Supreme Court of Canada
Hellens v. Densmore, [1957] S.C.R.
768
Date: 1957-10-01
Emmy Gudrun
Hellens, falsely called Emmy Gudrun Densmore (Suppliant) Appellant;
and
Andrew
William Densmore Respondent;
and
The Attorney
General Of British
Columbia Intervenant;
and
The Attorney
General Of Canada Intervenant.
1957: May 7, 8: 1957: October
1.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and
Taschereau, Rand, Locke, Cartwright Fauteux and Abbott JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Divorce—Remarriage—Validity
and effect of legislation—The Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857 (Eng.), c. 85,s. 57—An
Act to amend the Law relating to Divorce and Matrimonial Causes in England,
R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 76, s. 38, as amended by 1938, c. 13, s. 3.
The petitioner obtained from the Supreme Court of British
Columbia a decree of divorce which was stated to be "subject to Section 38
of the Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act, being Chapter 76 of the Revised
Statutes of British Columbia [1936]". Section 38 of the statute (which
first appeared as R.S.B.C. 1897, c. 62), before an amendment made by the
provincial Legislature in 1938, was identical with s. 57 of the English Matrimonial
Causes Act, 1857, and permitted the remarriage of a divorced person only
after the determination of an appeal or the expiration of the time for
appealing. Until the enactment of the
[Page 769]
British Columbia Divorce Appeals Act, 1937 (Can.), c.
4, the Courts in British Columbia had held that there was no right of appeal.
Before the expiration of the time for appealing, the petitioner went through a
form of marriage with the respondent in the Province of Alberta, where the
respondent was then domiciled. The parties subsequently became domiciled in British
Columbia. By her petition in these proceedings, the petitioner asked that her
"purported marriage" to the respondent be declared null and void.
Held (Kerwin C.J. and Locke and Abbott JJ. dissenting):
The petitioner was entitled to judgment.
Per Taschereau, Cartwright and Fauteux JJ.: The
enactment of s. 38 by the Legislature of British Columbia was unnecessary since
s. 57 of the English statute was still operative in British Columbia. The
incapacity to marry under s. 57 formed part of the substantive law of marriage
and divorce in British Columbia which, although it was dormant so long as there
was no right of appeal in divorce proceedings, became effective immediately
upon that right coming into existence. There being no evidence that the general
law of Alberta differed in this respect from that of British Columbia, the Court
should have assumed that it was the same. Accordingly, at the time of her
purported marriage to the respondent, the petitioner was under disability and
the marriage was invalid.
Per Rand J.: Section 57 of the English statute was
introduced into British Columbia before Confederation as a substantive measure,
although it remained procedurally inefficacious until provision was made for an
appeal. On that footing, the provision was now operative in British Columbia.
Per Kerwin C.J., dissenting: The history of the
legislation showed that s. 38 of the British Columbia statute was an enactment
by the Legislature of that Province, and it was ultra vires as
legislation respecting "Marriage and Divorce", within head 26 of s.
91 of the British North America Act. It was not a mere matter of
procedure but one of substantive law and had no relation to the solemnization
of marriage in the Province.
Per Locke and Abbott JJ., dissenting: Section 57
of the English Act was "from local circumstances inapplicable" in the
Colony of British Columbia and was therefore not introduced with the general
body of English laws in 1867. The provincial legislation was ultra vires
and there was, therefore, no impediment to the petitioner's marriage with the
respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the
Court of Appeal for British Columbia , affirming
a judgment of Wood J. . Appeal
allowed.
W. G. Burke-Robertson, Q.C., and J. J. Sutherland, for the petitioner,
appellant, and the Attorney-General of British
Columbia.
[Page 770]
J. M. Boucher and A. K.
Boucher, for the respondent.
D. H. W. Henry, Q.C., for
the Attorney General of Canada.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE (dissenting):—The
appellant, when a spinster, was married on August 10, 1943,
to Albert Robert Douglas Hellens in Alberta, where each was resident and domiciled. Some time
later the husband moved to British
Columbia, where he established his
domicile. The appellant secured a divorce from him by a decree of the Supreme
Court of British Columbia in Divorce and Matrimonial Causes, dated November 18, 1948,
but not entered until November 27, 1948. On January 19, 1949,
the appellant married the respondent, Andrew William Densmore, in Alberta,
where he was domiciled; whether the appellant was also domiciled there is
immaterial. One child, a daughter, was born to them on November 9, 1949.
In 1953 they moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, where they established their domicile. In March 1955, the appellant
filed a petition in the Supreme Court of British Columbia in Divorce and
Matrimonial Causes asking that what she described as her "purported
marriage" to Densmore be declared null and void and that she be given the
custody of the child.
The matter came before Wood J.
who, after notice to the Attorney-General of British Columbia, who was
represented by counsel, and to the Attorney General of Caanda, who did not
appear, dismissed the petition without costs . An
appeal by the appellant and the Attorney-General of British Columbia (as intervenant) to the Court of Appeal for British Columbia was dismissed , the
Court ordering the appellant to pay to the respondent, Densmore, his costs of
the appeal. That Court granted leave to the appellant and to the Attorney-General
of British Columbia to appeal to this Court and, by my order, the
Attorney General of Canada was permitted to intervene.
The present proceedings
originated in British Columbia, while the marriage to Densmore was celebrated in Alberta, but
it was not suggested that there is any difference between
[Page 771]
the relevant law of the two
Provinces. If there were, it might be pointed out that since it was not pleaded
that the law of Alberta applies, it should have been presumed in the Courts
below that it is the same as that of British
Columbia. In any event this Court
requires no evidence as to what laws may be in force at any particular time in
any of the Provinces of Canada and the question before us is as to the validity
of the marriage in Alberta in 1949 which, in turn, depends upon the effect of
the divorce in British Columbia in 1948.
