Supreme Court of Canada
Galbraith v. Madawaska Club Ltd., [1961] S.C.R. 639
Date: 1961-06-26
John S. Galbraith (Plaintiff)
Appellant;
and
The Madawaska Club
Limited (Defendant) Respondent.
1961: February 28; 1961: June 26.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and Taschereau, Abbott,
Judson and Ritchie JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Companies—Restrictions on transfer of
shares.
Real Property—Restrictive covenant—Assignee
of servient land taking with notice—Essential requirements for enforcement of
covenant lacking.
In an action against an incorporated club the
claims of the plaintiff were:
(1) on behalf of himself and all other
shareholders of the company for a declaration that those provisions of the
by-laws of the company which purported to restrain the transfer of its shares
were void; (2) as one of two joint tenants in fee simple (the other being his
wife) of part of an island for a declaration that these lands were not subject
to specified restrictions. As to the first point the judgment at trial declared
that the by-laws in question were invalid. As to the second point it declared
that the lands were subject to certain covenants which it was held ran with the
land as set forth in the company’s by-laws and that save as aforesaid the said
lands were free of the restrictive covenants set out in a deed of the part of
the island in question from F (a grantee in fee simple from the company) to the
plaintiff, including the by-laws of the company annexed thereto. This judgment
having been set aside by the Court of Appeal, the plaintiff appealed to this
Court asking that the judgment at trial be restored except in so far as it
declared that the lands were subject to the covenant in the relevant part of
by-law 19 which read: “Occupation of a dwelling or premises by persons who are
not members of the Club shall be only by special permission of the Board of
Directors”.
Held: Appeal
allowed. Judgment at trial restored with modifications.
Per Curiam: With
respect to the first claim, the provisions of the company’s charter governed.
As the ground covered by the by-laws in question was already dealt with by the
charter, the matter was disposed of. In so far as it extended beyond the terms
of the charter, it was problematical if any situation would arise calling for
the consideration or use of the by‑laws and, therefore, no declaration as
to the invalidity of any of them should be made.
Per Kerwin
C.J. and Taschereau J.: As to the second point, in view of the admissions
expressed in its statement of defence the defendant was not entitled to argue
that the directors had exceeded their powers as defined in the company’s
by-laws. The Tasmania, 15 App. Cas. 223; SS. Tordenskjold
v. SS. Euphemia (1909), 41 S.C.R. 154; David Spencer Ltd. v. Field, [1939]
S.C.R. 36, referred to. By-law 17 authorized the directors to convey the
islands by deed subject to the conditions set forth. The defendant admitted
that a deed had been given to the intent, i.e., with the intention, that
the burden of the covenants
[Page 640]
should run with the land but not (i) that
they did not bind the plaintiff, and (ii) that they were invalid. The lands in
question were subject only to the restrictions contained in by-laws 18(a) and
(b) and 28, but not those contained in by-law 19.
Per Curiam: If
the plaintiff as assignee of the servient land taking with notice was to be
bound by the covenant in by-law 19 certain essential requirements were to be
satisfied: (i) the covenant must touch and concern the dominant land, (ii) the
club as covenantee must retain land capable of being benefited by the covenant,
and (iii) there must be express annexation of the covenant to the dominant
land. All three requirements were lacking in this case. Noble and Wolf v.
Alley, [1951] S.C.R. 64; Canadian Construction Co. Ltd. v. Beaver Lumber
Ltd., [1955] S.C.R. 682, followed; Tulk v. Moxhay (1848), 2 Ph. 774;
Rogers v. Hosegood, [1900] 2 Ch. 388; Zetland v. Driver, [1939]
Ch. 1, referred to.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, setting aside a
judgment of Ferguson J. Appeal allowed. Judgment at trial restored with
modifications.
Terence Sheard, Q.C., for the plaintiff,
appellant.
R.F. Wilson, Q.C., and M.J. Wheldrake,
for the defendant, respondent.
The judgment of the Chief Justice and of
Taschereau J. was delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE:—This is an appeal by John S.
Galbraith from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario1
dismissing his action against The Madawaska Club Limited, hereinafter referred
to as the Company. The claims of the plaintiff were two-fold: (1) on behalf of
himself and all other shareholders of the Company for a declaration that those
provisions of the by‑laws of the Company which purport to restrain the
transfer of its shares were void; (2) as one of two joint tenants in fee
simple, (the other being his wife) of part of an island in Georgian Bay in
Ontario known as No. 122 for a declaration that these lands were not subject to
specified restrictions.
