Supreme Court of Canada
Montreal Trust Co. v. Gulf Securities Corp. Ltd. et
al., [1978] 1 S.C.R. 708
Date: 1977-01-25
Montreal Trust
Company (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Gulf Securities
Corporation Ltd. (Defendant) Respondent;
and
Tidewater Oil
Company, Triad Petroleum Development Ltd., Marathon Oil Company, Canada Cities
Services Petroleum Corporation, Atlantic Richfield Company (Defendants)
Respondents.
1976: November 3, 4; 1977: January 25.
Present: Laskin C.J. and Martland, Judson,
Ritchie, Spence, Pigeon, Dickson, Beetz and de Grandpré JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
SASKATCHEWAN
Mines and
minerals—Royalties—Assignment—Notice—G’s interests under oil and gas permits
assigned to T—G entering royalty trust agreement with M—G assigning to M all
royalty payments payable by T or its successors or assigns to G—T acknowledging
notice of assignment—T intending to surrender leases to Crown—G exercising
right of election to take over lands to be surrendered—G calling upon T to
assign its interest under leases to third party—M entitled to royalties payable
by third party to G—M not entitled to enforce as against T obligations which T
had undertaken to G.
The respondent Gulf received certain
petroleum and natural gas permits from the Crown in the right of Saskatchewan. By an agreement dated June 6,
1949, with the respondent Tidewater, Gulf assigned its interests under these
and other permits to Tidewater. Tidewater agreed, inter alia, that
during such time as it retained its interests in the lands covered by the
permits it would pay to Gulf 2½ per cent of the sale value of oil and
gas produced from these lands. Clause 10 of the agreement empowered Tidewater,
without Gulfs consent, to assign all or any part of its interest in the lands,
but, subject to the condition that such assignment “be made subject to the
assumption by the assignee thereunder of all rights and obligations of
[Tidewater] under said lands and under this agreement with respect to the lands
covered thereby”. Clause 10 also permitted Tidewater to surrender its interest
in the lands in whole
[Page 709]
or in part. However, if Tidewater proposed to
surrender such interest it was obligated to give Gulf 30 days’ notice of that
intent. Within that time Gulf had the right, by written notice, to elect to
take over the lands proposed to be surrendered. If it so elected, any
reassignment was to “be made subject to the foregoing conditions of assumption
and release”.
On May 15, 1950, Gulf entered into a royalty
trust agreement with the appellant Montreal Trust. Under cl. 2 of this agreement Gulf assigned to Montreal all royalty payments which, by the
terms of the Tidewater agreement, became payable by Tidewater, or its
successors or assigns, to Gulf. On the same day Gulf gave a notice of the
assignment to Tidewater. Tidewater acknowledged and accepted this notice of
assignment and undertook to make payments to Montreal in accordance with the terms of the notice.
On September 14, 1956, the Crown granted
Tidewater two petroleum and natural gas leases covering the lands in question.
In 1960 Tidewater notified Gulf that it intended to surrender a number of
leases to the Crown including the two aforementioned leases. Subsequently,
Gulfs solicitors wrote to Tidewater electing to take assignment of some of the
acreage to be surrendered by Tidewater. Arrangements were made by Gulf with
Imperial Oil to have the latter take over the two leases. Gulf made an
agreement on April 20, 1960, with Imperial reserving an overriding gross
royalty of 2½ per cent in respect of the leases. Tidewater was not a
party to this agreement. An agreement dated September 6, 1960, was entered by
Tidewater, Imperial and Gulf under which, inter alia, Tidewater assigned
the leases to Imperial. The assignment made no reference to the overriding royalty
to be paid by Imperial. Imperial obtained production of oil from the lands
covered by the leases and paid to Gulf the royalties stipulated in the
agreement with Gulf dated April 20, 1960.
Montreal brought
action against Gulf, against Tidewater and against the other four respondents.
As against Gulf it claimed entitlement to the royalties paid and payable by
Imperial and sought an accounting and payment of the amount found to be
payable. As against Tidewater it claimed damages because Tidewater had failed
to stipulate, in the assignment to Imperial, for the assumption by Imperial of
the obligation to make the royalty payments to Montreal. Montreal contended
that this obligation rested upon Tidewater by virtue of the assignment made by
Gulf to Montreal and accepted
by
[Page 710]
Tidewater. The four respondents, other than
Tidewater, were alleged to constitute a syndicate, with Tidewater, on behalf of
which Tidewater made its agreement with Gulf.
Montreal succeeded at
trial as against Gulf. The action against Tidewater was dismissed on the ground
that there was no contractual obligation by Tidewater to Montreal. The Court of Appeal allowed Gulfs
appeal and dismissed Montreal’s
cross-appeal as against Tidewater. Montreal then appealed to this Court.
Held (Pigeon,
Dickson and de Grandpré JJ. dissenting in part): The appeal as against Gulf
should be allowed; the appeal as against Tidewater and the other respondents
should be dismissed.
Per Laskin
C.J. and Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Spence and Beetz JJ.: Contrary to the
opinion of the Court of Appeal, what had occurred here could not be equated to
an outright surrender by Tidewater of its interest in the two petroleum and
natural gas leases. Had such a surrender been effected to the Crown those
leases would have been terminated. But they were not terminated. Instead, Gulf
called upon Tidewater to assign its interest under the leases to Imperial. The
leases, which Tidewater had obtained, by performance of the conditions attached
to the permits, remained in effect and Imperial became the assignee of
Tidewater’s interest under them. Clause 10 of the Tidewater agreement
contemplated the assumption by Imperial of Tidewater’s royalty obligations in
respect of them. In view of these circumstances, Imperial was an assignee of
Tidewater and the royalty payments required to be paid by Imperial to Gulf were
within the provisions of cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement. When Gulf
made its commitment to the holders of the royalty trust certificates under
cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement it gave to them the benefit of
royalties payable to Gulf by any assignee of Tidewater if such assignment was
effected by virtue of the operation of cl. 10 of the Tidewater agreement.
