Supreme Court of Canada
City of Prince Albert v. Underwood McLellan &
Associates Limited, [1969] S.C.R. 305
Date: 1968-12-20
City of Prince Albert (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Underwood McLellan
& Associates Limited (Defendant) Respondent.
1968: May 8, 9, 10; 1968: December 20.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Martland,
Ritchie, Hall and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
SASKATCHEWAN
Guarantee and
suretyship—Subrogation—Respondent employed by appellant to prepare plans for
and supervise construction of reservoir—Performance bond by surety company
provided by contractors—Collapse of reservoir because of faulty method of
backfilling—Failure of respondent to properly supervise operation—Payment made
by contractors to surety and from surety to appellant—Whether action brought in
name of appellant against respondent champertous—Whether appellant’s right to
recover from respondent extinguished.
Under a contract in writing the appellant
city employed the respondent, a firm of engineers, to prepare plans for and to
supervise the construction of a reservoir. A contract of construction prepared
by the respondent was entered into between the city and a firm of contractors.
Pursuant to a term of the construction contract requiring them to furnish a
performance bond covering the faithful performance of the contract, the
contractors provided such a bond by a surety company. Several months after work
on the erection of the reservoir was begun the structure collapsed during the
process of backfilling.
Following the collapse the contractors took
the position that they would not rebuild or complete the contract except
without prejudice to the rights of all concerned. The respondent was unwilling
to let the matter proceed on this “without prejudice” basis. Later, upon receipt
of a certificate from the respondent that sufficient cause existed to justify
such action, the city sent a notice to the contractors terminating their
employment and advising them that the city intended “to take immediate
possession of the premises and finish the work by whatever method the City may
deem expedient all in accordance with the provisions of the said contract”.
Following this the appellant employed another contractor to rebuild and finish
the reservoir which was done in accordance with the original design and
specifications at a cost of $149,191.88.
Subsequently, under written agreements
between the appellant and the surety and between the contractors and the
surety, the contractors paid to the surety the sum of $101,039.28, i.e., the
cost of rebuilding the reservoir less the amount owing by the appellant to the
contractors under the original contract of construction, which amount the
appellant held back. The sum of $101,039.28 was in turn paid by the surety to
the city. It was provided, inter alia, that subrogated rights of the
surety to sue in the name of the city should be exercised under the control of
the contractors.
An action against the respondent brought in
the name of the city was successful at trial, where it was held that the failure
of the respondent to properly supervise the backfilling operation “was the
prime factor
[Page 306]
in the collapse of the reservoir”. On appeal,
the Court of Appeal by a majority allowed the appeal and dismissed the action.
An appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal was then brought to this
Court.
Held (Cartwright
C.J. and Spence J. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed and the judgment
at trial restored subject to a variation as to quantum.
Per Martland,
Ritchie and Hall JJ.: The surety company became an assignee by way of
subrogation and by virtue of its agreement with the appellant, to which the
appellant had to give effect by allowing the action to be taken in its name. No
element of champerty or maintenance arose here.
The contention that the action was
champertous having failed, nothing stood in the way of the appellant being
entitled to judgment against the respondent for breach of their contract as
found by the trial judge unless the payment made by the surety under its
agreement with the appellant extinguished the appellant’s right to recover from
the respondent.
The payment in question was not a
“realization” out of the contractors as stated by Riddell J.A. in Campbell
Flour Mills Co. Ltd. v. Bowes; Campbell Flour Mills Co. Ltd. v. Ellis (1914),
32 O.L.R. 270 at 280, or a recovery within Imperial Bank of Canada v.
Begley, [1936] 2 All E.R. 367. Here the payment was conditional. If the
appellant had not permitted the action to be brought in its name it would have
had to refund the money it got under the agreement. In that agreement the
appellant did not purport to release the respondent nor the contractors, but
specifically provided that the surety company should be subrogated to all the
rights and remedies of the appellant against the contractors as well as against
the respondent or any other persons arising out of the failure of the reservoir
structure.
Further defences, viz., that the
appellant was estopped and that the agreement between the appellant and the
surety was ultra vires, were also rejected.
Per Cartwright
C.J. and Spence J., dissenting: As held by the Court of Appeal no
question of subrogation arose in this case and the appeal was to be decided on
the basis of the rights of the appellant against the respondent. The bonding company
was not paying pursuant to its bond; it paid an amount larger than the penalty
in the bond and did so with money furnished by the contractor and as its agent.
A principal debtor who pays his debt has no right of subrogation.
The action failed because the appellant was
not able to prove that it suffered any loss; indeed it was proved that before
the action was commenced the appellant’s loss had been paid in full.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Saskatchewan, allowing an appeal
from a judgment of Bence C.J.Q.B. Appeal allowed and trial judgment restored
subject to a variation as to quantum, Cartwright C.J. and Spence J. dissenting.
[Page 307]
Alan W. Embury, Q.C., and John M. Embury,
for the plaintiff, appellant.
J.L. Robertson, Q.C., and K. Barton, for
the defendant, respondent.
The judgment of Cartwright C.J. and Spence J.
was delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE (dissenting):—The
relevant facts and material documents are set out in the reasons of my brother
Hall. A brief summary will be sufficient to make plain the reasons for the
conclusion at which I have arrived.
On the findings in the Courts below, which are
fully supported by the evidence, the cause of the collapse of the reservoir was
the faulty manner in which the backfill was applied by the contractor, Smith
Bros. & Wilson Ltd., hereinafter referred to as “the contractor”. I think
it clear that there was a breach of contract by the contractor but this need
not be decided as it has actually paid the whole of the loss suffered by the
appellant.
There is no doubt that there was a breach of
contract on the part of the engineer, the present respondent, in failing to
supervise the application of the backfill by the contractor and that this
breach was a cause of the collapse.
The contractor was not a party to the contract
between the appellant and the respondent and the respondent was not a party to
the contract between the appellant and the contractor. In my view when the
reservoir collapsed the appellant had causes of action against both the
contractor and the respondent but these were independent and distinct causes of
action.
We are concerned only with the action between
the appellant and the respondent. In my view this action fails on the ground
that the loss which was undoubtedly sustained by the appellant has been fully
paid to it by the contractor partly in cash and partly by the appellant
retaining the sum of $48,152.60 held back by it which, but for its breach,
would have been payable to the contractor. The matter is, in my view, covered
by the following sentence
[Page 308]
in the judgment of Riddell J.A. in Campbell
Flour Mills Co. Ltd. v. Bowes; Campbell Flour Mills Co. Ltd. v. Ellis:
It is true that, if the full amount of the
damages were realised out of the contractors, no action (except perhaps for
nominal damages) would lie against the architects, but that is on an entirely
different principle, namely, that the plaintiffs have suffered no damage from
the default of the architects.
