Supreme Court of Canada
Bank of Canada v. Bank of Montreal, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 1148
Date: 1977-06-14
The Bank of Canada (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
The Bank of Montreal (Defendant) Respondent;
and
Bay Bus Terminal
(North Bay) Limited and Bay Bus Terminal (North Bay) Limited name changed to
John Palangio Enterprises Limited operating as Deluxe Coach Lines and John
Devost Respondents.
1977: January 27; 1977: June 14.
Present: Laskin C.J. and Martland, Judson,
Ritchie, Pigeon, Dickson, Beetz and de Grandpré JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Bills and notes—Currency and legal
tender—Bank of Canada bank-notes (pre-1967 form)—Whether promissory
notes—Obligation of Bank of Canada to replace destroyed bank-note—Bills of
Exchange Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. B-5, ss. 10, 156, 157, 176.
In 1959 the Bank of Montreal arranged with
the Post Office to have delivered from the Bank’s chief office in Montreal to its branch office in
Temiskaming a package containing Bank of Canada bank-notes. While in transit in
a bus owned by Bay Bus Terminal (North Bay) Limited most of the mail including the bank-notes was destroyed by
a fire in the bus. The Bank of Montreal sued Bay Bus for $23,307.50, the value
of the destroyed bank-notes less an amount of $2,692.50 received from the Bank
of Canada in exchange for partially burned notes. The trial judge took the view
that any action which Bay Bus contended the Bank of Montreal should have taken
against the Bank of Canada for replacement of the destroyed notes was unlikely
to succeed and found in favour of the Bank of Montreal. On appeal by Bay Bus
the Court of Appeal ordered that the Bank of Canada be added and joined as a
party defendant to the action and that the writ of summons be amended
accordingly; and further ordered that there be added to the endorsement of the
writ the Bank of Montreal’s claims against the Bank of Canada. The Bank
of Canada entered an appearance and the Court of Appeal directed a new trial on
all issues. While the Statement of Claim as amended alleged that the bank-notes
were destroyed or lost the parties chose to submit a statement
[Page 1149]
of facts for the determination of a point of
law pursuant to Rule 124 of the Ontario Rules of Practice. This statement of
facts recited that “at least one bank-note…bearing a face value of $5.00 was
destroyed by the fire” and that that bank-note was one issued by the Bank of
Canada. The bank-note in question was issued pursuant to the Bank of Canada
Act, R.S.C. 1952., c. 13 as amended by 1953-54 (Can.), c. 33, the text
of the note was under the signature of the then Governor and Deputy Governor of
the Bank of Canada and contained the statement “Bank of Canada will pay to the
bearer on demand”. On the motion under Rule 124 the judge found that the
Bank of Montreal was entitled to the relief sought against the Bank of Canada
and this judgment was affirmed in the Court of Appeal.
Held on equal
division (Laskin C.J. and Martland, Judson and Dickson JJ. dissenting): The
appeal should be dismissed.
Per Ritchie,
Pigeon, Beetz and de Grandpré JJ.: The $5 bank-note in question was a
promissory note within the meaning of s. 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange
Act. That, as a bank‑note, it had characteristics which made it
something more than an ordinary promissory note could not affect its status as
a promissory note. Its quality of being itself legal tender was not
incompatible with it being a promissory note. The bank-note in question having
been destroyed the Bank of Montreal was entitled to the remedy at law sought by
it, that is judgment against the Bank of Canada to the amount of the destroyed
note under s. 10 of the Bills of Exchange Act.
A destroyed note should not be treated as a
lost one. The resolution of the quite different problems which might arise in
relation to lost bank-notes must remain for consideration in a future case.
Per Laskin
C.J. and Martland, Judson and Dickson JJ. dissenting: The issue depended
on whether the Bank of Canada note involved in the litigation was a promissory
note, within s. 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act. As a result of
an amendment to the Bank of Canada Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 13, and to the Currency,
Mint and Exchange Fund Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 315, by 1966-67 (Can.), c. 88,
ss. 12 and 20, the words “will pay to bearer on demand” no longer appear on Bank
of Canada notes and the issue arising in this case could presumably not arise
under bank notes issued since the amendment. The entire support of the
judgments in appeal rested on the fact that these words appeared on the
destroyed five dollar note which is the subject of the present proceed-
[Page 1150]
ings. Having regard to the position of the
Bank of Canada as sole issuer of notes with the character of legal tender a
bank-note should not be regarded as a promissory note under s. 176(1). The
central Bank was not a mere debtor giving security to a creditor and the words “will
pay to the bearer on demand” could not turn what was itself money into a
different document calling for the payment of money.
[Banco de Portugal v. Waterlow and Sons,
Limited, [1932] A.C. 452, followed; Suffell v. The Bank of England (1881-82), 9 Q.B.D. 555; Gillet
v. The Bank of England (1889-90), 6 T.L.R. 9; R. v. Brown (1854-57), 8 N.B.R.
13; Raphael v. The Governor and Company of the Bank of England (1855-56), 17 Commons Bench Reports
161; McDonnell v. Murray (1858‑59), 9 Irish L. Rep. 495; The
Australian Joint Stock Bank v. The Oriental Bank (1866), 5 New South Wales Sup. Crt. Rep. 129; Jefferson
v. The Ulster Bank (1900), 34 Irish Law Time Rep. 58; Hong Kong and
Shanghai Banking Corporation v. Lo Lee Shi, [1928] A.C. 181; Re Toronto
Beaches Election; Ferguson v. Murphy, [1943] O.R. 787; Pillow v.
L’Espérance (1902), 22 Que. S.C. 213; Hansard v. Robinson (1827),
108 E.R. 659; Pierson v. Hutchinson (1809), 170 E.R. 1132; Woodford
v. Whitely (1830), 173 E.R. 1243; Clarke v. Quince (1834), 3 Dowl,
26; Blackie v. Pinding (1848), 136 E.R. 1225; Crowe v. Clay (1854),
9 Ex. Rep. 604; Wright v. Lord Maidstone, (1854-55) 1 K. & J.R. 701;
Banque d’Algérie c. Casteras 1867, Dalloz 1.289, referred to.]
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario dismissing an
appeal from a judgment of Addy J. on a
motion under Rule 124 of the Ontario Rules of Practice. Appeal dismissed on
equal division, Laskin C.J. and Martland, Judson and Dickson JJ. dissenting.
J.J. Robinette, Q.C., for the appellant.
Brendon O’Brien, Q.C., for the respondent
Bank of Montreal.
George Wallace, Q.C., for the respondents Bay Bus
Terminal (North Bay) Limited et al.
The judgment of Laskin C.J. and Martland, Judson
and Dickson JJ. was delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE (dissenting)—I have had
the advantage of seeing the reasons prepared by
[Page 1151]
my brother Beetz, under which he would dismiss
the Bank of Canada’s appeal. Although Beetz J. left open the question of
the Bank’s liability to replace a lost bank note, I cannot see how any
different conclusion could be reached in that respect if the obligation to
replace or to suffer judgment for the face amount exists in respect of a bank
note that has been destroyed. True, the success will be pyrrhic in the case of
a lost bank note since the claimant against the Bank must give security to it
under s. 156(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. B-5.
Although an action in such a situation is unlikely, the principle must be the
same, depending in both cases on finding that the Bank of Canada note involved
in the present litigation is a promissory note, within s. 176(1) of the Act.
As a result of an amendment to the Bank of
Canada Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 13, and to the Currency, Mint and Exchange
Fund Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 315 by 1966-67 (Can.), c. 88, ss. 12 and 20, the
words “will pay to bearer on demand” no longer appear on Bank of Canada notes,
and I take it that the issue that arises in this case under a note that contains
those words could not arise under bank notes issued since the 1967 amendment.
In short, the entire support for the judgments in appeal lies in the fact that
the words “will pay to bearer on demand” appeared on the destroyed five dollar
note which is the subject of the present proceedings.