As to the appeal as against Tidewater, Montreal was not an assignee from Gulf of
the Tidewater agreement. It did not become entitled to enforce, as against
Tidewater, the obligations which Tidewater had undertaken to Gulf under
cl. 10 of that agreement.
Tidewater was under no contractual obligation
to Montreal. Its only legal
duty to Montreal was to honour
the notice of assignment of royalties which it had received, and which related
solely to royalties which
[Page 711]
might become payable by Tidewater in respect
of its production from the lands described in the Tidewater agreement.
The provisions of the royalty trust agreement
applied to royalties payable by Imperial which, at the instance of Gulf, had
become the successor or assign of Tidewater. The obligation to require payment
to Montreal rested solely upon Gulf. Notice of the assignment of Gulfs
royalties effected by cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement should have
been given to Imperial by Gulf or by Montreal. No duty to give such notice was
imposed upon Tidewater.
Per Pigeon,
Dickson and de Grandpré JJ., dissenting in part: The appeal as against
Gulf should be allowed for the reasons given by the majority and the appeal
against the other respondents should be allowed as well. If the overriding
royalty had become payable by Tidewater and had been paid to Gulf rather than
to Montreal, the latter would have had a good cause of action against Tidewater
by virtue of the assignment, the notice thereof and the acknowledgment and
acceptance. In the second place, the assignment, although not of the entire
agreement but of the royalty only, covered the royalty becoming payable by an
assignee of Tidewater as well as the royalty becoming payable by Tidewater
itself. However, at Gulfs request, Tidewater made an assignment of the lease to
Imperial in such terms that the royalty became payable to Gulf by the assignee.
It could not be less of a breach of Tidewater’s obligation to Montreal to have
the royalty paid by its assignee to Gulf than to so do itself.
Tidewater must be held to have known that the
assignment of the royalty to Montreal was made for the purpose of enabling Gulf
to deal with the royalty trust certificates and the purpose of the notice of
assignment was to ensure that Tidewater would not pay the royalty to Gulf but
to Montreal. When Tidewater assigned the lease to Imperial, it was therefore
bound to stipulate for payment of the royalty to Montreal, not to Gulf. This
did not need to be spelled out in so many words. If Tidewater assigned the
lease its obligation was to stipulate for payment to no other than the true creditor
of the royalty.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Saskatchewan,
allowing an appeal by Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd. from a judgment
[Page 712]
of Bence C.J.Q.B. and dismissing a
cross-appeal by Montreal Trust Company against Tidewater Oil Company and
certain associated companies. Appeal allowed in part, Pigeon, Dickson and de
Grandpré JJ. dissenting in part.
W.M. Elliott, Q.C., for the plaintiff,
appellant.
M.C. Shumiatcher, Q.C., R. Bamford, L.H.
McDonald, Q.C., and R.B. Laschuk, for the defendants, respondents.
The judgment of Laskin C.J. and Martland,
Judson, Ritchie, Spence and Beetz JJ. was delivered by
MARTLAND J.—The respondent, Gulf Securities
Corporation Ltd., herein referred to as “Gulf”, obtained from the Crown, in the
right of the Province of Saskatchewan, a number of permits which authorized
Gulf to conduct geophysical surveys, examinations and investigations with
respect to lands in which petroleum and natural gas were owned by the Crown.
These included permits numbered 159 and 160. Upon compliance with the
regulations under which the permits were issued, Gulf had the right to obtain
petroleum and natural gas leases from the Crown in respect of portions of the
lands defined in the permits. The land which is the subject of this appeal is
the North Half of Section 32, Township 6, Range 4, West of the 2nd Meridian
(included in Permit 159) and the East Half of Section 6, Township 6, Range 2,
West of the 2nd Meridian (included in Permit 160).
By agreement dated June 6, 1949, hereinafter
referred to as “the Tidewater agreement”, Gulf assigned its interests under
these and other permits to the respondent Tide Water Associated Oil Company,
which later became Tidewater Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as
“Tidewater”. Under this agreement Tidewater agreed that, during such time as it
retained its interest in the lands covered by the assigned permits, whether
under permit, lease or other form of title from the Government of the Province
of Saskatchewan, it would pay to Gulf 2½ per cent of the sale value of oil
produced
[Page 713]
from the lands covered by the permits, 2½ per
cent of the sale value of gas produced from those lands and 2½ per cent of the
sale value of 35 per cent of the gasoline extracted from gas produced from those
lands.