The reasons given in the case just cited and in
the passage from Mayne on Damages quoted in Truth & Sportsman Ltd. v.
Kethel for
refusing to enquire into the existence of liability of a stranger to the
contract for the loss caused by the breach by the defendant of its contract
with the plaintiff have no application where that stranger is not merely said
to be liable for but has actually paid the whole loss suffered by the
plaintiff.
I agree with the unanimous conclusion of the
Court of Appeal that no question of subrogation arises in this case and that
the appeal is to be decided on the basis of the rights of the appellant against
the respondent. If the bonding company had in fact paid the appellant under its
bond questions might have arisen as to whether it could claim to be subrogated
to the appellant’s right of action against the respondent but the contracts
recited in the reasons of my brother Hall make it plain that the bonding
company was not paying pursuant to its bond; it paid an amount larger than the
penalty in the bond and did so with money furnished by the contractor and as
its agent. A principal debtor who pays his debt has no right of subrogation.
In my view the action fails because the
appellant is not able to prove that it suffered any loss; indeed it is proved
that before the action was commenced the appellant’s loss had been paid in
full.
The proposition that a person who has suffered a
loss and who has separate causes of action against more than one person to
recover the amount of that loss cannot recover more than the total amount thereof
is treated as too plain for argument in Imperial Bank of Canada v. Begley, a judgment of the Privy Council
affirming the
[Page 309]
judgment of this Court in Begley v. Imperial
Bank of Canada. Lord Maugham giving the judgment of the Board says at p. 375:
It is clear that in the circumstances the
respondent was not put to her election to sue either McElroy or the appellants:
she could sue both or either, subject of course to this that she could not
recover more than the total sum due to her.
While it is clear that there was a breach of
contract by the respondent and consequently the appellant may well have been
entitled to a judgment against it for nominal damages, no claim for any such
judgment was put forward either in the Courts below or before us and under the
circumstances I think that the judgment of the Court of Appeal providing that
the action be dismissed with costs ought not to be disturbed.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
The judgment of Martland, Ritchie and Hall JJ.
was delivered by
HALL J.:—This is an appeal from a judgment of
the Court of Appeal for Saskatchewan
(Woods J.A. dissenting) which allowed an appeal by the respondent from a
judgment by Bence C.J.Q.B. in favour of the appellant for $160,784.53.
The litigation arises out of the collapse of a
water reservoir being built for the appellant city. The city employed the
respondent, a firm of engineers, to prepare detailed plans and specifications
for the proposed reservoir under a contract in writing dated July 28, 1961.
This contract contained the following clauses:
Article 1 Branches of the Project:
The Engineer will perform engineering
services as outlined in Article II, for the following branches of the project:
1. New storage reservoir and pumphouse.
2. Other items directly related to the
provision of the above as agreed.
Article II Engineering Services:
The Engineer will perform the following
services under this contract:
1. Preliminary sketch plans and cost
estimates. Attendances at any necessary meetings to discuss the project.
2. Design of structures and ancillary
items, selection of equipment and materials. Preparation of detail plans and
specifications, call, receive and tabulate tenders and make recommendations to
council for tender award.
[Page 310]
3. Supervise construction of the project
including all office functions such as checking of shop drawings and
changes in methods and materials, prepare and submit monthly progress estimates
and including resident supervision for continuous daily inspection and
guidance of the contractor. Final “as built” plans and operating manuals
will be submitted for record purposes.
4. Arrange for soils investigation and
materials testing as required.
(Emphasis added.)
The respondent recommended a cylindrical type of
reservoir having a diameter of 131 feet and a height of 30 feet to be
constructed in an excavation, the whole of which when completed and capped
would be surrounded by and covered with earth. The reservoir was to be
constructed of concrete and was designed to utilize a particular preload or
pre-stressed process owned by a firm known as Canadian Gunite. This process
permits the use of a thinner wall than that type of construction which is
confined to reinforced steel. It includes reinforced steel but in addition
involves the installation of a series of wires under tension around the outside
of the cement wall and a special composition added to the outside surface. This
method provided a lighter overall structure and strengthened the walls against
the internal pressure exerted when filled with water. The filling in of the
excavated area surrounding the concrete structure by the process known as
backfilling was something which had to be done with great care. Earth had to be
placed in layers all around the structure so that no undue pressure would be
exerted at any particular area on the wall of the reservoir. This was of
special importance because of the comparative lightness of the pre-stressed
concrete and its susceptibility to being moved by uneven external pressure.
Tenders were called for in accordance with the
terms of the contract between the parties. The tender of a firm known as Smith
Bros. & Wilson Ltd. was accepted and a contract of construction prepared by
the respondent was entered into between the appellant city and said contractors.
That contract, including the specifications as a part thereof, contained inter
alia the following:
10. Engineer and Contractor
The Engineer shall have general
supervision and direction of the work, but the
Contractor shall have complete control, subject to Clause 12, of his
organization.
[Page 311]
The Engineer is, in the first instance,
the interpreter of the contract and the judge of its performance; he shall use
his powers under the contract to enforce its faithful performance by both the
parties hereto.
20. Emergencies
The Engineer has authority to stop the
progress of the work whenever in his opinion such stoppage may be necessary to
ensure its proper execution. In an emergency affecting or threatening the
safety of life, or the structure, or of adjoining property, he has authority to
make such changes and to order, assess and award the cost of such work extra to
the contract or otherwise as may in his opinion be necessary.
In the specifications A under General
Instructions:
(11) (e) All materials to be
incorporated in the work shall be stored under suitable conditions to prevent
damage, deterioration, contamination, etc. No materials to be incorporated in
the work shall be temporarily used or installed as a facility for construction
purposes except with the express approval of the Engineer.
B under General Trades:
(8) Backfilling:
(a) All free water surrounding concrete
structures in excavation prior to backfilling must be completely removed and
only dry unfrozen material may be used for backfill. Backfilling generally,
unless otherwise particularly specified or noted, shall consist of gravel or of
clean earth, particularly against concrete walls.
(b) All backfill and embankment required
around the structure shall be deposited in layers and carefully
consolidated to the lines and grades indicated on the drawings, as indicated
by the Engineer, but not previous to 21 days after completion of placing
the concrete for the walls. Where additional fill is required to comply with
the drawings, it shall be furnished by the Contractor without additional
remuneration.
(c)……
(d) Backfilling shall not be done against
walls that have been waterproofed, until the waterproofing has been inspected
and approved by the Engineer; then it shall be placed in layers, and
consolidated in such a manner as to not damage the waterproofing.