Counsel for the appellant
contends that the Densmore marriage is invalid because it took place on January
19, 1949, within the time limited for appealing from judgments, orders or
decrees of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, i.e., 2 months from
their entry: The Court of Appeal Act, R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 57, s. 14, as amended
by 1946, c. 18, s. 2. Whether the Courts in British Columbia were correct in
holding in several cases decided after British Columbia entered Confederation
in 1871 that there was no right of appeal in matrimonial causes to the Court of
Appeal need not be considered. By the British Columbia Divorce Appeals Act,
1937, c. 4 (now R.S.C. 1952, c. 21), the Parliament of Canada provided that the
Court of Appeal for British Columbia should have jurisdiction to hear and
determine appeals from an order, judgment or decree of a Court of the Province
or a judge thereof having jurisdiction in divorce and matrimonial causes.
Section 2 of c. 11 of the statutes of British Columbia, 1938, enacting s. 8A of
the Court of Appeal Act, R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 57, is to the same effect,
with an added provision (subs. (2)) that: "The practice and procedure
governing appeals to the Court of Appeal from a judgment or order of the
Supreme Court or a Judge thereof shall apply to appeals to the Court of Appeal
in divorce and matrimonial causes."
The divorce decree of November
18, 1948, dissolved the marriage to Hellens and made such dissolution absolute,
but by its terms it was "subject to Section 38 of the Divorce and
Matrimonial Causes Act, being Chapter 76 of the Revised Statutes of British
Columbia", (i.e., the Revised Statutes of 1936). The Revised
Statutes of 1948 did not
[Page 772]
come into force until February 7,
1949, and therefore do not concern us. Section 38 reads as follows:
38. When the time hereby
limited for appealing against any decree dissolving a marriage shall have
expired, and no appeal shall have been presented against such decree, or when
any such appeal shall have been dismissed, or when in the result of any appeal
any marriage shall be declared to be dissolved, but not sooner, it shall be
lawful for the respective parties thereto to marry again, as if the prior
marriage had been dissolved by death: Provided always that no clergyman in holy
orders of the United Church of England and Ireland shall be compelled to
solemnize the marriage of any person whose former marriage may have been
dissolved on the ground of his or her adultery, or shall be liable to any suit,
penalty, or censure for solemnizing or refusing to solemnize the marriage of
any such person.
By c. 13, s. 3, of the 1938
statutes s. 38 was amended by striking out the word "hereby" in the
first line.
The history with reference to
this section is curious. It suffices to commence with s. 2 of Ordinance no. 7,
dated March 6, 1867, of the Colony of British Columbia (republished as
no. 70 in the Compiled Law of British Columbia, 1871):
From and after the passing
of this Ordinance the Civil and Criminal Laws of England as the same existed on
the 19th day of November, 1858, and so far as the same are not from local
circumstances inapplicable, are and shall be in force in all parts of the
Colony of British Columbia.
By force of this ordinance the
substance of the law with respect to divorce in force in British Columbia at
the time of its entry into Confederation is that found in the Imperial statute
"An Act to amend the Law relating to Divorce and Matrimonial Causes in
England", 1857, c. 85, as amended by 1858, c. 108, so far as it was not
from local circumstances inapplicable. British Columbia became part of Canada
on May 16, 1871, and by virtue of the application to it of s. 129 of the British
North America Act, 1867, the laws in force therein at that date were
continued, subject, nevertheless (except with respect to such as were enacted
by or existed under Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain or of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland) to be repealed,
abolished or altered by the Parliament of Canada or by the Legislature of the
Province according to their respective authority.
[Page 773]
In M., falsely called S. v. S.
,
the Full Court of British Columbia held that the Supreme Court of British
Columbia had jurisdiction to grant a divorce in a proper case and this view was
ultimately confirmed by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Watts
et al. v. Watts .
Nothing germane to the present discussion occurred in British Columbia after 1871, when the Province entered Confederation, until 1897, when
the Revised Statutes of British Columbia appeared. In that revision is found c.
62 intituled "An Act to amend the law relating to Divorce and Matrimonial
Causes in England" (the same title, it may be noted, as that of the
Imperial Act of 1857), containing 48 sections of the Imperial Act, including s.
57, which is s. 40 in the revised statute. However incongruous this is, s. 6 of
"An Act respecting the Revised Statutes of British Columbia", 1897
(B.C.), c. 41, provides that on a day to be named by proclamation of the
Lieutenant-Governor in council, the roll containing the statutes shall
"come into force and effect as and by the designation of "The Revised
Statutes of British Columbia, 1897' to all intents as if the same were
expressly embodied in and enacted by this Act to come into force and have
effect on, from, and after such day". The necessary proclamation was
promulgated.
If the proper conclusion be that
the Legislature merely inserted c. 62 in the 1897 revision as a matter of
convenience, then s. 57 of the Imperial Act (and hence s. 40 of R.S.B.C. 1897,
c. 62) was, because of local conditions, not in force. In fact a mere reading
of the provisions of the Imperial Act and of the British Columbia statute
discloses that many of them could not apply to British Columbia for various
reasons, including the references to certain Courts in England which did not
exist in British Columbia. Section 57 of the Imperial Act and s. 40 of c. 62 of
R.S.B.C. 1897, c. 62, and s. 38 as it appeared in R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 76, before
its amendment by 1938, c. 13, are the same.
However, in view of s. 6 of c. 41
of the 1897 annual statutes of British
Columbia, I cannot escape the
conclusion that the British Columbia Legislature did enact R.S.B.C. 1897, c.
62, and it therefore becomes necessary to consider the validity of s. 40
thereof. If at that time it was beyond the competence of the Legislature it
cannot affect
[Page 774]
the matter that subsequently
there was a Court in the Province to which an appeal from a decree of divorce
might be taken.
In my opinion it was ultra
vires. Under head 26 of s. 91 of the British North America Act,
"Marriage and Divorce" is within the exclusive legislative
jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada. Under head 12 of s. 92, "The
Solemnization of Marriage in the Province" is within the competence of a
provincial Legislature and, under head 14, "The Administration of Justice
in the Province including the Constitution, Maintenance and Organization of
Provincial Courts, both of Civil and Criminal Jurisdiction, and including Procedure
in Civil Matters in those Courts". This was not a mere matter of
procedure, but one of substantive law and has no relation whatsoever to the
solemnization of marriage: In re Marriage Legislation in Canada ;
The Attorney General for Alberta and Neilson v. Underwood .