Clause 10 of the Tidewater agreement provided as
follows:
10. It is expressly agreed that Assignee
does not intend to create and does not hereby create any joint tenancy, or
tenancy in common, in any interest in said lands, or in the oil, gas and other
hydrocarbons which may be produced therefrom, and Assignor hereby expressly
disclaims any right, title, interest or estate in said lands, or any of said
products, by reason of any of the provisions of this agreement; that Assignee,
in its operation on said lands, shall have full discretion to conduct such
operations in whatever manner it shall see fit without incurring any liability
whatsoever to Assignor; that nothing herein contained shall be deemed to
obligate Assignee to produce, save or sell, or otherwise dispose of oil, gas,
or gasoline from said lands and that Assignee may, and is hereby irrevocably
empowered to, at any time at its election, without any consent or participation
by Assignor, modify, surrender, assign, terminate or otherwise dispose of its
interest in said lands with respect to all or any part of said lands, and upon
any surrender or termination of Assignee’s interest in said lands, this
agreement shall ipso facto terminate with respect to said lands covered by such
surrender or termination; provided, however, that if Assignee shall assign or
otherwise dispose of its interest in said lease as to all or any part of said
lands, said assignment or other disposition shall be made subject to the
assumption by the Assignee thereunder of all rights and obligations of Assignee
under said lands and under this agreement with respect to the lands covered
thereby, and thereafter Assignee shall be released and discharged of and from
all further obligations and liabilities hereunder with respect to the lands
covered thereby; provided, further, however, that in every instance of the
proposed surrender or termination of said lands, in whole or in part, Assignee
shall give Assignor thirty (30) days’ written notice of such intention within
which time Assignor shall have the right to elect whether or not to take over
that part of the lands proposed to be surrendered or terminated by giving
written notice to Assignee, and any reassignment to Assignor shall be made
subject to the foregoing conditions of assumption and release.
[Page 714]
On May 15, 1950, Gulf entered into an agreement
with the appellant, hereinafter referred to as “Montreal”. This agreement,
hereinafter referred to as “the royalty trust agreement” contained the
following relevant recitals and provisions:
AND WHEREAS Gulf is desirous of issuing
certificates for its two and one-half per cent (2½%) royalty, as defined in the
preceding recital and in the Tidewater Agreement, and for that purpose desires
to assign to the Trustee all its, right, title and interest to all royalty
payments to which it may, by the terms of the Tidewater Agreement, become
entitled;
AND WHEREAS the Trustee has agreed to
accept the assignment of Gulfs royalty aforesaid upon the terms and conditions
hereinafter set forth;
…
2. ASSIGNMENT OF GULF’S ROYALTY:—
Gulf does hereby forever set over,
transfer, assign, convey and deliver unto the Trustee all royalty payments
which may by the terms of the Tidewater Agreement become hereafter payable by
Tidewater, or its successors or assigns, to Gulf.
3. ROYALTY CERTIFICATES:—
The royalty payments, by the preceding
clause hereof assigned to the Trustee … shall be regarded as divided into one
hundred and eighty thousand (180,000) units, to be known and hereinafter
referred to as “Gross Royalty Units”. The Trustee shall issue royalty
certificates, hereinafter referred to as “Gross Royalty Trust Certificates”
covering the said Gross Royalty Units, which said Gross Royalty Certificates
shall be in the form as set out in Schedule “B” hereto. Such Gross Royalty
Trust Certificates shall forthwith upon the execution of this Agreement, be
issued by the Trustee to, and in the name of Gulf, or to, and in the name of,
such person or parties as Gulf may designate or nominate to the Trustee in writing,
and each Certificate shall be respectively issued in the proportions designated
by Gulf to the Trustee in writing.
4. …
Each full Gross Royalty Unit issued under
this Agreement shall entitle the holder to one one hundred and eight-thousandth
part of the two and one-half per cent (2½%) royalty assigned to the Trustee
hereunder, less and subject only to deductions for income and other taxes, if
any, and of the costs and expenses, including those of the Trustee, as
hereinafter set forth and provided.
…
[Page 715]
15. EXERCISE OF RIGHTS ORDER SUBLEASE:—
Nothing in this Agreement herein contained
shall be taken or construed as an assignment or transfer of the Tidewater
Agreement itself, but in the event of any default by Tidewater in the payment
of the royalty made payable by the terms of the Tidewater Agreement, Gulf
shall, on being indemnified as to its costs, charges and expenses in connection
therewith, itself take, or permit the Trustee to take in its name, such steps
or proceedings as counsel for the Trustee may advise with respect to any such
default and the enforcement of Gulfs rights to the royalty payments agreed by
Tidewater to be paid, pursuant to the terms of the Tidewater Agreement.
The Tidewater Agreement was annexed to the
royalty trust agreement as Schedule A and was declared to be a part of it.
On the same day, May 15, 1950, Gulf gave a
notice of the assignment to Tidewater. It reads as follows:
NOTICE
OF ASSIGNMENT
TO: Tide Water Associated Oil Company,
79 New Montgomery Street,
San Francisco, California,
U.S.A.
