Supreme Court of Canada
Crown
Trust Co. v. MacAulay et al., [1964] S.C.R. 391
Date:
1964-04-28
Crown Trust Company
(Defendant) Appellant;
and
Dame Mary Agnes Macaulay (Plaintiff) Respondent;
and
Peter Charles Macaulay And Sarah Ann Macaulay (Intervenants)
Respondents.
1964: March 3, 4; 1964: April 28.
Present: Taschereau C.J. and Fauteux, Abbott, Judson and
Ritchie JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF QUEEN'S BENCH, APPEAL SIDE,
PROVINCE OF QUEBEC.
Appeals—Right of—Practice and procedure—Consent
judgment—Not subject to appeal if acquiesced—Code of Civil Procedure, art.
1220.
The plaintiff instituted this action against the defendant
trustee asking to be declared solely entitled to a trust fund administered by
the defendant. The trustee submitted itself to the decision of the Court and
concluded its plea in the following terms: "Wherefore defendant prays for
judgment … instructing it as to the disposition of this trust property … by
dismissing or by allowing plaintiff's action …" Subsequently, the intervenants
intervened to ask that the action be dismissed. The case proceeded to trial
and, after hearing but before judgment, the plaintiff and the intervenants, at
the suggestion of the trial judge, met to discuss settlement and in due course
executed a Deed of Transaction, each party agreeing that the trust property
would be divided on the basis of 50 per cent for the plaintiff and 50 per cent
for the intervenants; the trustee was advised thereof but was not a party
thereto. The trial judge then rendered judgment confirming the transaction and
ordering the trustee to render an account. The trustee appealed to the Court of
Appeal, but that appeal was quashed on the ground that the trustee had no right
to appeal. The trustee appealed to this Court.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed.
The material filed in the record disclosed that the trustee,
through its attorneys of record and at least one of its officers, was fully
aware at all times of the discussions for settlement and with the Deed of
Transaction entered into and that it acquiesced in the settlement agreed upon
and in the judgment confirming such settlement. Having acquiesced both in
anticipation and after the judgment was rendered, the trustee thereby bandoned
its right to appeal under the provisions of art. 1220 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Queen's Bench,
Appeal Side, Province of Quebec,
quashing an
[Page 392]
appeal from a judgment of Chief Justice Scott. Appeal
dismissed.
P. N. Thorsteinsson, for the appellant.
R. Stewart Willis and L. A. Poitras,
for the respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Abbott J.:—This
appeal is from a judgment of the Court of Queen's Bench maintaining motions of the
plaintiff-respondent and intervenants-respondents to quash the appeal of the
present appellant from a judgment of the Superior Court rendered November 5,
1962. That judgment confirmed a transaction entered into between
plaintiff-respondent and intervenants-respondents and ordered the appellant to
render an account of the administration of a certain trust fund referred to in
the transaction and to dispose forthwith of the said trust fund, including all
revenues accrued thereon from and after July 18, 1959, the whole in accordance
with the terms of the transaction.
The relevant facts are as follows. By Deed of Donation
executed before Edouard Cholette, Notary, on February 10,
1931, one Agnes L. Holliday, mother of the plaintiff-respondent, conveyed, inter
vivos, to the appellant certain securities as a trust fund to be held by it
in trust:
1. to pay the revenues
during a five-year period in certain proportions to her two sons, Thomas J. R.
Macaulay and Norman Holliday Macaulay;
2. upon the expiration of
the five-year period to pay all the revenues to the said Thomas J. R. Macaulay
during his lifetime;
3. on his death to pay such
revenues to his widow during her lifetime or until her remarriage;
4. upon his death, and that
of his widow, or her remarriage, to pay the capital, with all accumulated
income, if any, to his lawful child or children in equal shares upon each
attaining the age of thirty years.
The Deed provided that if the said Thomas J. R. Macaulay
died unmarried or without leaving any lawful child or children, the capital was
to go as to one half to the said Norman Holliday Macaulay and as to the other
half to the plaintiff-respondent. If there should be no child or
[Page 393]
children issue of the marriage of the said Norman Holliday
Macaulay, and of the plaintiff-respondent, the capital was to go to the
survivor of the said Norman Holliday Macaulay and the plaintiff-respondent.