There is no inconsistency between the decision of the President of the Probate
Division in Warter v. Warter and the
decision of the High Court of Australia in Miller v. Teale ,
on the one hand, and that of the Judicial Committee in Marsh v. Marsh ,
on the other. In fact the latter must be read with care in view of what was
there in issue and the Australian case depends upon the constitution of that
country, which differs from ours.
The appeal should be dismissed
subject only to a variation as to costs. There should be no costs in this Court
or in either of the Courts below. At the present time the child is in the
actual custody of the appellant and she should be left to take what proceedings
she may be advised, if any, in that connection.
The judgment of Taschereau,
Cartwright and Fauteux JJ. was delivered by
CARTWRIGHT J.:—This is an appeal,
brought pursuant to leave granted by the Court of Appeal for British Columbia,
[Page 775]
from a judgment of that Court
affirming a judgment of Wood J.
whereby the petition of the appellant, asking that her purported marriage to
the respondent be declared null and void, was dismissed.
The view of the facts on which
the Courts below acted may be briefly stated. On August 10, 1943, the
appellant, who was then a spinster, was married in the Province of Alberta to Albert Hellens. On November 18, 1948, on her
petition, a judgment was pronounced by Whittaker J. in the Supreme Court of
British Columbia dissolving the lastmentioned marriage. This judgment was entered
on November 27, 1948. On January 19, 1949, the appellant went through a
form of marriage in Alberta with the respondent. On November 9, 1949, a daughter
was born of this union. On March 10, 1955, the appellant left the respondent
and has since then resided and worked in Alberta.
The Courts below have proceeded
on the footing that, while prior to the commencement of the divorce proceedings
against Hellens he and the appellant had become domiciled in British Columbia,
she acquired a domicile of choice, or regained her domicile of origin, in
Alberta immediately upon the granting of the divorce and so was domiciled in
Alberta at the time of going through the form of marriage there with the
respondent. At the commencement of the present proceedings the respondent had
acquired a domicile in British Columbia.
It should be mentioned that
counsel for the Attorney General of British Columbia stated that he made no
admission as to the domicile of the appellant at the time of her marriage to
Densmore, but neither he nor any other counsel asked that any of the findings
of fact recited above should be varied. In dealing with the questions of law I
will therefore proceed on the assumption that the facts are as stated above.
The time limited for appealing
against the judgment dissolving the marriage of the appellant to Hellens was 2
months from the date of the entry of that judgment. The appellant's purported
marriage to the respondent was
[Page 776]
therefore solemnized before the
time limited for appealing against that judgment had expired, and the question
is whether by reason of that fact her purported marriage to the respondent is
void.
By the English Law Ordinance,
1867, Ordinances of British Columbia, 30 Vict., no. 7, it was enacted that from
and after its passing "the Civil and Criminal Laws of England as the same
existed on the 19th day of November, 1858, and so far as the same are not from
local circumstances inapplicable, are and shall be in force in all parts of the
Colony of British Columbia".
Up to May 16, 1871, the date on
which British Columbia became part of the Dominion of Canada, no
legislation affecting the question before us had been passed in the colony.
A number of decisions culminating
in that of the Judicial Committee in Watts et al. v. Watts ,
have established that the Supreme Court of British Columbia has jurisdiction to
entertain a petition for divorce between persons domiciled in that Province,
and that the jurisdiction is derived from the Matrimonial Causes Act,
1857, 20 & 21 Vict. (Eng.), c. 85.
Until 1885, no Court to hear
appeals had been constituted in British
Columbia. In his reasons for judgment
Sidney Smith J.A. reviews the decisions which have held that even after a Court
with appellate jurisdiction was constituted no appeal lay from a judgment in a
divorce action. I share the view of the learned justice of appeal that it is
not necessary in this appeal to express an opinion as to the correctness of
those decisions since the existence of the right of appeal in divorce actions
has been put beyond controversy by the British Columbia Divorce Appeals Act,
1937 (Can.), c. 4 (now R.S.C. 1952, c. 21), and the Court of Appeal Act
Amendment Act, 1938 (B.C.), c. 11, which was made retroactive to February
23, 1937. It appears to me to be equally unnecessary to express an opinion as
to whether either of the two last-mentioned enactments was necessary.
The course followed by the
Legislature of British Columbia in regard to the Matrimonial Causes Act,
1857, is traced in the reasons of Sidney Smith J.A. and it will be sufficient,
[Page 777]
for the purpose of understanding
the grounds on which the learned justices in the Courts below based their
conclusions, to point out that commencing with the revision of 1897 that Act
with some sections omitted was printed in the Revised Statutes of British
Columbia. In 1897 s. 57 of the English Act was printed without alteration as s.
40 of c. 62. It appeared in the same form and with the same section number in
R.S.B.C. 1911, c. 67, and in R.S.B.C. 1924, c. 70. In R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 76, it
appeared, still in its original form, as s. 38, reading as follows:
38. When the time hereby
limited for appealing against any decree dissolving a marriage shall have
expired, and no appeal shall have been persented against such decree, or when
any such appeal shall have been dismissed, or when in the result of any appeal
any marriage shall be declared to be dissolved, but not sooner, it shall be
lawful for the respective parties thereto to marry again, as if the prior
marriage had been dissolved by death: Provided always that no clergyman in holy
orders of the United Church of England and Ireland shall be compelled to
solemnize the marriage of any person whose former marriage may have been
dissolved on the ground of his or her adultery, or shall be liable to any suit,
penalty or censure for solemnizing or refusing to solemnize the marriage of any
such person.
Section 3 of the Divorce and
Matrimonial Causes Act Amendment Act, 1938 (B.C.), c. 13, reads as follows:
3. Section 38 of said chapter
76 [i.e., c. 76 of R.S.B.C. 1936] is amended by striking out the word
"hereby" in the first line.