The liability of the carrier to answer for the
value of the destroyed notes does not arise in the issue raised between the
appellant Bank and the respondent Bank of Montreal. Moreover, there could be no
subrogation of the appellant to any claim of the respondent Bank against the
carrier if the respondent Bank is entitled to succeed against the appellant
under the Bills of Exchange Act; that would be independent of any
liability of the carrier to the Bank of Montreal. Nonetheless, it seems to me
that the issue now before us could have been raised by the carrier claiming as
bailee of the notes, destroyed during carriage, to have them replaced by the
appellant Bank. I see no difference between a claim by the bailee (although it
would have to account to the Bank of Montreal)
[Page 1152]
and a claim by the respondent Bank, so far as
the liability of the Bank of Canada is concerned.
I go further. If the position taken by the
respondent Bank of Montreal and in the Courts below is correct, then any person
accidentally or carelessly destroying a Bank of Canada note of the type
involved in this case (for example, destruction by fire when sitting in front
of one’s fireplace) would be entitled to have the appellant Bank replace
the note. Such a person would not be regarded as having destroyed his own
property—and thus have no claim against anyone else for its value—but as having
destroyed a promissory note under which he had a claim against the maker and,
hence, would be entitled to have it replaced as a matter of the law merchant,
preserved in that respect by s. 10 of the Bills of Exchange Act.
It would have been a simple matter, of course,
for the Bank of Canada legislation or for the Bills of Exchange Act to
have said that the latter Act does not apply to notes issued by the Bank, as
being legal tender recognized in our law, in short our paper money. This was
not done, and we are faced with a contention of literal interpretation and
application of s. 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act, despite the fact
that a separate code governing the establishment and operation of the Bank of
Canada in relation to the Canadian monetary system has been promulgated from
the point of view of the public character of the system as contrasted with the
essentially private relationships which engage the Bills of Exchange Act.
Under its constituent Act, as it stood at the
time the present litigation was instituted (see R.S.C. 1952, c. 13, am.
1953-54, c. 33), the Bank of Canada is the fiscal agent of the Government. Its
dealings are with governments and with chartered banks, as by the purchase of
securities, making of loans and acceptance of deposits from them against which,
of course, they will draw as the occasion requires. The preamble to the Bank
of Canada Act is an indicator of the nature and range of functions to be
discharged by the appellant. It reads as follows:
WHEREAS it is desirable to establish a
central bank in Canada to
regulate credit and currency in the best
[Page 1153]
interests of the economic life of the
nation, to control and protect the external value of the national monetary unit
and to mitigate by its influence fluctuations in the general level of
production, trade, prices and employment, so far as may be possible within the
scope of monetary action, and generally to promote the economic and financial
welfare of the Dominion:…
In addition to the foregoing features of the
position of the Bank of Canada, it is the sole issuer of notes that have the
character of legal tender. The notes are non-convertible into gold, and that
has been the case from the very beginning of the Bank of Canada’s
operations. If a person were to offer a pre-1967 note to a chartered bank to
enforce the Bank of Canada’s promise to pay to the bearer on demand the
face value of the note, he would get another, perhaps a less worn one, of the
same face value. Nothing is accomplished in any legal sense by such an
exchange. It is to engage in a charade to contend or suggest that the words “will
pay to the bearer on demand”, fastening on them alone, give a pre-1967 note the
character of a promissory note under the Bills of Exchange Act. I do not
accept the submission that the pre-1967 notes of the Bank of Canada fall within
the definition of a promissory note under s. 176(1) of the Bills of
Exchange Act. I reject it for two reasons.
First, the submission gives no force to the
position of the Bank of Canada under its constituent Act, pays no regard to the
relationship between the Bank of Canada and the chartered banks through whom
the Bank of Canada’s notes reach the public, and treats the Bank of
Canada as if it were a private debtor giving security in the form of a
promissory note to a creditor. The Bank of Canada does not have that character
in respect of its note issuing authority, a matter that goes to the money
supply and the monetary policy. Second, it is wrong to characterize the Bank of
Canada note involved in this case as a promissory note under the definition in
s. 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act. The definition is in these
words:
[Page 1154]
176. (1) A
promissory note is an unconditional promise in writing made by one person to
another, signed by the maker, engaging to pay, on demand or at a fixed or
determinable future time, a sum certain in money, to, or to the order of, a
specified person, or to bearer.
What is said to be an unconditional promise to
pay a sum certain in money is itself money. The words on the face of the paper
money, “will pay to the bearer on demand”, cannot alter its character as money
and turn it into a different document which calls for the payment of money.
Moreover, I find it impossible to isolate the
Bank of Canada’s note issuing authority from its host of operations as a
public institution and then, by such segregation, to adapt the Bills of
Exchange Act to the characterization of its notes. Indeed, reliance on
cases dealing with commercial banks can only be misleading if used to establish
a parallel with a central bank like the Bank of Canada. I refer in this
connection to a standard Canadian book on central banking, Plumptre, Central
Banking in the British Dominions (1940), where the author says this (at p.
29):
…A central bank looks rather like a
commercial bank. Each usually has a capital, a reserve fund accumulated from
profits, cash reserves, liquid investments, and deposits of various sorts. A
casual observer could no doubt detect certain differences in their balance
sheets, for instance almost all the liabilities of a central bank are usually
payable on demand, while the commercial banks are entitled to require so many
days’ or months’ notice before meeting many of their liabilities.
On the other side of the balance, the assets of a central bank appear more
liquid, more easily convertible into cash; for the assets of a commercial bank,
in addition to marketable securities, include loans to farmers pending the sale
of their crops, loans to businesses pending the disposal of stocks, goods and
so forth. The observer is easily led to believe that the chief differences
between commercial and central banking lie in such matters.
But the truth is otherwise. The divergence
runs deeper. It is so deep that one can scarcely avoid miscon-
[Page 1155]
ception in using the language, the
terminology, of commercial banking to describe central banking; and yet it is
the only language that has been devised for the purpose. The only protection
against misapprehension arising from incongruous language is to grasp the point
of view of a central bank; and this involves shedding, for the time, the point
of view of a commercial bank, and, indeed, of ordinary business. If one asks
why, despite its incongruities, the same language is used for both, the answer
must be sought in the past. It is because the leading central banks emerged
only recently as a species distinct from commercial banks.
In dealing with a central bank’s
note-issuing authority and its relation to required reserves, Plumptre, op.
cit., at p. 33, explains the situation as follows:
… The regulation of reserves is usually
connected with the regulation of the note issue from which it should nowadays
be largely or entirely separate. This connection is the result of the
historical evolution of central banking in England and elsewhere. As matters stand today in the Dominion and most
other countries there is no clear reason why the volume of note issue should be
ultimately limited by the foreign assets held by the central bank; for
the volume of note Issue changes chiefly in response to the public’s
need for hand-to-hand currency. This volume may be related to the state of the
country’s international payments and thus to requirements for reserves
of foreign assets; but the relationship is exceedingly distant and complex.
In a sense the note issue is fundamentally
important to a central bank; and in another sense it is quite unimportant. It
is important because, since central bank notes are legal tender and often, in
these days, practically the only important form of legal tender money
available, control of the note issue gives the bank control over what, in the
last resort, is legally the basis of the whole financial system. The note issue
is unimportant because in fact, either by law or by custom, the commercial
banks keep their reserves chiefly in the form of deposits in the central bank
rather than its notes. In practice it is the banks’ reserves that lie at
the basis of a country’s credit structure and financial system. Thus,
ultimately under the law, control of the note issue is fundamental; in fact,
under prevailing customs, control of the banks’ reserves is fundamental.
No doubt the banks would be unwilling to keep reserves in the central bank if
they were not assured that, if requested, legal tender notes
[Page 1156]
would be forthcoming. A central bank’s
active efforts to control credit, however, and through credit control to
influence the economic condition of the country, are nowadays directed towards
varying the banks’ reserves; and the note issue, serving the same lowly
role as subsidiary coin, changes passively up and down in response to the country’s
requirements for that particular form of monetary medium.