(e) Local pockets of materials which in the
opinion of the Engineer are unsuitable for slab support shall be removed to
such depth as the Engineer may require and replaced with compacted pit-run
gravel.
(f) Backfill over the reservoir shall
consist of 3” of gravel and clean earth to the elevations noted. Consolidation
of fill over the reservoir shall be done with light machinery to minimize the
possibility of damage.
25. Leakage Test: After the
covercoating has been applied but before waterproofing and backfilling the
reservoir and pumpwell shall be water-tested.
The pumpwell shall be left empty while the
reservoir is tested. This will indicate any leaks in walls of the pumpwell.
The chamber shall be filled to operating
level with clear water and shall remain standing for 24 hours. If no
leaks develop and on approval of the Engineer, the Contractor may proceed with
waterproofing and backfilling as further specified herein.
[Page 312]
If leaks do develop, they shall be repaired
to the satisfaction of the Engineer. After leaks have been repaired, the
chambers shall be re-tested to ensure that the repairs are satisfactory. All
visual leaks shall be repaired.
. . .
26. Waterproofing: The
perimeter walls (interior and exterior) and reservoir roof shall receive two
coats of asphalt waterproofing, Flintkote Static Asphalt Protective Coating
Type I, or approved equal. The inside of the perimeter wall may be waterproofed
prior to testing but the exterior surface shall not be waterproofed until after
testing.
. . .
The Contractor shall obtain the approval of
the Engineer on the first coat before proceeding with the second coat. After
approval has been received on the second coat, the Contractor shall proceed
with backfilling as specified elsewhere herein.
(Emphasis added.)
Clause 27 of the construction contract required
the contractors to furnish a performance bond covering the faithful performance
of the contract. Pursuant to this clause the contractors provided a bond by
Western Surety Company in the sum of $93,500. That bond reads in part as
follows:
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that SMITH
BROS. & WILSON LIMITED, a corporation organized under the laws of
the Province of Saskatchewan, (hereinafter called the Principal) and WESTERN
SURETY COMPANY, a corporation created and existing under the laws of the
Dominion of Canada and whose principal office is located in Regina,
Saskatchewan (hereinafter called the Surety), are held and firmly bound unto
CITY OF PRINCE ALBERT (hereinafter called the Obligee), in the full and just
sum of NINETY-THREE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED…….xx/100 Dollars, lawful money of the
Dominion of Canada, to the payment of which sum, well and truly to be made, the
said Principal binds itself, its successors and assigns, and the said Surety
binds itself, its successors and assigns, jointly and severally, firmly by
these presents. Signed, sealed and delivered this 15th day of June, A.D. 1962.
WHEREAS, said Principal has entered into a certain written contract with the
Obligee, dated April 25, 1962
for the construction of water storage reservoir, which by reference hereto is
made part hereof as fully to all intents and purposes as though recited in full
herein. NOW, therefore, the condition of the foregoing obligation is
such that if the said Principal shall well and truly indemnify and save
harmless the said Obligee from any pecuniary loss resulting from the breach of
any terms, covenants and conditions of the said contract on the part of the said
Principal to be performed, then this obligation shall be void; otherwise to
remain in full force and effect in law;
Smith Bros. & Wilson Ltd. will hereinafter
be referred to as the contractors.
The work on the erection of the reservoir was
begun in the month of April 1962, with one Jenkins as superintendent in charge
on behalf of the contractors and an engineer
[Page 313]
representing the respondent by the name of
Farley. Farley was replaced in mid-September 1962 by one Palichuk also employed
by the respondent who had graduated in electrical engineering in the spring of
1962 and had worked for the respondent for one year prior to that time. He
became a professional engineer in 1964. Both Jenkins and Palichuk continued in
their respective positions until the reservoir collapsed. The collapse occurred
on November 29, 1962, during the process of the backfilling operation.
The events preceding the collapse are set out in
the judgment of Bence C.J.Q.B. as follows:
When the reservoir was filled with water to
test it for leaks prior to proceeding with the water-proofing of the exterior
it was found that a portion consisting of approximately thirty per cent of the
perimeter in the south-east section showed wet spots.
According to Jenkins, Palichuk was on the
job at the time the testing was done and instructed him to proceed to repeat
the water-proofing on the inside of the thirty per cent. It was necessary for
this purpose to drain the water out, which was done. While this was going on
the construction company proceeded with the exterior water-proofing on the
seventy per cent area which was free of leaks. Jenkins stated that he asked
permission from Palichuk to proceed with the backfilling on the seventy per
cent and that Palichuk gave him such permission subject to any water in the
trench being removed. Palichuk confirmed this in his evidence.
Backfilling operations commenced on Friday,
November 23rd, which was the day after the said permission was given by
Palichuk. It continued on Saturday and also on the Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday of the following week. The collapse occurred at about five o’clock on the Thursday. At no time was
there ever any backfilling on the said thirty per cent. Apparently the exterior
water-proofing on the seventy per cent was going on at the same time as the
backfilling. The exterior waterproofing was finished on Tuesday, November 26th.
According to Palichuk, he left the job site
Monday morning for Shellbrook to examine another construction job being
undertaken at that point. He stated that before doing so he told Jenkins not to
go beyond the limits of six to eight feet around the reservoir. This is denied
by Jenkins, who said that the only warning that was ever given by Palichuk to
him was not to use too large lumps in the backfill.
Palichuk remained in Shellbrook that night
and returned to Prince Albert
around three o’clock the following afternoon and arrived on the job site at
approximately 4:00 p.m. He
stated that he found the backfill was up to the grade level, which is 20 to 24
feet from the bottom of the excavation. He said that when he observed this he
talked to Jenkins and asked him why he had gone beyond the six to ten feet.
Again, according to him, Jenkins replied that the reason he did so was that
there would be enough counter action around the seventy per cent to prevent
damage to the walls. Palichuk testified that his reply was merely: “I told him
it is up to you Bill, you are doing the work.” Nothing further was done and no
warnings were given.
[Page 314]
Jenkins said that any instruction given to
him by Palichuk were carried out. He insisted he received no advice or warnings
from any one that the method of backfilling that he was doing was dangerous. He
did state that the backfill which he did do was deposited in layers as these
were the instructions in the specifications and also the instructions of the
resident engineer Palichuk.
Bence C.J.Q.B. found and the finding is fully
supported by the evidence that the reservoir collapsed because of the faulty
method of backfilling in which about seventy per cent of the circumference was
covered leaving the remaining thirty per cent without support. This was
described as unsymmetrical loading and contrary to the specifications in the
construction contract.