As to the first point the judgment at the trial
declared that the by-laws of the Company nos. 2, 5, 6, 9 and 30 were invalid.
As to the second point it declared that the lands
[Page 641]
were subject to the following covenants which it
was held ran with the land as set forth in the Company’s by-laws nos. 18, 19
and 28:
18. (a) The decision on all matters
pertaining to the delimitation and allotment of sites shall rest with the Board
of Directors. In all cases of dispute between members as to the limits and
boundaries of lots, or the location of buildings, wharves, etc., the Board of
Directors shall have full power to make final decision.
(b) No building or structure shall be
erected on any site unless the plan and location thereof shall have been
approved by the Board of Directors. The Board of Directors may, after due
notification, order or cause to be removed any building or structure, which,
after December 1, 1904, may be erected without such approval having previously
been secured.
19. (In Part) Occupation of a dwelling or
premises by persons who are not members of the Club shall be only by special
permission of the Board of Directors.
28. Not more than one dwelling house shall
be erected on any member’s holding, nor shall any building on such holding,
allotted to a member, be used for the purpose of keeping boarders or paying
guests.
and that save as aforesaid the said lands were
free of the restrictive covenants set out in a deed of the part of island No.
122 in question from Ella R. Firth to the plaintiff, dated January 24, 1947, including the by-laws of
the defendant Company annexed thereto. With these exceptions the judgment
dismissed the action without costs.
The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeal
only with respect to the declaration that the property was subject to that part
of by-law 19 set forth above. The defendant cross-appealed on the ground that
the restrictions on the transfer of shares were authorized by its letters
patent, that the provisions of the by-laws affecting land were binding in
equity and that, in any event, the trial judge improperly exercised his
discretion in making any declaration. The Court of Appeal dismissed the
plaintiff’s appeal, allowed the defendant’s cross-appeal and, setting aside the
judgment at the trial, dismissed the action with costs and ordered the
plaintiff to pay the defendant its costs of the appeal and of the cross-appeal.
On the appeal to this Court the plaintiff asks that the judgment at the trial
be restored except in so far as it declared that the lands were subject to the
covenant in the relevant part of by-law 19.
[Page 642]
On July 12, 1898, the defendant was incorporated
under The Ontario Companies Act, R.S.O. 1897, c. 191, by letters patent
containing the following provisions:
AND WE DIRECT that the right to acquire and hold shares in the said Club shall be
limited to the persons mentioned in this Our Charter and to any Graduate or
Under‑Graduate of the University of Toronto or of the School of Practical
Science or any official connected with either the said The University of
Toronto or the said The School of Practical Science.
AND WE FURTHER DIRECT that the capital stock of the Club shall be deemed to be incapable
of being assigned or transferred to any body corporate whatever or to any
individual (other than those specified in this Our Charter) who is not a
graduate or under-graduate of the said The University of Toronto or of the said
The School of Practical Science or who is not an official connected with either
the said The University of Toronto or the said The School of Practical Science AND
WE HEREBY EXPRESSLY EXCLUDE all other persons from the right to acquire and
hold a share or shares in the said Club.
The Company was incorporated “for the purpose
and objects following that is to say (a) SUBJECT to the provisions of
the laws respecting the protection of Fish and Game TO protect preserve
and propagate fish and game and to pursue hunt capture and take the same in
over and upon the lands waters and property of the Club and (b) TO
conduct experimental work in Forestry Biology and other branches of Natural
Science.” The share capital was $2,000 divided into eighty shares of $25 each.
We are not concerned with designated free grant lands mentioned in the letters
patent as about to be acquired by the Company from the Province
of Ontario. Under various
Ontario statutes the Company had power to acquire by purchase and to hold and
sell other lands and on October 12, 1911, the Department of Indian Affairs of
Canada granted to the Company a number of islands in Georgian Bay, of which
No. 122 is one. The Company still owns a number of these islands or parts
thereof.
While the plaintiff applied for membership in
the Company on November 21, 1952, his testimony shows that nothing occurred as
a result thereof and Exhibit-1 is Share Certificate No. 288 in his name for two
fully-paid-up shares in the Company and dated as recently as November 29, 1952.