Even looking at the notes in isolation, I hold
the view that the statutory declaration that the notes are legal tender, added
to the fact that they have no convertibility into gold or anything else, is a
more persuasive indication of their character than the inscription on them that
they are payable to bearer on demand. As I have already noted, a promissory
note, by definition, involves an unconditional promise to pay a sum certain in
money, but it is not itself money. True, the obligation of a promissory note
may be carried forward by a renewal note, but no matter how many renewals there
be, or how many replacements under different terms, there is no liquidation of
the debt until it is discharged, and this may be by money or money’s
worth or the debt may be forgiven. To say that a bank note of the kind involved
here imports similar legal consequences, that a non-convertible bank note is
paid off by the giving of a bank note of similar face value is to go around in
a circle: legal tender is exchanged for legal tender; a different piece of
paper, true, but indistinguishable in legal effect from the one surrendered for
it.
Prior to the establishment of the Bank of Canada
with sole note-issuing authority, notes could be issued by the chartered banks
as provided by s. 61 of the Bank Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 12, and these
notes contained payment promises, that is, they were payable to the bearer on
demand. At the same time the Dominion Notes Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 41
provided for the issue by the Government of Dominion notes which were legal
tender and were redeemable in gold. The Currency Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 40
made gold coins legal tender for any amount, silver coins legal tender for
amounts not
[Page 1157]
exceeding ten dollars and nickel coins legal
tender for amounts not exceeding five dollars. The notes of the chartered banks
were not legal tender but, of course, they were redeemable in legal tender,
whether in Dominion notes or in gold, silver or nickel coins. The payment
promise in the notes issued by the chartered banks thus had substance. The same
can be said of the Dominion notes, which also carried a payment promise. Since
they were redeemable in gold, the payment promise on them also had substance.
The situation changed completely when the
chartered banks were shorn of their note-issuing authority and the Bank of
Canada became the only such issuer. Although the Bank of Canada Act, until
the 1967 amendment, carried into its terms the payment promise which had been
characteristic of the notes of the chartered banks (I refer again to what
Plumptre, op. cit., supra said about the continued use of the
terminology of commercial banking), the framework in which Bank of Canada notes
were issued and circulated—notes which were legal tender and
non-convertible—made the payment promise sterile from the very beginning.
Great reliance is placed by the respondent bank
on the Bank of Portugal case, Banco de Portugal v. Waterlow
and Sons Ltd. I
find it completely unpersuasive on the point in issue here, a point which did
not arise in that case. It was concerned only with the measure of damages
payable by the respondent printers for breach of contract upon the unauthorized
printing of bank notes of the appellant bank. The printing was done from the
original plates used by the printers to produce notes for the bank, but they
were victims of a fraudulent scheme and delivered the notes to the criminals
who carried out the scheme. The bank called in the entire issue of the notes
produced from the plates and paid off holders of the unauthorized notes by a
new issue of notes. The sole question before the House of Lords was whether the
printers should be liable only for the cost of
[Page 1158]
printing the unauthorized notes or for their
face value as well. A majority held that they must pay their face value as
well. I need not dwell on the correctness of this decision for present
purposes. It has not stood without criticism: see Nussbaum, Money in the Law
(1939), at pp. 93 ff. There is nothing in the case that, in my view,
turned on the character of lawfully issued notes of the Bank of Portugal as
promissory notes. However, some of the Law Lords proceeded to consider their
character and regarded them as promissory notes even though they did not
contain any promise to pay on their face.
I confess my inability to appreciate how there
can be any substance in the assertion that an inconvertible note issued by a
bank and being legal tender involves the same liability of a bank as is incurred
by a merchant who makes and gives a promissory note. Yet so Lord Atkin said,
and he is quoted extensively in the reasons for judgment of my brother Beetz.
We are told that the Bank of Portugal may be sued on its bank note if it does
not pay its face value on demand, but it will satisfy the demand if it offers
another of its notes of the same face value. I find this unreal; any holder who
would sue in such a situation must surely have his claim rejected by the Court
and be required to pay costs, if not also to be told that he is engaged in a
vexatious proceeding.
It may be said that litigation on this basis
would never happen, and that only where notes were destroyed or lost would
there be any likelihood of suit, the present case being illustrative. This
seems to me to be an argument from the base of a desired result rather than
from principle. The position must surely be viewed in the same way as it would
be with respect to an ordinary promissory note made by a private person in
favour of another. There is a further oddity, to me at least, in the Bank of
Portugal case when the notes of that bank are characterized as promissory
notes although there is no promise to pay on their face. As I understood the
submissions here, it was accepted
[Page 1159]
that post-1967 amendment Bank of Canada notes
could not be regarded as promissory notes under the Bills of Exchange Act. What
all of this conveys to me is that if there is to be some remedy against the
Bank of Canada in respect of a claim to have destroyed notes replaced, it
should be given under appropriate legislation and not by forcing that result
through the Bills of Exchange Act.
One redeems or pays off a true promissory note,
and the note is surrendered when the debt for which it was given is paid. Again,
the ordinary promissory note carries interest or is for a principal sum which
includes the cost of borrowing. There is no parallel with paper money which is
legal tender and which, as here, is inconvertible and bears no interest.
Nussbaum in his text Money in the Law, at pp. 83-84, asserts that the
payment promise is meaningless in such a situation and although Mann, The
Legal Aspect of Money (3rd ed. 1971), takes issue with this view and
asserts at p. 12 that the payment promise makes a bank note a promissory note
within the meaning of the Bills of Exchange Act, he qualifies this
position considerably and even contradicts it by noting that a bill of exchange
is not money but on the contrary the drawee is required to pay a sum certain in
money.
Reliance is also placed by the respondent Bank
on s. 21(1) of the Bank of Canada’s constituent Act which provides that
its notes “shall be a first charge upon the assets of the Bank”. I do not see
how this assists the contention of the respondent Bank. Rather, in my opinion,
it contradicts it because a promissory note is not in any sense a charge upon
the assets of the maker. Indeed, s. 21(1) fortifies my view that the Bank of
Canada note in this case is sui generis, as was argued by counsel for
the appellant.
There is, moreover, another consideration which
lends emphasis to the unreality of regarding the Bank of Canada note as falling
within s. 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act. It is pointed out by
Nussbaum, op. cit., at p. 84, as follows:
Despite the fact that paper money has
become practically inconvertible and no longer evidences a debt, such notes
must, for reasons of accounting, appear on the
[Page 1160]
liability side of the balance sheet of the
bank or other institution of issue. There should be no misapprehension,
however, of the legal nature of the notes. The “debtor” has disappeared.
The reason for this assertion is plain enough.
There is no redemption of an inconvertible note, and it is only if the Bank of
Canada was to be wound up that the question of meeting the claims of holders of
the notes would arise; and, as the author points out, this would probably be
done through another issue of notes. He adds in this connection that “realization
of the assets of the [central] bank would be impossible, such assets, in the
situation supposed, usually consisting mostly of government debts”. This view
is consistent with s. 36 of the Bank of Canada Act which reads as
follows:
36. No
statute relating to the insolvency or winding-up of any corporation applies to
the Bank and in no case shall the affairs of the Bank be wound up unless
Parliament so provides, but if provision is made for winding-up the Bank the
notes of the Bank outstanding shall be the first charge upon the assets.
I am aware of an answering argument that the
accounting requirement that puts notes on the liability side of the ledger is
indicative of a dichotomy between book money or money of account and physical
money, the actual notes. Involved in this monetary theory, which proceeds from
a historical base, is the assertion that bank notes are merely representative
of monetary value and are not themselves money; that they are issued against
assets shown on the Bank of Canada’s books, assets such as government
securities in the main, but also consisting of other securities and private
financial paper. Hence, so the argument would run, there is significance in the
payment promise because there is the asset backing on the books of the Bank of
Canada, and the “real” money is the book money.