The care which had to be exercised in the
back-filling operation was well known to Palichuk. One Davidson representing
the Canadian Gunite Company visited the construction project on October 12,
1962, and testified that he had a discussion on the site with both Palichuk and
Jenkins and that he described to them the proper procedure to be followed which
was to go around the entire structure with the fill material in layers of about
one foot in depth. Davidson followed up his concern about the backfilling
operation by calling upon the respondent’s officials in Saskatoon and discussing the procedure with
them. He then returned to his company’s office in Calgary where, being still apprehensive concerning the backfilling, he
wrote a letter to the respondent dated October 16, 1962, as follows:
Underwood
McLellan & Associates Ltd.,
Box 539,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Attention: Mr. K. Mountain, P. Eng.
Reference: Prince Albert Reservoir
Gentlemen:
At this time we take the liberty of writing
to you regarding the pending backfill work at the Prince Albert Reservoir. As
is the case with any concrete reservoir the backfill must be properly placed to
avoid damaging the walls and we mention the following points here in case you
would wish to pass any or all of them along to the contractor or persons
responsible for this work.
—Care must be taken to avoid uneven loading
to structure.
—Backfill material must be soft earth, free
from rock and stones.
—No machines should be allowed close enough
to increase side pressure on the wall.
—Backfill material must be placed
successively about the structure so as to avoid uneven loading.
—If compaction is required this too should
be done in a manner avoiding uneven loading and impact.
[Page 315]
Mr. Warder has enquired regarding the
possibility of using a ‘cutback’ type asphalt as an exterior wall treatment
material and we are now waiting for a reply from the suppliers of the rubber
jointing materials in this regard. You will hear from us soon.
Yours very truly,
THE CANADA GUNITE COMPANY
LIMITED,
Sgd. “R.G. DAVIDSON”
R.G. Davidson,
Branch Manager.
This letter was entered as ex. P. 10. The
contractors were not sent a copy nor any similar communication.
Palichuk testified that he received a copy of
Davidson’s letter (P.10) from his principals and that he showed the copy to
Jenkins. Jenkins denied having been shown a copy prior to the collapse.
Regarding this conflict in the evidence, the learned trial judge said: “I
prefer to accept Jenkins’ testimony in this regard.”
The appellant city brought action against the
respondent claiming:
(1) that the design was faulty.
(2) in the alternative that the defendant
failed to use reasonable and proper skill in supervising the construction of
the reservoir particularly during the backfilling operation and permitted and
indicated through its resident engineer a backfill operation around part of the
circumference of the reservoir leaving a gap in the backfill and causing the
wall to collapse where it was unsupported by backfill in the area of such gap.
The claim based on faulty design was dismissed
by Bence C.J.Q.B. and was not urged in this Court.
The learned trial judge made the following
findings of fact:
(a) It was generally agreed
by the witnesses, and I have no hesitation in finding, that the cause of the
collapse was the faulty method used in backfilling by the completion of about
seventy per cent of the circumference while leaving the balance of thirty per
cent without any support. This is described as unsymmetrical loading.
(b) In the light of the
knowledge which Palichuk says he had about the necessity of proper backfilling,
his awareness of the information contained in the said letter, Exhibit P.10,
and his familiarity with the specifications, I have come to the conclusion that
he was negligent in not insisting at the time of his return from Shellbrook
that no further work should be done on the backfilling. His attitude that it
was up to Jenkins as he was doing the work is inexplicable. It is my view that
it was his duty under the contract to have insisted that Jenkins stop and if
there had been a refusal the matter should have been immediately reported both
to the management of the contracting company and to the officials of the
defendant.
[Page 316]
(c) Palichuk was further negligent
by giving Jenkins permission in the first place to proceed with the backfilling
when he knew that it could not be done around the thirty per cent. He did state
that the thirty per cent could have been water-proofed up to the places where
the water leak marks showed, these marks being above the grade level, but there
is no evidence that he suggested that this be done.
(d) It seems to me also that
Palichuk should not have left the job at this rather critical juncture for a
period of over a day. He failed to give “continuous daily inspection and guidance”.
(e) For the reasons I have indicated
I find the defendant through its agent Palichuk was negligent in the discharge
of his duties and responsibilities and that such negligence resulted in the
collapse of the reservoir. If he had acted as he should have done and provided
proper supervision the damage which incurred could have been avoided.
(f) I have found that the
defendant’s failure to discharge its responsibility under the contract was the
reason for the collapse of the reservoir. Smith Bros. & Wilson Ltd.
believed that this was so and in my opinion were justified in adopting the
stand they did.
(g) I find that the defendant
did have a responsibility with respect to supervising the proper carrying out
of the operation, that it failed in its discharge thereof and that such failure
was the prime factor in the collapse of the reservoir.
The Court of Appeal summarized the learned trial
judge’s findings of negligence under three headings:
(1) In his failure to stop continuance of
backfilling operations on his return to the site after absence from a Monday
morning to late Tuesday afternoon, when backfilling had then reached grade
level;
(2) In granting permission to commence
backfilling operations when it could not be done on the thirty per cent area;
(3) In absenting himself from the work for
a period in excess of twenty-four hours, and this during what the trial judge
termed a “critical juncture”.
Maguire J.A. concurred in finding that there had
been a breach of contract by the respondent. He said:
I think there is evidence upon which the
learned trial judge could make his first finding of breach of contract by the
engineer. The engineer company employee, Palichuk, when he returned to the site
on the Tuesday late afternoon and observed that backfill on the seventy per
cent of the circumference had proceeded almost to grade level and thus most
substantially in excess of what he states he had authorized or approved, knew,
or should have known, that this constituted a serious menace to the safety of
the structure. Even though this situation may have arisen through default of
the contractor, the engineer, in performing his duties to the City, failed to
act and take what appears to be a rather obvious precaution for the safety of
the structure, namely by ordering cessation of further backfill, until such
fill could be brought up to level in the remaining thirty per cent
circumference.
He did not deal with 2 and 3 holding it was not
necessary to do so. In my view all the findings of negligence made
[Page 317]
by the learned trial judge and so summarized by
Maguire J.A. were fully supported by the evidence. The contractors were not
parties to the action nor was any application made to join them as might have
been done under the Saskatchewan Queen’s Bench Rules of Court. The learned
trial judge did not make any finding of negligence against the contractors.
Regarding the cause of the collapse, he found specifically:
That the defendant’s failure to discharge
its responsibility under the contract was the reason for the collapse of the
reservoir. Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited believed that this was so
and in my opinion were justified in adopting the stand they did.
and that the failure of the respondent to
properly supervise the backfilling operation “was the prime factor in the
collapse of the reservoir”.
