Supreme Court of Canada
Ginter v. Sawley Agency Ltd. et al., [1967] S.C.R. 451
Date: 1967-06-26
Frederick Ginter (Defendant)
Appellant;
and
Sawley Agency Ltd.
and Stan Stagg and Centre City Development Ltd. (Plaintiffs) Respondents.
1967: May 18; 1967: June 26.
Present: Cartwright, Martland, Ritchie, Hall
and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Contracts—Construction—Option agreement
patently ambiguous—Two time periods provided within which option could be
exercised—Whether acceptance within time limited in agreement.
On January 24, 1964, the defendant signed a
document granting an option on certain property in Prince George, B.C. The
document was prepared by one S on behalf of an undisclosed principal. The
option read in part: “The term of the option is to be for 176 days from
the date hereof expiring at the hour of 11:59 P.M. on the 24 day of July
1964”
S purported to exercise the option on July
23, 1964, by mailing an acceptance to the defendant. The following day, July
24th, a deed was presented to the defendant for signature. He refused to sign
the deed. S assigned his rights to the plaintiffs who brought action for
specific performance and for damages. The trial judge ordered specific
performance but made no award of damages. The defendant took an appeal to the
Court of Appeal for British Columbia which Court, by a majority judgment,
dismissed the appeal and upheld the order for specific performance. On appeal
to this Court, the only ground advanced was that the option was not accepted
within the time limited in the option agreement.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The reasoning of the majority in the Court of
Appeal was adopted. The ambiguity in the option agreement was patent since it
provided two time periods within which the option could be exercised. Taking
176 days as the term of the option the time for acceptance would have expired
on July 19, 1964. But the contract fixed the exact minute, hour and day that
the period of 176 days, and therefore the option, was to end. That circumstance
dominated the clause and controlled its meaning. The erroneous description of
the term as one of 176 days must therefore be rejected as being inconsistent
with the declared intention.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for British Columbia,
dismissing an appeal from a judgment of Branca J. Appeal dismissed.
John Laxton, for the defendant,
appellant.
G.A. Armstrong, for the plaintiffs,
respondents.
[Page 452]
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
HALL J.:—On January 24, 1964, the appellant
signed a document granting an option on certain property in Prince George,
British Columbia. The document was prepared by one Dudley Sawley on behalf of
an undisclosed principal. Sawley purported to exercise the option on July 23, 1964,
by mailing an acceptance to the appellant. The following day, July 24th, a deed
was presented to the appellant for signature. He refused to sign the deed. His
reasons for refusing to complete on that date were:
(i) That the sale price was too low;
(ii) That title deeds to the lands were in the
possession of his bank;
(iii) That he may have difficulty relocating the
buildings;
(iv) That he did not have sufficient time in
which to give notice to his tenants;
(v) That he objected to certain alterations made
on the document, viz. “20,000 net to the Vendor” which he had refused to
initial and therefore thought it would vitiate the option.
Sawley assigned his rights to the respondents
who brought action for specific performance and for damages.
The appellant defended the action on a number of
grounds, including the following:
13. In answer to the whole of the Statement
of Claim herein the Defendant says that on or about January 24th, 1964, one
Dudley Sawley representing the Plaintiff, Sawley Agency Ltd., called upon the
Defendant and requested him to employ the said Plaintiff as agent to list and
sell the Defendant’s property situate at the South East corner of the
intersection of 7th Avenue and Brunswick Street in the City of Prince
George, Province of British Columbia, and secured the Defendant’s signature to
a document which the said Dudley Sawley represented to the Defendant to be an
agreement to list the said property for sale. The Defendant further says that
if his signature was obtained by the Plaintiff, Sawley Agency Ltd., to any
other document in relation to the said lands then it was obtained fraudulently.
