Canadian National Railway Co. v.
Norsk Pacific Steamship Co., [1992] 1 S.C.R. 1021
Norsk Pacific Steamship Company
Limited,
Norsk Pacific Marine Services Ltd.,
The Tug Jervis Crown and
Francis MacDonnell Appellants
v.
Canadian National Railway Company Respondent
Indexed as: Canadian
National Railway Co. v. Norsk Pacific Steamship Co.
File No.: 21838.
1991: May 2;
1992: April 30.
Present: La Forest,
L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Cory, McLachlin, Stevenson and Iacobucci JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of
appeal
Torts ‑‑
Negligence ‑‑ Economic loss ‑‑ Railway bridge owned by
Crown damaged by barge ‑‑ Bridge used by railways under contract ‑‑
Bridge owner recovering damages from defendants ‑‑ Railways unable
to recover economic losses from bridge owner ‑‑ Whether or not
defendants liable to railways using bridge for economic loss.
A barge being towed down the
Fraser River by a tug owned by Norsk collided in heavy fog with the New
Westminster railway bridge and caused extensive damage which closed the bridge
for several weeks. Appellants admitted liability for negligence as to the
collision. The bridge was owned by Public Works Canada (PWC) and used by four
railways, including CN.
The bridge formed part of
CN's main line and connected with tracks and land owned by CN on either side of
the bridge. The railways' use of the bridge was governed by contract which
explicitly reserved full ownership of the bridge to PWC and explicitly rejected
any possibility of a leasehold estate or interest in CN. The bridge operated
on the principle of full recovery of all operating and maintenance costs but
not for profit. CN, in addition, agreed to provide PWC, on a contractual
basis, with repair, maintenance, consulting and inspection services as PWC
might request. PWC was to authorize all such services and to pay for them as
needed. CN also provided some services voluntarily.
PWC paid for the repair to
the bridge and recovered all damages resulting from the collision at trial.
The licence contracts between PWC and the railways, however, provided for no
indemnification in the case of disruption of bridge service. Unable to claim
under the contract, CN brought this action in tort against Norsk and the other
defendants claiming for the actual costs incurred because of the bridge
closure.
Before trial, it was agreed
that the entitlement of two of the railways to recover for pure economic loss
would stand or fall on the result of the action by CN. The trial judge allowed
CN's claim against Norsk and dismissed it as against the other defendants.
Norsk's appeal to the Court of Appeal was dismissed.
At issue here is whether or
not economic loss, and "contractual relational economic loss" in
particular, is recoverable in tort.
Held (La Forest, Sopinka and Iacobucci JJ.
dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per L'Heureux‑Dubé, Cory and
McLachlin JJ.: Pure economic loss is prima facie recoverable
where, in addition to negligence and foreseeable loss, there is sufficient
proximity between the negligent act and the loss. Proximity is the controlling
concept, avoiding the spectre of unlimited liability. Proximity may be
established by a variety of factors depending on the nature of the case. The categories
are not closed and further definition as to what factors give rise to liability
for pure economic loss will occur as more cases are decided. In determining
whether liability should be extended to a new situation, the courts should
consider the factors traditionally relevant to proximity such as the
relationship between the parties, physical propinquity, assumed or imposed
obligations and close causal connection. Sufficient special factors must exist
to avoid the imposition of indeterminate and unreasonable liability. The
result would be a principled, yet flexible, approach to tort liability for pure
economic loss. Recovery would be allowed where justified, while excluding
indeterminate and inappropriate liability, and it will permit the coherent
development of the law.
In effect, the absolute
exclusionary rule could be seen as an indicator of proximity in accordance with
the approach initiated in England by Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller &
Partners Ltd., and followed in Canada in Rivtow Marine Ltd. v.
Washington Iron Works, Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen and B.D.C.
Ltd. v. Hofstrand Farms Ltd. Where there is physical injury or damage, one
posits proximity on the ground that if one is close enough to someone or
something to do physical damage to it, one is close enough to be held legally
responsible for the consequences. It is, however, not the only
indicator of proximity. The necessary proximity to found legal liability
fairly in tort may arise in circumstances where there is no physical damage.
A more comprehensive and
objective consideration of proximity requires that the court review all of the
factors connecting the negligent act with the loss; this includes not only the
relationship between the parties but all forms of proximity -‑ physical,
circumstantial, causal or assumed indicators of closeness. While it is
impossible to define comprehensively what will satisfy the requirements of
proximity or directness, precision may be found as types of relationships or
situations are defined in which the necessary closeness between negligence and
loss exists.