It should be mentioned that the
operative part of the formal judgment of Whittaker J., dissolving the first
marriage of the appellant, is as follows:
This Court Doth Adjudge And
Decree that the marriage had and solemnized on the 10th day of August 1943 at
Grande Prairie in the Province of Alberta between your Petitioner, Emmy Gudrun
Hellens and the Respondent, Albert Robert Douglas Hellens, be and the same is
hereby dissolved, by reason that since the celebration thereof, the said
Respondent, Albert Robert Douglas Hellens, has been guilty of adultery with the
Woman Named, Olive Roller.
AND THIS COURT DOTH ORDER
AND ADJUDGE that the said Decree of Dissolution of marriage be and is hereby
made absolute.
PROVIDED THAT THIS DECREE
shall be subject to Section 38 of the Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act, being
Chapter 76 of the Revised Statutes of British Columbia.
At the trial Wood J. was of
opinion (1) that the amendment of 1938, striking out the word
"hereby" in s. 38, created an incapacity to marry which did not
previously exist and was ultra vires of the provincial Legislature as
[Page 778]
being in relation to
"Marriage and Divorce", and (ii) alternatively, that if the amendment
could be regarded as legislation in relation to the "Solemnization of
Marriage in the Province" it would not affect a marriage solemnized in Alberta. He
accordingly dismissed the petition.
In the Court of Appeal,
O'Halloran, Davey and Coady JJ.A. were of opinion that the appeal failed.
Sidney Smith and Sheppard JJ.A., dissenting, would have allowed the appeal and
declared the marriage void.
Coady J.A., with whom O'Halloran
J.A. and, subject to certain observations, Davey J.A. agreed, did not find it
necessary to decide whether the amendment of s. 38 in 1938 was intra vires
of the Legislature. Assuming its validity, he stated that there were two views
as to its effect, (i) that the decree dissolving the marriage, while restoring
the parties to the status of single persons, is conditional and inconclusive
until the time for appealing has expired with a consequential residual
incapacity inherent in and arising from the decree itself—a continuation of the
incapacity which existed during the marriage and operates to prevent the
parties from remarrying; and (ii) that the decree dissolving the marriage was
final and complete in every respect and restored the parties to the status of
single persons but that by another provision in the statute under which the
decree was granted there has been enacted an impediment on remarriage separate
and distinct from the divorce decree. The learned justice of appeal did not
have to choose between these views as he went on to hold that there being no
evidence as to the law of Alberta, the Court ought not to assume that the
Courts of that Province would give effect either to the incapacity mentioned in
the first view or to the impediment mentioned in the second.
The main ground upon which Sidney
Smith J.A. proceeded was that the enactment and amendment of s. 38 by the
Legislature were unnecessary as s. 57 of the Imperial Act continues to operate
in British Columbia mutatis mutandis, that the incapacity to marry,
until the time for appealing from a decree dissolving a marriage has expired or
in the result of any appeal a marriage has been declared dissolved, forms part
of the substantive law of marriage and divorce in British Columbia which, while
dormant so long
[Page 779]
as there was no right of appeal,
became effective immediately upon that right coming into existence. I agree
with this conclusion and with the reasons for it given by the learned justice
of appeal. It appears to me to follow from the reasoning of Gray and Crease JJ.
in M., falsely called S. v. S. , and
that of Martin J. in Sheppard v. Sheppard ,
approved by the Judicial Committee in Watts et al v. Watts, supra.
The nature and effect of the
incapacity existing, under s. 57, until the time for appealing has expired was
dealt with as follows by the Judge Ordinary in giving the judgment of the Court
in Chichester v. Mure :
The introduction of such a
clause [i.e., a clause permitting remarriage] into divorce Bills probably
caused the Legislature to make express provision as to the consequences of a
decree of dissolution of marriage pronounced by the Court about to be created.
If no express power to marry again had been given, it might have been argued,
from the practice in divorce Bills, that no such power was conferred by the
decree of the Court; and certainly, if no such power had been expressly given,
and it had been enacted that it should not be lawful for the parties to marry
again until a certain time had elapsed after the making of the decree, a
marriage solemnized before that time would have been void, for the parties
would have been thereby rendered incompetent to contract. Thus, if by the 57th
section it had been enacted "that it shall not be lawful for the
respective parties to a marriage dissolved by a decree of this Court to marry
again before the expiration of a certain time," no doubt could have
existed as to the prohibitory effect of those words; it seems to us their
meaning and effect must be held to be the same, although they are preceded by
words making it lawful to marry after the expiration of that time.
In Warter v. Warter ,
Sir James Hannen, dealing with the effect of a provision in the Indian Divorce
Act substantially the same as that contained in s. 57 of the Imperial Act, said
at p. 155:
Mrs. Tayloe was subject to
the Indian law of divorce, and she could only contract a valid second marriage
by shewing that the incapacity arising from her previous marriage had been
effectively removed by the proceedings taken under that law. This could not be
done, as the Indian law, like our own, does not completely dissolve the tie of
marriage until the lapse of a specified time after the decree. This is an
integral part of the proceedings by which alone both the parties can be
released from their incapacity to contract a fresh marriage.
[Page 780]
This reasoning was approved and
adopted in the judgment of the majority of the High Court of Australia (Dixon
C.J. and McTiernan, Fullagar and Taylor JJ.) in Miller v. Teale ,
a judgment which, in my opinion, correctly states the law, both as to the nature
and effect of the incapacity to remarry pending the expiration of the time
limited for appealing against a decree dissolving a marriage which results from
s. 57 of the Imperial Act, and as to the recognition of that incapacity by the
Courts of jurisdictions other than that in which the decree was pronounced.
In Brown v. Brown ,
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia was composed of the same five learned
justices of appeal who heard the appeal in the present case and their reasons
appear to indicate agreement with the view expressed by Sidney Smith J.A. in
the case at bar as to s. 57 forming part of the substantive law of British
Columbia and as to the nature of the incapacity to remarry resulting from it.
