Supreme
Court of Canada
Steel
Company of Canada Ltd. v. Willand Management Ltd., [1966] S.C.R. 746
Date:
1966-10-04
The Steel
Company of Canada Limited (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Willand
Management Limited (Plaintiff) Respondent.
1966: February 28; 1966:
March 1, 2; 1966: October 4.
Present: Taschereau C.J.
and Martland, Ritchie, Hall and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR ONTARIO.
Contracts—Roofing contract—Descriptions and
specifications supplied by owner—Guarantee
that work will remain weather tight—Damage
caused by failure of material to perform intended function—Contractor’s claim for compensation
for repairs—Whether responsibility for
results of using material rests upon owner who prescribed it or upon contractor
who applied it.
The respondent company
claimed compensation for work and services performed by it in repairing
windstorm damage to three roofs which it had constructed on buildings owned by
the appellant. Three separate tenders submitted by the respondent for the
original work were made and accepted on the basis that the roofing, roof
insulation and sheet metal work was to be done pursuant to descriptions and
specifications which the appellant had forwarded to the respondent together
with its invitation to tender. These descriptions and specifications were
prepared by employees of the appellant company and contained complete details
as to the materials and methods of construction to be employed which included
the requirement that the insulating boards were to be attached to the steel
sheeting on the roofs by the use of “Curadex
or approved equal”. The damage was caused by
the failure of the Curadex adhesive to perform the function for which it was
intended.
The specifications had also
required the contractor to furnish a five-year guarantee that all the work
specified would remain weather tight and that all material and workmanship
employed would be first class and without defect.
The appellant resisted the
respondent’s claims on the ground that
the repair work for which it claimed compensation was work which it was
required to do under the terms of its guarantee, whereas the respondent
contended that the guarantee did not require it to repair damage occasioned by
the failure of material, which had been selected and specified by the
appellant, to perform the function for which it was intended. At trial judgment
was rendered in favour of the respondent and on appeal the trial judgment was
affirmed by the Court of Appeal.
Held: The appeal should be
allowed.
The Court was unable to
accept the contention put forward on behalf of the respondent that “—under the circumstances the
plaintiff guaranteed only that, as to the work done by it, the roof would be
weather tight in so far as the plans and specifications with which it had to
comply would allow”.
[Page 747]
The word “work” as used in the guarantee
was interpreted as referring to the completed work including the materials of
which it was required to be composed and this construction was entirely
consistent with the further guarantee required by the specifications that “all material and
workmanship employed are first class and without defect”. Curadex was a material selected by
the appellant but it was one of the materials which the respondent agreed to
employ in the work and which it thereby agreed to guarantee as “first class and without
defect”. The latter words were
construed as meaning “first class and without
defect” for the purpose of its
intended use.
When a contractor expressly
undertakes to carry out work which will perform a certain function in
conformity with plans and specifications, and it turns out that the work so
constructed will not perform the function, “generally the express obligation to
construct a work capable of carrying out the duty in question overrides the
obligation to comply with the plans and specifications, and the contractor will
be liable for the failure of the work notwithstanding that it is carried out in
accordance with the plans and specification. Nor will he be entitled to extra
payment for amending the work so that it will perform the stipulated duty.”
The agreement to furnish a
written guarantee “that all work above
specified will remain weather tight”
for five years constituted at the very least an express undertaking to carry
out work which would perform a certain function in conformity with plans and
specifications and in accordance with the above-quoted principles, established
by a long line of decisions, it followed that when a work so constructed does
not perform the function which the contractor agreed that it would perform, the
contractor is liable for the failure of the work and is not entitled to extra
payment for repairing it so that it will perform the stipulated duty. Thorn
v. Mayor and Commonalty of London (1876), 1 App. Cas. 120; Jones v. The
Queen (1877), 7 S.C.R. (App.) 570; Sansan Floor Co. v. Forst’s Ltd., [1942] 1 D.L.R. 451; Grace
v. Osler (1911), 19 W.L.R. 109, followed; MacKnight Flintic Stone Co. v.
Mayor, Aldermen and Commonalty of the City of New York (1869), 160 N.Y.
Rep. 72, disapproved.
APPEAL from a judgment of
the Court of Appeal for Ontario, affirming a judgment of
Hughes J. Appeal allowed.
B. Grossberg, Q.C., and
G.R. Dryden, for the defendant, appellant.
John J. Robinette, Q.C.,
and W. Schreiber, Q.C., for the plaintiff, respondent.
