.
1968: November 28, 29; 1969: June 30.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Fauteux,
Abbott, Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall, Spence and Pigeon JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Insurance—Constitutional law—Ontario
insurance company licenced to do business in Ontario ordered to be wound-up
under federal statute—Administration of deposit whether governed by provincial
or federal legislation—Winding-up Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 296. ss. 33, 165(1),
173—”Charge” in s. 173—Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 190, ss. 41, 42(5),
48—Whether deposit must be transferred to liquidator.
The Ontario Insurance Act provides, inter
alia, that every insurer carrying on business in Ontario shall be required to deposit with the Minister a defined amount of
approved securities which are vested in the Minister for the protection of the
insured. The Insurance Act further provides that, should a claim be made
against the fund, the order of priority shall favour those who have suffered
losses and that those who have claims for unearned premiums should come second.
The order of priority provided for in the Winding-up Act ranks both
claims for losses and claims for unearned premiums on an equal footing. On
December 13, 1966, The Wentworth Insurance Company which had been incorporated
under the laws of the Province of Ontario and had carried out business in
that province with its head office in Toronto, was ordered to be wound-up and a provisional liquidator was
appointed. The appointment of a permanent liquidator was made on January 27,
1967. In the meantime, by order dated December 19, 1966, the provisional
liquidator was appointed receiver so to administer the deposit pursuant to the
provisions of The Insurance Act without prejudice to the right of the
provisional and of the permanent liquidator to administer the fund under the Winding-up
Act. The Master’s interim report required the liquidator to administer the
fund in accordance with The Insurance Act. Upon appeal by these
policyholders who had claims for refund of unearned premiums the Court of first
instance confirmed the report. Upon
[Page 780]
further appeal, the Court of Appeal
unanimously held that the interim report should be varied and that the fund and
securities be deposited in the manner provided for in the Winding-up Act. Leave
to appeal to this Court was granted.
Held (Ritchie,
Hall, Spence and Pigeon JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per Cartwright
C.J. and Fauteux, Abbott, Martland and Judson JJ.: The words of s. 165(1)
of the Winding-up Act regarding the transfer to the liquidator of all
funds and securities that may be on deposit with any government in Canada or
with trustees for the benefit of policyholders are plain and cannot mean
anything else than that the fund deposited had to be distributed according to
the provisions of that Act. Furthermore, the provisions of The Insurance Act
which purports to lay down a scheme of distribution upon insolvency were
invalid per se or, in any event, were certainly overborne by the
distribution provisions of the Winding-up Act with which they cannot be
compatibly administered.
Section 173 of the Winding-up Act, which
provides that “the priority of any mortgage, lien or charge on the property of
the company” shall not be prejudiced by reason of the winding‑up, is not
applicable to the present case. The word “charge” does not include any type of
interest created by the alleged statutory trust and refers to an interest in
existence, whereas the policyholders acquired no interest except perhaps, at
the very most, a prospective one, prior to the administrative order which was,
in fact, made at a date subsequent to the winding-up.
Per Hall,
Ritchie, Spence and Pigeon JJ., dissenting: The power granted to the
Minister under The Insurance Act of Ontario to require a deposit as a
condition precedent to the granting of a licence must include as a necessary
consequence the power to administer it if such power is not to become, to a
great extent, illusory. The vital question is, therefore, not the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada on matters of bankruptcy and
insolvency but whether Parliament, by enacting section 165(1) of the Winding
up Act, in fact, intruded in a field of legislation, namely insurance,
which by virtue of section 92 of the B.N.A. Act and of a succession
of decisions in the Privy Council and in this Court, has been held as
exclusively subject to provincial law. The Insurance Act is in “pith and
substance” insurance legislation and consequently its disputed sections, in so
far as they relate to the administration of a deposit, deal with bankruptcy and
insolvency only as incidental to the right to legislate regarding insurance. It
follows that section 165(1) of the Winding-up Act, by attempting to
divert the deposit of its true purpose was ultra vires of Parliament.
Assurances—Droit constitutionnel—Compagnie
opérant en vertu d’un’permis de la province d’Ontario mise en liquidation sous
l’autorité d’une loi fédérale—Argents et titres déposés auprès du ministre
devaient-ils être gérés aux termes de la loi provinciale ou de la loi
fédérale—Loi sur les liquidations, S.R.C. 1952, c. 296, art. S3, 165(1),
173—Sens du mot “charge” clans l’art. 173—Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 190,
art. 41, 42(5), 48—Argents et titres déposés auprès du ministre doivent-ils
être confiés au liquidateur.
[Page 781]
La loi d’Ontario sur les assurances stipule,
entre autres choses, que tout assureur avant de se livrer au commerce
d’assurance doit déposer auprès du ministre un certain montant en titres agréés
dont le ministre est saisi pour la protection des assurés. La Loi sur les
assurances prévoit en outre que, dans le cas d’une réclamation contre ce
dépôt, les créances de ceux qui ont droit à une indemnité contre les pertes
sont préférées aux créances de ceux qui ont droit à un remboursement de primes.
L’ordre de préférence établi par la Loi sur les liquidations place sur
un pied d’égalité les réclamations contre les pertes et celles portant sur un
remboursement de primes. La compagnie Wentworth Insurance, dont le siège social
était à Toronto, qui avait été constituée suivant les lois de la province
d’Ontario et avait exercé le commerce d’assurance dans cette province, fut mise
en liquidation le 13 décembre 1966 conformément aux termes de la Loi sur les
liquidations. Un liquidateur provisoire fut désigné. La nomination d’un
liquidateur permanent fut faite le 27 janvier 1967. Précédemment, par une
ordonnance, datée le 19 décembre 1966, le liquidateur provisoire avait été
nommé receveur aux fins de gérer le dépôt suivant les exigences de la Loi
sur les assurances et sans préjudice aux droits du liquidateur provisoire
et du liquidateur permanent désignés en vertu des dispositions de la Loi sur
les liquidations. Le conseiller-maître à la Cour suprême de l’Ontario’ a,
dans son rapport provisoire, exigé que le liquidateur administre le dépôt
suivant les dispositions de la Loi sur les assurances. La Cour de
première instance, qui a entendu les appels des détenteurs de police qui
réclamaient un remboursement de primes, a confirmé le rapport. La Cour d’appel,
à l’unanimité, a jugé que le rapport provisoire devait être modifié et que les
argents et les titres devaient être déposés en la manière prescrite par la Loi
sur les liquidations. L’autorisation d’interjeter appel à cette Cour a été
accordée.
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être rejeté, les Juges Ritchie, Hall, Spence et Pigeon étant dissidents.
Le Juge en
Chef Cartwright et les Juges Fauteux, Abbott, Martland et Judson: Les termes de
l’art. 165(1) de la Loi sur les liquidations concernant le transfert au
liquidateur des fonds et valeurs dont peut être dépositaire tout gouvernement
au Canada ou pouvant être en dépôt chez des fiduciaires pour protéger les
porteurs de polices d’assurance sont clairs et ne peuvent pas signifier autre
chose que ces fonds et valeurs doivent être répartis en la manière prescrite
par cette loi. De plus, les dispositions de la Loi sur les assurances qui
prétendent imposer un autre ordre de distribution au cas d’insolvabilité sont
nulles de plein droit ou, à tout le moins, sont devenues inopérantes par
l’effet des dispositions de la Loi sur les liquidations régissant
l’ordre de distribution, avec lesquelles elles ne sont plus compatibles.
L’article 173 de la Loi sur les
liquidations aux termes de laquelle la liquidation ne doit pas porter
préjudice à «la priorité de toute hypothèque, privilège ou charge» ne
s’applique pas à la présente cause. Le mot «charge» ne comprend aucun des
droits accordés par cette prétendue fiducie et ne s’applique qu’à un droit
existant, tandis que les détenteurs de polices d’assurance n’avaient tout au
plus qu’un droit éventuel avant la date de l’ordonnance administrative qui, de
fait, fut postérieure à la liquidation.
Les Juges
Ritchie, Hall, Spence et Pigeon, dissidents: Les pouvoirs conférés au
ministre aux termes de la Loi d’Ontario sur les assurances
[Page 782]
d’exiger un dépôt avant qu’un permis ne
puisse être accordé doit avoir pour conséquence nécessaire la faculté de
l’administrer, sans quoi ces pouvoirs, dans une large mesure, risquent de
devenir illusoires. La question essentielle n’est donc pas celle de la compétence
exclusive du Parlement du Canada en matière de faillite ou d’insolvabilité,
mais celle de savoir si le Parlement fédéral, en introduisant l’art. 165(1)
dans la Loi sur les liquidations n’a pas, en fait, empiété sur un
domaine législatif, à savoir l’assurance, qui en vertu des dispositions de
l’art. 92 de l’ A.A.N.B. et suivant les décisions répétées du Conseil
Privé, fait partie du domaine exclusif des législatures provinciales. La Loi
sur les assurances est dans son essence et dans sa réalité objective une
législation régissant l’assurance et, en conséquence, les articles en litige,
dans la mesure où ils se rapportent à l’administration du dépôt, ne traitent de
faillite et d’insolvabilité que d’une façon accessoire inséparable du droit de
légiférer en matière d’assurance. Il s’ensuit que l’art. 165(1) de la Loi
sur les liquidations, parce qu’il cherche à détourner le dépôt de son
véritable sens, est ultra vires.
APPEL d’un jugement de la Cour d’Appel de la
province d’Ontario, infirmant un jugement du Juge Hartt portant sur la validité des
articles de la Loi d’Ontario sur l’Assurance prévoyant un ordre de
distribution au cas d’insolvabilité. Appel rejeté, les Juges Ritchie, Hall,
Spence et Pigeon étant dissidents.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario1, reversing the judgment of Hartt J. on the issue of the
validity of the distribution provisions upon insolvency as found in The
Insurance Act of Ontario. Appeal dismissed, Ritchie, Hall, Spence and
Pigeon JJ. dissenting.