WHEREAS, by a certain Agreement in writing
dated the 6th day of June, 1949, made between the undersigned, Gulf Securities
Corporation Ltd. (hereinafter called “Gulf”) of the one part, and Tide Water
Associated Oil Company (hereinafter called “Tide Water”), of the other part,
Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd. did assign, transfer and set over to Tide
Water certain oil and gas exploration Permits theretofore granted to Gulf by
the Province of Saskatchewan, the lands covered by the said Permits comprising
an area of approximately nine million (9,000,000) acres, situated in the
Province of Saskatchewan aforesaid;
AND WHEREAS, in consideration of the
assignment of the said Permits by Gulf to Tide Water, the said Agreement of
June 6th, 1949, provided that Tide Water, so long as it should retain its
interest in any lands covered by the said Permits, would account for, and pay
to, Gulf, from the proceeds of sale of oil, gas and gasoline produced, saved
and/or sold from the lands covered by the said Permits, certain royalty
payments, all as provided in and subject to the terms of, the said Agreement of
June 6th, 1949;
AND WHEREAS, by the terms of a Royalty
Trust Agreement, dated the 15th day of May, 1950, and made between Gulf
Securities Corporation Ltd., of the one part, and Montreal Trust Company, of
the other part,
[Page 716]
Gulf has assigned to Montreal Trust Company
all Gulfs right, title and interest in all future payments of the royalty which
may become payable by Tide Water pursuant to the provisions of the Agreement of
June 6th, 1949, first above mentioned, such assigned payments of royalty to be
subject, in all respects, to the provisions of the last-mentioned Agreement;
NOW, THEREFORE, Gulf hereby gives notice to
Tide Water that it has assigned to Montreal Trust Company all future payments
of royalty which, by the terms of the said Agreement of June 6th, 1949, may
become payable to Gulf; that the said Assignment to Montreal Trust Company is
an absolute assignment of all Gulfs right, title and interest in the said
payments, and that Montreal Trust Company is, by virtue of the terms of the
said Royalty Trust Agreement, dated the 15th day of May, 1950 entitled to
receive all such future payments of royalty, and to give a binding receipt
therefor;
AND Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd. in
consideration of the acceptance of this Notice by Tide Water, does hereby
covenant that it will at all times save harmless and indemnify Tide Water
against all claims and demands which may be made by it, or by any other person
or corporation by reason of any royalty payments hereafter made by Tide Water
directly to Montreal Trust Company, in accordance with the terms of this
Notice;
ALL royalty payments aforesaid shall be
made to Montreal Trust Company at its office at 112—Seventh Avenue West,
Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
On July 17, 1950, Tidewater acknowledged and
accepted this Notice of Assignment and undertook to make payments to Montreal
in accordance with the terms of the notice. The operative portion of the acceptance
reads as follows:
TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY,
Operator, hereby acknowledges and accepts the above Notice of Assignment of
royalty payments by Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd. to Montreal Trust Company,
and hereby agrees that all payments of royalty pursuant to the agreement of
June 6, 1949, accruing hereafter and prior to a termination in any manner of
the Royalty Trust Agreement dated May 15, 1950, and referred to in said Notice
of Assignment, will, subject to the terms and conditions of the said Agreement
of June 6, 1949, be made by Tide Water Associated Oil Company directly to
Montreal Trust Company, in accordance with the terms of the above Notice.
[Page 717]
On September 14, 1956, a Crown, Petroleum and
Natural Gas Lease No. PN 1310 was granted to Tidewater covering lands in Permit
No. 159 which included the N1/2 32-6-4-W2. Similarly, a lease, No. PN 1572, was
granted by the Crown on September 14, 1956, to Tidewater covering the E1/2
6-6-2-W2 which arose out of Permit No. 160. Both leases were from July 1, 1956,
for 21 years renewable for further terms of 21 years.
By letter dated February 26, 1960, Tidewater
notified Gulf that it intended to surrender a number of leases to the Crown
including Leases PN 1310 and PN 1572.
Subsequently, by letter dated March 24, 1960,
Gulfs solicitors wrote to Tidewater electing to take assignment of some of the
acreage to be surrendered by Tidewater. The letter read as follows:
|
Re:
|
Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd.
request for Assignments of leases on 58,995 acres in Saskatchewan.
|
Please be advised that our client, Gulf
Securities Corporation Ltd., hereby exercises its right to take Assignments of
58,995 acres, more or less, being some of the lands covered by notices given by
your Company. The said 58,995 acres are more particularly described in
Schedules “A” and “B” to this letter.
…
The lands in question in this action were
covered by this letter. Arrangements were made by Gulf with Imperial Oil
Limited, hereinafter referred to as “Imperial”, to have the latter take over
the leases. Gulf made an agreement on April 20, 1960, with Imperial reserving
an overriding gross royalty of two and one-half per cent (2½%) in respect of
the leases. Tidewater was not a party to this agreement.
An agreement dated September 6, 1960, was
entered by Tidewater, Imperial and Gulf under which Tidewater assigned to
Imperial, inter alia, Lease No. PN 1310 as it related to the N1/2
32-6-4-W2 and Lease No. PN 1572. The assign-
[Page 718]
ment made no reference to the overriding royalty
to be paid by Imperial.
In due course the Assignment of Lease No. PN
1572 was recorded in the records of the Department of Mineral Resources and a
separate lease was issued to Imperial numbered PN 4879 to cover the N1/2
32-6-4-W2 which was cancelled from Lease No. PN 1310.
Imperial obtained production of oil from the
lands covered by these leases and paid to Gulf the royalties stipulated in the
agreement with Gulf dated April 20, 1960.
Montreal brought action against Gulf, against
Tidewater and against the other four respondents. As against Gulf it claims
entitlement to the royalties paid and payable by Imperial and seeks an
accounting and payment of the amount found to be payable. As against Tidewater
it claims damages because Tidewater had failed to stipulate, in the assignment
to Imperial, for the assumption by Imperial of the obligation to make the
royalty payments to Montreal. Montreal contends that this obligation rests upon
Tidewater by virtue of the assignment made by Gulf to Montreal and accepted by
Tidewater. The four respondents, other than Tidewater, are alleged to
constitute a syndicate, with Tidewater, on behalf of which Tidewater made its
agreement with Gulf.