The assessment, in my opinion, bears out the
view expressed by Plumptre, supra, on the misleading assimilation of
central banking to private commercial banking; it isolates the central bank’s
accounting obligations from their relation to government purposes and the bank’s
own duties in the field of monetary policy and treats them as if they
[Page 1161]
merely represented private debtor-creditor
transactions. Moreover, it is an economic argument which ignores the legal
attribution of money character to bank notes, and it does not advance the case
for classifying a bank note as a promissory note, I repeat what I said earlier,
namely, that if there is a case for obligating the Bank of Canada to replace
destroyed notes (as contrasted with replacing worn out or mutilated or torn notes
by way of substitution and not redemption), it cannot be made by transforming a
Bank of Canada note, even one with a payment promise, into a promissory note.
Apart from the main grounds upon which I would
reject the claim of the Bank of Montreal against the Bank of Canada, there is
another aspect of this case which is worth mentioning, having regard to the
Bank of Montreal’s reliance on s. 156 of the Bills of Exchange Act as
applicable to destroyed notes no less than to lost notes. That provision is
complemented by s. 157, and they read as follows:
156. (1)
Where a bill has been lost before it is overdue, the person who was the holder
of it may apply to the drawer to give him another bill of the same tenor,
giving security to the drawer, if required, to indemnify him against all
persons whatever, in case the bill alleged to have been lost is found again.
(2) Where the drawer, on request as
aforesaid, refuses to give such duplicate bill, he may be compelled to do so.
157. In any
action or proceeding upon a bill, the court or a judge may order that the loss
of the instrument shall not be set up, if an indemnity is given to the
satisfaction of the court or judge against the claims of any other person upon
the instrument in question.
Two questions arise in connection with the Bank
of Montreal’s invocation of s. 156. The first is whether that provision
applies to promissory notes. It is said that s. 186 of the Bills of Exchange
Act makes it applicable but, as was strongly contended by counsel for the
Bank of Canada, there is difficulty in making the application because s. 186
provides that the maker of a promissory note shall be deemed to correspond with
the acceptor of a bill, and the first endorser is deemed to correspond
[Page 1162]
with the drawer of an accepted bill. Since s.
156 relates only to the obligation of the drawer of a bill to duplicate it,
there can be no adaptation of the section to impose the obligation upon the
maker of a promissory note when he does not correspond to the drawer of a bill.
The second hurdle to any reliance on s. 156 lies
in that part of s. 156 which describes the obligation thereunder as one “to
give another bill of the same tenor”. Even assuming that it is proper in this
case to substitute the word “note” for “bill”, the sequence of events resulting
in the claim against the Bank of Canada reveal its disablement to satisfy s.
156. It is the fact that the Bank of Canada was made a party to the Bank of
Montreal’s action against the carrier and others when an appeal was
taken to the Ontario Court of Appeal from a judgment adverse to the carrier.
The Court of Appeal, in the circumstances, by a judgment of June 18, 1964
ordered a new trial on fresh pleadings to take account of the claim against the
Bank of Canada. The fresh amended statement of claim of the Bank of Montreal
was not delivered until December 21, 1967. Prior to that date, an amendment to the Bank of Canada Act by
1966-67 (Can.), c. 88 s. 12, effective March 23, 1967, substituted a new s.
21(1), the note‑issuing authority of the Bank of Canada. It replaced the
provision for the issue of notes payable to bearer on demand and provided for
notes without that prescription. In short, the effect of the amendment was to
make it impossible for the Bank of Canada to issue a new five dollar note of
the same tenor as the one destroyed.
Again, if s. 156(1) be inapplicable to destroyed
notes, the Bank of Montreal is in no more favourable position under the law.
What it would have to seek at common law would be redemption upon offering
secondary evidence of the contents of the destroyed note; and I have already
made clear my opinion that since the destroyed note was itself money and was
non-convertible it is illusory to speak of redemption. If then there is nothing
to
[Page 1163]
redeem there is no basis for giving judgment
against the Bank of Canada for the face amount of the destroyed note.
I would allow the appeal, set aside the
judgments below and declare that the point of law set down for determination,
upon the consent of all parties, as between the Bank of Montreal and the Bank
of Canada should be determined in favour of the latter and that the claim of
the Bank of Montreal against the Bank of Canada should, accordingly, be
dismissed with costs to the Bank of Canada against the Bank of Montreal
throughout. I think this is a case where a form of Bullock order should be made
so as to entitle the Bank of Montreal to recover the costs aforesaid from the
other respondents if it should succeed on the claim made against them which has
been held in abeyance pending the determination of the point of law in the
present proceedings.
The judgment of Ritchie, Pigeon, Beetz and de
Grandpré JJ. was delivered by
BEETZ J.—Is a $5 note issued by the Bank of
Canada and intended for circulation a promissory note within the meaning of s.
176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 15? If so, and
in the event of that note being accidentally destroyed, is the holder entitled
to claim a duplicate note under s. 156 of this Act, or to obtain judgment in
the amount of $5 against the Bank of Canada? Those are the questions in this
case.
I
They arose out of circumstances which date back
to 1959. In August of that year, the Bank of Montreal arranged with the Post
Office to have delivered from the Bank’s chief office in Montreal to its branch office in
Temiskaming a package containing bank-notes issued by the Bank of Canada. While
in transit in a bus owned by Bay Bus Terminal (North
Bay) Limited (“Bay Bus”), most of the mail
including the contents of the package was destroyed by reason of a fire which
occurred within the bus.
[Page 1164]
The Bank of Montreal sued Bay Bus for
recovery of the sum of $23,307.50 representing the value of the destroyed
bank-notes less an amount of $2,692.50 received from the Bank of Canada in
exchange for partially burned notes. The case was tried by Spence J. then a
member of the Supreme Court of Ontario, who decided in favour of the Bank of
Montreal. Spence J. took the view that any action which Bay Bus contended
should have been brought by the Bank of Montreal against the Bank of Canada for
replacement of the destroyed notes “would be dubious in its success”. Bank
of Montreal v. Bay Bus Terminal (North Bay) Limited, at p. 570.
Bay Bus appealed
to the Court of Appeal. On February 10, 1964, the Court of Appeal ordered that
the Bank of Canada be added and joined as a party defendant to the action and
that the writ of summons be amended accordingly; the Court of Appeal further
ordered that the endorsement of the writ be amended by adding, in terms
specified in the order, the Bank of Montreal’s claims against the Bank
of Canada. The Bank of Canada entered an appearance as defendant on February
20, 1964. On June 18, 1964, the
Court of Appeal set aside the judgment of Spence J. and directed a new trial on
all issues: Bank of Montreal v. Bay Bus Terminal (North Bay) Ltd.
et al.
The Fresh as Amended Statement of Claim, dated
December 21, 1967, alleges that the banknotes were destroyed or lost. However,
the parties chose to submit a statement of facts for the determination of a
point of law pursuant to Rule 124 of the Ontario Rules of Practice. The relevant
paragraphs of the agreed statement of facts read as follows:
7. Between North Bay and Temiskaming a fire occurred
within the vehicle while it was travelling; and, as a result, most of the mail
was destroyed, including the contents of the said letter or package. At least
one bank note within this letter or package bearing a face value of $5.00 was
destroyed by the fire. The Bank note was one issued by the Defendant, the Bank
of Canada, in the form hereto annexed.
[Page 1165]
8. The point
for determination by the court is whether in the circumstances the Plaintiff is
entitled to the relief asked for in the Fresh as Amended Statement of Claim as
against the Defendant Bank of Canada with respect to the $5.00 bank note
leaving the other issues in the action for determination afterwards by trial or
otherwise as the parties may agree.