If I have understood the reasons in Brown v. Brown correctly, it would
appear that in the case at bar the Court of Appeal would have been unanimous in
holding the appellant's marriage to the respondent void, but for the
circumstances that at the time it was solemnized the appellant was domiciled,
and the marriage ceremony was performed, in a jurisdiction other than British
Columbia.
In my opinion the majority in the
Court of Appeal in the case at bar erred in holding that the petition failed
because of the lack of evidence as to the law of Alberta. In the absence of such
evidence the British Columbia Court should proceed on the basis that in Alberta the
general law, as distinguished from special statutory provisions, is the same as
that of British Columbia. It is the general law which determines whether the
Courts of one jurisdiction will recognize an incapacity to remarry until the
lapse of a specified time forming an integral part of the proceedings of the
Courts of another jurisdiction dissolving a former marriage of the parties, and
I have already expressed my opinion that that general law is correctly stated
in Warter
[Page 781]
v. Warter, supra, and in Miller v. Teale, supra. I refer
particularly to the judgment of the majority in the lastmentioned case at p.
94:
In English law a restraint
on remarriage so as to allow time for appealing appears to be regarded as
designed to give a provisional or tentative character to the decree dissolving
the marriage so that it does not yet take effect in all respects. It is
regarded as ancillary to the provision of the law which for a comparatively
brief time makes the decree absolute for dissolution contingently defeasible in
the event of appeal. It is as if there is a residual incapacity to remarry
arising out of the previous marriage and not yet removed by the process
provided for dissolving it.
As the foreign law effecting
the dissolution which alone sets the party free to marry treats the dissolution
as incomplete and not yet productive of that consequence, the law by which the
validity of the subsequent marriage is determined cannot disregard it. And that
will be so whether the question is referred to the lex domicilii as a
matter of capacity, or is governed by the lex loci celebrationis as one
of the essentials to the marriage.
In the case at bar, the assumption
that the general law of Alberta on the points which are decisive of this appeal is
the same as that of British Columbia is well-founded. The law of both Provinces in these
matters is, in my opinion, accurately stated in Warter v. Warter, supra,
and Miller v. Teale, supra.
I do not find it necessary to
express an opinion on the questions other than those dealt with above which
were discussed before us.
For the above reasons I would
allow the appeal and direct that judgment be entered declaring that the purported
marriage of the appellant to the respondent solemnized on January 19, 1949,
is null and void. At the present time the child is in the actual custody of the
appellant and the parties are left to take such proceedings, if any, as they
may be advised in that connection. Counsel informed us that in the event of the
appeal succeeding neither the appellant nor the Attorney-General of British Columbia would ask for costs. I would direct that there be no order as to the
costs of any party or of the intervenants in any Court.
RAND J.:—This appeal raises a question in the law of
divorce of British Columbia: it is whether a clause in a decree restraining
remarriage of the parties until the conclusion of an appeal that is or might be
taken is valid.
[Page 782]
In Watts et al. v. Watts ,
the Judicial Committee held that the adoption by the Province in 1858 of the
law of England as it then existed embraced the substantive law of divorce as
prescribed by the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857 (Eng.), c. 85; and that
it was within the jurisdiction of the provincial Supreme Court of that time to
enforce it. An examination of that statute shows the special tribunals and
procedures provided, and in many respects they were deeply involved with the
substantive provisions. The holding stands, as I view it, for the enactment by
adoption of those provisions as they are fairly to be drawn from the statute,
and that the law so adopted is to be accommodated to the judicial organs
administering the law generally in the Province. But the provision of the Matrimonial
Causes Act which forbade remarriage pending the period within which an
appeal from the special Court set up could be brought to the House of Lords was
an essential incident of the decree: is the law of the latter to be held to be
adopted but the annexed disability disregarded? I am unable to agree that law
adopted in such a wide and general fashion is to be so interpreted.
The governing fact is the
intention of the adopting legislature: is it to be taken to have intended to
introduce only those positive provisions that at the moment could, in
accordance with their precise language and by the existing juridical machinery,
be carried into execution? The Province was in its infancy: divorce was unknown
to its judicature; the blanket law gathered up by the enactment was, by the
principle then and now applied, to be confirmed or rejected by the Courts as it
was or was not adjudged to be appropriate to the social conditions of the
Province, an act of judicial legislation involving adaptation. That with the
increase of population and the general development of its political, social and
economic life, the apparatus of justice would undergo major modifications must
be attributed to the understanding of the legislators; and that with the extension
of the court system after the patterns then in existence in England and the
United States, such a provision originally inoperative because of the absence
of an appeal Court within the Province would then become efficacious through
the furnishing of procedure is, in my
[Page 783]
opinion, the sound view of what
was intended to be done. It was impossible for the legislators, lacking
omniscience, at that time to appreciate the particulars of such a body of law:
their idea was to introduce rules of civil order and relations which the
experience of England had converted into law. The Province was not at that
moment contemplating a constitutional change which would take it out of its
power thereafter to deal with divorce; what was intended was to infuse the life
of the Province with the matured rules of conduct of an older society to which
resort, present or future, could be made: to fill, as it were, the lacunae
in its legal order. I see nothing incompatible with a legal system in the early
stages of organization that laws be so enacted generally even though at the
time the machinery for enforcement is not then in existence. The adopted
restraint, for example, would be during the time of appeal as and when that
should be available. If for some reason an appeal, existing in 1858, were
temporarily abrogated, would the substantive rule thereupon disappear? I should
say not.
For these reasons, I take the
provision restraining remarriage pending appeal to have been introduced as a
substantive measure; and that it remained procedurally inefficacious until, by
provincial law, provision was made for appeal. That after Confederation a right
of appeal could be given by provincial law appears to me to be unquestionable
although the opposite opinion seems to have been held in the provincial Courts:
the administration of justice by the Province surely extends to the final
determination within the Province of the judgments of its own Courts. But in
the circumstances of this case, the particular jurisdiction giving an appeal
would be irrelevant to the question of adoption.