F.W. Callaghan, Q.C., and R. Scott, for
the appellant.
H.H. Siegal, Q.C., for Policyholders
of Wentworth Ins. and others claiming for losses.
Fred M. Catzman, Q.C., and Marvin A.
Catzman, for Policyholders of Wentworth Ins. and others claiming for refund of
unearned premiums.
Carl H. Morawetz, Q.C., for the Clarkson
Co., liquidator.
N.A. Chalmers, Q.C., and S.F. Weislo, for the Attorney
General of Canada.
Claude Gagnon, Q.C., for the Attorney
General of Quebec.
S. Friedman, Q.C., for the Attorney
General of Alberta.
[Page 783]
The judgment of Cartwright C.J. and Fauteux,
Abbott, Martland and Judson JJ. was delivered by
JUDSON J.:—Under the provisions of The
Ontario Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 190, s. 41, every insurer carrying
on business in Ontario is
required to deposit with the Minister approved securities in certain defined
amounts. While these securities are on deposit the property is vested in the
Minister without any formal transfer (s. 42(5)). Nevertheless, the insurer is
entitled to receive the interest on the deposits as long as it satisfies the
conditions of the Act and no notice of any final judgment against the insurer
or order for its winding-up or for the distribution of its assets or for the
administration of its deposit is given to the Minister.
By order dated December 13, 1966, Wentworth Insurance
Company was ordered to be wound up under the Winding-up Act, R.S.C.
1952, c. 296. A provisional liquidator was appointed the same day and a
permanent liquidator on January 27, 1967. In the meantime, by order dated December 19, 1966, the company’s deposit of
securities under s. 41 of The Insurance Act was ordered to be
administered pursuant to the provisions of that Act, and the provisional
liquidator was appointed receiver so to administer the deposit. This order was
made without prejudice to the rights of the provisional liquidator and the
permanent liquidator under the Winding-up Act and, particularly, s. 165
of that Act.
It is apparent that the issue with which we are
concerned was recognized very early in the proceedings. The Ontario
Insurance Act provides for a certain order of priorities for claimants
against this fund. Briefly, those insured persons who have suffered losses come
first. Those who have claims for unearned premiums come second. Under the Winding-up
Act these two classes of creditors rank pari passu.
In the winding-up proceedings, in his interim
report, dated September 19, 1967, the Master found that the liquidator was
required to administer the fund in the manner provided by ss. 58 and 59 of The
Insurance Act. There was an appeal from this report by those policyholders
who had claims for refunds of unearned premiums. The judge of first instance,
by order dated February 21, 1968, dismissed the appeal and confirmed the report. An appeal to the
[Page 784]
Court of Appeal followed. That Court unanimously
held that the appeal should be allowed and the interim report of the Master
varied and an order made that the liquidator administer the funds and
securities deposited as above mentioned in the manner provided by the Winding‑up
Act. Leave to appeal was granted by this Court on July 4,1968.
The Master held that the legislation relating to
the deposit was in “pith and substance” insurance legislation and that the
deposit was vested in the Minister in trust for the benefit of the
policyholders and that he should be free to deal with it according to the
provisions of the Insurance Act. In his view, the deposit was a “charge”
within the meaning of that word in s. 173 of the Winding-up Act, which
reads as follows:
173. Nothing in this Part prejudices or
affects the priority of any mortgage, lien or charge upon the property of the
company.
Mr. Justice Hartt, while affirming the
decision of the Master, did so for different reasons. In his view, the effect
of s. 41 of The Insurance Act was to vest the deposit in the Minister in
trust for the policyholders. Therefore, on ordinary principles of the law of
trusts, the deposit was not the property of the company and could not be
distributed on insolvency according to the Winding-up Act. He did not
agree with the Master that s. 173 was applicable. This section only
applied where there was a charge upon the company’s property. He rested his
judgment on the statutory trust which took the deposit out of the classification
of “property of the company”.
The Court of Appeal unanimously reversed this
decision. Mr. Justice Laskin, speaking for the Court, conceded that Hartt
J.’s reasoning would be most convincing if one had to rely solely upon s. 33 of
the Winding-up Act. Section 33 reads:
33. The liquidator, upon his appointment,
shall take into his custody or under his control, all the property, effects and
choses in action to which the company is or appears to be entitled, and he
shall perform such duties in reference to winding up the business of the
company as are imposed by the court or by this Act.
However, there was s. 165(1) which was enacted
to deal with this very situation. Section 165(1) reads:
165. (1) The funds and securities of the
company in Canada that may be on
deposit with any government in Canada or with trustees or otherwise held for the company or for the
protection of the policyholders of
[Page 785]
the company of the class or classes that
are affected by the winding-up order shall, on order of the court having
jurisdiction, be transferred to the liquidator.
He could not see how the plain words of this
section could mean anything else than that the fund deposited had to be
distributed according to the provisions of the Winding-up Act. Furthermore,
he was of opinion that the provisions of The Insurance Act purporting to
provide for a scheme of distribution upon insolvency were invalid per se or,
in any event, were certainly overborne by the distribution provisions of the Winding-up
Act.
And finally, there were in his view at least
three reasons why s. 173 was not applicable. First, on an ejusdem generis construction,
the word “charge” did not include the type of interest created by the alleged
statutory trust. Secondly, the term “charge” refers to an interest in existence
at the time of the winding-up order. Here the policyholders acquired no
interest until an administration order was made. Their interest was at the very
most prospective until the advent of the order. Thirdly, the winding-up order
was made before the administration order. Therefore, the deposit was subject to
the transfer order under s. 165(1) before the creation of any beneficial
interest in the loss claimants.
I agree with the reasons of the Court of Appeal
in their entirety and have nothing to add. I would dismiss the appeal and make
the same order as to costs in this Court, namely, that the permanent liquidator
and the competing classes of policyholders should have their costs of the
appeal out of the deposit on a solicitor and own client basis. There will be no
costs to or against the Attorney-General for Ontario and the Intervenants.
The judgment of Ritchie, Hall, Spence and Pigeon
JJ. was delivered by
HALL J. (dissenting):—The Wentworth
Insurance Company was incorporated under the laws of the Province of Ontario
and carried on the business of insurance in Ontario, with head office at Toronto. A succession of decisions in the Privy Council and in this Court
have held that the business of insurance is exclusively subject to provincial
law and that by s. 92 of the B.N.A. Act the provinces have exclusive
jurisdiction to prescribe the way in which insurance business shall be carried
on in the province. Dominion legislation which encroaches upon or intermeddles
with such
[Page 786]
exclusive provincial jurisdiction is ultra
vires of the Dominion Parliament. Citizens Ins. Co. v. Parsons; A.-G. Canada v. A.-G. Alta; Re Reciprocal Ins. Legislation; In Re The Insurance Act of Canada, Re Home Assurance Co.
Acting within its exclusive right to legislate
regarding insurance, the Province of Ontario enacted The Insurance Act R.S.O. 1960, c. 190.
This Act is a lengthy statute with XVI Parts, 353 sections, and deals with all
phases and modes of insurance, other than those specifically excluded by s.
21(4). This Act and Part VI of The Corporations Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 71,
was intended by the Legislature to cover the entire field of insurance and to
provide a complete and comprehensive code respecting the law of insurance in
the Province of Ontario. Martin J.A., as he then was, in Crown Bakery v. Preferred
Accident Insurance Company said:
A perusal of The Saskatchewan Insurance
Act, as it was enacted in 1915 and again in 1924-25, convinces me that the
Legislature intended to cover the entire field of insurance, and to enact a
complete code of law to govern all insurance contracts in the province,…
The Saskatchewan Insurance Act and The
Ontario Insurance Act are almost identical in scope and this observation
would apply equally to the Ontario legislation.
Part I of The Insurance Act provides for
a Superintendent of Insurance by s. 2(1) which reads:
2. (1) A Superintendent of Insurance shall
be appointed who shall exercise the powers and perform the duties vested or
imposed upon him by this or any other Act, shall have the general supervision
of the business of insurance in Ontario and shall see that the laws relating to
the conduct thereof are enforced and obeyed.
Part II of The Act applies to insurance
undertaken in Ontario and to
all insurers carrying on business in Ontario (s. 20(1)). S. 21(1) and (2) read:
21. (1) Every insurer undertaking insurance
in Ontario or carrying on business in Ontario shall obtain from the Minister
and hold a licence under this Act.
(2) Every insurer undertaking insurance or
carrying on business in Ontario
without having obtained a licence as required by this section is guilty of
an offence.
[Page 787]
and prohibit anyone undertaking insurance or
carrying on the business of insurance in Ontario unless licenced to do so. A licence issued under s. 21(1)
authorizes, as stated in s. 23:
23. (1) Upon due application and upon proof
of compliance with this Act, the Minister may issue a licence to undertake
contracts of insurance and carry on business in Ontario to any insurer coming
within one of the following classes:
1. Joint stock insurance companies.
2. Mutual insurance corporations.
3. Cash-mutual insurance corporations.
4. Fraternal societies.
5. Mutual benefit societies.
6. Companies duly incorporated to undertake
insurance contracts and not within classes 1 to 5.
7. Reciprocal or inter-insurance exchanges.
8. Underwriters or syndicates of
underwriters operating on the plan known as Lloyds.
9. Pension fund associations.
(2) A licence issued under this Act
authorizes the insurer named therein to exercise in Ontario all rights and powers reasonably incidental to the carrying on of
the business of insurance named therein that are not inconsistent with this Act
or with its act or instrument of incorporation or organization.
Certain conditions precedent to the issuing of a
licence are set out in s. 32.
S. 41 and 42 which read:
41. (1) Every insurer carrying on the
business of insurance in Ontario shall, before receiving a licence under
this Act, deposit approved securities with the Minister in the following
amounts: (emphasis added)
1. Where the insurer undertakes life
insurance—$50,000.
