Supreme Court of Canada
Herrington v. Hamilton (City), [1964] S.C.R. 274
Date: 1964-01-28
Alfred K.
Herrington (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
The Corporation of
the City of Hamilton (Defendant) Respondent;
and
Gisele Fernande
Herrington and Samuel Taylor Respondents.
1963: November 21, 22; 1964: January 28.
Present: Cartwright, Fauteux, Judson,
Ritchie and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Expropriation—Compensation fixed by
Municipal Board—Books of going business almost non-existent—Valuation based on
land values plus replacement cost of buildings less depreciation—Revision of
Board’s figures not to be attempted unless Board exercised judgment upon
improper principles.
The City of Hamilton expropriated certain lands of which the appellant and his wife were
owners as joint tenants and which formed part of the property of a partnership
in which they were the only partners. One T was appointed receiver of all the
assets of the partnership with power to manage the business of the partnership
until the conclusion of the expropriation proceedings. The Ontario Municipal
Board, which was appointed the sole arbitrator, fixed the compensation at
$50,525. The husband, the wife and T appealed to ask that the compensation be
increased. The appeal was dismissed. The husband alone decided to appeal to
this Court, and served notice of appeal upon the solicitors for the City and
the solicitor for his wife and T. A motion by the City to quash the appeal on
the ground that the appellant had no status to maintain the appeal because a
partner cannot sue alone to recover a debt due to the partnership was dismissed
([1964] S.C.R. 69.). The husband then proceeded with his appeal.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The Municipal Board could not base a
valuation of the expropriated premises on the profit situation of the business
as the claimants’ so-called books were almost non-existent. It was not possible
for the Board to adjourn the matter for further and better evidence on the
subject of profits. Such evidence did not exist and could not be created as the
foundation data itself did not exist. The Board then proceeded to consider the
evidence of value on the basis of land values plus replacement cost of
buildings less depreciation. The board members heard the witnesses and had an
opportunity to weigh and compare the value of the various pieces of evidence
given, and the figures set out in their finding represented their judgment of
the probative value of those various pieces of evidence. Unless it appeared that
the Board were exercising their judgment upon improper principles, this Court
should not attempt to revise their figures. The Court might have found much
less drastic rates of depreciation but if that could be done only
[Page 275]
by exercising judgment upon the evidence, the
Court should not apply its opinion of the evidence to amend that of the members
of the Board who heard the evidence.
As to the claim for certain groynes, despite
the fact that they must have cost the claimants a very considerable sum, albeit
one quite impossible to determine on the evidence, the Court below was right in
saying that the groynes simply were necessary for the preservation of the lands
upon which the buildings stood; if the groynes had been absent there would be
no land to be expropriated, and the claimants would have simply been able to
claim for a useless water-covered lot. Therefore, the Board would not have been
justified in making an allowance for the cost of the groynes.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, affirming an
expropriation award fixed by the Ontario Municipal Board. Appeal dismissed.
Alfred K. Herrington, in person.
J.T. Weir, Q.C., and B.H. Kellock, for
the respondent corporation.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
SPENCE J.:—This appeal from the judgment of the
Court of Appeal for Ontario was
argued by the appellant in person. The appellant, however, was represented by
skilled counsel both in the Court of Appeal and at the hearing before the
Municipal Board when all the evidence was the subject of minute examination and
cross-examination. That Board fixed the compensation payable to the appellants
for the expropriation of the lands and buildings in the City of Hamilton at a total of $50,525 made up as
follows:
|
1. Duplex..........................................................
|
$ 6,500
|
|
2. Cottage property.........................................
|
2,000
|
|
3. Vacant lots...................................................
|
3,025
|
|
4. Cove Restaurant.........................................
|
30,000
|
|
5. Allowance for disturbance..........................
|
6,000
|
|
6. Allowance for possibility that Van Wagner’s Beach Road be rebuilt...................
|
|
|
|
$ 50,525
|
In the Court of Appeal and again in this Court
no question was raised as to any of the first three amounts. We are, therefore,
concerned with the latter three only.
The Board, dealing with restaurant property
after reciting the history of the purchase of the various portions of it, the
lease of certain other lands, the construction of the groynes
[Page 276]
to prevent erosion and of certain additions and
also the complete washing out of the Van Wagner’s Beach Road access, turned to
the fixing of compensation upon the following basis:
1. Land Values.
2. Replacement value of buildings, less
depreciation.