Montreal succeeded at trial as against Gulf. The
learned trial judge stated his reasons as follows:
Insofar as Gulf is concerned I have reached
the conclusion that by virtue of the contract between the plaintiff and Gulf,
which is found in the provisions of the Tidewater Agreement and the Royalty
Agreement which incorporated the Tidewater Agreement, that Gulf was bound to
pay to the plaintiff the 2½% of the sale value of those products referred to in
paragraph 5 of the Tidewater Agreement which it, Gulf, might receive from the
production of lands under the leases obtained pursuant to said permits. It
could not avoid its liability by following the course of a direct assignment to
Imperial. It was the party which imposed upon Tidewater the conditions of
assumption referred to in the latter part of clause 10 of that Agreement and if
it became an assig-
[Page 719]
nee or the nominator of an assignee I
believe it should be bound by those conditions.
He dismissed the action against Tidewater on the
ground that there was no contractual obligation by Tidewater to Montreal. Its
duty to Montreal would arise only in respect of production which Tidewater
obtained from the lands in question.
The Court of Appeal allowed Gulfs appeal and
dismissed Montreal’s cross-appeal as against Tidewater. The conclusion is as
follows:
It appears to me that in order to sustain
the judgment of the learned trial Judge, I would have to hold that all lands
covered by the Tidewater agreement, with the possible exception of those
surrendered directly to the Government, were impressed with an irrevocable
payment of a two and one-half per cent royalty to Gulf. To reach this
conclusion, I would have to ignore the real terms of the Tidewater agreement
and render futile the specific provisions respecting termination and surrender.
The provisions respecting termination and surrender are, in my view, clear and
unambiguous and effect must be given thereto. As I have already stated, lands
surrendered in accordance with provision of the Tidewater agreement would be
effectively removed from the contract, and in respect of which there could be no
royalty payments which would be subject to the Royalty Trust agreement.
APPEAL AS
AGAINST GULF
I will deal first with Montreal’s appeal as
against Gulf. The liability of the latter to the former must be determined on a
consideration of the obligations assumed by Gulf under the provisions of the
royalty trust agreement. In cl. 2 of that agreement Gulf assigned to
Montreal all royalty payments which, by the terms of the Tidewater agreement,
became payable by Tidewater, or its successors or assigns, to Gulf. (The
emphasis is my own.)
Although Tidewater had, by performance of the
relevant conditions, qualified to obtain and had obtained the petroleum and
natural gas leases involved in this matter, it had never obtained production of
either substance so as to entitle Gulf to claim from it the appropriate royalty
on production. However, the royalty trust agreement is not limited to royalty
payments by Tidewater, but also
[Page 720]
includes royalty payments which, by the terms of
the Tidewater agreement, become payable to Gulf by Tidewater’s successors or
assigns.
The term of the Tidewater agreement which is all
important in this connection is cl. 10, which has been cited. That clause
empowered Tidewater, without Gulfs consent, to assign all or any part of its
interest in the lands in question, but, subject to the condition that such
assignment “be made subject to the assumption by the Assignee thereunder of all
rights and obligations of (Tidewater) under said lands and under this agreement
with respect to the lands covered thereby”.
It is clear, therefore, that, had Tidewater
elected to assign its interest under the two petroleum and natural gas leases
involved here, it would have been obligated to insist that the assignee should
assume the royalty obligation to Gulf imposed by the Tidewater agreement. It is
equally clear that, in such event, the royalties payable by Tidewater’s
assignee to Gulf would have been caught by the provisions of cl. 2 of the
royalty trust agreement.
Clause 10 also permitted Tidewater to surrender
to the Crown its interest in the petroleum and natural gas leases. If that had
been done those leases would have terminated. However, that right of surrender
was subject to a condition. If Tidewater proposed to surrender such interest it
was obligated to give to Gulf 30 days’ notice of that intent. Within that time,
Gulf had the right, by written notice, to elect to take over the lands proposed
to be surrendered. If it so elected, any reassignment was to “be made subject
to the foregoing conditions of assumption and release”. The foregoing condition
of “assumption” relates back to the requirement, on an assignment by Tidewater,
that the assignee assume all Tidewater’s rights and obligations under the
agreement. One of those obligations was in respect of royalty payments to Gulf.
[Page 721]
In the event, Tidewater desired to surrender the
two petroleum and natural gas leases. Gulf exercised its right to ask for a
reassignment, but, instead of requesting an assignment of the leases to itself,
requested Tidewater to assign its interest under the leases to Imperial. Under
the provisions of cl. 10, that assignment was required to be made subject
to Tidewater’s royalty obligation to Gulf.
The question in issue is, therefore, whether
Imperial was a successor or assign of Tidewater within the meaning of
cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement.
The Court of Appeal, without specifically
referring to cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement, said this:
The surrender could be effected in two
ways. There could be a direct surrender to the Government. In such a case,
clearly the lands would be effectively removed from the contract and would be
of no further concern either to Tidewater or to Gulf. The surrender could also
be effected by a re-assignment to Gulf and Gulf electing to take over the lands
proposed to be surrendered. If, as a result of such election, the lands were re‑assigned
to Gulf, they would, in my opinion, be as effectively removed from the contract
as if they had been allowed to revert to the Government. Upon such re‑assignment,
the only obligation undertaken by Gulf was the assumption of the obligations to
the Government in respect of such lands which had been assumed by Tidewater
under the Tidewater agreement. To suggest that in such a case the re‑assignment
would be subject to payment to itself of the sums provided for in clause 5 of
the agreement is not only illogical, but contrary to the whole purpose and
intent underlying the provision for termination or surrender.