2. Where the insurer undertakes any one or
more classes of insurance other than life,
i. in Ontario only—$25,000.
ii. in Ontario and elsewhere—$50,000.
(2) The Superintendent may require the
deposit referred to in subsection 1 to be increased, either before or
after granting the licence, to such amount as he considers necessary.
(3) An insurer may voluntarily make a
deposit in excess of the amount prescribed by this section, but no part of a
voluntary deposit shall be withdrawn without the sanction of the Minister.
42. (1) The value of such securities shall
be estimated at their market value, not exceeding par, at the time they are
deposited.
(2) If any other than approved securities
are offered as a deposit, the Minister may accept them on such valuation and on
such conditions as he deems proper.
(3) If the market value of any securities
that have been deposited by an insurer declines below that at which they were
deposited, the
[Page 788]
Minister may notify the insurer to make
such further deposit as will ensure the accepted value of all the securities
deposited by the insure being equal to the amount that is required by this Act
to be deposited.
(4) On failure by the insurer to make such
further deposit within sixty days after being called upon so to do, the
Minister may suspend or cancel the licence of the insurer.
(5) The property in any stock, bonds or
debentures deposited with the Minister under this Act or any predecessor
thereof is vested in the Minister by virtue of his office without any formal
transfer while such stock, bonds or debentures form the whole or any part of
the deposit required by this Act. (emphasis added)
(6) So long as the conditions of this Act
are satisfied and no notice of any final judgment against the insurer or order
for its winding-up or for the distribution of its assets or for administration
of its deposit is given to the Minister, the insurer is entitled to receive the
interest upon the securities forming the deposit.
are the sections which provide for the
deposit, and it will be observed that the deposit called for by section 41
is made a condition precedent to receiving a licence under the Act.
In sections 46 to 73 the Act provides for
the administration of the deposit required by s. 41. Specifically,
sections 48 to 52 provide as follows:
48. (1) The deposit made by an insurer
under this Act is subject to administration in the manner hereinafter provided.
(2) Subject to sections 69 and 70,
the deposit shall be held and administered for the benefit of all insured
persons under Ontario contracts and they are entitled to share in the proceeds of the
deposit. (emphasis added)
(3) An insured person under an Ontario contract is entitled to share in
the proceeds of the deposit in respect of,
(a) a claim for a loss that is covered by
the contract and that occurred before the termination date fixed under
section 53 of this Act or section 233 of The Corporations Act; or
(b) a claim for refund of unearned
premiums, except in the case of life insurance; or
(c) a claim for payment of the legal
reserve in respect of the contract in the case of life insurance; or
(d) claims under both clauses a and b.
49. (1) An application for administration
of a deposit shall be made by originating notice of motion to a judge of the
Supreme Court.
(2) The application shall be made in the
county or district,
(a) in which the head office of the insurer
is situate; or
(b) in which the chief office of the
insurer in Ontario is situate
if its head office is out of Ontario.
50. (1) With the approval of the Minister,
the Superintendent may make application for administration at any time when, in
his opinion, it is necessary or desirable for the protection of the insured person
entitled to share in the proceeds of the deposit.
(2) In the case of a reciprocal deposit
held in Ontario, the
superintendent of insurance of a reciprocating province may make application
for administration of the deposit.
[Page 789]
(3) An insured person entitled to share in
the proceeds of a deposit may make application for administration of the
deposit upon producing evidence,
(a) that he has served the Superintendent
with a notice in writing of his intention to make application if the
Superintendent or the superintendent of insurance of a reciprocating province
does not apply; and
(b) that sixty days have elapsed since the
service of the notice and that no application for administration of the deposit
has been made.
(4) In the case of a reciprocal deposit, if
the Superintendent is served with a notice as provided in subsection 3, he
shall forthwith notify the superintendent of insurance of each reciprocating
province that he has been so served.
51. (1) The applicant for administration of
the deposit shall serve the originating notice of motion at least ten days
before the date specified in the notice for the making of the application,
(a) upon the insurer or, where the insurer
is in liquidation, upon the liquidator of the insurer; and
(b) upon the Superintendent; and
(c) in the case of a reciprocal deposit,
upon the superintendent of insurance of each reciprocating province.
(2) An applicant for administration is
entitled to an order for administration upon proof,
(a) that the licence of the insurer has
been cancelled, and that its assets are insufficient to discharge its
outstanding liabilities; or
(b) that an order has been made for the
winding up of the insurer, or
(c) that the insurer has failed to pay,
(i) an undisputed claim for sixty days
after it has been admitted, or
(ii) a disputed claim after final judgment
and tender of a valid discharge,
if the claim arose under a contract of
insurance in respect of which the deposit is subject to administration.
52. (1) Upon granting an order for administration,
the court shall appoint a receiver to administer the deposit.
(2) Where a provisional liquidator or a
liquidator has been appointed under this Act or The Corporations Act or a
liquidator has been appointed under the Winding-up Act (Canada) to wind up a
company that has made a deposit under this Act, the court may appoint the
provisional liquidator or the liquidator as the receiver to administer the
deposit.
(3) Thereupon the provisional liquidator or
the liquidator shall administer the deposit for the benefit of the insured
persons entitled to share in the proceeds thereof in accordance with the
provisions of and the priorities set out in this Act.
Sections 58 and 59 read:
58. The proceeds of the deposit are
payable,
(a) first, in payment of the receiver and
of all costs and expenses incurred by him in the administration of the deposit
and in payment of the remuneration, costs and expenses of the provisional
liquidator as ordered by the Minister under section 229 of The
Corporations Act;
[Page 790]
(b) second, in payment of the insured
persons who are entitled to share in the proceeds of the deposit in accordance
with the priorities set out in section 59.
59. (1) Except in the case of life
insurance, each insured person who claims in respect of a loss covered by the
contract that occurred before the termination date fixed under section 53
of this Act or section 233 of The Corporations Act is entitled to
receive payment of his approved or settled claim in full in priority to the
insured persons who claim in respect of refunds of unearned premiums.
(2) Subject to subsection 1, an
insured person who claims in respect of a refund of unearned premiums may claim
such part of the premium paid as is proportionate to the period of his contract
unexpired,
(a) at the termination date fixed by the
receiver under section 53 or fixed by the provisional liquidator or the
liquidator under section 233 of The Corporations Act; or
(b) at the date the insured person
cancelled the contract, whichever is the earlier date.
(3) In the case of life insurance, each
insured person who has a claim for a loss covered by the contract that occurred
before the termination date fixed under section 53 of this Act or
section 233 of The Corporations Act ranks in the distribution of
the proceeds of the deposit for the approved or settled amount of the claim pari
passu with insured persons under unmatured life insurance contracts.
(4) An insured person under an unmatured
life insurance contract is entitled to the full amount of the legal reserve in
respect of his contract determined by the receiver according to the valuation
thereof approved by the Superintendent under this Act.
These sections must be read in conjunction with
sections 231 and 232 of Part VI of The Corporations Act, respecting insurance
corporations. These sections provide:
231. (1) The provisional liquidator or the
liquidator, before any order granting administration of the deposit and before
the fixing of a termination date pursuant to section 233, may arrange for
the reinsurance of the subsisting contracts of insurance of the insurer with
some other insurer licensed in Ontario.
(2) For the purpose of securing the
reinsurance, the following funds shall be available:.
1. The entire assets of the insurer in
Ontario other than the deposit except the amount, reasonably estimated by the
provisional liquidator or the liquidator as being required to pay,
(a) the costs of the liquidation or winding
up;
(b) all claims for losses covered by the
insurer’s contracts of insurance of which notice has been received by the
insurer or provisional liquidator or liquidator before the date on which the
reinsurance is effected;
(c) the claims of the preferred creditors
who are the persons paid in priority to other creditors under the winding up
provisions of this Act,
all of which shall be a first charge on the
assets of the insurer, other than the deposit.
2. All or such portion, if any, of the
deposit as is agreed upon pursuant to subsection 3.
[Page 791]
(3) If it appears necessary or desirable to
secure reinsurance for the protection of insured persons entitled to share in
the proceeds of the deposit, the Minister, on the recommendation of the
Superintendent, or, in the case of a reciprocal deposit, the superintendents of
insurance of the reciprocating provinces, may enter into an agreement with the
provisional liquidator or the liquidator, whereby, pursuant to section 47
or 71 of The Insurance Act, all or any part of the securities in the
deposit may be used for the purpose of securing the reinsurance.
(4) The creditors of the insurer, other
than the insured persons and the said preferred creditors, are entitled to
receive a payment on their claims only if provision has been made for the
payments mentioned in subsection 2 and for the reinsurance.
(5) If, after providing for the payments
mentioned in subsection 2, the balance of the assets of the insurer,
together with all or such portion, if any, of the deposit as is agreed upon
under subsection 3, is insufficient to secure the reinsurance of the contracts
of the insured persons in full, the reinsurance may be effected for such
portion of the full amount of the contracts as is possible.
(6) No contract of reinsurance shall be
entered into under this section until it is approved by the Supreme Court.
232. (1) In the winding up of an insurer
that has made a deposit pursuant to The Insurance Act, if the person
appointed as receiver to administer the deposit pursuant to section 52 of The
Insurance Act is not the person appointed as the provisional liquidator or
the liquidator under The Insurance Act or this Act or appointed as the
liquidator under the Winding-up Act (Canada), as the case may be, the
Supreme Court at any time in its discretion may order that the deposit and the
administration thereof be transferred from the receiver to the provisional
liquidator or the liquidator.
(2) Upon the making of an order under
subsection 1, the provisional liquidator or the liquidator shall
administer the deposit for the benefit of the persons entitled to share in the
proceeds thereof in accordance with the provisions of and the priorities set
out in this Act.
(3) The amount payable to the provisional
liquidator or the liquidator for administering the deposit and all costs and
expenses incurred by him in administering the deposit shall be paid out of the
deposit in accordance with the priorities fixed by clause a of section 58
of The Insurance Act, but the amount payable to the provisional
liquidator or the liquidator and all costs and expenses incurred by him in the
winding up of the insurer shall not be paid out of the deposit but shall be
paid out of and are a first charge on the assets of the insurer except as
provided in subsection 3 of section 229.