There is in the record a certificate for two fully-paid-up shares of the
Company of $25 each in the name of Ella R. Firth, dated January 18, 1947, on
the back of which certificate is an assignment by her to the plaintiff dated January 24, 1947. A witness for the respondent
testified that it
[Page 643]
was on the basis of this assignment that the
plaintiff became a shareholder and the plaintiff gave evidence that he became a
shareholder only about the time of the conveyance to him by Ella R. Firth of
January 24, 1947, of part of island No. 122.
On October 17, 1945, the Company conveyed the
said part of island No. 122 to Ella R. Firth, her heirs and assigns for her
sole and their sole and only use forever
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Subject nevertheless to the reservations,
limitations, provisos and conditions expressed in the original grant thereof
from the Crown; To the intent that the burden of these covenants may run with
the lands aforesaid during the Corporate existence of The Madawaska Club,
Limited, the said Grantee for herself, her heirs, executors, administrators and
assigns, DOTH COVENANT AND AGREE WITH THE said Grantor its successors and
assigns as follows: that she the said Grantee, her heirs, executors,
administrators and assigns
(a) Will not or will any of them
transfer said land by Deed of Ownership or any similar agreement to any person
not a member of the Club, and that any such sale, lease or transfer to any
person not a member of the Club, or attempted alienation of the said land to
take it out of the control of the by-laws of the Club shall be null and void;
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
(d) Will observe and carry
out the by-laws of The Madawaska Club, Limited, annexed hereto marked “A” and
will hold the said land subject to the terms herein contained and subject to
the terms and conditions imposed upon the said land by the said by-laws.
The deed signed by the grantee contained a
covenant on her part to observe the Company’s by-laws, a copy of which was
annexed to and made part of the deed. Ella R. Firth conveyed the same lands to
the plaintiff by grant dated January 24, 1947, the same date that she assigned
the two shares to him. The plaintiff signed the conveyance, covenanted with the
grantor in the same terms set forth above in the conveyance to her and also
covenanted with the grantor to observe and carry out the by-laws of the
Company, a copy of which was annexed to and made part of the document. On February 21, 1951, the plaintiff conveyed the
lands to himself and his wife as joint tenants,—the deed containing none of the
covenants included in the conveyance to Ella R. Firth or in that from her to
the plaintiff.
As to the first claim of the plaintiff in this
appeal the provisions of the Charter govern. It is argued on his behalf that
ss. 17 and 39 of The Corporations Act, 1953 (Ont.), c. 19, are
applicable. These sections are in Part II of the
[Page 644]
Act and by s. 17 that Part applies “(c) to every
company incorporated by or under a general or special Act of the
Legislature”,—which includes the defendant Company. By subs. (2) of s. 39,
“subject to subs. (3) (which is not relevant) no by-law shall be passed that in
any way restricts the right of a holder of fully-paid shares to transfer them
but by-laws may be passed regulating the method of transfer thereof”.
Section 39(2) was in substance first enacted in 1912 by 2 Geo. V, c. 31,
s. 54(2), which was subsequent to the date of the Company’s Charter. This subs.
(2) looks to the future and in any event the provisions of the Charter are
explicit.
The trial judge held by-laws 2, 5, 6, 9 and 30
to be invalid. These read:
2. The membership shall be limited to 120,
and shall consist of charter members, and of graduates and undergraduates of
the University of Toronto or of
the School of Practical Science, and of any officials connected therewith.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
5. Election of new members shall take place
at the annual meeting only. All applications for membership shall be made in
writing to the Board of Directors at least three weeks before the annual
meeting, on a form to be approved by the Board of Directors, and the Board of
Directors shall cause the names of such applicants as are eligible under the charter
to be inserted in the notice calling the annual meeting.
6. The election of new members shall be by
ballot, each member present in person or by proxy being entitled to cast one
vote, and any applicant receiving six adverse votes shall be rejected.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
9. No member shall at any time hold more
than ten shares of the capital stock of the Club.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
30. An undivided holding and the shares
attached may be devised and bequeathed by will to a single devisee and legatee,
provided that the devisee or legatee is eligible for membership under the
By-laws; and the said devisee or legatee shall become a member of the Madawaska
Club without election, by submitting proper documentary proof of the devise or
legacy to the Board of Directors, and shall be entitled to acquire possession
of the property so devised or bequeathed on paying the entrance fee required
from new members; and shall thereafter hold said property subject to the terms
of the By-laws of the Club.