In my view, the fact that Gulf, in exercising
its right to take over the lands which Tidewater proposed to surrender,
directed that the assignment be made to Imperial Oil rather than to itself in
no way altered the situation. Such assignment was made pursuant to the
provision relating to surrender and was not that type of assignment
contemplated by clause 10, to which obligations under paragraph 5 would attach.
In my opinion the Court of Appeal erred in
equating what occurred here to an outright surrender by Tidewater of its
interest in the two petroleum and natural gas leases. Had such a
[Page 722]
surrender been effected to the Crown those
leases would have been terminated. But they were not surrendered. Instead, Gulf
called upon Tidewater to assign its interest under the leases to Imperial. The
leases, which Tidewater had obtained, by performance of the conditions attached
to the permits, remained in effect and Imperial became the assignee of
Tidewater’s interest under them. Clause 10 of the Tidewater agreement
contemplated the assumption by Imperial of Tidewater’s royalty obligations in
respect of them. In view of these circumstances my view is that Imperial was an
assignee of Tidewater and the royalty payments required to be paid by Imperial
to Gulf were within the provisions of cl. 2 of the royalty trust
agreement. In my opinion, when Gulf made its commitment to the holders of the
royalty trust certificates under cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement, it
gave to them the benefit of royalties payable to Gulf by any assignee of
Tidewater if such assignment was effected by virtue of the operation of
cl. 10 of the Tidewater agreement.
APPEAL AS
AGAINST TIDEWATER
Montreal alleges that Tidewater owed a duty to
it to ensure that, upon the assignment of its interests to Imperial, the
overriding royalty stipulated by Gulf should be payable by Imperial to Montreal
and not to Gulf. Montreal seeks damages from Tidewater for the alleged breach
of that obligation.
The only contractual obligations undertaken by
Tidewater under the Tidewater agreement were to Gulf. Tidewater’s duty, under
cl. 10 of that agreement, to do certain things in the event of its
surrendering or assigning its interest was a duty owed solely to Gulf. Montreal
was not the assignee of Gulfs rights under the Tidewater agreement. The opening
words of cl. 15 of the royalty trust agreement specifically provide that:
Nothing in this Agreement herein contained
shall be taken or construed as an assignment or transfer of the Tidewater
Agreement itself.
[Page 723]
The assignment made in cl. 2 of the royalty
trust agreement was solely an assignment by Gulf to Montreal of royalty
payments payable to Gulf by the terms of the Tidewater agreement by Tidewater
or by Tidewater’s successors or assigns. It was Gulfs obligation to see that
such royalty payments were received by Montreal.
In implementation of that obligation Gulf gave
to Tidewater a notice of the royalty assignment which it had made in favour of
Montreal.
I have already recited the terms of the actual
notice of assignment. It makes no reference to the assignment made in the
royalty trust agreement of royalties payable by Tidewater’s successors or
assigns. It refers only to royalties payable by Tidewater. It is nothing more
than a notice requiring Tidewater to pay to Montreal royalties which might be
payable by it to Gulf under the Tidewater agreement.
Section 2 of The Choses in Action Act, R.S.S.
1940, c. 292, which was in effect at the time the assignment was made,
provided as follows:
2. Every debt and every chose in action
arising out of contract shall be assignable at law by any form of writing
containing apt words in that behalf, but subject to such conditions and
restrictions with respect to the right of transfer as may appertain to the
original debt or as may be connected with or be contained in the original
contract; and the assignee thereof may bring an action thereon in his own name
as the party might to whom the debt was originally owing or to whom the right
of action originally accrued, or he may proceed in respect of the same as
though this Act had not been passed.
This provision could not give to Montreal, in
respect of its assignment from Gulf, anything more than the statutory right to
claim against Tidewater any royalty payments which it, in the absence of the
assignment, would have been compelled to pay to Gulf. Tidewater never obtained
production of petroleum or natural gas from the lands in question and so no
obligation to pay royalties ever arose.
Tidewater acknowledged the notice of assignment,
and, for the purposes of convenience of reference, I repeat that
acknowledgment:
[Page 724]
TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY,
Operator, hereby acknowledges and accepts the above Notice of Assignment of
royalty payments by Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd. to Montreal Trust Company,
and hereby agrees that all payments of royalty pursuant to the agreement of
June 6, 1949, accruing hereafter and prior to a termination in any manner of
the Royalty Trust Agreement dated May 15, 1950, and referred to in said Notice
of Assignment, will, subject to the terms and conditions of the said Agreement
of June 6, 1949, be made by Tide Water Associated Oil Company directly to
Montreal Trust Company, in accordance with the terms of the above Notice.
Montreal seeks to construe this acknowledgment
as involving a commitment by Tidewater to it to ensure that payments of
royalty, not by Tidewater, but by its successors or assigns, should be made to
Montreal and not to Gulf. It stresses the words “all payments of royalty
pursuant to the agreement of June 6, 1949”.
To support this contention it is necessary to
construe the acknowledgment as creating a contractual obligation by Tidewater
to Montreal. But the acknowledgment was not a contract between Tidewater and
Montreal. The notice of assignment was given to Tidewater by Gulf. It was a
notice by a potential creditor to a potential debtor that the debt had been
assigned. Tidewater’s acknowledgment of the assignment was given to Gulf. This
acknowledgment could not impose on Tidewater an obligation beyond the payment
to Montreal of its own debts to Gulf. This contention overlooks the concluding
words of the acknowledgment, “be made by Tide Water Associated Oil Company
directly to Montreal Trust Company, in accordance with the terms of the above
Notice”. Tidewater was certainly not committing itself to pay royalties payable
by its successors or assigns.