It will be seen that the provisions of
section 232 above correspond to those in s. 52 of The Insurance Act.
Wentworth Insurance Company became insolvent and
was ordered to be wound up under the Winding‑up Act R.S.C. 1952,
c. 296. Clarkson Company Limited was appointed provisional liquidator on
December 13, 1966 (later confirmed as permanent liquidator). On December 19,
1966, the following order was made respecting the
[Page 792]
deposit which Wentworth Insurance Company had
been required to put up as a condition of being licenced to do business in
Ontario:
UPON the application of counsel on behalf
of the Superintendent of Insurance, in the presence of counsel for The Clarkson
Company Limited, Provisional Liquidator of Wentworth Insurance Company under The
Winding-Up Act, R.S.C. 1952, Chapter 296, upon reading the affidavit of
Cecil Richards, the consent of The Clarkson Company Limited to act as receiver
to administer the deposit of Wentworth Insurance Company under the said
Insurance Act and the consent of the said Provisional Liquidator through its
solicitors, filed, and upon hearing what was alleged by counsel aforesaid,
1. IT IS ORDERED that the deposit of
securities deposited by Wentworth Insurance Company pursuant to Section 41
of the said Insurance Act with the Minister, as denned by the said Act, be
administered pursuant to the provisions of the said Act.
2. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that The Clarkson
Company Limited be and is hereby appointed receiver to administer the said
deposit pursuant to the said Act.
3. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that The Clarkson
Company Limited be and is hereby authorized to exercise in respect of the
‘account of the insurer all or any of the powers that the Master of the Supreme
Court would have if he were taking an account of the claims against the said
deposit.
4. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that The Clarkson
Company Limited be and is hereby authorized to sell or realize upon bank
deposit receipts in the aggregate sum of approximately $60,000.00 comprising
part of the said deposit.
5. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that this matter
be and is hereby referred to the Master at Toronto to give such further
directions or advice pertaining to any matter arising in the administration of
the deposit as may be necessary from time to time and that the said Master be
and is hereby conferred with all the powers conferred upon the Court by the
said Insurance Act in and about the administration of the said deposit, passing
the accounts of the said receiver, approving the accounts and discharging the
said receiver.
6. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that all the above
provisions of this order be without prejudice to the rights of The Provisional
Liquidator and The Permanent Liquidator, or either of them of Wentworth
Insurance Company appointed under The Winding-Up Act, R.S.C. 1952, Chapter 296
and in particular Section 165 thereof.
7. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the costs
of this application be taxed and paid to the applicant and to the said
Provisional Liquidator out of the said deposit.
On July 14, 1967, an application was made to the
Master for advice and direction of the Court as to the manner in which the
deposit under s. 41 of The Insurance Act in the hands of the Liquidator
was to be administered, whether Under The Insurance Act, or as a general
asset of the company under the Winding-up Act. On this application
counsellor the Attorney General for Canada submitted that the
[Page 793]
provisions of The Insurance Act respecting
the administration of the deposit were legislation relating to insolvency and ultra
vires Ontario.
The Master directed the Liquidator to deal with
the deposit in the manner provided by sections 58 and 59 of The
Insurance Act. An appeal was taken to Hartt J., who upheld the Master and
ordered insofar as is relevant here, as follows:
2. AND THIS COURT DOTH FURTHER ORDER that
The Clarkson Company Limited, Permanent Liquidator of Wentworth Insurance
Company, do administer the funds and securities deposited pursuant to the
provisions of The Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1960, Chapter 190, in the manner
provided by Sections 58 and 59 of the said Insurance Act.
The Policyholders entitled to claim for refunds
of unearned premiums appealed to the Court of Appeal and that Court allowed the
appeal and ordered:
2. AND THIS COURT DOTH FURTHER ORDER that
The Clarkson Company Limited, Permanent Liquidator of Wentworth Insurance
Company, do administer the funds and securities deposited pursuant to the
provisions of The Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1960, Chapter 190, in the manner
provided by The Winding-up Act, R.S.C. 1952, Chapter 296.
The effect of this order was to require
distribution of the deposit as set out in s. 162 of The Winding-up Act.
Laskin J.A., writing for the Court, said in his
reasons:
It was contended that where on a winding-up
under the federal Act by reason of insolvency (which is the present case)
securities are on deposit with the Minister, they are not assets of the
insolvent company administrable under the federal Act. If the matter rested
only on the reach of section 33 of the federal Act, previously mentioned,
or on the stark question whether the securities were property of the insolvent
company at the time of insolvency the argument would be a formidable one. But
it fails to take account of what to me are the plain words of
section 165(1).
and
Having regard to the making of a winding up
order by reason of insolvency of the Wentworth Insurance Company, I would, as a
matter of construction of the Ontario Insurance Act, hold that Act inapplicable
to govern the distribution of the deposit in view of the order made under
section 165(1) of the Winding-up Act. In so far as the Ontario provisions purport to provide a
scheme of distribution upon insolvency, they are invalid per se. In any
event, they are overborne by the Winding-up Act and especially by
sections 162 and 165(1) with which they cannot be compatibly administered.
With respect, I cannot agree. In my view,
sections 58 and 59 of The Insurance Act are, in pith and substance,
valid provincial legislation and further, that s. 165(1) of the
[Page 794]
Winding-up Act is
ultra vires Parliament; an intrusion into a field of legislative power
reserved exclusively to the provinces.
The present case is another in the series of
decisions in litigation between the Federal authority and the provinces
involving insurance and in every case without exception the exclusive
jurisdiction of the provinces as to the conduct of the business of insurance
has been upheld by the Courts. Insurance is defined by The Insurance Act
1960, R.S.O. c. 190, as follows:
1. (31) “insurance” means the undertaking
by one person to indemnify another person against loss or liability for loss in
respect of a certain risk or peril to which the object of the insurance may be
exposed, or to pay a sum of money or other thing of value upon the happening of
a certain event;
This is the definition used by all provinces
which have adopted the uniform approach, being all ten provinces except Quebec and Newfoundland.
It is accordingly of the essence of insurance
that when an eventuality occurs which entitles the insured to indemnity that
there be in existence a fund or assets in the hands of someone from which the
indemnity will be forthcoming, otherwise the insurance may be no more than a
delusion. The deposit feature of the several insurance acts, including the
Ontario Act, thus became an integral part of the whole scheme of insurance. To
deny access to that deposit to the very persons for whose protection it was
established at the time when they need it most is to destroy one of the
fundamentals of insurance protection in Ontario.
The deposit is the day to day assurance to
insureds who, having no means of their own to evaluate the reliability of
insurers, are given that assurance by the provisions of The Insurance Act which
require the deposit as a condition of being permitted to do business in Ontario. Accordingly an insured in Ontario buys insurance with the knowledge
that he will be indemnified if he has a valid claim; in other words that the
umbrella will be there if and when it rains; i.e. when any of the
eventualities set out in s. 51(2) occur.
In these circumstances, how can it be said that The
Ontario Insurance Act in requiring the deposit and administering it if need
be for any of the reasons stated in s. 48 is in pith and substance other than
valid insurance legislation?
[Page 795]
The pith and substance test of legislative validity
has been recognized as the most valid test in determining whether legislation
of the Dominion or of a province is intra vires or ultra vires and
particularly so in the much traversed field of insurance law in Canada. The leading case in this respect
would appear to be Attorney-General for Ontario v. Reciprocal Insurers. The Judgment of their Lordships in that
case was delivered by Duff J. (later C.J.C.) sitting as a member of the Privy
Council. He said at pp. 336 to 338:
In Attorney-General for Canada v.
Attorney-General for Alberta (1916) 1 A.C. 588, it was decided by this
Board that it was not competent to the Dominion to regulate generally the
business of insurance in such a way as to interfere with the exercise of civil
rights in the Provinces.
The provisions relating to licences in the
Insurance Act of 1910, which by this judgment was declared to be ultra vires,
and the regulations governing licences under the Act and applicable to
contracts and to the business of insurance, did not, in any respect presently
material, substantially differ from those now found in the legislation of 1917;
but the provisions of the statute of 1910 derived their coercive force from
penalties created by the Insurance Act itself.
The distinction between the legislation of
1910 and that of 1917, upon which the major contention of the Dominion is
founded, consists in the fact that s. 508c is enacted in the form of an
amendment to the statutory criminal law, and purports only to create offences
which are declared to be indictable, and to ordain penalties for such offences.
The question now to be decided is whether, in the frame in which this
legislation of 1917 is cast, that part of it which is so enacted can receive
effect as a lawful exercise of the legislative authority of the Parliament of
Canada in relation to the criminal law. It has been formally laid down in
judgments of this Board, that in such an inquiry the Courts must ascertain the
“true nature and character” of the enactment: Citizens Insurance Co. v.
Parsons (1881) 7 App. Cas. 96; its “pith and substance”: Union Colliery
Co. v. Bryden (1899) A.C. 580; and it is the result of this investigation,
not the form alone, which the statute may have assumed under the hand of the
draughtsman, that will determine within which of the categories of subject
matters mentioned in ss. 91 and 92 the legislation falls; and for this purpose
the legislation must be “scrutinised in its entirety”: “Great West Saddlery
Co. v. The King (1921) 2 A.C. 91, 117. Of course, where there is an absolute
jurisdiction vested in a Legislature, the laws promulgated by it must take
effect according to the proper construction of the language in which they are
expressed. But where the law-making authority is of a limited or qualified
character, obviously it may be necessary to examine with some strictness the
substance of the legislation for the purpose of determining what it is that the
Legislature is really doing. Upon this principle the Board proceeded in 1878,
in Attorney-General for Quebec v. Queen Insurance Co. (1878) 3 App. Cas.