According to Exhibit-3 all of these, except 30,
were “adopted May 18, 1932, as amended, 194?” However, Exhibit-21 shows that
the by-laws were first passed December 12, 1904, that is prior to s. 54(2) of 2
Geo. V, c. 31, including the first four of those mentioned (with a slight
variation as to 6).
[Page 645]
In so far as the ground covered by these by-laws
is already dealt with by the Charter, the matter is disposed of and this
includes by-law 30 as the Charter directs “that the right to acquire and hold
shares in the said Club shall be limited to the persons mentioned in this Our
Charter and to any Graduate or Under-Graduate of the University of Toronto or
of the School of Practical Science or any official connected with either the
said The University of Toronto or the said The School of Practical Science”. In
so far as it extends beyond the terms of the Charter, I agree with the Court of
Appeal that it is problematical if any situation will arise calling for the
consideration or use of the by-laws and that, therefore, no declaration as to
the invalidity of any of them should be made.
In connection with the second point it should
first be stated that the circumstance that Mrs. Firth or her
representatives were not parties was never alluded to even when counsel were
asked to argue certain additional points before the Court of Appeal, but, in
any event, it cannot affect the matter as it does not appear that she or they
have any interest in any other part of island No. 122 or any part of any other
island in Georgian Bay. Next, it should be noted that irrespective of the date
when the plaintiff actually became a shareholder, he is, under The Registry
Act of Ontario, charged with notice of the covenants including those in the
by-laws which appear in and are attached to the deed from the Company to Ella
R. Firth and that, furthermore, he signed the deed from her to him even though
“under protest”. It is now necessary to examine the pleadings. Paragraphs 7A
and 7B of the amended statement of claim were as follows:
7A. By deed of grant dated October 17th,
1945, and registered in the Registry Office at Bracebridge, Ontario, for the
Registry Division of Muskoka as number 393 for the Township of Gibson, the
Defendant granted to Ella R. Firth, widow, that part of island number 122 in
the Georgian Bay hereinafter more particularly described.
7B. By the said deed of grant the said
Ella. R. Firth for herself, her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns,
to the intent that the burden of the covenants hereinafter referred to might
run with the lands, covenanted as follows:
(a) That she would not nor would any
of them transfer the said lands to any person not a member of the Club and that
any such sale, lease or transfer to any person not a member of the Club or
attempted alienation of the said lands to take it out of the control of the
By-Laws of the Club shall be null and void.
[Page 646]
(b) That she would continue to be
liable for and will pay all taxes, dues and charges imposed upon her as holder
of the said land under the By-Laws of the Club dealing with the holding of
sites which are in force at the time of the purchase of the said property save
only that the payments under By-Law 15, Section (b) subsection (1)
shall cease from this date and that the regular payments of all annual dues,
taxes and charges save as aforesaid shall be a condition of the transfer and
sale of the said lands.
(c) That she would pay her due share
of all Municipal and Parliamentary or other taxes, which may at any time be
levied upon the property owned or leased by the Club, such share to be
determined by resolution of a general meeting of the shareholders.
(d) That she would observe
and carry out the By-Laws of The Madawaska Club Limited annexed to the said
deed of grant and would hold the said land subject to the terms therein
contained and subject to the terms and conditions imposed upon the said lands
by the said By-Laws.
These paragraphs are expressly admitted by para.
1 of the statement of defence. This was a trial and not a motion as in Noble
and Wolf v. Alley; the
rule expressed in The Tasmania,SS.
Tordenskjold v. SS. Euphemia and
David Spencer Limited v. Field, applies
and the Company was not entitled to argue in the Court of Appeal and may not
argue in this Court that the directors exceeded their powers as defined by the
Company’s by-laws. The Chief Justice of Ontario refers to a number of by-laws
which, in his view, demonstrated that the directors had no power under the
by-laws to grant land acquired from the Indian Department in fee simple, but he
does not in my view give sufficient weight to by-law 17 which provides, as well
in the by-laws adopted December 12, 1904, as in the by-laws adopted May 18,
1932, as amended, (the underlining has been added):
17. Any member to whom a site has or shall
have been allotted and who desires to own the said site instead of
leasing it from the Club, may do so, subject (in the case of sites upon the
mainland) to the provisions of the charter and patent granted by the Ontario
Government, and (in the case of sites upon the islands) to the provisions of
the agreement with the Dominion Government; and such ownership shall be further
subject to the following conditions:
(1) Such member shall pay to the Treasurer
of the Club the amount at which the Dominion Government values the land in
question, or (in the case of sites upon the mainland) the amount of $2 per
acre. He shall also pay all the costs, charges and expenses of the transfer of
the said property.