In my opinion the notice of assignment and its
acknowledgment by Tidewater relate only to royalties which might have become
payable by Tidewater.
It is contended that because Tidewater was
obliged to pay to Montreal royalties due from it to Gulf it was also obligated
when its leases were
[Page 725]
assigned to Imperial to stipulate that Imperial
should pay the overriding royalty to Montreal. In considering this submission
it is necessary to recall the circumstances in which that assignment was made.
Tidewater did not seek to exercise the powers
given to it under cl. 10 of the Tidewater agreement to assign the leases.
It sought to exercise the power, given by that clause, to surrender the leases
to the Crown. Before it could do so, Gulf had the right to require the
assignment of the leases to itself, and it elected to do so. Tidewater was then
obligated to assign the leases to Gulf. Gulf made an agreement with Imperial,
to which Tidewater was not a party, to assign the leases to Imperial, Imperial
agreeing to pay to Gulf the overriding royalty.
Instead of taking an assignment to itself and
thereafter assigning to Imperial, Gulf arranged for an assignment to be made
directly from Tidewater to Imperial, under an agreement to which all three
companies were parties. That agreement related that:
And Whereas Tidewater is desirous of
surrendering the leases to the extent that the same cover or relate to the said
lands (hereinafter called “the said leases”) and pursuant to the said agreement
dated the 6th day of June A.D. 1949, Gulf has elected to take over the said
leases.
Tidewater in the agreement then assigned the
leases to Imperial. The agreement made no reference whatever to any overriding
royalty payable by Imperial to Gulf. In making that assignment Tidewater was
performing its contractual duty to Gulf, which arose, under cl. 10 of the
Tidewater agreement, when it sought to surrender the leases. That clause
imposed no duty on Tidewater in favour of Montreal, because, as already pointed
out, the royalty trust agreement did not assign to Montreal the Tidewater
agreement itself.
The only legal duty owed by Tidewater to
Montreal was that resulting from the notice of assignment of royalties, i.e.
to pay to Montreal any royalties which under the terms of the Tidewater
agreement might become payable by it to Gulf.
[Page 726]
In summary, the following points are of
importance:
1. Montreal was not an assignee from Gulf of the
Tidewater agreement. It did not become entitled to enforce, as against
Tidewater, the obligations which Tidewater had undertaken to Gulf under
cl. 10 of that agreement.
2. Tidewater was under no contractual obligation
to Montreal. Its only legal duty to Montreal was to honour the notice of
assignment of royalties which it had received, and which related solely to
royalties which might become payable by Tidewater in respect of its production
from the lands described in the Tidewater agreement.
3. The provisions of the royalty trust agreement
applied to royalties payable by Imperial which, at the instance of Gulf, had
become the successor or assign of Tidewater. The obligation to require payment
to Montreal rested solely upon Gulf. Notice of the assignment of Gulfs
royalties effected by cl. 2 of the royalty trust agreement should have
been given to Imperial by Gulf or by Montreal. No duty to give such notice was
imposed upon Tidewater.
In the result, I would allow the appeal of
Montreal as against Gulf, set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal in
respect of Gulf and restore the judgment at trial, with costs in this Court and
in the Court of Appeal. I would dismiss Montreal’s appeal as against Tidewater
and the other respondents, with costs.
The judgment of Pigeon, Dickson and de Grandpré
JJ. was delivered by
PIGEON J. (dissenting in part)—I have had
the advantage of reading the reasons prepared for delivery by my brother
Martland. I agree with him on the appeal as against Gulf Securities Corporation
Ltd. (“Gulf”), but I have to differ as against Tidewater Oil Company
(“Tidewater”) and the other respondents.
I will start by saying that I do not think
anyone will deny that, if the overriding royalty had become payable by
Tidewater and had been paid
[Page 727]
to Gulf rather than to Montreal Trust Company
(“Montreal”), the latter would have had a good cause of action against
Tidewater by virtue of the assignment, the notice thereof and the
acknowledgement and acceptance. Even apart from The Choses in Action Act, Gulf
being a party to the action, the assignment was enforceable in equity if not in
law, and this requirement is only a matter “of procedure and not of substance”:
Regas Ltd. v. Plotkins, at
p. 571.
In the second place, it is clear from the
reasons stated by Martland J. on the appeal as against Gulf that the
assignment, although not of the entire agreement but of the royalty only,
covers the royalty becoming payable by an assignee of Tidewater as well as the
royalty becoming payable by Tidewater itself.
However, at Gulfs request, Tidewater made an
assignment of the lease to Imperial Oil Limited (“Imperial”) in such terms that
the royalty became payable to Gulf by the assignee. I fail to see how it could
be less of a breach of Tidewater’s obligation to Montreal to have the royalty
paid by its assignee to Gulf than to so do itself.
Tidewater must be held to have known that the
assignment of the royalty to Montreal was made for the purpose of enabling Gulf
to deal with the royalty trust certificates and the purpose of the notice of
the assignment was to ensure that Tidewater would not pay the royalty to Gulf
but to Montreal. When Tidewater assigned the lease to Imperial, it was
therefore bound to stipulate for payment of the royalty to Montreal, not to
Gulf. I cannot agree that this needed to be spelled out in so many words. If
Tidewater assigned the lease its obligation was to stipulate for payment to no
other than the true creditor of the royalty.