1090, where a statute of Quebec (39 Vict. c. 7), which took the form of a
licensing Act, enacted under the authority of s. 92, head 9, of the British
North America Act, was held to be in its true character
[Page 796]
a Stamp Act and an attempt to impose a tax
which was an indirect tax, in contravention of the limitation to which the
Provincial powers of taxation are subject under the second head of that
section. The principle is recognized in Russell v. The Queen (1882) 7 App.
Cas. 829, and in Citizens Insurance Co. v. Parsons 7 App. Cas. 96, and
in 1899, conformably to this doctrine, it was held, in the well-known case of Union
Colliery Co. v. Bryden (1899) A.C. 580, that a statutory regulation,
professedly passed for governing the working of coal mines, which admittedly
“might be regarded as establishing a regulation applicable” to the working of
such mines, and which, “if that, were an exclusive description of the substance
of it,” was “within the competency of the Provincial Legislature by virtue
either of s. 92, No. 10, or s. 92, No. 13,” must be classed, its “true
character,” its “pith and substance” being ascertained, as legislation in
relation to the subject of “aliens and naturalisation,” a subject exclusively
within the Dominion sphere of action. The general doctrine was later applied in
John Deere Plow Co. v. Wharton (1915) A.C. 330, and again in Great
West Saddlery Co. v. The King (1921) 2 A.C. 91, 117.
and at p. 340:
The power which this argument attributes to
the Dominion, is, of course, a far-reaching one. Indeed, the claim now advanced
is nothing less than this, that the Parliament of Canada can assume exclusive
control over the exercise of any class of civil rights within the Provinces, in
respect of which exclusive jurisdiction is given to the Provinces under s. 92,
by the device of declaring those persons to be guilty of a criminal offence who
in the exercise of such rights do not observe the conditions imposed by the
Dominion. Obviously the principle contended for ascribes to the Dominion the
power, in execution of its authority under s. 91, head 27, to promulgate and to
enforce regulations controlling such matters as, for example, the solemnization
of marriage, the practice of the learned professions and other occupations,
municipal institutions, the operation of local works and undertakings, the
incorporation of companies with exclusively Provincial objects—and superseding
Provincial authority in relation thereto. Indeed, it would be difficult to
assign limits to the measure in which, by a procedure strictly analogous to
that followed in this instance, the Dominion might dictate the working of
Provincial institutions, and circumscribe or supersede the legislative and
administrative authority of the Provinces.
Such a procedure cannot, their Lordships
think, be justified, consistently with the governing principles of the Canadian
Constitution, as enunciated and established by the judgments of this Board.
and again at pp. 342-3:
In accordance with the principle inherent
in these decisions their Lordships think it is no longer open to dispute that
the Parliament of Canada cannot, by purporting to create penal sanctions under
s. 91, head 27, appropriate to itself exclusively a field of jurisdiction in
which, apart from such a procedure, it could exert no legal authority, and that
if, when examined as a whole, legislation in form criminal is found, in aspects
and for purposes exclusively within the Provincial sphere, to deal with matters
committed to the Provinces, it cannot be upheld as valid. And indeed, to hold
otherwise would be incompatible with an essential principle of the
Confederation scheme, the object of which, as Lord Watson said in Maritime
Bank of Canada v. Receiver-General of New Brunswick (1892) A.C.437, 441,
was “not to weld the Provinces into
[Page 797]
one or to subordinate the Provincial
Governments to a central authority.” “Within the spheres allotted to them by
the Act of the Dominion and the Provinces are,” as Lord Haldane said in Great
West Saddlery Co. v. The King (1921) 2 A.C. 91, 100, “rendered in general
principle co‑ordinate Governments.”
Having the power to require the deposit as a
condition of granting a licence (and that power is expressly conceded by the
respondents and by the Attorney General for Canada) for no one challenges the
validity of sections 41 and 42 of The Insurance Act of Ontario, the
power to administer the deposit follows as a necessary consequence. This
argument was recognized as sound as long ago as 1880 where, in The Queen Insurance
Company v. Parsons,
Ritchie C.J. said:
How can this be said to be an interference
with the general regulation of trade and commerce? Yet it deals as effectually
with the matter or contract of insurance in these particulars as this Act does
in reference to the matters with which it deals. If the Legislative power of
the provincial legislatures is to be restricted and limited, as it is claimed
it should be, and the doctrine contended for in this case, as I understand it,
is carried to its legitimate logical conclusion, the idea of the power of the
local legislature to deal with the local works and undertakings, property and
civil rights, and matters of a merely local and private nature in the province
is, I humbly think, to a very great extent, illusory.
I scarcely know how one could better
illustrate the exercise of power to the local legislature to legislate with
reference to property and civil rights, and matters of a merely local and
private nature, than by a local Act of incorporation, whereby a right to hold
or deal with real or personal property in a province is granted, and whereby
the civil right to contract and sue and to be sued as an individual in
reference thereto is also granted. If a legislature possesses this power, as a
necessary sequence, it must have the right to limit and control the manner in
which the property may be so dealt with, and as to the contracts in reference
thereto the terms and conditions on which they may be entered into, whether
they may be verbal, or shall be in writing, whether they shall contain
conditions for the protection or security of one or other or both the parties,
or that they may be free to deal as may be agreed on by the contracting parties
without limit or restriction.
Inasmuch, then, as this Act relates to
property in Ontario, and the subject-matter dealt with is therefor local, and
as the contract between the parties is of a strictly private nature, and as the
matters thus dealt with are therefore, in the words of the British North
America Act, “of a merely local and private nature in the province,” and as
contracts are matters of civil rights and breaches thereof are civil wrongs,
and as the property and civil rights in the province only are dealt with by the
Act, and as “property and civil rights in the provinces” are in the enumeration
of the “exclusive powers of provincial legislatures,” I am of opinion that the
legislature of Ontario, in dealing with these matters in the Act in question,
did not exceed their legislative powers.
[Page 798]
I am happy to say I can foresee, and I
fear, no evil effects whatever, as has been suggested, as likely to result to
the Dominion from this view of the case. On the contrary, I believe that while
this decision “recognizes and sustains the legislative control of the Dominion
parliament over all matters confided to its legislative jurisdiction, it, at
the same time, preserves to the local legislatures those rights and powers
conferred on them by the B.N A. Act, and which a contrary decision
would, in my opinion, in effect, substantially, or to a very large extent,
sweep away.
Similarly, Lord Atkin in Ladore v. Bennett, said:
But in the present case nothing has emerged
even to suggest that the Legislature of Ontario at the respective dates had any
purpose in view other than to legislate in times of difficulty in relation to
the class of subject which was its special care—namely, municipal institutions.
For the reasons given the attack upon the Acts and scheme on the ground either
that they infringe the Dominion’s exclusive power relating to bankruptcy and
insolvency, or that the deal with civil rights outside the Province, breaks
down. The statutes are not directed to insolvency legislation; they pick out
insolvency as one reason for dealing in a particular way with unsuccessful
institutions; and though they affect rights outside the Province they only so
affect them collaterally, as a necessary incident to their lawful powers of
good government within the Province. (emphasis added)
And in this Court in the case of Attorney-General
for Ontario v. Barfried Enterprises Ltd,
Judson J. said:
The issue in this appeal is to determine
the true nature and character of the Act in question and, in particular, of s.
2 above quoted. The Act deals with rights arising from contract and is prima
facie legislation in relation to civil rights and, as such, within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the province under s. 92(13). Is it removed from the
exclusive provincial legislative jurisdiction by s. 91(19) of the Act, which
assigns jurisdiction over interest to the federal authority? In my opinion, it
is not legislation in relation to interest but legislation relating to
annulment or reformation of contract on the grounds set out in the Act, namely,
(a) that the cost of the loan is excessive, and (b) that the transaction is
harsh and unconscionable. The wording of the statute indicates that it is not
the rate or amount of interest which is the concern of the legislation but
whether the transaction as a whole is one to which it would be proper to maintain
as having been freely consented to by the debtor. If one looks at it from the
point of view of English law it might be classified as an extension of the
doctrine of undue influence. As pointed out by the Attorney General for Quebec, if one looks at it from the point
of view of the civil law, it can be classified as an extension of the doctrine
of lesion dealt with in articles 1001 and 1012 of the Civil Code. The
theory of the legislation is that the Court is enabled to relieve a debtor, at
least in part, of the obligations of a contract to which in all the
circumstances of the case he cannot be said to have given a free and valid
consent. The fact that interference with such a contract may involve
interference with interest as one of the constituent elements of the contract
is incidental.
[Page 799]
And Cartwright J., as he then was, said at page
579:
The Unconscionable Transactions Relief
Act appears to me to be legislation in relation to
Property and Civil Rights in the Province and the Administration of Justice in
the Province, rather than legislation in relation to Interest. Its primary
purpose and effect are to enlarge the equitable jurisdiction to give relief
against harsh and unconscionable bargains which the courts have long exercised;
it affects, but only incidentally, the subject-matter of Interest, specified in
head 19 of s. 91 of the British North America Act.
Regarding the validity of s. 165(1) of the Winding-up
Act, which reads:
165. (1) The funds and securities of the
company in Canada that may be on deposit with any government in Canada or with
trustees or otherwise held for the company or for the protection of the
policyholders of the company of the class or classes that are affected by the
winding-up order shall, on order of the court having jurisdiction, be
transferred to the liquidator.
(2) Where the company is a Canadian company
that has deposited with the government of any state or country outside of
Canada, or with any trustee or other person in such state or country, any of
its funds or securities for the protection of the company’s policyholders in
such state or country, the liquidator may request such government trustee or
other person to transfer to him the said funds and securities and on such
transfer being made, the said funds and securities shall be used for the
benefit of all the company’s policyholders in the same manner as any other
assets of the company.