In the notice of appeal from the decision of the
Board to the Court of Appeal for Ontario, the grounds of appeal include:
1. The Ontario Municipal Board erred in not applying the test of value to the owner
in disallowing the Claimants compensation for the Groynes and for the partly
completed addition to the restaurant.
2. The Board erred in not applying the test
of value to the owner in awarding the Claimants compensation for the value of
the leasehold interest.
* *
*
4. The Board erred in assessing
compensation for the restaurant in not taking into account the income received
from the business which the Claimants were carrying on in those premises.
Examining these grounds of appeal, Laidlaw J.A.
said:
It is sufficient to say that in my opinion
the amounts of gross estimated profits shown on that statement are dependent to
such an extent upon such uncertainties, speculation and estimates upon which no
reliance can be placed as to render the probative value of that report nil. It
would not be safe in my opinion for any tribunal exercising judicial functions
to found an appraisal or an award of compensation on that evidence. In my
opinion the claimant has failed entirely to establish the amount of gross profits
from the operation of this business as a reliable and proper basis on which to
award compensation…
Then in such circumstances what was the
Board to do to ascertain the proper amount of compensation payable to the
claimants? It was the duty of the Board, in my humble opinion, to consider the
available evidence that would best enable them to value these properties and to
fix a compensation that would be adequate and sufficient to indemnify the
owners. The only basis upon which the Board could proceed in the particular
circumstances was to consider the replacement value of the property
expropriated less proper depreciation from the value of each of the various
items.
Having read the evidence given upon the
expropriation proceedings by Mr. Samuel Taylor, the receiver appointed by
the Court in Ontario in an action by the female claimant against the male
claimant, and also the evidence given by the male claimant A.K. Herrington and
the other witnesses called by him, I am of the opinion that Laidlaw J.A.’s view
as to the probative value of the evidence as to profits is a sound one and I
would not have agreed to have based any
[Page 277]
valuation of this expropriated restaurant
premises upon such a haphazard conjecture.
Then, I turn to the same query as Laidlaw J.A.
expressed upon what was the Board’s task. It would naturally occur to one that
the Board might have set the matter over for further evidence in order to
obtain reliable information upon the profit situation for admittedly the
concept of value to the owner in the case of a going business would require a
valuation based on this profit situation. Woods Manufacturing Company v. The
King, per
Rinfret C.J., at p. 514. It is by such an investigation that there
could be determined what amount the owner, as a prudent business man, would
have been prepared to pay for the property on the date of the expropriation
rather than be forced to give up title and possession.
It appears, however, from a survey of the
evidence to which I referred that such information simply could not be
produced. The claimants’ so-called books were almost non existent and consisted
of some rather haphazard entries in a series of diaries from 1951 to 1958, and
those entries bore little if any relation to the statement worked out by
Mr. Taylor, the receiver. It would appear, moreover, that the data given
with some degree of detail to Mr. Lounsbury, acting as adviser for the
respondent corporation, again bore little relation to either the original data
in these diaries or to Mr. Taylor’s subsequently produced summaries. It is
significant, in passing, that if Mr. Lounsbury informally offered $75,000
as compensation, an offer which it was stated, the claimant refused, he could
only have done so on the inflated figures given to him by the claimant, to
which I have just referred.
In the light of these circumstances, it was not
possible for the Municipal Board to adjourn the matter for further and better
evidence on the subject of profits. Such evidence did not exist and could not
be created as the foundation data itself did not exist. The Municipal Board
then proceeded to consider the evidence of value on the basis of land values
plus replacement cost of buildings less depreciation, and the Board said:
Essentially therefore the Board accepts the
evidence of the respondent’s witnesses as to the value of the restaurant and
the leasehold interest in the parking lot.