The relief asked for as against the Bank of
Canada in the Fresh as Amended Statement of Claims conforms to the order made
by the Court of Appeal on February 10, 1964. It reads:
(a) The Plaintiff claims against the Bank
of Canada, pursuant to Sections 156 and 157 of the Bills of Exchange Act.,
R.S.C. 1952, Chapter 15 for the issue and delivery to the Plaintiff of
duplicate bills of The Bank of Canada in the aforesaid amount of $23,307.50 and
of the same tenor as those bills lost or destroyed, subject to the security
being given to the Bank of Canada, if required by the Bank of Canada, and to
the satisfaction of this Court, to indemnify The Bank of Canada against all
persons whatsoever, in case any bill or bills of the Canadian currency so lost
or destroyed shall be found again.
(b) And in the alternative, the Plaintiff
claims Judgment against The Bank of Canada to the amount of the said bills so
lost or destroyed.
The photocopy annexed to the agreed statement of
facts represents a $5 note issued by the Bank of Canada pursuant to the Bank
of Canada Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 13, as amended by 1953-54 (Can.), c. 33, (“the
Act”). The text of the note is under the signature of the then Governor
and the then Deputy Governor of the Bank of Canada. It reads in part as
follows:
Bank of Canada will pay to the bearer on
demand.
The sum of five dollars is printed many times in
letters and figures on the face as well as on the back of the note.
The motion under Rule 124 was heard by Addy J.
who found for the Bank of Montreal. Addy J. dismissed a preliminary argument to
the effect that, in issuing notes, the Bank of Canada is acting on behalf of
Her Majesty and that, by reason of s. 16 of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1952,
c. 158, the Bills of Exchange Act is not applicable; he held: (1) that
the $5 bank-note is a promissory note within the meaning of s. 176(1) of the Bills
of
[Page 1166]
Exchange Act, (2)
that the word “lost” in s. 156 must be taken to include a bill that has been
accidentally destroyed and (3) that s. 186 does not operate so as to prevent
the application of s. 156 to the maker of a note. The formal judgment of the
Supreme Court of Ontario reads as follows:
1. THIS COURT DOTH ORDER that the Plaintiff
is, as against the Defendant The Bank of Canada, entitled to the relief asked
for in the Fresh as Amended Statement of Claim as regards the $5.00 bank note
destroyed in the fire and in the form of the bank note annexed to the said
Statement of Facts.
2. AND THE COURT DOTH FURTHER ORDER that
the costs of this issue are reserved to the judge who will finally determine
all of the issues between the parties.
The Court of Appeal agreed with the reasons and
conclusions of Addy J. and dismissed the appeal. To the reasons of Addy J.,
Brooke J.A. speaking for himself and for MacKay and Aylesworth JJ.A. added
reasons of his own; he reached the further and alternative conclusion that,
apart from s. 156 of the Bills of Exchange Act, the Bank of Montreal had
a common law right of action on the destroyed note against the Bank of Canada
and could proceed against it under s. 10 without giving security.
In this Court, counsel for the Bank of Canada
abandoned the argument to the effect that, when issuing notes, the Bank is
acting on behalf of Her Majesty.
Much of the main submission advanced by counsel
for the Bank of Canada relates to convertibility of bank-notes into gold and to
legal tender. While in my opinion nothing in this case turns upon those two
subjects, I should, in view of that submission, briefly review recent
legislative history in this respect.
II
Prior to the establishment of a central banking
system in Canada, in 1934,
chartered banks were authorized to issue notes of $4 and upwards intended for
circulation, (1871 (Can.),
34 Vict. c. 5, s. 8). These bank-notes were not legal tender.
[Page 1167]
The issuance of smaller notes, called Dominion notes,
was the monopoly of the Government of Canada. Dominion notes were declared to
be legal tender, (1880 (Can.),
43 Vict. c. 13, s. 5). Until the abandonment of the gold standard, which
took place before the Bank of Canada commenced its operations, Dominion notes
and the notes of chartered banks had intermittently been convertible into gold
but the notes of chartered banks were always redeemable in Dominion notes.
The Bank of Canada was created by the Bank of
Canada Act, 1934 (Can.), c.
43. This Act provided for the take-over by the Bank of Canada of the
note-issuing function of the Government of Canada and further restricted the
note-Issuing privilege of chartered banks until this privilege, which continued
to be gradually eroded, disappeared entirely with the passing of 1944-45 (Can.), c. 30, s. 60.
Section 25 of the Act provided as
follows:
(1) The Bank shall sell gold to any person
who makes demand therefor at the head office of the Bank and tenders the
purchase price in legal tender, but only in the form of bars containing
approximately four hundred ounces of fine gold.
(2) The Governor in Council, from time to
time and for such period as he may deem desirable, may suspend the operation of
subsection (1) and remove such suspension.
(4) On and after the day on which the Bank
is authorized to commence business the Bank is responsible for the redemption
of all Dominion notes then issued and outstanding and such notes shall be and
continue to be legal tender.
As of the date the Bank of Canada was authorized
to commence business until 1966, when the right of redemption in gold
contemplated by s. 25(1) of the Act was abolished (1966-67 (Can.), c.
88, s. 13), the Governor in Council passed every year an order-in-council
pursuant to s. 22(2) suspending convertibility for that year.
On the other hand, under s. 7 of the Currency,
Mint and Exchange Fund Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 315, the notes of the Bank
of Canada were declared to be legal tender in Canada for the payment of any amount, in addition to ordinary
[Page 1168]
coins for the payment of modest amounts. No
provision however compelled the Bank of Canada to redeem any note in ordinary
coins. Section 7 of the last mentioned Act also refers to gold coins as being
legal tender for any amount if issued under the authority of s. 4; this section
empowers the Governor in Council, on certain conditions, to authorize the issue
of gold coins by proclamation; but it does not appear that any such
authorization was ever proclaimed.
Thus, Bank of Canada notes have never been redeemable
in gold or in anything else but have been the only legal tender for the payment
of any amount in Canada.
III
In form, the $5 bank-note under consideration is
unquestionably a promissory note: it has all the extrinsic qualities of a
promissory note as prescribed by s. 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act:
A promissory note is an unconditional
promise in writing made by one person to another, signed by the maker, engaging
to pay, on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time, a sum certain in
money, to, or to the order of, a specified person, or to bearer.
But we have been invited to look at the
substance of the matter, not the form. According to the main submission made by
counsel for the Bank of Canada, the $5 bank-note is a sui generis statutory
instrument the true nature of which is determined by the Act and by the Currency,
Mint and Exchange Fund Act. It is legal tender. It is intended for
circulation. It is part of the currency of the country. It is in fact money and
the sole official medium of exchange. The definition of a promissory note in s.
176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act makes an internal distinction
between a promissory note and money. This definition contemplates something
which is distinguishable from the note which it discharges. Something which is
money cannot be a promise to pay in money within the meaning of s. 176(1) of
the Bills of Exchange Act. Bank-notes issued in the past by chartered
banks could be redeemed in gold, when permissible, or in Dominion notes, which
were
[Page 1169]
legal tender. It is not so with notes of the
Bank of Canada; assuming that gold is money, notes of the Bank of Canada cannot
and could never have been paid in gold and, since such notes are and were the
only legal tender, they could not be discharged by the payment of anything
which is different from themselves. If the holder of a $5 note of the Bank of
Canada were to present it to the Bank for payment he could be dismissed or he
could be told: “You already have $5”. The holder of a Bank of Canada note has
no right on presentment of his note to obtain anything from the Bank. (See, to
the same general effect, the author A. Nussbaum, who, in his book, Money
in the Law, Chicago, 1939, pp. 83, 84, contents that paper money of the
type we are concerned with no longer evidences a debt and suggests that central
banks do away with the payment-promise clause in their notes.)
I do not agree with that submission. It ignores
the fact that, with respect to negotiable instruments, form prevails over
substance and that Parliament has decreed by statute that the notes of the Bank
of Canada be in the form of promissory notes as defined by s. 176(1) of the Bills
of Exchange Act.
Section 2(j) of the Act provided
that:
“notes” means the notes of the Bank of
Canada payable to bearer on demand and intended for circulation;
Section 21 provided in part as follows:
(1) The Bank has the sole right to issue
notes payable to bearer on demand and intended for circulation in Canada and such notes shall be a first
charge upon the assets of the Bank.