[Page 647]
(2) Such member shall continue to be liable
to all dues, taxes and charges imposed upon the holders and lessees of sites by
the by-laws dealing with the holding of sites which may be in force at the time
he purchases the said property; save only that the payments under By-law
15, section (b), sub-sections (1) and (2) shall cease from the
time of such purchase. The regular payment of all such annual dues,; taxes and
charges shall be a condition of the transfer and sale of the property in
question, and shall be so expressed in the deed; and the said purchaser shall
execute the deed in the terms of the said conditions, and the covenant
containing such conditions shall run with the land.
(3) It shall also be stipulated and
provided in the deed as a condition of the transfer of said property, that it
shall not subsequently be transferred by deed of ownership or lease, or any
similar agreement to any person not a member of the Club, and that any such
sale, lease, transfer or alienation of the property in question as shall take
it out of the control of the by-laws of the Club, shall be null and void.
The by-law therefore authorizes the directors to
convey the islands by deed subject to the conditions set forth. The defendant
admitted that a deed had been given to the intent, i.e., with the intention,
that the burden of the covenants should run with the land but not (1) that they
did not bind the plaintiff, and (2) that they were invalid.
In this Court the main argument was in
connection with part of by-law 19 which, for convenience, is again reproduced:
19. Occupation of a dwelling or premises by
persons who are not members of the Club shall be only by special permission of
the Board of Directors,
as counsel for the plaintiff admitted that the
trial judgment was correct in holding that by-laws 18(a) and (b)
and 19 ran with the land. However by the wide terms of that judgment, it was
declared that, with the exceptions mentioned, the lands were free not only of
the restrictive covenants set out in the deed from Ella R. Firth to the
plaintiff but also free of all restrictive covenants in the Company’s by-laws
and the plaintiff asks for the restoration of the trial judgment except as to
by-law 19. The by-laws were not referred to before us in detail but a careful
examination of them in order to ascertain which ones except 19 might have any
relation to the matter under discussion indicates that
[Page 648]
only 17, 21, 22, 24 and 30 need be considered,
all of which are referred to by Chief Justice Porter except 24. These read as
follows:
17. Any member to whom a site has or shall
have been allotted and who desires to own the said site instead of leasing it
from the Club, may-do so, subject (in the case of sites upon the mainland) to
the provisions of the charter and patent granted by the Ontario Government, and
(in the case of sites upon the islands) to the provisions of the agreement with
the Dominion Government; and such ownership shall be further subject to the
following conditions:
(1) Such member shall pay to the Treasurer
of the Club the amount at which the Dominion Government values the land in
question, or (in the case of sites upon the mainland) the amount of $2 per
acre. He shall also pay all the costs, charges and expenses of the transfer of
the said property.
(2) Such member shall continue to be liable
to all dues, taxes and charges imposed upon the holders and lessees of sites by
the by-laws dealing with the holding of sites which may be in force at the time
he purchases the said property; save only that the payments under By-law 15,
section (b), subsections (1) and (2) shall cease from the time
of such purchase. The regular payment of all such annual dues, taxes and
charges shall be a condition of the transfer and sale of the property in
question, and shall be so expressed in the deed; and the said purchaser shall
execute the deed in the terms of the said conditions, and the covenant
containing such conditions shall run with the land.
(3) It shall also be stipulated and
provided in the deed as a condition of the transfer of said property, that it shall
not subsequently be transferred by deed of ownership or lease, or any similar
agreement to any person not a member of the Club, and that any such sale,
lease, transfer or alienation of the property in question as shall take it out
of the control of the by-laws of the Club, shall be null and void.
……………………………………………………………………………………………...