On that footing, the provision is
now operative within the Province. I agree that it is not law relating to
solemnization of marriage. I take the decree of divorce to be absolute, with a
disability imposed on the parties rendering
[Page 784]
them incapable of entering into
another marriage during the time prescribed: Marsh v. Marsh
by Lord Goddard:
This, of course, assumes
that the decree absolute was a valid decree, and on that assumption the
question admits of only one answer. It dissolved the marriage from the moment
it was pronounced, and at the date when the appeal by the intervener abated it
stood unreversed. The fact that neither spouse could remarry until the time for
appealing had expired in no way affects the full operation of the decree. It is
a judgment in rem, and unless and until a court of appeal reversed it the
marriage was for all purposes at an end.
In Miller v. Teale ,
at pp. 93-4, language is used which is argued to treat the effect of the
provision as withholding full force to the decree until disposed of in relation
to appeal. The last sentence seems to state the pith of the idea: "It is
as if there is a residual incapacity to marry arising out of the previous
marriage and not yet removed by the process provided for dissolving it". I
am disposed to accept the view of Lord Goddard. The conception of a
"residual incapacity" withheld from the force of the decree seems to
me to retain an incident when that to which it is annexed, the marriage, has
ceased to exist.
That being the provincial law
before Confederation, it became thereafter law as if enacted by Parliament. As
paramount law, it would determine the capacity for marriage of the persons
affected throughout Canada; and there could be no question of a Province not
giving it recognition. Apart from questions of solemnization, with one source
of law for marriage and divorce, personal capacity or incapacity is the same
throughout the nation.
I would allow the appeal, set
aside the judgment of Wood J., and direct a declaration that the remarriage in Alberta was a
nullity. There will be no costs. At the present time the appellant has the
actual custody of the child in relation to whom the parties should be left to
take whatever proceedings, if any, they may be advised.
[Page 785]
The judgment of Locke and Abbott
JJ. was delivered by
LOCKE J. (dissenting):—
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia by
which the appeal of the present appellant from a judgment of the late Mr.
Justice Wood dismissing the petition was
dismissed. Sidney Smith and Sheppard JJ.A., dissenting, would have allowed the
appeal and granted to the petitioner the relief sought.
The facts proven by the evidence,
in so far as it is necessary to consider them, are as follows:
On August 10, 1943, the appellant
was married at Grande Prairie, Alberta, to
A. R. D. Hellens.
On November 18, 1948, a decree
dissolving the said marriage was granted in the Supreme Court of British
Columbia at Cranbrook. The decree was entered on November 27, 1948.
After declaring the marriage to be dissolved, the decree read in part:
AND THIS COURT DOTH ORDER
AND ADJUDGE that the said Decree of Dissolution of marriage be and is hereby
made absolute.
PROVIDED THAT THIS DECREE
shall be subject to Section 38 of the Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act, being
Chapter 76 of the Revised Statutes of British Columbia.
The reference in the decree was
to c. 76 of R.S.B.C. 1936. The section, as contained in the revised statutes of
that year, is a replica of s. 57 of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857 (Eng.), c. 85.
After the revision of 1936, by c. 13 of the statutes of 1938, the Legislature
assumed to amend s. 38 by striking out of the first line thereof the word
"hereby" and, as thus amended, the section, so far as it is relevant,
read:
When the time limited for
appealing against any decree dissolving a marriage shall have expired, and no
appeal shall have been presented against such decree, or when any such appeal
shall have been dismissed, or when in the result of any appeal any marriage
shall be declared to be dissolved, but not sooner, it shall be lawful for the
respective parties thereto to marry again, as if the prior marriage had been
dissolved by death.
At the time of the entry of the
decree, the time limited for appealing from a decree of divorce in British Columbia was 2 months from the time of entry
[Page 786]
On January 19, 1949, the
appellant assumed to enter into a contract of marriage with the respondent
Densmore at Edmonton, Alberta, this being before the expiration of the 2-month
period above mentioned. It is admitted that on January 19, 1949, both the
appellant and Densmore were domiciled in Alberta.
The appellant's petition, after
stating the facts as to the two marriages and the divorce decree, and that a
child was born of the marriage to Densmore, asked for a declaration that what
was described as the "purported marriage" be declared null and void
and that the petitioner should be awarded custody of the infant child. There
was no allegation that under the laws of the Province of Alberta the contract of marriage with Densmore was a nullity
and no reference to the laws of that Province was made.
The answer filed by Densmore
asserted that the petitioner and the respondent were lawfully married at Edmonton at
the time stated and that the petitioner's previous marriage to Hellens had been
dissolved by the decree pronounced at Cranbrook. The respondent, in addition to asking for the
dismissal of the petition, claimed custody of the child and a declaration that
the infant was legitimate. No reference was made to the law of Alberta. It
may, however, be fairly contended for the respondent that the allegation that
the parties were lawfully married at Edmonton should be construed as meaning
that they were married in accordance with the laws of that Province.
The matter came on for hearing
before the late Mr. Justice Wood and it was apparently that learned judge who
considered that a constitutional question arose for determination by reason of
the amendment of 1938, by which an alteration was made in s. 38 of R.S.B.C.
1936, c. 76, above mentioned. Accordingly, he directed that notice be given to
the Attorneys General of the Province and of the Dominion to enable them to be
heard. It should be said that no evidence had been adduced by either of the
parties to the litigation as to the law of the Province of Alberta as of January 19, 1949.
[Page 787]
Upon the ground that if the
amendment of 1938 created an incapacity to marry which did not previously exist
it was ultra vires, while if it had to do with the solemnization of
marriage in the Province it did not affect marriages in Alberta, the learned
judge dismissed the petition.