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
RITCHIE
J.:—On the opening of this
appeal an application was granted to change the name of the
plaintiff-respondent from Schreiber Roofing Company (Ontario) Limited to
Willand Management Limited in conformity with supple-
[Page 748]
mentary
Letters Patent issued by the Provincial Secretary of Ontario on January 23,
1944.
This is
an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario affirming the judgment
rendered at trial before Mr. Justice Hughes which allowed the claim of the
respondent for compensation for work and services performed by it in repairing
windstorm damage to three roofs which it had constructed on buildings owned by
the appellant in the City of Hamilton.
In the
spring of 1957 the appellant accepted three separate tenders submitted by the
respondent for the “application of built-up
roofing” on the sloping roofs of
two of its new buildings. It is not disputed that these tenders were made and
accepted on the basis that the roofing, roof insulation and sheet metal work
was to be done pursuant to the “Descriptions and
Specifications” which the appellant had
forwarded to the respondent together with its invitation to tender. These “Descriptions and
Specifications” were prepared by employees
of the appellant company and contained complete details as to the materials and
method of construction to be employed which included the requirement that
insulating boards were to be attached to the steel sheeting on these roofs by
the use of “Curadex or approved equal”.
Curadex
is an expensive fire resistant adhesive prepared by Currie Products Limited
which had been used by the respondent on more than one occasion in constructing
flat roofs for buildings of the appellant but which had not been previously
used by either party in constructing sloping roofs.
The
three separate windstorms which damaged the appellant’s roofs were of a kind which was
reasonably foreseeable in the Hamilton area and each of them had the effect of
severing the insulating boards from the steel sheeting of the roofs constructed
by the respondent. It was not disputed that at the time of these storms these
roofs were not “weather tight” within the meaning of the
guarantees which are hereinafter referred to and there are concurrent findings
in the Courts below to the effect that the damage was caused by the failure of
the Curadex adhesive to per-
[Page 749]
form
the function for which it was intended. The findings in this regard are
summarized by Gale J.A. in the course of the reasons for judgment which he
rendered on behalf of the Court of Appeal in the following passage:
It
was found by the learned trial judge that the cause of the damage was the
failure of the adhesive (Curadex) to hold the roofing to the steel deck. He
also found that the materials used by the plaintiff were those which the
specifications required it to use; that there was no defect in the workmanship
and that the materials were applied in the quantities and manner required by
the specifications.
It
accordingly appears to me that the question which lies at the heart of this
appeal is whether the responsibility for the results of using Curadex rests
upon the appellant who prescribed it or upon the respondent who applied it, and
in this regard it seems to me to be of first importance to consider the
circumstances under which this adhesive came to be included in the
specifications.
In the
course of preparing the specifications, Mr. L. Tweedie, who was in charge
of the project for the appellant company, sought the advice of Mr. H.L.
Schreiber, general manager of the respondent, who was a highly qualified expert
on built-up roofing, as to the best method to be employed in the construction
of the roofs in question. Mr. Schreiber spoke with great authority and in
view of the experience he and his company had had in the use of Curadex as an
adhesive on flat roofs, he must, in my view, be taken to have had knowledge of
the properties and potential of this product as a wind resistant adhesive. In
the course of his lengthy discussions with Mr. Tweedie and other members
of the appellant company, Mr. Schreiber expressed a preference for the use
of hot, stiff asphalt rather than Curadex for the sloping roofs which the
appellant had in contemplation but having consulted with his associates in
Detroit he made three separate tenders on behalf of his company pursuant to
specifications which, as has been stated, required the use of “Curadex or approved equal”.
The
attitude of the respondent in this regard as expressed by Mr. Schreiber is
best summarized in a passage from his cross-examination where he said:
A.
Let’s put it this way: I
preferred the use of asphalt, but if a customer saw fit to use Cur-Adex, I
would go along, certainly, with whatever he saw fit.
[Page 750]
Q.
You went along with this, and made your tender on these specifications? A. Yes,
sir. This is what the Steel Company wanted me to tender on.
The
invitation to tender in respect of each roof included the following paragraph:
If
you are interested in this work please contact our Mr. Tweedie, visit the
site; obtain drawings and submit your quotation in duplicate to this office.
It
therefore appears to me that when he signed the tenders on behalf of the
respondent, although he had had no actual experience in the use of Curadex on
sloping roofs, Mr. Schreiber was, as the result of lengthy discussions
with the appellant’s officers and of his
having previously used the product on flat roofs, fully aware of the factors
necessary to enable him to decide whether or not this adhesive was a
first-class material for its intended use, and whether it was one which his
company was prepared to guarantee to remain “weather tight” for a period of five years.