(2) It shall be the duty of the Bank to
make adequate arrangements for the issue of its notes at its head office and at
its branch offices and agencies in Canada, and to supply such notes as required for circulation in Canada.
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in
this section, each note printed before the 15th day of August, 1938, and issued
thereafter and each such note theretofore issued is a valid and binding
obligation of the Bank.
Section 7 of the Currency, Mint and Exchange
Fund Act provided in part as follows:
[Page 1170]
…a tender of payment of money is a legal
tender if it is made
(c) in notes issued by the Bank of
Canada pursuant to the Bank of Canada Act that are payable to bearer on demand and are intended for circulation in Canada.
(In 1967, the Bank of Canada Act and the Currency,
Mint and Exchange Fund Act were amended by 1966-67 (Can.), c. 88 ss. 1(2),
13 and 20 and the words indicating that the notes are payable to bearer on
demand were removed from the Bank of Canada notes; these amendments however do
not affect the issue which arose before they took effect on March 23,
1967.)
The use on bank-notes of the words “will pay to
the bearer on demand” was not a matter of choice for the Bank of Canada. It was
an obligation imposed upon the Bank during more than thirty years by several
statutes. Had Parliament wished a bank-note not to be a promissory note, it
would not have required that it be in the form of a promissory note. It seems
to me that if Parliament insisted that bank-notes be in that form, it also
wished such legal consequences as flow from the use of that form to attach to
bank-notes. The Bank of Canada cannot have it both ways: to have enjoyed on the
one hand, in terms of public confidence in its notes, whatever advantage may at
one time have been derived from the form of words traditionally used for
bank-notes; but on the other hand, to recant the words of its promise by
arguing that they do not mean what they say and that its notes are not what
they represent to be.
In the course of argument, my brother Ritchie
asked Mr. Robinette, counsel for the Bank of Canada, the meaning of the words “Bank
of Canada will pay to the bearer on demand”. The answer was that they are
meaningless.
I cannot agree. Nor can I agree that the holder
of a Bank of Canada note has no right to obtain anything from the Bank.
The nature of an inconvertible note issued by a
[Page 1171]
central bank and declared to be legal tender,
together with the rights of the holder of such note, have been canvassed by the
House of Lords in the case of Banco de Portugal v. Waterlow and Sons,
Limited. A
firm of printers employed by the Bank of Portugal were made the victims of a
fraud and delivered to one Marang, the head of a band of criminals, bank‑notes
printed from original plates in the belief that Marang had the authority of the
Bank. The spurious notes were put into circulation and the Bank had to redeem
them with good ones. The Bank sued the printers for breach of contract, the
main issue being the extent of damages suffered by the Bank. The House of Lords
held by a majority that the extent of damages was to be measured by the face
value of the notes and not by the mere cost of printing them. Only three of the
five Law Lords—Lord Atkin, Lord Warrington of Clyffe and Lord Russell of
Killowen—expressed views on the question of the nature of bank-notes and of the
rights of the holder, and these views may not have been necessary to decide the
case. Lord Warrington of Clyffe
and Lord Russell of Killowen were in dissent. But they agreed with Lord Atkin,
who was in the majority, on the question of the nature of bank-notes and of the
rights of the holder. The opinions of the three learned Lords are quite
detailed on that question and carry great weight. It should be noted that the
bank-notes in that case did not carry the promise to pay on their face but they
were regarded by those members of the House of Lords as if they were promissory
notes. I rely on the opinions of the three learned Lords as upon an a
fortiori argument and I refrain from expressing any view as to what the
situation would be should a note not be in the form of a promissory note. Here
is how Lord Atkin expressed himself at pp. 487 and 488:
A bank note is a promissory note issued by
a bank payable on demand. The English note contains the promise on the face.
The Portuguese note does not, but there is competent evidence in this case that
the note has the same effect.
So far the banker issuing his note incurs
precisely the same liability as a merchant issuing his note. If either fails to
pay he is liable for the face value of the note.
[Page 1172]
One Bank becomes alone entitled to issue
notes; and let us assume that they have become currency so that they can be
tendered in discharge of a debt: the position of the Bank remains the same. It
is liable on its note. If its note is payable in gold, then to a claim on a
note the Bank must pay in gold; otherwise, on debts in general, the Bank as
well as private traders will pay in currency; and, as I have said, on default
will be liable to judgment for the face value. Now let us assume that the State
alters the law by decreeing that the bank notes need no longer be paid in gold.
While that decree lasts the notes are inconvertible, the currency is in the
ordinary sense a paper currency. This happened in Portugal in 1891 by a moratorium directed to payment in gold which has been
continued in Portugal ever
since. The position has not altered. The merchant is in precisely the same
position as before; he must pay in currency which will as before be notes, but
now inconvertible notes. If he fails to pay he can be sued for the face value
of his promissory note. The Bank is for the first time put in the same position
as the merchant; it is bound to pay on its note; but it need only pay its note
in currency, i.e., in its own notes; and if it will not or cannot so pay, it
can be sued for the face value of the note.
Lord Russell of Killowen had this to say at pp.
497 and 499:
A period of inconvertibility had been
established in 1891 and was still continuing, with no likelihood of its ever
being determined. The only liability of the Bank, so far as concerns paying or
redeeming a note when presented at the Bank, was to give in exchange for it
another note or notes of equivalent face value. Each note when issued by the
Bank became in the hands of the holder legal tender, and any such note if paid
to the Bank by a debtor to the Bank must be accepted by the Bank in discharge
pro tanto of the debt…
What then was the obligation which the Bank
incurred?
Mr. Gavin Simonds, in the course of an
admirable argument which leaves me much in his debt, defined this obligation
with I think complete accuracy. It is threefold—namely: (1.) To give in
exchange a note or notes of equivalent face value each carrying a similar
obligation. (2.) If and when it is hereafter decreed that the
[Page 1173]
notes are to be redeemed in gold, then on
demand such quantity of gold as may be decreed. (3.) If and when it is
hereafter decreed that some new form of currency shall be legal tender, and
that the Bank’s notes are to be paid in such currency, then on demand to
pay the proper amount of such currency.
Lord Warrington of Clyffe spoke to the same
effect at pp. 483 and 484, also holding that the notes were in effect
promissory notes payable to bearer on demand.
Where members of the House of Lords disagreed
among themselves was on the quantification of the bank’s damages. But
none of them took the view that the holder of a bank-note which is not
redeemable in gold and which is declared to be legal tender would have had no
right to obtain anything from the bank.
Section 22(3) of the Act, quoted above,
demonstrates that the threefold obligation mentioned by Lord Russell of
Killowen is not pure theory; it provided that the Bank of Canada is responsible
for the redemption of all Dominion notes issued and outstanding on and after
the day the Bank is authorized to commence business.
Moreover, several other provisions of the Act
gave legal and economic substance to the rights which the holder of a Bank
of Canada note could enforce should the Bank fail to honour the promise which
appeared on the face of its notes. Thus, s. 21(5) quoted above referred to
certain specific issues of notes but implied that each and every note “is
a valid and binding obligation of the Bank”; s. 21(1) provided
that the notes “shall be a first charge upon the assets of the Bank”;
s. 36 was as follows:
No statute relating to the insolvency or
winding up of any corporation applies to the Bank and in no case shall the
affairs of the Bank be wound up unless Parliament so provides, but if
provision is made for winding-up the Bank the notes of the Bank outstanding
shall be the first charge upon the assets.
It would appear that the Bank of Canada does
have assets, apart from its use of the printing press. Under s. 30 of the Act,
it must report these assets weekly to the Minister of Finance, together
with its liabilities, in the form of Schedule B. Not
[Page 1174]
only did Schedule B mention “notes in
circulation” among the liabilities of the Bank but it also gave some idea of
the assets upon which the notes of the Bank were a first charge, such for
instance as bullion, foreign exchange and bank premises; many other assets, it
is true, are themselves debts of governments in the form of treasury bills,
advances to the Government of Canada, etc. But one would like to think that the
latter are not devoid of substance, backed as they are by the resources of the
country and the industry of its people.