(3) Where the said government, trustee or
other person does not transfer the said funds and securities within such period
commencing with the date of the liquidator’s request therefor as the Court may
fix, the policyholders of the company, for whose protection the said deposit
was made, shall be deemed to have refused the reinsurance, if any, arranged by
the liquidator, and, whether reinsurance has been arranged or not, to have
forfeited all right and claim to any share of the assets of the company other
than the funds or securities so deposited for their protection outside of
Canada.
it is significant to note that Parliament tried
unsuccessfully to regulate the conduct of the insurance business in Canada by enacting that all insurers must
obtain a licence. The device employed was by purporting to make it an offence
under the Criminal Code for any insurer to do business without a
Dominion Licence. The field of criminal law is unquestionably in the exclusive
competence of Parliament just as is bankruptcy and insolvency under s. 91 of
the British North America Act. The Privy Council struck down that
attempt in the Reciprocal Insurers case previously referred to.
[Page 800]
The next attempt was by the Insurance Act of
Canada, R.S.C. 1917, c. 29. Sections 11 and 12 of the Insurance Act
of Canada read:
11. It shall not be lawful for (a) any
Canadian company; or (b) any alien, whether a natural person or a foreign
company, within Canada to solicit or accept any risk, or to issue or deliver
any receipt or policy of insurance, or to grant, in consideration of any
premium or payment, any annuity on a life or lives, or to collect or receive
any premium, or, except as provided in section one hundred and twenty-nine
of this Act, to inspect any risk or adjust any loss, or to advertise for or
carry on any business of insurance, or to prosecute or maintain any suit action
or proceeding, or to file any claim in insolvency relating to such business,
unless under a licence from the Minister granted pursuant to the provisions of
this Act.
12. (1) It shall not be lawful for any
British company, or for any British subject not resident in Canada, to immigrate
into Canada for the purpose of opening or establishing any office or agency for
the transaction of any business of or relating to insurance, or of soliciting
or accepting any risk or issuing or delivering any interim receipt or policy or
insurance, or granting, in consideration of any premium or payment, any annuity
on a life or lives, or of collecting or receiving any premium, or except as
provided in section one hundred and twenty-nine of this Act, of inspecting
any risk or adjusting any loss, or of carrying on any business of or relating
to insurance, or of prosecuting or maintaining any suit, action or proceeding
or filing any claim in insolvency relating to such business, unless under a
licence from the Minister granted pursuant to the provisions of this Act.
(2) A company shall be deemed to immigrate
into Canada within the meaning
of this section if it sends into Canada any document appointing or otherwise appoints any person in Canada its agent for any of the purposes
mentioned in subsection one of this section.
Sections 65 and 66 of the same act
prescribed penalties for contravention of sections 11 and 12. The validity
of these provisions were dealt with by the Privy Council in the case of In
Re Insurance Act of Canada. The
judgment of the Privy Council was delivered by Viscount Dunedin, who said:
It is not in their Lordship’s opinion
necessary for them, as it was for the judges in the Courts below, to examine in
detail the various cases that have arisen in the Canadian Courts. They think
that the questions raised can be conclusively dealt with in the light of four
cases which have reached this Board. These are in chronological order: Citizens
Insurance Co. v. Parsons (1881) 7 App. Cas. 96; John Deere Plow Co. v.
Wharton (1915) A.C. 330; Attorney General for Canada v. Attorney-General
far Alberta (1916) 1 A.C. 588; and Attorney-General for Ontario v.
Reciprocal Insurers (1924) A.C. 328.
The case of the Citizens Insurance Co.
v. Parsons (1881) 7 App. Cas. 96, was not fought directly between the Dominion
and the Provinces, either as parties or inteveners. It was an action by a
private individual
[Page 801]
to recover money under an insurance
contract for a loss by fire. The defence was non‑compliance on the part
of the insured with certain statutory conditions imposed by a Provincial
Ontario Act and applicable to insurers, to which the answer was made that the
provisions were ultra vires as trespassing on the province of Dominion
legislation. It was held that the conditions were not ultra vires, and the
defence was good. The arguments turned on what may be called the competing
claims of ss. 91 and 92 of the British North America Act. The principle laid
down was clear. It is within the power of the Dominion legislature to create
the person of a company and endow it with powers to carry on a certain class of
business to wit, insurance; and nothing that the Provinces can do by
legislation can interfere with the status so created; but none the less the
Provinces can by legislation prescribe the way in which insurance business or
any other business shall be carried on in the Provinces. The great point of the
case is the clear distinction drawn between the question of the status of a
company and the way in which the business of the company shall be carried on.
This distinction was clearly acted on in the next case, which was not an
insurance case.
John Deere Plow Co.’s case (1915) A.C. 330; related to a company incorporated under Dominion
legislation to carry on the business of trading in agricultural implements
throughout Canada. The Parliament of British Columbia sought means to restrain
any such trade by enacting that the trader should have no power to sue unless
he had obtained a licence to trade from the Provincial authorities. It was held
that this was ultra vires of the Province, as being an attempt to interfere
with the status of the company.
Then came the case of Attorney-General
for Canada v. Attorney-General for Alberta (1916) 1 A.C. 588; this was the
first direct trial of strength between a Province and the Dominion. By s. 4 of
the Dominion Insurance Act of 1910 it was provided that no company or person
should do insurance business unless they had received a Dominion license so to
act. This provision was fortified by a penalty for contravention under s. 70.
Two questions were put to the Court: (1) Are ss. 4 and 70 of the Act or any
part thereof ultra vires of the Parliament of Canada? (2) Does s. 4 operate to
prohibit a foreign company carrying on business without a licence even though
its business is confined to one Province?
The Board answered the first question in
the affirmative. Here again the arguments turned on the competing claims of ss.
91 and 92, and the decision on this question conclusively and finally settled
that regulations as to the carrying on of insurance business were a Provincial
and not a Dominion matter. It really only carried to their logical conclusion
the two cases already cited.
As to the second question, Lord Haldane
said: (1916) 1 A.C. 588, 597: “The second question is, in substance, whether
the Dominion Parliament has jurisdiction to require a foreign company to take
out a licence from the Dominion Minister, even in a case where the company
desires to carry on its business only within the limits of a single province.
To this question their Lordships’ reply is that in such a case it would be
within the power of the Parliament of Canada, by properly framed legislation,
to impose such a restriction. It appears to them that such a power is given by
the heads in s. 91, which refer to the regulation of trade and commerce and to
aliens. This question also is therefore answered in the affirmative.”
The first question in the present appeal
really turns upon whether the sections impugned fall within the sentence
of the Board just quoted.
[Page 802]
But before discussing this it will be well
to examine the remaining case mentioned—namely, the Reciprocal Insurers’
case (1924) A.C. 328. After the decision against them on the first question
in the last case in 1916, the Dominion legislation on this subject was altered.
A new Act was passed in 1917. In place of the old s. 4, which had been declared
ultra vires by the decision, there were now enacted ss. 11 and 12 in these
terms:—(See ss. 11 and 12 previously quoted)
Contravention of these provisions was dealt
with by sections imposing penalties. But besides that, there had been
inserted in the Criminal Code two new sections, 508C and 508D, which
constituted as a criminal offence the doing of insurance business without a
Dominion license. Meantime Ontario had passed an Act dealing with mutual insurance. This led to the
case in which the questions proposed were as follows: (1) Is it within the
legislative competence of the legislature of the Province of Ontario to regulate or license the making of reciprocal
contracts by such legislation as that embodied in the Reciprocal Insurance Act,
1922? (2) Would the making or carrying out of reciprocal insurance contracts
licensed pursuant to the Reciprocal Insurance Act, 1922, be rendered illegal or
otherwise affected by the provisions of ss. 508C and 508D of the Criminal Code
as enacted by c. 26 of the Statutes of Canada 7 and 8 Geo. 5 in the absence of
a license from the Minister of Finance issued pursuant to s. 4 of the Insurance
Act of Canada, 7 & 8 Geo. 5, c. 29? (3) Would the answers to questions 1 or
2 be affected, and if so, how, if one or more of the persons subscribing to
such Reciprocal Insurance contracts is: (a) a British subject not resident in Canada immigrating into Canada? (b) an alien?
Mr. Justice Duff, who delivered the
judgment of the Board, expressed himself thus (1): “The provisions relating to
licenses in the Insurance Act of 1910, which” (by the judgment of 1916) “was
declared to be ultra vires, and the regulations governing licenses under the
Act and applicable to contracts and to the business of insurance, did not, in
any respect presently material, substantially differ from those now found in
the legislation of 1917; but the provisions of the statute of 1910 derived
their coercive force from penalties created by the Insurance Act itself. The
distinction between the legislation of 1910 and that of 1917, upon which the
major contention of the Dominion is founded, consists in the fact that s. 508C
is enacted in the form of an amendment to the statutory criminal law, and
purports only to create offences which are declared to be indictable, and to
ordain penalties for such offences. The question now to be decided is whether
in the frame in which this legislation of 1917 is cast, that part of it which
is so enacted can receive effect as a lawful exercise of the legislative
authority of the Parliament of Canada in relation to the criminal law. It has
been formally laid down in judgments of this Board, that in such an inquiry the
Courts must ascertain ‘the true nature and character’ of the enactment: Citizens
Insurance Co. v. Parsons 7 App. Cas. 96; its ‘pith and substance’: Union
Colliery Co. v. Bryden (1899) A.C. 580…”
The Board proceeded to decide that the
amendment of the criminal law by s. 508C was not a genuine amendment of the
criminal law, but was really an attempt by a soi-disant amendment of the
criminal law to subject insurance business in the Province to the control of
the Dominion, that which had exactly been determined to be ultra vires by the
judgment of 1916. This decided the main question.
As regards question 3, it was answered in
the negative, but there was added the following addendum: “Their Lordships do
not express
[Page 803]
any opinion as to the competence of the
Dominion Parliament, by virtue of its authority in relation to aliens and to
trade and commerce, to enact ss. 11 and 12, sub-s. 1, of the Insurance Act.