21. In the. case of the death of any member
of the Club holding a site by lease or purchase according to the by-laws, then,
upon the regular annual payment of all dues, taxes and charges prescribed for
such member by the by-laws, his immediate family may continue to occupy the
premises formerly held by the deceased, for a period of two years, and
thereafter from year to year, upon the annual permission of the Board of Directors.
During the period of occupancy the legal representative of the estate of the
deceased member may dispose of the said member’s interest in the said premises
to any member of the Club, subject to the by-laws of the Club.
22. (a) In case the premises formerly
held by a deceased member are not disposed of as provided in By-law 21, then
upon six months’ notice being given in writing, either by the legal
representative of the estate of the deceased member, or by the Board of
Directors, of the discontinuance of occupancy, an allowance may be made to the
estate of the deceased for the interest in the site held by the deceased, for
such buildings as may have been on the said site at the date of the passing of
this by-law, and such buildings as may thereafter be erected thereon by
permission of the Board of Directors, and for such improvements as may have
been made on the said site.
[Page 649]
(b) The amount of such compensation
shall be determined conjointly by a representative of the estate and a
representative chosen by the Board of Directors from among themselves; in case
of non-agreement between these two arbitrators, a third arbitrator shall be
chosen by the aforesaid arbitrators, and the Board of Arbitration so
constituted shall finally determine the amount of compensation to be allowed.
(c) The Board of Directors may elect
to take over the interests of the deceased member at the valuation fixed by the
said Board of Arbitration, and if they fail to make such election within six
months after the decision of the Board of Arbitration has been received by the
Board of Directors, the legal representative of the estate of the deceased
member may dispose of the said member’s interest in the said site, and the
buildings and improvements upon the said site, to any person whomsoever,
subject to the conditions under which the Club holds the land in question from
the Ontario or Dominion Government; and subject also to the terms under which
the deceased member held the site in question, with such modifications or
alterations as may be approved by the Board of Directors; and such person shall
execute the assignment of the lease, or deed, as the case may be, and covenant
with the Club to observe and perform all the terms, covenants and conditions
therein contained, with such modifications or alterations as may have been
approved by the Board of Directors.
……………………………………………………………………………………
24. The use of fire-arms shall be
prohibited from the first day of June to the thirty-first day of August,
inclusive, except by special permission of the Board of Directors; and the use
of rifles shall be prohibited at all times.
…………………………………………………………………………………...
30. An undivided holding and the shares
attached may be devised and bequeathed by will to a single devisee and legatee,
provided that the devisee or legatee is eligible for membership under the
By-laws; and the said devisee or legatee shall become a member of the Madawaska
Club without election, by submitting proper documentary proof of the devise or
legacy to the Board of Directors, and shall be entitled to acquire possession
of the property so devised or bequeathed on paying the entrance fee required
from new members; and shall thereafter hold said property subject to the terms
of the By-laws of the Club.
I agree with Judson J. that for the reasons
given by him the lands in question of the plaintiff John S. Galbraith are
subject only to the restrictions contained in by-laws 18(a) and (b)
and 28, but not to those contained in by-law 19.
The appeal should be allowed and the judgment of
the Court of Appeal set aside. The judgment at the trial should be restored
except that Paragraph 1 should be amended by striking out the declaration that
the lands of the plaintiff John S. Galbraith are bound by by-law 19 and by
striking out Paragraph 2 thereof. The order as to costs at the trial should
stand; there should be no costs in the Court of Appeal, but the appellant
should have one-half of his costs in this Court.
[Page 650]
The judgment of Taschereau, Abbott, Judson and
Ritchie JJ. was delivered by
JUDSON J.:—I agree with the reasons of the Chief
Justice on the first branch of the case that the appellant fails in his claim
for a declaration concerning the restrictions on the transfer of shares. I also
agree that the appellant and his wife are joint tenants in fee simple of the
land and not licensees as the Court of Appeal held. In my opinion the result of
this litigation is that the plaintiff is bound only by the restrictions
contained in by-laws 18(a) and (b) and 28 but not by by-law 19
and to this extent I would modify the judgment of the learned trial judge.
After a trial in which he was largely
successful, Galbraith appealed to the Court of Appeal on one point only—whether
he was bound by by-law 19. He was, of course, a purchaser with notice. By-law
19, so far as it is applicable, reads:
Occupation of a dwelling or premises by
persons who are not members of the Club shall only be by special permission of
the Board of Directors.