The
respondent’s officials had the first
specifications in their hands for three weeks before deciding to tender and it
is to be presumed that during that period consideration was given to the terms
of the paragraph of those specifications under the heading “Bond and Guarantee” which read as follows:
This
Contractor is to furnish a written guarantee running for a period of five
years, that all work above specified will remain weather tight and that all
material and workmanship employed are first class and without defect. Terms of
all guarantees shall begin at completion of the work. This contractor shall
make good without charge all defects appearing within period named when
requested in writing by the Owner.
The
three guarantees which were eventually given sometime after the repairs had
been completed, are made effective for five years from the date when the
original work was finished and they therefore must, in my view, have reference
to the roofs as they existed at that date and can have no relation to the very
different structures which were produced as a result of the repairs.
In this
regard, I disagree with Hughes J. when he says of the completely repaired
roofs:
...it
was these roofs which were referred to in the written guarantees which it (i.e.
the respondent) eventually supplied in March 1958.
[Page 751]
The
appellant resisted the respondent’s
claim on the ground that the repair work for which it claims compensation was
work which it was required to do under the terms of its guarantee, whereas the
respondent contended that the guarantee did not require it to repair damage
occasioned by the failure of material, which had been selected and specified by
the appellant, to perform the functions for which it was intended.
I agree
with Gale J.A. that “this case is to be decided simply
by a common sense interpretation of that part of the guarantee which is under
dispute” but unlike him I am, with
all respect, unable to accept the contention put forward on behalf of the
respondent that:
...under
the circumstances the plaintiff guaranteed only that, as to the work done by
it, the roof would be weather-tight in so jar as the plans and
specifications with which it had to comply would allow.
The
italics are my own.
In
accepting this contention, the Court of Appeal followed the reasoning employed
by the New York State Court of Appeal in the case of MacKnight Flintic Stone
Co. v. The Mayor, Aldermen and Commonalty of the City of New York in which that Court was construing a
contractor’s guarantee which provided
that the work done by the contractor was to be turned over to the City in
perfect order and “guaranteed absolutely
weather and damp proof for five years from the date of acceptance of the work.
Any dampness or water breakage within that time must be made good by the
contractor without any cost or expense to the City.”
Gale
J.A. found the issues in that case to be substantially the same as those in the
present case and he adopted the following paragraph from the reasons for
judgment of Vann J. who delivered the judgment for the New York Court:
The
reasonable construction of the covenant under consideration is that the
plaintiff should furnish the materials and do the work according to the plan
and specifications, and thus make the floors water tight so far as the plan
and specifications would permit.
The
italics are my own.
It will
be observed that the acceptance of the interpretation placed by the Court of
Appeal upon the guarantee
[Page 752]
required
by the specifications involves supplying the words “in so far as the plans and
specifications with which it had to comply would allow” which are not contained in the guarantee
itself. The five-year guarantee which was required to be given by all those
tendering on the works in question included the stipulation “that all work above
specified will remain weather tight...”
and in my view the words “all work above specified” mean the work described in
the specification which included the employment of Curadex as the adhesive
material to be used in attaching the insulating boards to the steel sheeting on
the roofs in question. If any other adhesive material had been used by the
contractor the completed work would not have been the “work above specified” which the respondent was
required to guarantee.
I
interpret the word “work” as it is used in the
five-year guarantee as referring to the completed work including the materials
of which it was required to be composed and this construction in my view
appears to be entirely consistent with the further guarantee required by the
specifications that “all material and
workmanship employed are first class and without defect”. It is true that Curadex was a
material selected by the appellant but it was one of the materials which the
respondent agreed to employ in the work and which it thereby agreed to
guarantee as “first class and without
defect”. I think these latter
words must be construed as meaning “first
class and without defect” for the purpose of its
intended use.
In
construing the guarantee as he did, Gale J.A. was clearly influenced by the
fact that he did not think that it would have been reasonable for the defendant
to have expected, and the plaintiff to have given, an absolute guarantee
against the elements when neither had had any experience with the capacity of
Curadex to perform properly on the sloping steel deck.
In this
regard it is, however, to be remembered that the respondent is an experienced
contractor specializing in the roofing business and that it was bidding in
competition with several other roofing contractors. Under these circumstances
the language employed by Cockburn C.J. in
[Page 753]
Stadhard
v. Lee which was quoted with approval in the
Exchequer Court of Canada in Jones v. The Queen appears to me to be particularly
pertinent:
It
frequently happens, in the competition which notoriously exists in the various
departments of business, that persons anxious to obtain contracts submit to
terms which, when they come to be enforced, appear harsh and oppressive. From
the stringency of such terms escape is often sought by endeavouring to read the
agreement otherwise than according to its plain meaning. But the duty of a
court in such cases is to ascertain and to give effect to the intention of the
parties as evidenced by the agreement, and though, where the language of the
contract admit of it, it should be presumed that the parties meant only to be
reasonable, yet, if the terms are clear and unambiguous the court is bound to
give effect to them without stopping to consider how far they may be reasonable
or not.