[Page 278]
The Board then proceeded to cite the evidence of
C.E. Parnell as to the value of the lands and the leasehold interest, i.e., land
$6,750, leasehold interest $1,080, and the evidence of Donald Hall as to the
value of the restaurant buildings at $17,500, being able to verify one item in
Hall’s valuation by comparing his valuation of the duplex with that of Mason, a
claimant’s witness. The Board found that Mason was only 10 per cent higher than
Hall on that item and so the Board added 10 per cent to Hall’s estimate of
$17,500. With the addition of $2,920 for fixtures not included in Hall’s
valuation, these amounts totalled $30,000. It was this question of the
valuation of the restaurant buildings at $17,500 plus 10 per cent which gave me
the most concern. Donald Hall gave the replacement value of each of the various
portions of the buildings at February 1961 costs and said that those costs were
about 10 per cent higher than the cost in the year 1958, the date of the actual
expropriation. This would, of course, give the claimants the advantage of that
increase in cost. His depreciation allowance was, however, very drastic varying
from 33 per cent on the unfinished reinforced concrete addition to 60 per cent
on some other portions of the building. Such depreciation items are somewhat
shocking. They were, however, the subject of astute cross-examination by
skilled counsel for the claimant and no evidence contra other than the
haphazard estimates of the claimant himself was introduced. It must be
remembered that the Board members heard the witnesses and had an opportunity to
weigh and compare the value of the various pieces of evidence given and that
the figures set out in their finding represented their judgment of the
probative value of those various pieces of evidence. Unless in this Court it
appears that the Board were exercising their judgment upon improper principles,
this Court should not attempt to revise their figures. So this Court might have
found much less drastic rates of depreciation but if we could only do so by
exercising our judgment upon the evidence, we should not apply our opinion of
the evidence to amend that of the members of the Board who heard the evidence.
As I have noted, the Board itself figured the
rates of depreciation were excessive and added 10 per cent in an attempt to
overcome that excessive depreciation. Again, it is a matter for the Board’s
judgment whether that 10 per cent was a sufficient allowance to cover the
excess. The
[Page 279]
various photograph exhibits, particularly those
in exhibit 43, seem to show a tumble-down series of buildings and might give
considerable support for what would appear an abnormally high depreciation.
The complaints to the Court of Appeal that the
Board failed to allow the claimants’ compensation for the groynes is dealt with
by Laidlaw J.A. in the reasons for judgment. Firstly, reading the record, it
would be very difficult to come to a proper ascertainment of the cost of these
groynes upon the evidence given at the arbitration hearing before the Board.
The evidence of the claimants again is haphazard at the best and the evidence
given by others both for the claimants and for the respondent as to the costs
of the groynes varied enormously. This factor, however, is not so important as
the view taken in the Court of Appeal, and I think the proper view, as to the
principle upon which the groynes should be considered. The Board in its reasons
said:
The Board feels that the claim presented by
the claimants for expenditures on the groyne and on the proposed addition, and
on the loss on the chattel property, and the value of the leasehold interest
and of the goodwill, were all essentially without substance unless Van Wagner’s
Beach Road was to be rebuilt.
In the Court of Appeal, on the other hand,
Laidlaw J.A. dealt with the value of the groynes on a different basis, and
said:
If the groynes had not been in existence
and had not been in place at the time of expropriation, I think that no prudent
purchaser would have given much if anything for the land having regard to the
probability that it might be washed out for all useful purposes by storm
waters. It is because of the existence of the groynes and the value of the land
which they protect that the land has a value of $6,750.00. I think it would
have been highly improper for the Board to have determined any separate amount
as proposed by the claimants as an allowance to the owner for the groynes.
Despite the fact that these groynes must have
cost the claimants a very considerable sum, albeit one quite impossible to
determine on the evidence, I have come to the conclusion that Laidlaw J.A. was
right in saying that the groynes simply were necessary for the preservation of
the lands upon which the buildings stood; if the groynes had been absent there
would be no land to be expropriated, and the claimants would have simply been
able to claim for a useless water-covered lot. Therefore, the Board would not
have been justified in making an allowance for the cost of
[Page 280]
the groynes. In this Court, no particular
argument was addressed to two other complaints before the Court of Appeal, i.e.,
the failure to value the air conditioning system in the building on the
basis that it was a mere chattel, and the failure to make an allowance for a
fresh water well on the land. Both of these matters were dealt with by Laidlaw
J.A.
I would, therefore, dismiss the appeal with
costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the respondent
corporation: Mason, Foulds, Arnup, Walter, Weir & Boeckh, Toronto.