Bank-notes have characteristics of their own
which make them something more than ordinary promissory notes and which may
entail legal consequences peculiar to them. Thus was it held in Suffell v.
The Bank of England that
the alteration of serial numbers upon notes of the Bank of England was a
material alteration vitiating the notes although the alteration did not affect
the contract. Jessel M.R., stated at pp. 563 and 564:
Now, a Bank of England note is not an
ordinary commercial contract to pay money. It is in one sense a promissory note
in terms, but no one can describe it as simply a promissory note. It is part of
the currency of the country. It has long been made so by Act of Parliament, it
is a legal tender for any sum above £5, and it must be issued to anyone who brings
a certain quantity of bullion to the bank, and demands it, as he has a right to
do, for the purpose of using it as currency. It is protected in a way no other
instrument is protected, against alteration or mutilation, and its preservation
in a pure state, to use a term as applied to deeds by some learned judges, is
certainly a matter of the utmost importance. It is admitted that the usage of
putting the number on the note, dates from a long period and is a custom
universally known. One must consider the operation of the Act of Parliament
which says that any man who produces at the Bank of England a certain quantity
of gold bullion shall be entitled to receive bank notes. Could it be contended
that the bank wanting to buy bullion and not wanting to increase the
circulation of notes, could give to the person who brought the bullion notes
without numbers? The man who received the notes in such an unusual form could
not make use of them as currency, because no one would take them; and I take
it,
[Page 1175]
the Act means a note in the ordinary form
in which the bank issues Bank of England notes.
But, as was rightly noted in the Courts below,
the additional properties of a bank-note do not prevent it from remaining a
promissory note. Thus, the provisions of the Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, (U.K.)
were applied to a lost Bank of England note in Gillet v. The Bank of
England (Queen’s
Bench Division). The fact that the $5 in the case at bar never was redeemable
in gold is not a reason to hold that it is not a promissory note: like any
other promissory note, it can be redeemed in legal tender; and its quality of
being itself legal tender is not incompatible with its being a promissory note.
Parliament wanted it to have both qualities and said so.
In many cases bank-notes have been held to be
promissory notes or have been considered as if they were promissory notes or
negotiable instruments. In addition to the Suffell and Gillet cases,
supra, I refer to the following: R. v. Brown; Raphael v. The Governor and
Company of the Bank of England;
McDonnell v. Murray;
The Australian Joint Stock Bank v. The Oriental Bank; Jefferson v. The Ulster Bank; Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
Corporation v. Lo Lee Shi; Re
Toronto Beaches Election; Ferguson v. Murphy.
Counsel for the Bank of Canada tried to
distinguish those cases on the ground that the banknotes they dealt with were
the notes of chartered banks, or were redeemable in gold or were not legal
tender. Again, I do not think it matters. Besides, the notes in the Banco de
Portugal case were unredeemable notes issued by a central bank and were
legal tender.
[Page 1176]
Most leading text-books and treatise also
consider the notes of central banks as promissory notes and many of them have
been published or re-edited after the abandonment of convertibility and while
such notes were legal tender: Milnes Holden, the Law and Practice of
Banking, 1970, vol. 1, p. 299; Chorley, Law of Banking, 6th ed.
1974, p. 3; Jowitt, F., The Dictionary of English Law, 1959, vol. 1, p.
201; Falconbridge, Banking and Bills of Exchange, 7th ed. 1969, p. 127;
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd ed. 1953, vol. 3, p. 240; Byles
on Bills of Exchange, 23rd ed. 1972, p. 294; Chalmers on Bills of
Exchange, 13th ed. 1964, p. 274 and p. 346.
I have no hesitation in agreeing with the Courts
below that the $5 bank-note under consideration is a promissory note within the
meaning of 176(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act.
IV
There remains the question whether the Bank of
Montreal is entitled to the relief asked for in the Fresh as Amended Statement
of Claim with respect to the $5 bank-note.
The principle which governs the rights of a
payer on payment of a bill of exchange is contained in s. 93(3) of the Bills
of Exchange Act:
When a bill is paid the holder shall
forthwith deliver it up to the party paying it.
This principle, derived from the Custom of
Merchant, is qualified by ss. 10, 156 and 157 of the Act:
10. The
rules of the common law of England, including the law merchant, save in so far
as they are inconsistent with the express provisions of this Act, apply to
bills of exchange, promissory notes and cheques.
Lost
Instruments
156. (1)
Where a bill has been lost before it is overdue, the person who was the holder
of it may apply to the drawer to give him another bill of the same tenor,
giving security to the drawer, if required, to indemnify him against all
persons whatever, in case the bill alleged to have been lost shall be found
again.
(2) Where the drawer, on request as
aforesaid, refuses to give such duplicate bill, he may be compelled to do so.
[Page 1177]
157. In any
action or proceeding upon a bill, the court or a judge may order that the loss
of the instrument shall not be set up, if an indemnity is given to the
satisfaction of the court or judge against the claims of any other person upon
the instrument in question.
The provisions of the Act relating to bills of
exchange, such as ss. 156 and 157 are made applicable to promissory notes by s.
186:
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Part,
and except as by this section provided, the provisions of this Act relating to
bills of exchange apply, with the necessary modifications, to promissory notes.
(2) In the application of such provisions
the maker of a note shall be deemed to correspond with the acceptor of a bill,
the first endorser of a note shall be deemed to correspond with the drawer of
an accepted bill payable to drawer’s order.
(3) The provisions of this Act as to bills
relating to,
(a) presentment for
acceptance;
(b) acceptance;
(c) acceptance supra protest;
(d) bills in a set;
do not apply to notes.
Having held that ss. 156 and 157 apply to a
destroyed instrument as well as to a lost one, (in Pillow v. L’Espérance, the Quebec Court of Review appears
to have taken the same view) the Court of Appeal had this to say in relation to
ss. 156, 157 and 186:
...“drawer” properly interpreted in these
sections means the one who creates an instrument of any kind referred to by the
statute. As to these two sections, s. 156 makes provision for relief by way of
action in the event of loss of an instrument… On the other hand,…the principal
purpose of s. 186(2) is to make clear for the purpose of liability under other
sections of the statute (particularly 127 to 133) the position of the maker of
a promissory note.
In the result then, for the above reasons,…
s. 186(2) does not prevent the application of s. 156 to the maker of a
promissory note and…the remedy of the holder of the note is the same as that of
a holder of a bill and, in both cases, is to look to the one who created the
instrument.
[Page 1178]
I might be inclined to agree with the Court of
Appeal on this point but I do not reach it since in my view, under the Bills
of Exchange Act, a destroyed instrument should not be treated as a lost
one.
The Court of Appeal said that:
…the word “lost” should be given a fair and
liberal interpretation and…accordingly it does not permit of a distinction
between an instrument lost to the holder through disappearance and one lost to
the holder through destruction.
The problem is that an instrument lost to the
holder through disappearance may be found again and presented for payment,
whereas a destroyed instrument may not. It is questionable also whether the
interpretation proposed by the Court of Appeal is more liberal and fair than
the literal interpretation which must be preferred when the text is clear.
The Bills of Exchange Act makes explicit
reference to lost and destroyed instruments when it is required, as in s. 120:
Where a bill is lost or destroyed, or is
wrongly or accidently detained from the person entitled to hold it, or is
accidentally retained in a place other than where payable, protest may be made
on a copy or written particulars thereof.
Besides, if one goes back to the origins of the
rules expressed in ss. 93(3), 156 and 157, one finds that, while the
distinction between a lost instrument and a destroyed one may have been blurred
in some early cases (e.g. Hansard v. Robinson), it seems to have been accepted
without question in later cases and at the time of codification. (Pierson v.
Hutchinson; Woodford
v. Whitely;
Clarke v. Quince;
Blackie v. Pinding;
Crowe v. Clay;
Wright v. Lord Maidstone;
The Australian Joint Stock Bank v. The Oriental Bank (supra).)