This, although referred to on the argument before their Lordships’ Board, was
not fully discussed, and since it is not directly raised by the question
submitted, their Lordships, as they then intimated, considered it inadvisable
to express any opinion upon it. Their Lordships think it sufficient to recall
the observation of Lord Haldane, in delivering the judgment of the Board, in Attorney-General
for Canada v. Attorney‑General for Alberta (1916) 1 A.C. 588, to the
effect that legislation, if properly framed, requiring aliens, whether natural
persons or foreign companies, to become licensed, as a condition of carrying on
the business of insurance in Canada, might be competently enacted by
Parliament.”
Following on this judgment, the Dominion
Parliament, by an amending statute in 1924, repealed sub-s. 2 of s. 12 of the
Act of 1917. The Act of 1927, which is the Act with which the present case has
to do, reproduces, as has been seen, ss. 11 and 12 and the corresponding penal
sections renumbered as 66 and 67, and in the Criminal Code of 1927 the old
508C reappears as 507, but with an exception as to reciprocal insurance companies
so as to avoid the direct result of the judgment of 1924.
Their Lordships are now in a position to
address themselves directly to the first question in this case. It is clear
from the quotations from the Reciprocal Insurers’ case (1924) A.C. 328,
that the question is technically still open, and it is clear from the judgment
in the 1916 case that the sections in question can only be justified if to
them can be applied what was there said by Lord Haldane in his answer to query
2. Their Lordships will repeat it: “To this question their Lordships’ reply is
that in such a case it would be within the power of the Parliament of Canada,
by properly framed legislation, to impose such a restriction. It appears to
them that such a power is given by the heads in s. 91, which refer to the
regulation of trade and commerce and to aliens.”
The state of opinion in the Court below was
as follows: Two learned judges thought that the sections were ultra vires,
whether applied, to British or to foreign insurers; but three judges, while
holding the sections ultra vires as to British subjects, held that they
were intra vires as to aliens. Now so far as British subjects were concerned
the view was that Lord Haldane’s dictum showed clearly that the only power of
restriction given rested upon its being possible to connect it with alien
legislation, and that therefore it was impossible to bring British subjects
within the scope of the dictum. So far as this argument goes, their Lordships
think it is sound, but at the same time they think it unnecessary because they
think it is swallowed up in the wider consideration which makes the
sections bad as regards both aliens and British subjects. Their Lordships
consider that although the question was studiously kept open in the Reciprocal
Insurers’ case (1924) A.C. 328, it was really decided by what was then laid
down. The case decided that a colourable use of the Criminal Code could not
serve to disguise the real object of the legislation, which was to dominate the
exercise of the business of insurance. And in the same way it was decided that
to try by a false definition to pray in aid s. 95 of the British North America
Act, 1867, which deals with immigration, in order to control the business of
insurance, was equally unavailing. What has got to be considered is whether
this is in a true sense of the word alien legislation, and that is what Lord
Haldane meant by “properly framed legislation.” Their Lordships have no doubt
that the Dominion Parliament might
[Page 804]
pass an Act forbidding aliens to enter
Canada or forbidding them so to enter to engage in any business without a
license, and further they might furnish rules for their conduct while in
Canada, requiring them, e.g., to report at stated intervals. But the
sections here are not of that sort, they do not deal with the position of
an alien as such: but under the guise of legislation as to aliens they seek to
intermeddle with the conduct of insurance business, a business which by the
first branch of the 1916 case has-been declared to be exclusively subject to
Provincial law. Their Lordships have therefore, no hesitation in declaring that
this is not “properly framed” alien legislation.
As regards British subjects, who cannot be
styled aliens, once the false definition is gone, the same remark applies as to
alien immigrants. This is not properly framed law as to immigration, but an
attempt to saddle British immigrants with a different code as to the conduct of
insurance business from the code which has been settled to be the only valid code,
i.e., the Provincial Code.
And regarding the claim that Parliament had a
right to provide by section 16 of the Special War Revenue Act, R.S.C.
1927, c. 179 that:
“(16) Every person resident in Canada, who
insures his property situate in Canada, or any property situate in Canada in
which he has an insurable interest, other than that of an insurer of such
property, against risks other than marine risks: (a) with any British or
foreign company or British or foreign underwriter or underwriters, not licensed
under the provisions of the Insurance Act, to transact business in Canada; or
(b) with any association of persons formed for the purpose of exchanging
reciprocal contracts of indemnity upon the plan known as interinsurance and not
licensed under the provisions of the Insurance Act, the chief place of business
of which association or of its principal attorney-in-fact is situate outside of
Canada; shall on or before the thirty-first day of December in each year pay to
the Minister, in addition to any other tax payable under any existing law or
statute a tax of five per centum of the total net cost to such person of all
such insurance for the preceding calendar year.”
Viscount Dunedin said:
Now as to the power of the Dominion
Parliament to impose taxation there is no doubt. But if the tax as imposed is
linked up with an object which is illegal the tax for that purpose must fall.
Sect. 16 clearly assumes that a Dominion license to prosecute insurance
business is a valid license all over Canada and carries with it the right to
transact insurance business. But it has been already decided that this is
not so; that a Dominion license so far as authorizing transactions of insurance
business in a Province is concerned, is an idle piece of paper conferring no
rights which the party transacting in accordance with Provincial legislation
has not already got, if he has complied with Provincial requirements. It is
really the same old attempt in another way. (emphasis added)
Their Lordships cannot do better than quote
and then paraphrase a portion of the words of Duff J. in the Reciprocal
Insurers’ case (1924) A.C. 328, 342. He says: “In accordance with the
principle inherent in these decisions their Lordships think it is no longer
open to dispute that the Parliament of Canada cannot, by purporting to create
penal sanctions under s. 91, head 27, appropriate to itself exclusively a field
of
[Page 805]
jurisdiction in which, apart from such a
procedure, it could exert no legal authority, and that if, when examined as a
whole, legislation in form criminal is found, in aspects and for purposes
exclusively within the Provincial sphere, to deal with matters committed to the
Provinces, it cannot be upheld as valid.” If instead of the words “create penal
sanctions under s. 91, head 27” you substitute the words “exercise taxation
powers under s. 91, head 3,” and for the word “Criminal” substitute “taxing”,
the sentence expresses precisely their Lordships’ views.
It was after this decision in the Insurance
Act of Canada case that s. 165(1) of the Winding-up Act was enacted.
This would appear to be the last attempt by Parliament to control a facet of
insurance operations by purporting to do so through legislation dealing with
insolvency. Bankruptcy and insolvency is, by head 21 of s. 91 of the B.N.A.
Act within the exclusive jurisdiction of Parliament. This is not questioned
any more than criminal law was within the jurisdiction of Parliament in the Reciprocal
Insurers’ case or that immigration was in the case of In Re Insurance
Act of Canada, or interest in the Barfried case, or bankruptcy and
insolvency in Ladore v. Bennett.
It is not the fact that bankruptcy and
insolvency is within the exclusive jurisdiction of Parliament that is vital to
the question here, but rather that Parliament, by enacting s. 165(1), sought
again to intrude into a field of legislation, namely insurance, which by virtue
of s. 92, and the cases previously referred to, is committed exclusively to the
jurisdiction of the Provinces.
Sections 40 to 73 of The Insurance Act
of Ontario as well as ss. 225 to 240 of Part VI of The Corporations Act respecting
Insurance Corporations are part and parcel of the law of Ontario respecting
insurance, and the relevant sections, insofar as they relate to the
administration of a deposit, deal with bankruptcy and insolvency only as
incidental to the right to legislate regarding insurance.
The effect of s. 165(1) of the Winding-up Act
and of s. 162 of the same Act is to make available to all creditors of an
insolvent insurance company the deposit which the Province has required for the
protection of policyholders in Ontario for a number of reasons. The requirement
that the deposit be handed over to the liquidator may be in itself innocuous.
It is the fact that once it is in his hands the liquidator must distribute the
deposit as provided in s. 162 of the Winding-up Act. This means a
distribution different from that called for in s. 48 of The Insurance Act. The
[Page 806]
liquidator under the Winding-up Act and
the receiver under s. 52(1) of The Insurance Act may, by s. 52(2), be
the same person. I see nothing repugnant in this procedure. It is the manner in
which the deposit is to be administered that is the vital issue here, not by
whom it is to be distributed. Parliament has chosen by the seemingly innocuous
direction in s. 165(1) of the Winding-up Act to divert the deposit from
its true purpose to a purpose wholly repugnant to the intent of the Legislature
of Ontario which, in providing for the deposit, did so for the protection of
policyholders as set out in s. 48.
With deference to contrary opinion, the
contention that there is no room for any suggestion that s. 165(1) is merely
colourable ignores, I think, the history of Parliament’s attempts to invade the
field of insurance legislation following upon the decision in Citizens
Insurance v. Parsons.
Having attempted to invade the insurance field:
(a) Through the licensing requirement door
(Attorney General for Canada v. Attorney General for Alberta);
(b) Through the criminal law door (The
Reciprocal Insurers case);
(c) Through the immigration door (In Re
Insurance Act of Canada);
and having been repulsed on these three
attempts, Parliament then chose immediately after the Insurance Act of
Canada decision in 1932 to gain entry through another door by s. 165(1)
which is not a section dealing with bankruptcy and insolvency generally
but one of limited application specifically aimed at insurance companies only.
It must be seen as an attempt to make that which is not an asset of an
insolvent insurance company into an asset by some sort of legislative
transmutation.
Surely it cannot be said that this is valid
Dominion legislation. It is patently a foray into the field of insurance, an
area forbidden to Parliament. It is colourable legislation and, because of
this, ultra vires. It ignores completely that by s. 41(5) the deposit is
vested in the Minister. There can be no legislative divesting of the deposit
under the guise of bankruptcy and insolvency. The effective answer, it appears
[Page 807]
to me, is that s. 165(1) attempted to deal with
something which is not an asset of the bankrupt by purporting to say that it
is. The deposit is vested in the Minister (The Attorney General of Ontario) to
be held by him under s. 48(2) “…for the benefit of all insured persons under
Ontario contracts…”
The case of Royal Bank of Canada v. Larue, was cited as supporting the proposition
that bankruptcy legislation enacted by Parliament took precedence over the
provisions of Art. 2121 of the Civil Code of Quebec regarding the
priority of a judicial hypothec upon real assets of a debtor in that province.