Thomas J. R. Macaulay died August 16, 1954 and his widow,
Marjory Dorothy Prodgers Macaulay remarried on July 18, 1959.
There were no children issue of the marriage of Thomas J. R.
Macaulay and the said Marjory Dorothy Prodgers but they had legally adopted, in
England where they were then residing, the two intervenants-respondents.
Norman Holliday Macaulay died on October 20, 1957 without
lawful issue.
Upon the remarriage of the widow of Thomas J. R. Macaulay
the plaintiff-respondent claimed the capital of the trust fund, and all
revenues accumulated in it since the remarriage, on the ground that the
intervenants-respondents were not the lawful children of her brother Thomas J.
R. Macaulay within the meaning of the Deed of Donation, and that by reason of
the death of Norman Holliday Macaulay, without lawful issue, she was solely
entitled to the trust fund.
Upon the refusal of the appellant to comply with her request
she took the present action.
Appellant in its plea alleged that conflicting claims had
been made against it by the intervenants-respondents but submitted itself to
the decision of the Court, concluding its plea as follows:
WHEREFORE defendant prays for judgment of this Honourable
Court instructing it as to the disposition of the Trust property held by it
under the Deed of Trust entered into before Edouard Cholette, Notary,
on the 10th day of February 1931, by dismissing or by allowing plaintiff's
action, with or without costs as this Honourable Court shall see fit to do.
Subsequently, the intervenants-respondents intervened
alleging that the plaintiff-respondent was not entitled to what she asked and
prayed that their intervention be received and maintained and the action
dismissed with costs.
The case then proceeded to trial in March 1962 and, after
hearing but before judgment, the plaintiff-respondent and
[Page 394]
the intervenants-respondents, at the suggestion of the
presiding judge, met to discuss settlement and in due course executed a Deed of
Transaction on November 1, 1962, each party agreeing that the trust property
and revenues thereon would be divided on the basis of 50 per cent for the
plaintiff-respondent and 50 per cent for the intervenants-respondents and the
appellant-trustee was advised thereof but was not a party thereto.
On November 5,1962, judgment was rendered reciting the
transaction in full and it concludes as follows:
NOW THEREFORE THE COURT, as requested by plaintiff and intervenants
hereby renders judgment confirming the said transaction in all respects and for
all legal purposes, and doth hereby order the defendant, Crown Trust Company,
to render an account of the administration of the said trust fund and to
dispose forthwith of the said trust fund, including all revenues accrued
thereon from and after July 18, 1959, in accordance with the terms of the
aforesaid transaction.
The sole question in issue both in the Court below and
before this Court is whether the appellant had a right to appeal from that
judgment. We are not here concerned with the interpretation and effect of the
Deed of Donation of February 10, 1931.
From the material filed in the record I am satisfied that
appellant, through its attorneys of record and at least one of its trust
officers, was fully aware at all times of the discussions for settlement and
with the Deed of Transaction entered into and that it acquiesced in the
settlement agreed upon and in the judgment confirming such settlement. That
settlement was of course binding upon both the plaintiff-respondent, Dame Mary
Agnes Macaulay, and the intervenants-respondents Peter Charles Macaulay and
Sarah Ann Macaulay.
As I have said the sole question now in issue is whether the
appellant acquiesced in the judgment of the Superior Court both in anticipation
and after the judgment was rendered, thereby abandoning its right to appeal
under the provisions of art. 1220 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The
Court of Queen's Bench held unanimously that appellant had so acquiesced and I
am in agreement with that finding.
At the opening of the hearing before this Court appellant
filed a discontinuance of its appeal against the plaintiff-
[Page 395]
respondent Dame Mary
Agnes Macaulay, and the appeal was argued only as
against the intervenants-respondents. For the reasons which I have given I
would dismiss that appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Attorneys for the defendant, appellant: Stikeman
& Elliott, Montreal.
Attorneys for the plaintiff, respondent: Besehenes, Forget & Crépeau, Montreal.
Attorneys for the intervenants, respondents:
Duquet, MacKay, Weldon, Bronstetter, Willis & Johnston, Montreal.