In
construing the guarantee by supplying the words “in so far as the plans and
specifications with which it had to comply would allow” it appears to me that the Courts
below have tacitly accepted the proposition that no matter how experienced a
contractor may be in a particular field, he nevertheless bears no
responsibility for the employment of defective material in the work which he has
undertaken, provided that it is a material which has been selected by the owner
and included in the specifications. This proposition finds support in the
judgment of Vann J. in the MacKnight case, supra, in a passage
which was expressly adopted by Hughes J. which reads as follows:
The
defendant, (i.e. the owner), specifically selected both material and design and
ran the risk of a bad result. If there was an implied warranty of sufficiency,
it was made by the party who prepared the plan and specifications, because they
were its work, and in calling for proposals to produce a specified result by
following them, it may fairly be said to have warranted them adequate to
produce that result.
I
cannot accept this proposition which appears to me to run contrary to a long
line of decisions in England starting with Thorn v. The Mayor and Commonalty
of London which have been followed
in this country (see Jones v. The Queen, supra, Sansan Floor Company v.
Forst’s Limited, Grace v. Osler), and the effect of
which is summarized in part in Hudson’s
Building and Engineering Contracts, 8th ed., 1959, at p. 147 where it is said:
Sometimes,
again, a contractor will expressly undertake to carry out work which will
perform a certain duty or function in conformity with
[Page 754]
plans
and specifications, and it turns out that the work constructed in accordance
with the plans and specifications will not perform that duty or function. It
would appear that generally the express obligation to construct a work capable
of carrying out the duty in question overrides the obligation to comply with
the plans and specifications, and the contractor will be liable for the failure
of the work notwithstanding that it is carried out in accordance with the plans
and specification. Nor will he be entitled to extra payment for amending the
work so that it will perform the stipulated duty.
The
agreement to furnish a written guarantee “that all work above specified will
remain weather tight” for five years in my view
constitutes at the very least an express undertaking “to carry out work which well perform a
certain...function in conformity with plans and specifications” and in accordance with the
principles stated in the paragraph last above cited, I think that it follows
that when a work so constructed does not perform the function which the
contractor agreed that it would perform, the contractor is liable for the
failure of the work and is not entitled to extra payment for repairing it “so that it will perform the
stipulated duty”.
In the
course of his reasons for judgment, Mr. Justice Hughes expresses the
following view:
It
would seem…that from this evidence
that the defendant corporation was taking a calculated risk in specifying the
adhesive designed and required to fasten the roofing membrane to a roof of new
design and it would seem that they knew this to be the case.
In my
opinion the evidence discloses that both parties were fully alerted to any
limitations which may have attached to the use of Curadex as an adhesive on
these roof decks and in view of the fact that neither of them had had any
experience in using it on sloping roofs, I think that some risk was involved.
This may have been the reason why the appellant required the contractors who
were tendering on the work to provide the guarantee in question, but whatever
the reason may have been, it appears to me that any risk involved in the
undertaking was accepted by those who were prepared to tender in accordance
with specifications which included the requirement of providing a written
guarantee that all material employed in the work was first class and without defect,
and that “all work…specified” would remain weather tight
for a period of five years.
[Page 755]
In view
of all the above I would allow this appeal and dismiss the action of the
respondent with costs in this Court and in the Courts below.
Appeal allowed and action
dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the
defendant, appellant: Levinter, Grossberg, Dryden, Rachlin, Bliss &
Raphael, Toronto.
Solicitor for the
plaintiff, respondent: William Schreiber, Hamilton.
Sub
nom. Schreiber Roofing Co. (Ontario) Ltd. v. Steel Company of Canada Ltd.,
[1965] 1 O.R. 410, 48 D.L.R. (2d) 212.
Sub
nom. Schreiber Roofing Co. (Ontario) Ltd. v. Steel Company of Canada Ltd.,
[1965] 1 O.R. 410, 48 D.L.R. (2d) 212.
(1899),
160 N.Y. Rep. 72.
(1877), 7
S.C.R. (App.) 570 at 621.
[1942] 1
D.L.R. 451 at 456.
(1911), 19
W.L.R. 109 at 115.