Proximity, while critical to
establishing the right to recover pure economic loss in tort, does not always
indicate liability. The approach adopted in Kamloops (paralleled by
the second branch of Anns v. Merton London Borough Council) requires
that the court consider the purposes served by permitting recovery as well as
any residual policy considerations which call for a limitation on liability.
Liability for pure economic loss can therefore be rejected where indicated by
policy reasons not taken into account in the proximity analysis.
The approach enunciated in Kamloops
does not threaten to open the floodgates of indeterminate liability, lead to
undue uncertainty, or cause unfair or inefficient economic allocation of
resources. Rather, it is sensitive to these concerns. The legislature,
moreover, can impose limits if the courts extend liability too far following
this approach. In light of the review of the issues of insurance, loss spreading
and contractual allocation of risk raised against liability in this appeal,
there is no practical reason for the courts to retreat to the inflexible rule,
for example, one that never countenances recovery of economic loss except where
the plaintiff has suffered physical damage or injury or has relied on a
negligent misrepresentation.
CN suffered economic loss as
a result of being deprived of its contractual right to use the bridge damaged
by the defendants' negligence. Its right to recover depended on: (1) whether
it could establish sufficient proximity or "closeness" and (2)
whether extension of recovery to this type of loss was desirable from a
practical point of view.
The issue of proximity had to
be considered anew here. The case did not fall within any of the categories
where proximity and liability had previously been found to exist.
In addition to focusing upon
the relationship between Norsk and CN -- a significant indicator of proximity
in and of itself -- the trial judge based his conclusion that there was
sufficient proximity on a number of factors related to CN's connection with the
property damaged, the bridge, including the fact that CN's property was in
close proximity to the bridge, that CN'S property could not be enjoyed without
the link of the bridge which was an integral part of its railway system, and
that CN supplied materials, inspection and consulting services for the bridge,
was its preponderant user, and was recognized in the periodic negotiations
surrounding the closing of the bridge.
Recovery for purely economic
loss has been recognized for a "joint" or "common venture"
category. To deny recovery in such circumstances would be to deny it to a
person who for practical purposes is in the same position as if he or she owned
the property physically damaged. Here, CN's operations were so closely allied
to the operations of PWC's damaged bridge that the necessary proximity is
established.
From a practical point of
view, extension of recovery to this type of loss is desirable. Recovery
permits a plaintiff, whose position for practical purposes vis‑à‑vis
the tortfeasor is indistinguishable from that of the owner of the damaged
property, to recover what the actual owner could have recovered. This is fair
and avoids an anomalous result. Recovery of economic loss in this case does
not open the floodgates to unlimited liability; the category is a limited one
and allows potential tortfeasors to gauge in advance the scope of their
liability.
Per Stevenson J.: While in Canada
there is no general exclusionary rule precluding recovery of pure economic loss
in a negligence action, there are acceptable policy reasons which preclude
recovery of certain types of economic losses. For policy reasons and for
reasons of fairness to defendants, the law must deny recovery of economic
losses which give rise to the possibility of indeterminate liability.
Relational losses usually create the possibility of indeterminate liability and
their recovery is therefore exceptional. Aside from the danger of
indeterminate liability, however, there is no reason in principle that bars recovery
of such losses. Relational losses should thus be recoverable wherever the
policy concern about indeterminate liability does not apply. There is no
danger of indeterminate liability when the defendant actually knows or ought to
know of a specific individual or individuals, as opposed to a general or
unascertained class of the public, who is or are likely to suffer a foreseeable
kind of loss as a result of negligence by that defendant. With a "known
plaintiff", the scope of liability cannot become indeterminate. While the
"known plaintiff" approach may not be an adequate final limit on
recovery of relational economic loss, it provides an appropriate basis for
excluding the relational loss exclusionary rule. There may be other
exceptions. The concept of proximity is incapable of providing a principled
basis for drawing the line on the issue of liability.
On the facts of this case,
there is no policy rationale for excluding liability. The appellants do not
deny that the respondent's loss was foreseeable or that the other usual
elements necessary to found a liability in negligence were present. One
navigating near a bridge would ordinarily realize that damage to the bridge
structure will cause damage to the users of the bridge. The loss and the victim
were identifiable, and the damage almost inevitable. The appellants ought to
have known ‑‑ and in fact knew ‑‑ that the respondent
would suffer economic loss as a result of their negligence. Liability would in
no way be out of proportion with the neglect. There is no danger of
indeterminate liability.