Maguire J.A., in dealing with this last finding,
said:
I do not interpret the trial judgment as
absolving the contractor from negligence in the performance of its duties
during construction. The learned trial judge directed his consideration to
whether, as between the city and the engineer, and under the terms of the
engineer’s contract, it had committed a breach or breaches in the performance
of its contractual duties. The findings that the negligence of the engineer was
the “prime cause” of the failure of the structure goes no further than this.
While, as Maguire J.A. says, this does not
absolve the contractors, it does not in any way constitute a finding of
negligence against them but even if it did, the collateral liability, if any,
of the contractors to the appellant under a separate and distinct contract
cannot be used to defeat the appellant’s right to judgment against the
respondent, Campbell Flour Mills Co. Ltd. v. Bowes; Campbell Flour Mills Co.
Ltd. v. Ellis;
Truth & Sportsman Ltd. v. Kethel,
and Mayne & McGregor on Damages, 12th ed., p. 162, nor could
the liability of the contractors be determined in the present action as
constituted, they not being parties. Mayne on Damages, 10th ed. at
p. 127.
The appellant was, therefore, entitled to
succeed against the respondent unless under another aspect of the case which
must now be examined, it has suffered no damage.
This second aspect has its foundation in certain
agreements made between the appellant and Western Surety Co. on the one hand
and between the contractors and Western
[Page 318]
Surety Co. on the other after the collapse of
the structure. Following the collapse the appellant made a demand on the surety
company but that company denied liability under the bond by letter dated March 14, 1963, as follows:
The City
Clerk,
City Hall,
PRINCE ALBERT, Saskatchewan.
Dear Sir:
Re:
New Water Storage Reservoir and Pump House
We have your registered letter of March 8th, 1963, with enclosures.
We understand from Smith Bros. & Wilson
Ltd. that they take the position the City has wrongfully and without sufficient
cause terminated their contract and that there has been no breach of contract
or other default on their part.
This being the case, our Company
contemplates taking no action at this time.
Yours very truly,
WESTERN SURETY COMPANY.
(sgd) “L.N. RAY”
Lionel
N. Ray,
General Manager.
Following the collapse of the structure, the
contractors took the position that they would not rebuild or complete the
contract except without prejudice to the rights of all concerned. In a letter
to the respondent dated January 3, 1963, they said in part:
Underwood,
McLellan & Associates Ltd.,
Consulting Professional Engineers,
1721—8th Street East,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Dear Sirs:
Re:
Prince Albert Reservoir
You have indicated to us that you do not
intend to reply to our letter of December 11th, nor to acknowledge that any
work of repair carried out by us is to be without prejudice to the rights of
all concerned, and is not to be construed as an admission of liability on our
part.
Without such an agreement and
acknowledgment from you and the City of Prince Albert, we find it impossible to undertake the responsibility of making
repairs.
We do not ask that you or the City abandon
any rights that you may have in the matter, but we ask simply that the question
of liability be kept open and unaffected, and that our undertaking to make
repairs is without prejudice to our right to claim payment for the same in
addition to the contract price.
However, if you and the City are unwilling
to facilitate matters as requested we must decline to proceed with the repairs.
[Page 319]
A copy of this letter was sent to the appellant.
The appellant replied on January 21, 1963, through its solicitor as follows:
I have been retained by the City of Prince Albert in connection with the
difficulties which have arisen in the matter of the completion of the New
Storage Reservoir and Pumphouse.
I have before me and have perused your
tender of April 19, 1962, for the construction of this work; the agreement made
on the 25th day of April, 1962, between your Company as Contractor and the City
of Prince Albert as Owner;
General Conditions of the contract; instructions to bidders and specifications.
In our opinion it is clear that your
Company undertook and agreed to do and fulfill everything which is indicated by
the above documents and the drawings and to complete the work within the time
specified.
The work has not been completed in terms of
the agreement and is at present in a state requiring major repairs to the work
which was done.
In the above circumstances the City hereby
gives you the Notice and makes the demands following:
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT THE CITY HEREBY
requires you to complete the construction of the Water Storage Reservoir and
Pump House referred to in the Agreement of April 25, 1962, in accordance to the
terms of the said agreement, general conditions of the contract, the
instructions to bidders, the specifications, the tender and the drawing above
referred to;
AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE THAT UNLESS you
agree to proceed with the completion of the work the City will have no
alternative but to terminate the agreement and/or call upon the Bonding Company
to complete the work.
In giving this notice and in making this
demand the City agrees that, while denying any liability or responsibility, you
may proceed on the understanding that it is without prejudice to any legal
right or claim you may have against it for payment for the repair work in
addition to the Contract price and by the same token without prejudice to any
legal right or claim the City may have against your Company to claim payment
for expenses or damages incurred or suffered by it or to enforce any other
right which it may have.
The respondent was, however, unwilling to let
the matter proceed on this “without prejudice” basis. It stated its position in
a letter to the solicitors for the contractors dated February 14, 1963, reading:
Yesterday in our meeting with
Mr. Cuelenaere, you asked Underwood McLellan & Associates Limited to
agree that if your client Smith Brothers and Wilson completed the reservoir at
Prince Albert according to its contract with the City, its so doing would be
“without prejudice” to any right it might have against Underwood McLellan &
Associates Limited.
While we do not know of any right your
client may have in this regard, we have discussed your request at some length
with our principals and are instructed to say that they do not agree to it.
[Page 320]
On February 25, 1963, the respondent, purporting
to act under the provisions of the construction contract, certified to the
appellant as follows:
IN THE MATTER OF A CONTRACT DATED THE 25TH
DAY OF APRIL, 1962, BETWEEN THE CITY OF PRINCE ALBERT AND SMITH BROTHERS & WILSON LTD. FOR THE ERECTION OF A
RESERVOIR:
CERTIFICATE
WHEREAS Smith Brothers & Wilson
Ltd. is the Contractor named in a certain contract dated the 25th day of April,
1962, between it and the City of Prince Albert;
AND WHEREAS Underwood McLellan &
Associates Limited is the Engineer of the City named in said contract;
AND WHEREAS the said Smith Brothers &
Wilson Ltd., under the provisions of said contract contracted and agreed with
the City of Prince Albert to perform and complete the work, including the
erection of the reservoir, described and specified in said contract by not
later than the 21st day of August, 1962;
AND WHEREAS said Smith Brothers & Wilson
Ltd. has not performed and completed the work, including the erection of said
reservoir, which it was required to do under said contract, and the said
Underwood McLellan & Associates Limited estimates that the said work cannot
now be completed until about July 1st, 1963, at the earliest;
AND WHEREAS the said Smith Brothers &
Wilson Ltd. Has done no work under said contract since about the 29th day of
November, 1962, notwithstanding requests both verbal and in writing to proceed
with and complete said work, including the erection of said reservoir;
NOW THEREFORE the said Underwood
McLellan & Associates Limited does hereby certify that in its opinion, and
because of the foregoing, the Contractor is in substantial violation of the
provisions of said contract and that, without
prejudice to any other right or remedy, sufficient cause exists to justify the
City of Prince Albert, by written notice to the said Smith Brothers and Wilson
Ltd., terminating the employment, under said contract, of the said Smith
Brothers & Wilson Ltd., taking possession of the premises on which
said work was to have been executed and all materials, tools, structures and
appliances thereon and finishing the work, without undue expense or delay by
whatever method may be deemed expedient, all in accordance with the provisions
of the said contract.