The Club cross-appealed on all points. The Court
of Appeal held, as a result of a point raised before them for the first time in
the litigation, that Galbraith was a licensee of the land and not an owner in
fee simple and consequently subject to all the restrictions. On appeal to this
Court, he seeks to have the judgment at trial restored with the above mentioned
modification as to not being bound by the restrictive covenant contained in
by-law 19. He has never appealed against the declaration that he is bound by
by-laws 18(a) and (b) and 28.
The chain of title in this case is short. The
Club acquired the fee simple to the land in question by grant from the Dominion
of Canada. I mention this because other club lands were acquired by grant from
the Province of Ontario. The provincial grant contains special conditions
limiting the persons who may become interested in the lands and nothing that I
say in these reasons has any application to the lands contained in the
provincial grant. In 1945 the Club granted in fee simple to Ella R. Firth part
of island 122. The grantee covenanted in the following terms:
to the intent that the burden of these
covenants may run with the lands aforesaid during the Corporate existence of
The Madawaska Club Limited, the said Grantee for herself, her heirs, executors,
administrators and
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assigns, DOTH COVENANT AND AGREE with the
said Grantor its successors and assigns as follows: that she the said Grantee,
her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns
(a) Will not nor will any of them
transfer said land by Deed of Ownership or any similar agreement to any person not
a member of the Club, and that any such sale, lease or transfer to any
person not a member of the Club, or attempted alienation of the said land to
take it out of the control of the by-laws of the Club shall be null and void;
………………..
(d) Will observe and carry
out the by-laws of The Madawaska Club Limited, annexed hereto marked “A” and
will hold the said land subject to the terms herein contained and subject to
the terms and conditions imposed upon the said land by the said by-laws.
By-law 19, which was the main subject-matter of
argument on this branch of the appeal, is thus introduced by way of covenant (d)
contained in the deed.
In 1947 Mrs. Firth conveyed in fee to
Galbraith and took from him the same covenants. In 1951 Galbraith conveyed to
himself and his wife as joint tenants and this deed did not contain the
covenants. Thus, notwithstanding the fact that the action is one brought by
Galbraith for a declaratory judgment, the dispute is really one between the
Club as the original covenantee and a subsequent purchaser of the restricted
land who takes with notice but claims to be free of the covenant.
If Galbraith, as assignee of the servient land
taking with notice, is to be bound by this covenant, certain essential
requirements must be satisfied. I will take it that the covenant is negative in
substance, if not form, for the negative implication is very clear. The
requirements are that this covenant must touch and concern the dominant land,
that the Club as covenantee must retain land capable of being benefited by the
covenant and that there must be express annexation of the covenant to the
dominant land. In my opinion all three requirements are lacking in this case.
The juridical basis for the enforcement of these
covenants has undergone a marked change since Tulk v. Moxhay. The doctrine of notice was the
decisive factor in that case. The presently developed theory of enforceability
is that expressed by Rand J. in Noble and Wolf v. Alley:
Covenants enforceable under the rule of Tulk
v. Moxhay (1848) 11 Beav. 571; 50 E.R. 937, are properly conceived as
running with the land in equity and, by reason of their enforceability, as
constituting an equitable
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servitude or burden on the servient land.
The essence of such an incident is that it should touch or concern the land as
contradistinguished from a collateral effect. In that sense, it is a relation
between parcels, annexed to them and, subject to the equitable rule of notice,
passing with them both as to benefit and burden in transmissions by operation
of law as well as by act of the parties.
Assuming for the moment that there has been an
annexation of this covenant to some land of the Club capable of being benefited
at the time of the conveyance to Mrs. Firth, does this covenant relating
to occupation of the servient land touch or concern the dominant land for it is
that land which must be “touched or concerned” (Rogers v. Hosegood)? There is no privity of contract
between Galbraith, as owner of the restricted land, and the Club. The Club has
parted with the fee simple. If the Club is to enforce the covenant against
Galbraith, it must be done for the benefit of land retained by the Club at the
date of the covenant. It is this protected land which must be touched and concerned
by the covenant, within the classic definition of Farwell J. in Rogers v.
Hosegood, supra, p. 395:
The covenant must either affect the land as
regards mode of occupation or it must be such as per se, and not merely from
collateral circumstances, affects the value of the land.