Per La Forest, Sopinka and
Iacobucci JJ. (dissenting): There are at least three types of economic
loss cases in tort. The first involves consequential economic loss. In those
cases, the plaintiff claims for economic loss which occurs as a consequence of
the plaintiff's being personally injured or incurring property damage. In the
second type, which can be termed non-relational economic loss, the plaintiff
claims for pure economic loss which is unrelated to any personal injury or
property damage suffered by either the plaintiff or any third party. It is
doubtful that this group can be analyzed in terms of a single rule. The third
type, present here, involves a claim for relational economic loss by the
plaintiff as a result of damage caused to someone else's property.
Thus the issue in this case
is not whether economic losses are recoverable in tort; they are indeed
recoverable in certain cases. The issue, rather, is whether a person (A) who
contracts for the use of property belonging to another (B) can sue a person who
damages that property for losses resulting from A's inability to use the
property during the period of repair. This type of loss can be referred to as
contractual relational economic loss.
A distinct approach to
contractual relational economic loss cases is justified both on policy grounds
and on precedent. In policy terms, contractual economic loss cases have a
number of specific characteristics that differentiate them from other pure
economic loss cases. First, the property owner's right of action already puts
pressure on the defendants to act with care. Imposing further liability cannot
reasonably be justified on the grounds of deterrence. Second, a firm
exclusionary rule does not necessarily exclude compensation to the plaintiff
for his or her loss. Rather, it simply channels to the property owner both
potential liability to the plaintiff and the right of recovery against the
tortfeasor. Third, perfect compensation in these cases is almost always
impossible because of the ripple effects which are of the very essence of
contractual relational economic loss. These effects are often absent in other
economic loss cases. It is in this sense that the solution to cases of this type
is necessarily pragmatic: the whole exercise in this kind of situation involves
drawing a line amongst those who are undeniably injured by the tortfeasor who
was undeniably at fault. Fourth, contractual relational economic loss cases,
typically, involve accidents, an aspect of fundamental importance with respect
to tests of liability founded on the foreseeability of an individual plaintiff
or an ascertained class of plaintiffs.
As for precedent, the debate
over recovery of pure economic loss in tort has been obscured by the existence
of two different versions of an exclusionary rule barring recovery for pure
economic loss. In its narrow formulation, the rule excludes claims for
negligent interference with contractual relations where a third party's property
has been damaged and where the damage to the plaintiff's contractual
relations is caused as a result of that property damage. The rule was
originally developed in these terms in Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co.,
and other early cases as noted in the recent case of Candlewood Navigation
Corp. v. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. (The Mineral Transporter). Subsequently,
the exclusionary rule was broadened and purported to exclude all claims in
negligence for pure economic loss. This broad rule was rejected in Hedley
Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners Ltd., opening up a third phase in
the development of law on economic loss. Many recent cases in the area of
economic loss have approached the problem at a very high level of generality.
They have addressed the question of whether we should abandon the broad rule
altogether. The result of this broad approach is that cases on relational
economic loss are unhelpfully bound up with other types of economic loss cases
that raise different policy concerns. Precedent and policy support a distinct
approach to the issue of contractual relational economic loss.
The decisions of this Court
relied upon by the respondent are not contractual relational economic loss
cases; they involve other types of economic loss claims which raise different
policy concerns. Undoubtedly, the decisions of this Court in Rivtow Marine
Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works and Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen,
refute the existence of a broad exclusionary rule in Canada and Murphy v.
Brentwood District Council does not represent the law in Canada. However,
nothing in Rivtow or Kamloops indicates that the Court considered
the narrow exclusionary rule to be ill-advised.
While the respondent
recognized the existence of the narrow rule in Cattle, it sought first
to avoid the application of the rule by contending that its interest was more
than a mere contractual interest. Second, they sought to qualify the
application of the rule in Cattle by contending that even if CN has only
a contractual interest, the existence of other factors is sufficient to
constitute a special relationship with the tortfeasor and to ground recovery
for its contractual claims. These arguments were dealt with in turn.