The Attorney-General of British Columbia, as intervenant, and the present appellant appealed to the Court of
Appeal. The constitutional question was argued in that Court but Coady J.A.,
with whom O'Halloran J.A. concurred, and Davey J.A., who were agreed that the
appeal should be dismissed, did not consider it necessary to determine it,
considering that the petition should be dismissed in the absence of evidence
that under the laws of Alberta the marriage entered into with Densmore was a
nullity. Sidney Smith J.A. was of the opinion that deleting the word
"hereby" from the section had neither taken away nor added anything
to the section and that its effect was to create an incapacity to marry during
the period limited for appeal. Sheppard J.A. considered that the section as
amended dealt with a matter of procedure within head 14 of s. 92 of the British
North America Act and was, therefore, within the legislative jurisdiction
of the Province and that its purpose was to fix the time when the decree for
divorce should become operative for the purpose of removing the incapacity to
remarry.
The disposition of these
important and difficult matters necessitates a consideration of the manner in
which the jurisdiction in divorce and matrimonial causes is vested in the
Supreme Court of British Columbia.
By Ordinance No. 70, made on
March 6, 1867, the Governor of British Columbia, with the advice and consent of
the Legislative Council of the Colony, enacted that:
From and after the passing
of this Ordinance, the Civil and Criminal Laws of England, as the same existed
on the 19th day of November, 1858, and so far as the same are not from local
circumstances inapplicable, are and shall be in force in all parts of the
Colony of British Columbia.
British Columbia became part of the Dominion of Canada by an order of
Her Majesty in Council made pursuant to the terms of s. 146 of the British
North America Act on May 16, 1871. By virtue of s. 10 of the Terms of Union and of s.
129 of the British North America Act, the
laws in
[Page 788]
force in the Province at the time
of its admission were continued, subject, except with respect to such as were
enacted by or existed under Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain or of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to be repealed,
abolished or altered by the Parliament of Canada or by the Legislature of the
Province according to the authority of the Parliament or of that Legislature
under the Act.
It was decided by the Full Court
of the Province in M., falsely called S. v. S. ,
that the Supreme Court of British Columbia has in that Province all the
jurisdiction conferred on the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes under
the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857, 20-21 Vict., c. 85, as amended by 21-22
Vict., c. 108. While this decision was not followed by Clement J. in the case
of Watt v. Watt , the
jurisdiction of the Court was affirmed in the appeal taken to the Judicial
Committee from that decision: Watts et al. v. Watts .
As head 26 of s. 91 of the British
North America Act vests exclusive legislative authority in the Parliament
of Canada in relation to divorce and as the Province is, accordingly, excluded
from that field, save as to matters of procedure, it is to the Imperial statute
that one must look to determine the extent of the Court's jurisdiction. In the
Colony of British Columbia, the Governor and the Legislative Council might have
legislated but they did not do so, and while Parliament has by the Divorce
Act, 1925, c. 41, dealt in part with the subject-matter, nothing is
contained in that legislation which affects the powers of the Court under the
statute of 1857 as amended.
Much of that statute is
inapplicable to British Columbia, such as the sections setting up a Court for Divorce
and Matrimonial Causes, declaring who shall be the judges of that Court,
defining the jurisdiction of the Judge Ordinary, and providing for appeals to
the House of Lords. Section 57, where it read:
When the Time hereby limited
for appealing against any Decree dissolving a Marriage shall have expired,
had reference to the times for
appeal limited in other sections of that statute, none of which are applicable.
[Page 789]
The question as to whether an
appeal might be taken from a decree granted in British Columbia was considered
by the Full Court of the Province in Scott v. Scott ,
which decided that there was no appeal in such matters to the Full Court.
This decision was followed in Brown v. Brown .
In 1937 Parliament enacted as c.
4 the British Columbia Divorce Appeals Act, which declared that the
Court of Appeal of the Province should have jurisdiction to hear and determine
appeals from any judgment or decree of a Court having jurisdiction in divorce
and matrimonial causes. In the year following, by c. 11, the Legislature of the
Province amended the Court of Appeal Act by adding sections which
declared the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal to hear such appeals, and
directed that the practice and procedure governing appeals should be the same
as applied to appeals from other judgments of the Supreme Court.
It was in the same year that the
Legislature, by c. 13, assumed to amend s. 38 of R.S.B.C., c. 76 in the manner
above indicated and to repeal s. 37 of c. 76, which was s. 55 of the Matrimonial
Causes Act, 1857, verbatim and dealt with appeals from the Judge
Ordinary to the Full Court in England.
It is to be remembered that the
power vested in the Court to grant decrees of divorce is conferred by the
statute of 1857 as amended and by c. 41 of the statutes of Canada for
1925. The Province, as pointed out, could not legislate on this aspect of the
matter, though the course that has been followed in British Columbia since 1938 would rather indicate that the Legislature has assumed that
it could do so.
For reasons which are not clear
to me, part of the Imperial statute has appeared as a numbered chapter of the
revised statutes of the Province since 1897, as if it had been enacted by the
Legislature.
The preamble to the statute (c.
41) passed on May 8, 1897, which authorized the revision of that year, recites
that
it has been found expedient
to revise and consolidate a new edition of the laws of this Province, including
the Statute Law of England in force in and applicable here.
[Page 790]
The revision contained, as c. 62,
an Act which bore the following heading: "An Act to amend the law relating
to Divorce and Matrimonial Causes in England." These words were preceded by the following:
"Imperial: 20 & 21 Victoria, Chap. 85; 21 & 22 Victoria, Chap.
108." The entire Act was not included and the numbers of some of the
sections as they appeared in the Imperial statute were changed. Section 57
appeared as s. 40.
Following the revision of 1897,
by c. 40 of the statutes of 1898, the revision was approved. The Act, however,
contains no specific reference to c. 62.
It is abundantly clear that while
the Act was thus given a number as if it had been passed by the Legislature,
the purpose was merely to include it as one of the Imperial statutes which, to
the extent that it was not from local circumstances inapplicable, was in force
in the Province.
The same course was followed in
later revisions of the statutes and the Act appeared as c. 67 of R.S.B.C. 1911,
c. 70 of R.S.B.C. 1924, c. 76 of R.S.B.C. 1936, and c. 97 of R.S.B.C. 1948. In
all of these revisions the heading "An Act to amend the Law relating to Divorce
and Matrimonial Causes in England" was retained. The description of the Imperial
Act, by giving the reference to the statutes of 1857 and 1858, was omitted
after 1897.