14. Alternatively and in answer to the
whole of the Statement of Claim herein the Defendant says if he signed the
agreement in writing referred to in Paragraph 5 of the Statement of Claim
herein, he did so upon the fraudulent misrepresentation by the said Dudley
Sawley on behalf of the Defendant, Sawley Agency Ltd., that the said
[Page 453]
document was an agreement to list the
property described therein with the said Sawley Agency Ltd. for sale as agent
on the Defendant’s behalf.
15. Alternatively and in answer to the
whole of the Statement of Claim herein the Defendant says that if he signed the
alleged agreement of January 24th, 1964, which is not admitted but specifically
denied, the said agreement at the time of signature was not in the same
condition as it now is and that additions were made to the said agreement after
his signature thereto and without his knowledge or consent.
The action came on for trial before
Mr. Justice Branca in the Supreme Court of British Columbia who, in a
judgment dated August 23, 1965, dealt with these defences as follows:
In reference to the plea of non est
factum, I do not consider this allegation to be made out at all. I accept
Sawley’s evidence as to what occurred at the initial meeting when exhibit 1 was
signed. I find Sawley to be perfectly trustworthy and that he did as stated
read over the option word for word to Ginter and that there were no additions
or alterations to the document after Ginter had signed, except as stated by
Sawley. Wherever Sawley’s evidence is in conflict with that given by Ginter, I
without hesitation accept the evidence given by Sawley in preference to and
reject the evidence given by Ginter.
I consequently find that there was a
complete and full understanding of the contents of exhibit 1 on the part of
Ginter when he signed the same.
I also reject the plea that Ginter thought
the document exhibit 1 was a listing and, on the contrary, I find that Ginter
was fully aware of the contents of exhibit 1, that he knew it was an option and
that he knew of all the terms therein set forth and their true meaning and
effect before he signed the document.
I find against the allegation that the
plaintiff Sawley concealed from the defendant Ginter the fact that he was
acting for another person or persons and, on the contrary, I find it clear that
Sawley did tell Ginter that he was acting for an undisclosed principal whom he
was not at liberty to disclose and also that he, Sawley, could not disclose to
Ginter what the property was wanted for.
He concluded by ordering specific performance
but made no award of damages. The appellant took an appeal to the Court of
Appeal for British Columbia which Court, by a majority judgment, dismissed the
appeal and upheld the order for specific performance. In the Court of Appeal
Norris J.A. dissented.
The only ground now advanced is that the option
was not accepted within the time limited in the option agreement. In this
regard the option ex. 1 read:
2. The term of the option is to be for 176
days from the date hereof expiring at the hour of 11:59 P.M. on the 24 day
of July 1964.
[Page 454]
As stated, Sawley purported to exercise the
option to purchase on July 23, 1964. The real difficulty is that if 176 days is
taken as the term of the option the time for acceptance would have expired on
July 19, 1964, and on that basis Sawley’s acceptance on July 23rd was not in
time. The respondents contend that the option continued in force until 11:59
P.M. July 24, 1964.
The ambiguity in the option agreement is patent
since it provides two time periods within which the option could be exercised.
Faced with this ambiguity, Davey C.J.B.C., with
whom McFarlane J.A. concurred, said:
It is impossible to say from the document
itself whether the term of the option was intended to be 176 days and the
terminal date of July 24, 1964, was fixed by miscalculating their number, or
whether it was intended to end on that date, and the number of intervening days
was miscalculated. But the contract does fix the exact minute, hour, and day
that the period of 176 days, and therefore the option, is to end. About that
there can be no doubt. That circumstance, in my opinion, dominates the clause
and controls its meaning. The erroneous description of the term as one of 176
days must therefore be rejected as being inconsistent with the declared
intention. This approach leads to a result that in my opinion makes good sense,
and has the advantage of construing this business document in the way that
businessmen would understand it.
In concluding I should note the fact that
no claim for rectification was advanced at the trial.
I agree with this reasoning and with the
conclusion arrived at by the majority of the Court of Appeal.
The appeal should, therefore, be dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the defendant, appellant:
Thomas R. Berger, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the plaintiffs,
respondents: K.L. Brawner, Vancouver.