The covenant in question here gives the Club the
right to choose the persons who shall occupy the servient land, if the owner
wishes to go outside the club membership. This has nothing to do with the use
to which the land may be put, but relates only to the kind of person who may be
given occupation. It is imposed by the vendor for its own benefit as a club. It
does not touch or concern the land, as being imposed for the benefit of or to
enhance the value of land retained by the Club. It calls into being the
exercise of an unfettered personal discretion by the club management and its
plain purpose is to preserve the amenities of the Club. That such a covenant
does not touch or concern the dominant land is concluded in this Court by the
decision in Noble and Wolf v. Alley, supra. The covenant in that case
covered occupation as well as alienation in the following terms:
The lands and premises herein described
shall never be sold, assigned, transferred, lease, rented or in any manner whatsoever
alienated to, and shall never be occupied or used in any manner whatsoever by
any person of the Jewish, Hebrew, Semitic, Negro or coloured race or blood, it
being
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the intention and purpose of the Grantor,
to restrict the ownership, use, occupation and enjoyment of the said
recreational development, including the lands and premises herein described, to
persons of the white or Caucasian race not excluded by this clause.
It was held that this was not a covenant
touching or concerning the land and I can see no possible ground for any
distinction between a covenant restricting alienation and one restricting
occupation.
There is nothing in the conveyance from the Club
to Mrs. Firth which attempts to annex the benefit of the covenant to any
land retained by the Club. Further, there is no evidence anywhere in the record
to indicate whether the Club had any such land capable of being benefited. The
grantee simply covenants for herself, her heirs, executors, administrators and
assigns, with the grantor, its successors and assigns, to the intent that the
burden of the covenants should run with the lands during the corporate
existence of the Club but nothing is said about any other lands. This fails to
meet what I think must be regarded as the minimum requirements that the deed
itself must so define the land to be benefited as to make it easily
ascertainable (Zetland v. Driver).
There was exactly the same situation in Canadian
Construction Company Limited v. Beaver Lumber Limited. In that case Beaver Lumber was the
owner of two parcels of land, A and B. It conveyed parcel A in 1944 and took a
covenant that the grantee would not, for a period of 25 years, carry on a
lumber business on the lands. The lands eventually came into the hands of
Canadian Construction Company with notice of the covenant. There was nothing in
the agreement containing the covenant which annexed its benefit to parcel B on
which Beaver Lumber Limited was carrying on a lumber business. The inference
drawn by the learned trial judge was that the covenant was intended by the
parties to be personal to the covenantee and not for the benefit of parcel B.
The Court of Appeal reversed the finding of the trial judge but the judgment at
trial was restored in this Court. The majority of the Court did not find it
necessary to consider the extent of the admissibility of evidence of
surrounding circumstances, for the purpose
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of indicating the existence or situation of
other land of the covenantee intended to be benefited. However, the plain
implication in the judgment of this Court in affirming the trial judgment was
that a restrictive covenant contained in an agreement which omits all reference
to any dominant land, although it sets out the restrictions placed upon the
servient land, is unenforceable by the covenantee against a successor in title
of the covenantor, since such an agreement expresses no intention that any
other lands should be benefited by the covenant. A covenant running with the
land cannot be created in this manner and in the absence of any attempted
annexation of the benefit to some particular land of the covenantee, the
covenant is personal and collateral to the conveyance as being for the benefit
of the covenantee alone.
I would allow the appeal and set aside the judgment
of the Court of Appeal which dismissed the action with costs. I would restore
the judgment at trial with these modifications:
(a) Paragraph 1 should be amended by striking
out the declaration that the plaintiff is bound by by-law 19;
(b) Paragraph 2, declaring by-laws 2, 5, 6, 9
and 30 to be invalid insofar as they restrict or purport to restrict the
transfer of shares, should be struck out.
The order as to costs at trial should stand. As
success was divided in the Court of Appeal there should be no order as to
costs. In this Court I would allow the appellant one-half his costs. For him an
appeal was necessary to establish that he was an owner in fee simple and that
he was not bound by by-law 19. On these points he succeeded. He failed on the
issue relating to the shares.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, appellant:
Johnston, Sheard & Johnston, Toronto.
Solicitors for the defendant, respondent:
Day, Wilson, Kelly, Martin & Campbell, Toronto.