It will be noted that this certificate makes no
reference to the collapse of the structure or to any allegation of negligence
in respect thereto on the part of the contractors. The substantial violation
asserted against the contractors was that:
Smith Bros. & Wilson Ltd. has done no
work under said contract since about the 29th day of November, 1962,
notwithstanding requests both verbal and in writing to proceed with and
complete said work, including the erection of said reservoir.
[Page 321]
The appellant thereupon gave the contractors the
following notice on March 5, 1963:
IN THE MATTER OF A CONTRACT DATED THE 25TH
DAY OF APRIL, 1962, BETWEEN SMITH BROTHERS & WILSON LTD., AS CONTRACTOR AND
THE CITY OF PRINCE ALBERT, AS
OWNER, FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF A WATER STORAGE RESERVOIR AND PUMPHOUSE:
NOTICE
TAKE NOTICE that the City of Prince Albert
having received the Certificate of the Engineer, Underwood McLellan &
Associates Limited that sufficient cause exists to justify such action, a copy
of which said certificate is attached hereto, does hereby give you Notice
terminating your employment as Contractor and does hereby notify you that the
City intends to take immediate possession of the premises and finish the work
by whatever method the City may deem expedient all in accordance with the
provisions of the said contract.
Following this the appellant employed another
contractor to rebuild and finish the reservoir which was done in accordance
with the original design and specifications at a cost of $149,191.88.
When the reservoir had been rebuilt and the cost
of so doing ascertained the surety company on June 2, 1964, entered into an
agreement with the appellant under which the appellant received $101,039.28. No
doubt negotiations between the appellant and the surety company and the
contractors must have taken place in the months preceding June 1964 although
the record is silent in this respect. This agreement reads:
WHEREAS by a contract in writing between
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited, a body corporate carrying on business in the
Province of Saskatchewan, and the above named City of Prince Albert, the said
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited contracted to erect a certain reservoir for
the said City of Prince Albert in the said City to certain designs and
specifications outlined in the said contract.
AND WHEREAS the said City of Prince Albert entered into a contract in
writing with Underwood McLellan and Associates Limited, a body corporate
carrying on business in the Province of Saskatchewan, to provide engineering
services and supervision for the erection of the said reservoir.
AND WHEREAS Western Surety Company entered
into its Bond Number 01-1-4461 for the due performance of the said contractor,
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited, in the construction of the said reservoir.
AND WHEREAS on the 29th day of November,
A.D. 1962, the structure of the said reservoir failed before construction had
been completed and expenses were incurred in reconstruction and completion
resulting from the said failure.
AND WHEREAS the City of Prince Albert has completed the said
repairs and construction of the said reservoir at a cost of
[Page 322]
$149,191.88 and claims the said sum less
$48,152.60 owing by it to Smith Bros. & Wilson under the original contract
of construction, namely, $101,039.58 from the said Western Surety Company
pursuant to the terms of the said bond.
NOW THEREFORE THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSETH:
1. That in consideration of the premises
and the payment of the sum of $101,039.28 now paid by the said Western Surety
Company unto the City of Prince Albert (the receipt whereof is hereby
acknowledged), the City of Prince Albert does hereby release, remise and
forever discharge the said Western Surety Company from all claims, demands,
actions or causes of actions whatsoever which the said City of Prince Albert
may have against Western Surety Company under and by virtue of the said bond.
2. By virtue of such payment, the said City
of Prince Albert acknowledges and agrees that Western Surety Company is
subrogated to all of the rights and remedies for recovery of the City, both in
contract and in tort, in law and in equity, enjoyed at any time by the City of
Prince Albert arising out of either its contract with Smith Bros. & Wilson
Limited or Underwood McLellan and Associates Limited or any other persons
whatsoever arising out of the failure of the said reservoir structure, with the
right in Western Surety Company to sue in the name of the City of Prince Albert
against any person or corporation as it may be advised for the full enforcement
of such rights, remedies and recoveries, and the City of Prince Albert agrees
it will deliver to Western Surety Company all original contract documents,
correspondence or any other relevant documents, vouchers or accounts in its
possession and will co-operate fully with the said Western Surety Company in
the prosecution of any action for such recovery, subject always to the
condition that such co-operation and subrogation shall be at the expense of the
said Western Surety Company; provided further that the said Western Surety
Company will save the City harmless from any legal costs incurred in any action
taken in the name of the City of Prince Albert from any judgment on any claim
or counterclaim for engineering services incurred in demolition and rebuilding;
and the City of Prince Albert agrees that if in any such action the costs of
demolition and rebuilding of the said reservoir shall be found by the court to
be less than the sum paid by the City of Prince Albert for this purpose, then
the City of Prince Albert will refund to Western Surety Company the sum in
excess of such court finding, if any, now paid to the City of Prince Albert
under and by virtue of the terms of this release and subrogation agreement; and
further Western Surety Company agrees to clear the title of the works of claims
for lien arising prior to the 29th day of November, A.D. 1962.
3. The City of Prince
Albert agrees that it will not rescind or revoke this
agreement to the prejudice of the Western Surety Company at any time hereafter.
On the same day the contractors and the surety
company entered into the following agreement:
WHEREAS Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited
are indemnitors to the bond of Western Surety Company numbered 01-1-4461 for
the due performance by Smith Bros & Wilson Limited of a certain contract
for the construction of a reservoir for the City of Prince Albert by the said
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited dated the 25th day of April,
[Page 323]
A.D. 1962, and have requested Western
Surety Company to secure the rights in subrogation of the City of Prince Albert
as indicated in a certain release and subrogation agreement hereunto annexed
and marked as Schedule “A” hereto.
AND WHEREAS Smith Bros. & Wilson
Limited have paid unto Western Surety Company the sum of $101,039.28, who in
turn are paying the same to the City of Prince Albert for the acquisition of
the said rights in subrogation pursuant to the said release and subrogation
agreement.