As I understand the matter, no action could be main-
[Page 1179]
tained at law on a lost instrument, the courts
of law having no jurisdiction to insist upon security being given in case the
lost instrument be found. But the holder of a lost instrument could obtain
relief from equity provided he offered sufficient security. As for destroyed
instruments, there is authority for the proposition that an action would lie at
law upon secondary evidence being produced of their contents: Blackie v.
Pinding, supra: Clarke v. Quince, supra. In Pierson v. Hutchinson,
supra, a case where a bill of exchange had been lost, Lord Ellenborough
said, at pp. 1132 and 1133:
If the bill were proved to be destroyed, I
should have no difficulty in receiving evidence of its contents, and directing
the jury to find for the plaintiff. Since the Plaintiff can neither produce the
bill, nor prove that it is destroyed, he must resort to a Court of Equity for
relief.
In the Australian Joint Stock Bank case, supra,
Faucett J., said, at p. 146:
An action may be maintained on a destroyed
note—probably even though the destruction took place before maturity or
presentation—and, the destruction being proved, secondary evidence of the
contents will be allowed. In such a case the defendant can run no risk of being
called upon to pay a second time. But on a lost note, as we have seen, no
action can be maintained; and this arises, not from the inadmissibility of the
evidence, or the technical rule of pleading—a rule shortly afterwards done away
with—but from mercantile usage and the law founded upon it, which prevents the
action from being sustained because the instrument cannot be given up on
payment. And further, indebitatus assumpsit for money had and received
would not now lie, while the security, although lost, was outstanding.
Section 87 of the Common Law Procedure Act
1854 (U.K.), 17-18 Vict. c. 125 gave to the common law courts jurisdiction
to grant equitable relief where a negotiable instrument was lost:
In case of any action founded upon a bill
of exchange or other negotiable instrument, it shall be lawful for the Court or
a judge to order that the loss of such instrument shall not be set up, provided
an indemnity is given to the satisfaction of the Court, or a judge, or a
master,
[Page 1180]
against the claims of any other person upon
such negotiable instrument.
This proviso was extended in the Bills of
Exchange Act 1882 (U.K.), 45-46 Vict. c. 61, and appears as ss. 156 and 157
of our own Act.
I do not think that those who drafted the Common
Law Procedure Act and the Bills of Exchange Act could have been ignorant
of the distinction made by law and equity between lost and destroyed
instruments. Section 87 of the Common Law Procedure Act and s. 157 of
the Bills of Exchange Act are both couched in the very language of
equity: they provide that the loss of instruments “shall not be set
up” if an indemnity is given. All that was meant was to extend the
jurisdiction of the common law courts so as to enable them to grant equitable
relief with respect to lost instruments. But by so doing, it could not have
been intended to restrict the more advantageous remedy already available at law
with respect to destroyed instruments. This is why the words “lost” and “loss”
were deliberately retained in ss. 156 and 157, in preference to the expressions
“lost or destroyed” in s. 120.
If the evidence be doubtful as to whether a
negotiable instrument has been lost or destroyed, one should probably proceed
as if it had been lost. There is no such doubt in the case at bar where the $5
bank-note was admittedly destroyed.
In my opinion, and, with deference, I agree in
this with the Court of Appeal, the remedy at law remains available to the Bank
of Montreal under s. 10 of the Bills of Exchange Act. One of the reliefs
prayed for by the Bank of Montreal is less advantageous than the remedy at law:
it is a claim for the issue and delivery of a duplicate note subject to
security being given to the Bank of Canada which, in any event, does not
request such security. Since I have reached the conclusion that the Bank of
Montreal is entitled to the alternative and more advantageous relief asked for,
namely judgment against the Bank of Canada to the amount of the destroyed $5
note, I do not find it necessary to express any view with respect to the other
relief
[Page 1181]
asked for in the Fresh as Amended Statement of
Claim.
V
Counsel for the Bank of Canada argued that
security would be useless to the Bank, whether a bank-note be destroyed or
lost. The Bank replaces soiled notes with new ones and destroys old notes. It
does not however record the serial numbers of the notes which it destroys. Even
if it did, the volume of notes in circulation is so large that it would be
impossible to guard against the presentation of a lost or supposedly destroyed
note which had been replaced.
I understood this argument to be directed at
reinforcing the main submission, namely, that the provisions of the Bills of
Exchange Act were not meant to apply to bank-notes. In France, a similar argument was accepted by
the Cour de cassation in Banque d’Algérie c. Casteras; notes of a chartered bank had been
put aboard a ship which was lost at sea; the bank was freed from its
obligations given the peculiar nature of bank-notes. I refer to this case as a
matter of curiosity since of course, it is not an authority in this matter. Common
Law Courts have taken a different view. In the case of McDonnell v. Murray, supra, Pigot C.B., spoke as follows at pp. 505 and 506:
…If a private person, who makes a
promissory note payable to bearer for £10,000, is within the Act, why should
not a banker be? He is in no respect different from a private individual,
except that a private individual issues a smaller number of such engagements.
Suppose inconvenience would result from our order, can the Court by any such
consideration construe an Act of Parliament clear in its words? If there be
mischief in so holding, that mischief must be referred to the Legislature. But
is there? or, if there be, which is the greater, that a Bank should be obliged
to keep an account of its transactions, or that parties should be left without
any remedy whatever for the loss of a bank-note? With respect to a number of
such instruments, the great probability is, that a large proportion of lost £1
bank notes never will be demanded. The majority of those who lose a single note
never will think of bringing an action for £l, and giving a mortgage for £1. If
the Banks
[Page 1182]
set their gains upon the loss of such notes
against the trouble of accepting the security, and giving notice to their
various branches, the gain upon the part of the Banks will be very
considerable. In this case, it is plain the most grievous injury would result
to the plaintiff, and we should treat the Legislature as shortening its own
arm, if this motion were refused. Here are seven promissory notes, which,
according to the doctrine contended for, must be lost for ever. It being
impossible to prove their destruction, there cannot be a remedy at Law, for the
proof of loss is a complete answer to the action; and, if the defendant’s
argument be well founded, a Court of Equity never did give relief in such a
case, and ought not now. If it did, that would be the strongest reason for
holding that this section applied; if it did not, the plaintiff is utterly
remediless at Law and in Equity. So far from straining against the plaintiff
the words of this section, if they were ambiguous, I should be disposed to
construe them with reference to the mischief intended to be remedied, and so
give them the largest operation.
In the case of The Australian Joint Stock
Bank v. The Oriental Bank, Stephen C.J., who was dissenting but on
some other point, spoke to the same effect at pp. 132 and 133:
I entertain no doubt, that bank notes
payable to the bearer are negotiable instruments, within the meaning of the
statute; that the notes declared upon have been stolen from the plaintiffs, and
that few if any of them will ever be recovered; or, that, should it turn out
otherwise, ample security can be given to indemnify the defendants against the
consequences. Nor do I feel embarrassed, because of the great number of the
missing instruments; for the remedy, if it exist at all, must equally be
applicable, whether the notes lost be few or many.
In some jurisdictions, bank-notes are expressly
exempt from the operation of laws relating to lost or destroyed instruments.
(A. Nussbaum, op. cit. pp. 89 and 90.) The submission made on behalf of
the Bank of Canada would, if accepted, achieve the same result. In my view,
such a result cannot be arrived at by judicial interpretation in a case where
it is admitted that a bank-note has been destroyed. Different problems might
arise with respect to lost bank-notes. Their solution will have to await
another case.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
[Page 1183]
Appeal dismissed with costs, on equal
division, LASKIN C.J. and MARTLAND, JUDSON and DICKSON JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Gowling
& Henderson, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the (plaintiff)
respondent: Phelan, O’Brien, Rutherford, Lawer & Shannon, Toronto.
Solicitors for the (defendants)
respondents: Wallace & Carr, North Bay.