It should be noted that s. 37 of
R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 76, which the Legislature assumed to repeal in 1937, was
merely a replica of s. 55 of the Imperial statute, which provided that any
person dissatisfied with any decision of the Court in any matter which,
according to the provisions of that Act, might be made by the Judge Ordinary
alone, might, within three calendar months, appeal therefrom to the Full Court.
This was one of the many sections which were inapplicable to the Colony and to
the Province of British Columbia and had never been in force in either. Thus, the Legislature was
assuming to repeal a section of the Imperial statute, which was, of course,
beyond its powers by virtue of s. 129 of the British North America Act
above referred to: Dobie v. The Temporalities Board .
As appears, however, from the
revision of 1948, s. 37 was excluded as if it had been repealed. Conceivably,
this may have been done simply to indicate that the section was one
[Page 791]
of those which, by their terms,
were clearly inapplicable, though other sections, such as ss. 1 and 3, still
appear in the Revised Statutes of 1948.
The action of the Legislature in
1938 in assuming to strike out the word "hereby" from the opening
phrase of s. 38 appears to have been done on the assumption that c. 76 was a
statute of the Province of British Columbia which its Legislature might amend,
rather than being a reprint of an Imperial statute in force in the Province.
The amendment clearly cannot be supported on that basis and appears to me to be
wholly ineffective, unless s. 38 of c. 76 is to be treated as part of an Act of
the Legislature of British Columbia and the section itself as one dealing, as
suggested by Mr. Justice Sheppard, with the procedure in civil matters in the
Courts of the Province, and thus falling under head 14 of s. 92.
In my opinion, this cannot be
done. As the above-recited history shows, the Legislature has never assumed to
legislate on the subject of divorce otherwise than to provide rules for the
exercise of the jurisdiction vested in the Supreme Court by the Imperial and
the Dominion statutes, and, in the exercise of the further powers given by head
14, constituted the Court where such jurisdiction may be exercised. It may
perhaps be suggested that in this indirect manner the Legislature, by the
statute of 1938, was simply declaring the time at which divorce decrees granted
in the exercise of the jurisdiction should become effective. This might, in my
opinion, have been done by an Act dealing with the matter as one of procedure
in the Courts, but this is not what was done, but rather an attempt to amend the
Imperial statute.
The question to be determined is
whether s. 57 of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857, was, in the language
of Ordinance no. 70, "not from local circumstances inapplicable" to
the Colony of British Columbia.
The portion of the section to be considered,
since it prohibits remarriage within the time limited for appealing, affects
the marriage status of those to whom it applies and is substantive law. It is
not a matter of procedure. The date as of which this question is to be
determined is, in my opinion, November 19, 1858.
[Page 792]
The disability, according to s.
57, remains until the time limited for exercising the right of appeal given by
that section has expired or until any such appeal shall have been dismissed.
The appeal sections, as I have pointed out, were held not to be applicable and
there has been no suggestion on the argument before us that Scott v. Scott,
supra, and Brown v. Brown, supra, were wrongly decided. The
provisions of s. 57, which depended for their efficacy on the appeal sections
thus found to have been inapplicable, must, in my opinion, be held equally
inapplicable.
Sidney Smith J.A. has expressed
the view that whether or not the 1938 statute, which assumed to delete the word
"hereby" from s. 38, was intra vires, that section was in
force in the Province and applied to the appeal provided for by the Dominion
legislation of 1938. There is, I think, some support for this view to be found
in a passage from the judgment of Martin J., as he then was, in Sheppard v.
Sheppard at p.
503, which, in turn, refers to a passage from the judgment of Gray J. in S.
v. S., supra, and of Crease J. in that case. However, as the passage relied
upon indicates, the learned judges in S. v. S. were talking about
"a partially dormant or abeyant principle of jurisdiction, to become
effective later on as the machinery arrived" and their consideration was
not directed to a matter such as that to be decided in this case. It may be
added that while the judgment of that learned judge, Martin J., was approved by
the Judicial Committee in its judgment in Watts et al. v. Watts, supra,
that approval was directed to that portion of the decision which held that the
Supreme Court of British Columbia had jurisdiction in divorce and not to any
question such as the present one. In Brown v. Brown, which was decided
by the Full Court of British Columbia the year following the decision in Sheppard
v. Sheppard, it was not suggested in argument or in the judgments that what
had been said by Martin J. in Sheppard's Case affected the matter.
Applying the language quoted from
the earlier cases, Sidney Smith J.A. has expressed the view that the part of
the section creating the disability during the periods limited by the English
sections should be regarded as having been in abeyance until the time in 1937
when the Dominion
[Page 793]
statute vested jurisdiction in
the Court of Appeal to entertain such appeals, and the amendment to the Court
of Appeal Act thereafter defined the manner of its exercise. Thus, while
the language of the section by its very terms refers to a right of appeal which
never existed in British Columbia, it would be applied mutatis mutandis from
that date.
As to this, it is to be
remembered that, from the time the Colony of British Columbia entered Confederation
in 1871, the exclusive legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada
extended to marriage and divorce under head 26 of s. 91. The same legislature
which passed the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857, passed the British
North America Act and, to give effect to the argument, it would be
necessary to decide that the exclusive legislative authority in divorce matters
given to Parliament by the later statute could be displaced by a provision in
an earlier Act affecting marital status which had remained dormant from 1858 to
1938, but then came into force and became part of the substantive law of the
Province. With the greatest respect, I think this to be unsound.
There was, in my opinion, no
impediment to the marriage of the appellant and Densmore.
The question of the custody of
the child should be dealt with in the Court of first instance.
I would dismiss this appeal.
Appeal allowed without
costs, KERWIN C.J. and LOCKE
and ABBOTT JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the
petitioner, appellant, and for the Attorney-General of British Columbia, intervenant: Sutherland & Forbes, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Boucher & Sauer, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the Attorney
General of Canada: F. P. Varcoe, Ottawa.