AND WHEREAS Smith Bros. & Wilson
Limited desires that the said rights in subrogation of the City of Prince
Albert be exercised under its control in the name of the City of Prince Albert
and at its expense by the issue of a writ against the engineers referred to,
namely, Underwood McLellan and Associates Limited, a body corporate carrying on
business in the Province of Saskatchewan.
NOW THEREFORE THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSETH:
(1) Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited hereby
agrees to save Western Surety Company harmless and fully indemnifies it from
all claims, counterclaims, demands, costs or expenses whatsoever which may be
incurred and arising out of the prosecution of the said action in the name of
the City of Prince Albert under and by virtue of the said release and
subrogation agreement hereunto annexed and marked as Schedule “A” hereto.
(2) Western Surety Company hereby agrees
that Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited shall have control of the said action
in subrogation to prosecute the same against the said Underwood McLellan and
Associates Limited as it may be advised.
(3) Nothing in this agreement contained nor
anything done in pursuance thereof shall, in any way, prejudice the rights of
Western Surety Company under the agreement of indemnity given by Smith Bros.
& Wilson Limited in respect to the bond given by Western Surety Company in
this connection, or in any way operate as a waiver, release or postponement of
the rights of Western Surety Company under the said agreement of indemnity by
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited and the said agreement of indemnity is hereby
ratified and confirmed and Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited hereby authorizes
and confirms the entering into of the agreement marked as Schedule hereto.
In the statement of defence as originally
delivered the respondent’s main defence was that the collapse of the structure
had been caused by the default and negligence of the contractors and it
specifically denied any negligence on its part or on the part of its employee,
Palichuk. However, at the trial of the action the statement of defence was
amended by order of the learned trial judge permitting the respondent to plead
in the alternative that all damage alleged to have been suffered by the appellant
had been paid to it in the following manner:
(a) By Western Surety Company, for
and on behalf of Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited, paying the sum of
$101,039.28 to the Plaintiff, the said Western Surety Company being the Surety
named in a certain
[Page 324]
bond (numbered 01-1-4461 by Western Surety
Company for the purposes of its own records) dated June 15, 1962, wherein the
Plaintiff was named as Obligee and Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited as
Principal, the condition of which was that if the said Smith Bros. & Wilson
Limited should well and truly indemnify and save harmless the City of Prince
Albert from any pecuniary loss resulting from the breach by it (that is by
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited) of any of the terms, covenants, and
conditions of the said contract the obligation under the said Bond should be
void otherwise to remain in full force and effect; and
(b) By holding back from payment to
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited under the provisions of said contract dated
the 25th day of April, 1962, the sum of $48,152.60 or thereabouts and applying
said sum plus said sum of $101,039.28 to the cost of completing the
construction work required to be done by Smith Bros. & Wilson
Limited under its said contract with the Plaintiff.
and there was filed in evidence an admission of
facts by the appellant as follows:
1. That Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited,
on or shortly before June 2nd, 1964, paid the sum of $101,039.28 to Western Surety Company.
2. That Western Surety Company paid said
sum of $101,039.28 to the Plaintiff on June 2nd, 1964.
3. That on June 2nd, 1964 Western Surety Company
entered into an Agreement with the Plaintiff, a true copy whereof is hereunto
annexed and marked “A”.
4. That on June 2nd, 1964 Western Surety
Company entered into an Agreement with Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited a true
copy whereof is hereunto annexed and marked “B”.
5. That Western Surety Company has no
interest in this action excepting only as may be evidenced by said Agreements
marked “A” and “B”.
6. That Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited
procured and paid for the bond described in the Statement of Defence wherein
the Plaintiff is named as “Obligee”, Western Surety Company as “Surety” and
Smith Bros. & Wilson Limited as “Principal”.
The agreements referred to as “A” and “B” in the
foregoing admission of facts are the agreements of June 2, 1964, previously referred to. In
substance the defence thus put forward by the respondent on this branch of the
case is that the surety company did not become subrogated to the rights of the
appellant and the appellant having received the reservoir it contracted for at
no extra cost to it, had no right of action.
The respondent contended also that the action
was a champertous one and that the agreement between the appellant and the
surety company of June 2, 1964, was ultra vires the powers of the
appellant and it also contended that the appellant was estopped from asserting
a
[Page 325]
claim against the respondent because of having
acted upon the respondent’s certificate of February 25, 1963, previously
referred to.
The contention based on the subrogation issue
was fully gone into by the learned trial judge and I am in agreement with him
that the surety company became an assignee by way of subrogation and by virtue
of the agreement of June 2, 1964, to which the appellant had to give effect by
allowing the action to be taken in its name. I agree with the learned trial
judge and with Maguire J.A. that no element of champerty or maintenance arises
here.
In any event it is significant to point out as
was done by Woods J.A. in his dissenting judgment that the action is in the
name of the appellant only; that neither the surety company nor the contractor
claims any status in the action.
The contention that the action is champertous
having failed, nothing stands in the way of the appellant being entitled to
judgment against the respondent for the breach of their contract as found by
the learned trial judge unless the payment made by the surety under the
agreement of June 2, 1964, extinguished the appellant’s right to recover from
the respondent. The case of Campbell previously cited arose out of somewhat
similar circumstances. The facts in Campbell’s case were: the plaintiffs employed a
firm of architects to draw plans and specifications for a building and to
superintend the construction thereof; and entered into a contract with a firm
of builders to erect the building. The plaintiffs brought an action against the
builders for breach of the building contract by placing defective materials in
the building, and another action against the architects for negligence in
supervising the construction by reason of which the defective material was not
condemned. The actions were begun on the same day. The trial judge, Latchford
J., consolidated the two actions and found that both the architects and the
builders were in breach of their separate and distinct contracts and gave
judgment against both for the damages sustained by the owners. Both the
architects and the builders appealed, the former as to liability and the latter
on quantum only.
The architects argued that the owners were bound
to elect which set of defendants they would sue and that the judgment against
the builders was a bar against the owners
[Page 326]
being given judgment against the architects. The
Court of Appeal held that as the Rules then read, the actions should not have
been consolidated, but regardless of the error in procedure held that the
judgment against the architects was proper. In the result the owners had
judgment against both the architects and the builders.
It is in this context that Riddell J.A. said at
p. 280:
It is true that, if the full amount of the
damages were realised out of the contractors, no action (except perhaps for
nominal damages) would lie against the architects, but that is on an entirely
different principle, namely, that the plaintiffs have suffered no damage from
the default of the architects.