It was held that it was within the powers of the Parliament of Canada to enact,
in relation to bankruptcy and insolvency, the relative priorities of creditors
under a bankruptcy or authorized assignment. That proposition is not
questioned, but it is not relevant here. The Bankruptcy Act is general
bankruptcy legislation validly enacted under Head 21 of s. 91 of the British
North America Act.
Larue (Viscount
Cave L.C. at p. 197) recognizes that an execution creditor who has realized
upon his execution and become satisfied by payment is not affected by a
receiving order. In other words, the asset which has been realized upon or the
proceeds therefrom are not regarded as belonging to the bankrupt. A fortiori
an asset which is not the property of the insurance company but is vested
in the Minister who can deal with it independently of the company is
necessarily beyond the reach of the receiver.
Section 165(1) of the Winding-up Act is
not a case of a general provision applying to all bankruptcies and
insolvencies. It is a section specifically aimed at deposits put up by
insurance companies as a condition of being licensed to do business in the
Province by which that deposit vested in the Minister is sought to be translated
into an asset of the insolvent insurance company and the title of the
Minister to the deposit so vested in him is extinguished. Larue dealt
with the rights of creditors inter se to property of the bankrupt and
did not purport to make available to creditors an asset which was not the
property of the bankrupt at the time of the bankruptcy.
[Page 808]
The decision of this Court in Provincial
Treasurer of Manitoba v. Minister of Finance for Canada, is, in my opinion directly applicable to
the present case. The facts as set out in the headnote are as follows:
The Imperial Canadian Trust Company and the
Great West Permanent Loan Company, both having charter power to receive moneys
on deposit, were closely associated in management. In 1924, the Loan Company,
having decided to discontinue its deposit business, entered into an agreement
with the Trust Company whereby the latter took over the deposits of the former
on terms set out in the agreement. The amount of deposits so turned over was
$124,249.16, and the Loan Company delivered to the Trust Company securities
aggregating that amount in estimated value. The Trust Company proceeded from
time to time to dispose of these trust assets and to pay depositors and, on
December 27th, 1927, had paid off $105,968.87, leaving an unpaid balance of
$18,280.29. On that same date, the Trust Company was ordered to be wound up
under the Winding-up Act and the Montreal Trust Company was appointed as
liquidator. In August, 1929, an immovable property, the only remaining security
still undisposed of, was sold by the liquidator for $30,336.65 and the
liquidator “set aside and earmarked”, in May, 1930, the above sum of
$18,280.29. The liquidator paid out of that sum $8,435.89 to depositors who had
filed claims pursuant to an order made by the Master in Chambers, leaving a
balance of $9,844.40. The Provincial Treasurer of Manitoba, by an application
filed in December, 1937, claimed that sum as bona vacantia, and this is
the subject-matter of the first appeal. Then, in April, 1940, the Manitoba
legislature passed an Act called the Vacant Property Act, and, in July,
1940, the Attorney-General for Manitoba claimed the same moneys under the
provisions of that Act, and this is the subject-matter of the second appeal.
The Minister of Finance for Canada contended in both cases that the moneys were
the property of the Crown in right of the Dominion as unclaimed dividends under
sections 139 and 140 of the Winding-up Act. The appellate court
held that the Dominion had jurisdiction over these moneys as part of its
jurisdiction over bankruptcy and that its legislation should prevail.
This Court held that the judgments in the
Manitoba Court should be reversed and directed that the moneys be paid to the
Provincial Treasurer for Manitoba under the provisions of The Vacant
Property Act. The unanimous judgment of this Court (Rinfret C.J., Davis,
Kerwin, Hudson and Taschereau JJ.) was delivered by Hudson J. who, after having
discussed the facts and the various transactions which resulted in the sum of
$9,844.40 being in dispute, said:
The fund here in question represents what
remains of the securities transferred under the agreement of 1924. That
agreement was primarily a contract between the loan company and the trust company
to effect a substitution of the latter for the former in relation to the
depositors.
[Page 809]
The agreement, however, incorporated a
trust which upon the transfer of the securities to the trust company became an
“executed” trust, the beneficiaries of which were the depositors. Although
these depositors were not parties to the agreement they were interested. The
assets transferred by the loan company diminished pro tanto the capacity
of that company to pay the depositors and the provision for the trust was for
their protection.
The language of clause 4 is explicit: the
trust company covenants and agrees
“to earmark and specially set aside the
securities which shall be taken over...and to retain them solely and only as
security and provision to take care of and pay off the deposits above referred
to and said securities shall not fall into or become part of the assets”
of such party, “but shall be held and used
only as above provided.” When the securities were allocated to the trust
company, the trust was irrevocable without the consent of the beneficiaries who
thereupon acquired an independent right to enforce the trust.
* *
*
When the order was made for winding-up, the
securities undisposed of were held by the trust company as trustee for the
unpaid depositors and, as such, they did not form any part of the assets of the
estate. See Palmer’s Company Law (Winding-Up) 1937 ed., p. 252 and also p. 672.
* *
*
It would appear then that the fund in
question is held to fulfil the trust of 1924 and can be treated in no other
way.
In this view of the matter,
sections 139 and 140 of the Winding-Up Act can have no application.
The moneys were held by the liquidator as trustee for the individual depositors
and not for the trust estate or for anybody else.
The Privy Council in Attorney-General for Canada v. Attorney-General for the Province of Quebec and Attorneys-General for Saskatchewan, Alberta and Manitoba,
in referring to Provincial Treasurer of Manitoba v. Minister of Finance for
Canada, said:
Indeed, the Chief Justice would himself
have decided in favour of the appellants had he not felt himself constrained by
the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Canada in Provincial Treasurer of
Manitoba v. Minister of Finance for Canada, (1943) S.C.R. (Can.) 370 to hold otherwise. That case
decided that certain trust money in the hands of a trustee which had not been,
and some of which could not be, distributed to the cestuis que trustent could
not be regarded as bona vacantia, but that it passed to the Province under an
Act which provided that: “2. All personal property, including money or
securities for money deposited with or held in trust by any person in the
province, which remains unclaimed by the person entitled thereto for twelve
years from the time when such property, money or securities were first payable
shall notwithstanding that the depositee or trustee has delivered or paid or
transferred such personal property, money or securities to any other person or
official within or
[Page 810]
without the province as depositee or
trustee vest in and be payable to His Majesty in the right of the province of
Manitoba subject only to His Majesty’s pleasure with respect to any claim
thereafter made by any person claiming to be entitled to such property, money
or securities.” The only question in that case material to that which their
Lordships are now considering was whether the special Act was in conflict with
ss. 139 and 140 of the Winding-up Act of the Dominion Parliament or trenched on
the field of bankruptcy and insolvency. It was held that the special Act was
not invalidated for either reason. The money in question was not simply a
debt—it was trust money—a fund secured on immovable property, and was not an
asset of the liquidator in the winding-up but held as trustee for the
individual depositors. There was no reason therefore why the Province should
not transfer the possession, which the court held to be all that passed, to the
Attorney-General for Manitoba
as trustee for the depositors, or, indeed, for that matter, to him as bona
vacantia. Winding-up and insolvency were not interfered with—only property and
civil rights; the sum in dispute being trust money could not be used by the
liquidator in the winding‑up.
To paraphrase Hudson J. in the quotation given
above, the deposit in question here was vested in the Minister as trustee for
the policyholders in Ontario
pursuant to the provisions of The Ontario Insurance Act and not for the
Wentworth Insurance Company or for anybody else.
It is clear from s. 33 of the Winding-up Act that
the property which vests in the liquidator upon his appointment is “…all the
property, effects and choses in action to which the company is or appears to be
entitled…”, and s. 93 of the Act says that the property of the company
is to be applied in satisfaction of its debts and liabilities and the charges,
costs and expenses incurred in winding up its affairs. The liquidator,
therefore, has no right under the general provisions of the Act to
property unless that property is property which comes within the meaning of s.
33. It cannot be said that a deposit vested in the Minister is property
to which the company is or appears to be entitled. The deposit is not the
property of the company at all although in certain circumstances it may revert
to the company, but that is much different from saying that the company is or
appears to be entitled to it at the relevant time, namely, at the time of the
bankruptcy. It cannot be suggested that immediately prior to the making of the
receiving order Wentworth Insurance Company could have maintained an action
against the Minister for the return to it of the deposit. The receiver has no
greater rights in that respect than the insolvent company.
[Page 811]
A statement by Lord Atkin in Lymburn v.
Mayland, where
he said:
The provisions of this part of the Act may
appear to be far-reaching; but if they fall, as their Lordships conceive them
to fall, within the scope of legislation dealing with property and civil rights
the legislature of the Province, sovereign in this respect, has the sole power
and responsibility of determining what degre of protection it will afford to
the public.
is, in my view, very, very apt here. The
province has the sole power and responsibility to determine what degree of
protection it will stipulate from insurers in favour of insureds in the Province of Ontario.
I would accordingly allow the appeal and restore
the judgment of Hartt J. with costs in this Court and in the Court of Appeal.
Appeal dismissed, RITCHIE, HALL,
SPENCE and PIGEON JJ. dissenting.
Solicitor for the Attorney-General for Ontario: F.W. Callaghan, Toronto.
Solicitors for those policyholders and
others claiming for losses: Siegal, Fogler and Greenglass, Toronto.
Socilitors for those policyholders
claiming for refund of unearned premiums: Catzman and Wahl, Toronto.
Solicitor for the liquidator: Morawetz
and Strauss, Toronto.