In a case where solicitors completed a
settlement without taking care to protect the bank that was the transferee of
the claim, this Court held that the debtor was liable to the bank: The Saint
John and Quebec Railway Co. v. The Bank of British
[Page 728]
North America and The Hibbard Co., Mignault J. said (at pp. 352-353):
I have no doubt that Mr. Hanson acted
in absolute good faith, for solicitors as a rule object to any change in
resolutions drafted by them for the payment of moneys by their clients, the
more so if the disposal of the moneys is, by such changes, made subject to conditions
or restrictions. But the fact still remains that the addition made to the first
draft of the resolution should have put Mr. Hanson on inquiry as to what
were the rights of transfer and subrogation of the bank. In plain English it
stated that the bank was a transferee of the claim and was subrogated in any
right of recovery of the Hibbard Company. Mr. Hanson could not close his
eyes to this plain intimation and make an unconditional settlement with
Mr. Gall without running the risk of the trouble that has arisen from the
action of Mr. Gall in illegally paying himself out of moneys of which,
even under Mr. Hanson’s draft resolution, he was a trustee. The bank, at
the time of the trial, was still a creditor of the Hibbard Company for more
than $5,000.00, and, although it had possibly ample security, it had the right
to receive any moneys due to the Hibbard Company under the transfer the latter
had made to it.
As another illustration of implied terms in an
assignment of a future debt, I would refer to the case of Fraser v. Imperial
Bank of Canada.
Duff J. (as he then was) summarized as follows
the conclusions of the majority in this Court (at pp. 380-381):
It was only after the contract had been
completed by Fraser’s exertions and at his own cost and Garson was in his last
illness that the claim to appropriate the reward of Fraser’s work under the
bank’s assignment was, for the first time, suggested. It would be something of
a reproach upon the law if in such circumstances such a claim could be allowed
to prevail in a court of justice.
To summarize for the sake of clearness
these rather lengthy reasons for disagreeing with the court below. The
evidence, and notably that which discloses the conduct of the parties,
conclusively justifies the finding of the trial judge that there was in April
an arrangement
[Page 729]
between Garson and Fraser by which Fraser
was to assume the building of the stations on the Outlook Branch in performance
of Garson’s contract with the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. and that by the same
arrangement the moneys paid under that contract by the railway company to
Garson were by him to be paid over to Fraser. It is, moreover, established that
the bank had notice that an arrangement of this character had been made between
Fraser and Garson at least as early as July. The proper inference from the
facts in evidence (including the course of the bank in the conduct of its
defence) is that no obligation from Garson to the bank which came into
existence as early as July, and for which the assignment was to stand as
security, is still unsatisfied. It follows that assuming the assignment of June
to have been taken without notice of the appellant’s rights and to have the
effect of vesting in the bank the legal title to moneys (as soon as such moneys
should be earned) which should become payable to Garson under the Outlook
contract—still the bank having had notice of Fraser’s rights before any debt
was incurred for which it is now entitled to hold the assignment as security,
cannot on well-known principles successfully assert any claim upon those moneys
as against Fraser.
Remedies for breach of obligations do not
require to be specified in a contract. In Re Polymer Corp., it was held that, under an
arbitration clause in general terms, a board of arbitrators could award damages
suffered by reason of a strike held in breach of a collective agreement,
although the agreement embodied no express stipulation for such remedy. In Lounsbury
Co. Ltd. v. Duthie and Sinclair, this
Court held that an unpaid vendor was liable in damages for breach of his
obligation under the contract to effect a provident sale and that this
obligation was not destroyed by the vendor making an assignment of the contract
to a third party in consideration of the payment of the balance due.
It was strenuously contended that, because
Tidewater had first given a notice of intention to surrender the lease and made
the assignment to Imperial on the instructions of Gulf after the latter had
elected to have the lease assigned back to it,
[Page 730]
the obligations of the parties should be
determined as if, instead of a direct assignment by Tidewater to Imperial,
there had been an assignment to Gulf followed by another assignment by Gulf to
Imperial. In my view this contention is wholly ill-founded not only for the
reasons given by Martland J. on the appeal as against Gulf, but also because,
even on that view of the operation, the legal result should be the same.
Tidewater having had notice of the assignment of the royalty to Montreal could
not assign the lease to Gulf otherwise than subject to the obligation of paying
the royalty to Montreal. The royalty was no longer in favour of Gulf,
therefore, Gulf could only take an assignment subject to the obligation of
paying this royalty to Montreal. Tidewater would have been in breach of its
obligations to Montreal just as if it had made an assignment of the lease to
Gulf without protecting Montreal’s rights. The situation would have been
exactly the same in that respect as in The Saint John and Quebec Railway case,
supra.
I would allow the appeal against all respondents
with costs in this Court and in the Court of appeal and restore the judgment at
trial but vary the same by substituting for the dismissal against the
defendants other than Gulf, a declaration that all the defendants are jointly
and severally liable in damages to the plaintiff so that in the aggregate the
plaintiff will recover damages to the date of judgment equivalent to the amount
of royalty the plaintiff is entitled to receive together with interest.
Appeal allowed in part, PIGEON,
DICKSON and DE GRANDPRÉ JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, appellant:
MacPherson, Leslie & Tyerman, Regina.
Solicitors for the defendant, respondent,
Gulf Securities Corporation Ltd.: Shumiatcher & Associates, Regina.
Solicitors for the defendants,
respondents, Tidewater Oil Company and associated companies: Balfour, Moss,
Milliken, Laschuk, Kyle, Vancisse & Cameron, Regina.