That sentence came after he had said:
“Where there are joint and several
contracts, or joint and several debts, or where the several parties are independently
and collaterally bound by the same obligation, the recovery of judgment against
one of such separate contractors or separate debtors is no bar to an action
against the others, until the judgment has been satisfied:” Addison on
Contracts, 11th ed., p. 193. This is as old as Queen Elizabeth’s time (Blumfield’s
Case (38 & 39 Eliz.), 5 Co. R. 86 B), and cannot be doubted. See per Montague Smith J.,
giving the judgment of the Court in Vestry of Bermondsey v. Ramsey (1871),
L.R. 6 C.P. 247, at p. 251; per Stirling J. in Blyth v.
Fladgate, [1891] 1 Ch. 337, at p. 353. And it makes not the
slightest difference that the amount secured by the independent contracts is
the same and for the same debt.
* *
*
In the present case, the plaintiffs had two
separate and distinct contracts, the one with the contractors, which was in
writing, the other with the architects, which was, as in Jameson v. Simon, (not
in writing but) implied from the employment. The contractors broke their
contract when they put bad material into the building; at the same moment the
architects broke theirs because they allowed this to be done. Under the
circumstances, the damages are the same under either contract; but that is
wholly immaterial. The contracts are not the same; and, if judgment were to be
obtained in the action against the contractors, it would destroy their contract
quoad hoc, but it could not affect the contract of the architects—that non
transit in rem judicatum, but remains a simple contract.
and following the sentence above quoted, he
continued:
The result is, that the plaintiffs are
entitled to judgment against both the contractors and the architects, and that
is what the judgment in appeal gives them.
* *
*
The plaintiffs might have insisted on a
judgment in both cases with costs, either set of defendants to be at liberty to
move, in the nature of an audita querela, to stay their action on
payment of costs if and when the amount was made out of the other set, and
either set of defendants to be at liberty to bring an action to recover from
the other any sum paid by them, etc. (I do not suggest that any such action
will lie on the facts, but the defendants should not be precluded from
litigating the question if so advised.)
[Page 327]
The case of Imperial Bank of Canada v. Begley is authority for the proposition
that a person who has suffered a loss and who has separate causes of action
against two or more persons to recover the amount of that loss, cannot recover
more than the total amount of the loss. That situation does not arise here. The
city will not recover more than its actual loss. Under the agreement of June 2,
1964, it must account to the surety for all moneys it may recover in this
action.
The payment made by the surety to the appellant
was not, in my opinion, a “realization” out of the contractors as stated by
Riddell J.A., or a recovery within Imperial Bank of Canada v. Begley. Here the payment was conditional, the condition being as set out in
para. 2 of the agreement of June 2, 1964, previously quoted. If the appellant had not permitted the action
to be brought in its name it would have had to refund the money it got under
that agreement. The surety was potentially liable to the appellant under the
performance bond because, whatever the reason may have been, the reservoir was
not constructed within the time provided, and if liable under the bond the
surety had the right to be reimbursed by the contractors. The fact that it
received reimbursement prior to or simultaneously with payment to the appellant
is immaterial. That does not alter the conditional character of the payment,
and it is important to note that in the agreement between the appellant and the
surety the appellant did not purport to release the respondent nor the
contractors, but specifically provided that the surety company should be
subrogated to all the right and remedies of the appellant against the
contractors as well as against the respondent or any other persons arising out
of the failure of the reservoir structure. In this way litigation between the
appellant and the surety was no doubt avoided and the rights of the surety
preserved.
Under Saskatchewan Rule of Court 48, the
contractors could have been brought into the action by the respondent as
parties “… whose presence before the Court may be necessary, in order to enable
the Court effectually and completely to adjudicate and settle all the questions
involved in the cause or matter…” and the rights of these
[Page 328]
parties inter se dealt with, but for
reasons best known to the respondent this was not done. The action,
accordingly, falls to be disposed of in the form in which it was dealt with at
the trial, in the Court of Appeal and in this Court.
On the record before this Court the appellant is
entitled to succeed. There has been no judicial determination of negligence
against the contractors. The respondent sought to overcome this fact by
contending that the payment by the contractors through the surety to the
appellant was the equivalent of such a determination, or, alternatively, was an
admission of the contractors’ liability. However, in view of the position taken
by the contractors and by the surety in their respective letters of January 3,
1963, and March 14, 1963, and
the findings of the learned trial judge previously quoted, that contention is
not tenable. There has not been a “realization” of the appellant’s damages from
the contractors nor a payment of those damages by the contractors in the
procedure which was adopted in this instance. The contractors were not relieved
of their liability by the payment but that liability, if any, was specifically
continued by the agreement of June 2, 1964.
There remain the defences of estoppel and ultra
vires to deal with. First, as regards estoppel, this contention cannot
succeed. There were no representations of fact made by the appellant to the
respondent which the respondent acted upon to its prejudice nor was any
prejudice alleged.
As to the defence that the agreement of June 2, 1964, between the appellant and the
surety company was ultra vires the appellant, it should first be noted
that this defence was not raised in the pleadings nor was it referred to in the
judgments below. In any event it cannot be said that the appellant had not the
power to stipulate for the indemnity bond from the contractors. Having received
the indemnity bond, the appellant had the right to assert a claim under it and
it must follow that it necessarily had the right to receive payment, and having
received payment it became by the process of subrogation answerable to the surety
for any damages it might recover. Nor can it be contended that the appellant
had not the right to sue for a breach of the contract. The mere existence of
the in-
[Page 329]
demnity bond could not extinguish the
appellant’s right to recover damages from the respondent if the contract with
it was breached as found by the learned trial judge.
The learned trial judge allowed as part of the
appellant’s damages an item of $17,573.57 being the fee paid the respondent for
services in respect of the construction in question including the plans and
specifications used both before and after the collapse. Counsel for the
appellant admitted here and in the Court of Appeal that not all such fees had
been thrown away by reason of the collapse. This clearly follows from the
dismissal of the claim for faulty design. The structure was actually completed
according to the original plans and specifications. I am in agreement with
Maguire J.A. that the onus was on the appellant to establish what portion, if
any, of the $17,573.57 was so thrown away and in the absence of such evidence
the Court cannot speculate on the amount. The award of this item cannot stand
and the judgment should be varied accordingly.
The appeal will, therefore, be allowed subject
to this variation with costs here and in the Court of Appeal.
Appeal allowed and judgment at trial restored subject
to a variation as to quantum, with costs, CARTWRIGHT C.J. and SPENCE J.
dissenting.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, appellant:
Embury, Molisky, Gritzfeld & Embury, Regina.
Solicitors for the defendant, respondent:
Schmitt, Robertson, Muzyka, Beaumont & Barton, Saskatoon.