CN's arguments that the
narrow rule should not apply in this case because it had more than a
contractual interest were unpersuasive. First, CN did not suffer a
"transferred loss of use" any different in kind from that suffered by
the typical contractual claimant. The argument that granting judgment to CN in
this case would not extend the liability of the defendants over and above what
they would normally incur to the owner of commercial property (since the owner
could have collected damages for loss of use) was unconvincing. A similar
argument was rejected in Candlewood on stronger facts for the
plaintiff. Adoption of a "transferred loss of use" theory in cases
of this type would lead to great uncertainties in measuring, tracing and
apportioning damages. Second, CN did not come under the common adventure or
joint venture exception to the narrow exclusionary rule. CN's preponderant
usage of the bridge and its contractual arrangement to supply repair services
to PWC where requested and paid for by PWC were not sufficient to constitute a
common adventure. Common adventure cases involve a situation where B is bound
to contribute to A's loss under general average rules and seeks to recover that
amount from the wrongdoer C. They also involve discretionary decisions made in
the common interest which impose cost disproportionately amongst those who
benefit from the decision. There was no common imminent peril in this case and
CN was not required to contribute to PWC's loss. CN's voluntary contributions
to bridge maintenance were also insufficient to constitute a common adventure.
Turning to the second branch
of CN's argument, it was necessary, before examining the various proposals that
have been made to relax the bright line rule which excludes recovery for
contractual relational economic loss, to set forth the criteria that a rule in
this area should meet. The guideposts set forth by McLachlin J. for
establishing a rule in this area were generally agreed with: liability must be
limited; the limits must be clearly defined; considerations of policy and
fairness must be taken into account. A number of additional aspects are also
relevant to the choice of a rule in this area. It is often suggested that
indeterminacy is the only problem the rule must confront. This was
perhaps natural in light of the importance of potential indeterminate liability
in negligent misrepresentation cases and the fact that the breakthrough in
allowing recovery for economic loss came in Hedley Byrne. However, the
resulting confusion between the indeterminate liability problem and economic
loss cases in general tends to obscure the variety of issues raised in
different kinds of economic loss cases. Although a rule in the area of
contractual relational economic loss certainly must confront the problem of
indeterminacy, the rule should serve to do more than just exclude indeterminate
liability. A test for recovery in cases of contractual relational economic
loss should also reflect the characteristics of this type of litigation. The
rule should encourage both parties to act in ways that will minimize overall
losses.
The rule must, of course,
also confront the problem of indeterminacy. What then does it mean for a
particular liability to be determinate? First, in this area, the requisite
certainty should exist before the accident occurs. Second, the concern
is not simply the risk of a large number of claims since an accident may injure
a large number of people or cause extensive property damage. Rather, the
concern is that the volume of claims is indeterminate and therefore difficult
and expensive to insure against. In physical damage cases, the number of
potential first-victim claims is usually foreseeable even when large. Even
more importantly, it is rare for multiple physical damage claims to ripple down
a chain. In contrast, such ripple effects are the very essence of contractual
relational economic loss. A third important consideration is the indeterminacy
of each claim. Allowing recovery for contractual expectancies would require
analysis of who bore the loss. The problem with this case, from the
perspective of indeterminacy, is that it involves a type of accident
that will very likely lead to a great number of claims.
The proposed tests that
would allow recovery do not meet the criteria that a rule should have in this
area. First, the "individual plaintiff" or "ascertained class
of plaintiffs" test was rejected in Candlewood. While useful in
negligent misrepresentation cases, it has no link with the defendant's degree
of fault or with the merit of the plaintiff's claim in the context of an
accident. Second, foresight of the specific nature of the plaintiff's loss is
not sufficient; in practically all cases of this type, the defendant will be
aware that the specific nature of the loss will be loss of use of the damaged
property. Third, the "physical effects" test adopted by Jacobs J.
in Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. v. The Dredge "Willemstad", is
not satisfied even if it were to be adopted. The other railways suffered
identical damages despite not owning any property in physical propinquity to
the accident. There is no policy significance in the fact that a particular
plaintiff owns property in proximity to an accident. Fourth, the concept of
proximity is incapable of providing a principled basis for drawing the line
with respect to the issue of liability for the reasons expressed by Stevenson
J. It expresses a result, rather than a principle. Fifth, liability in this
area should not be established based on the court's perception of the extent of
the defendant's moral fault. Liability is very often vicarious in cases of
this type. The hallmark of vicarious liability is that it is based neither on
any conduct by the defendant nor even on breach of his or her own duty.
Furthermore, to the extent that the concern about fault is linked to
deterrence, the deterrent effect of tort law is already present due to the tort
action of the property owner. Sixth, CN's suggestion that a new bright line be
erected excluding all co-contractors of CN does not appear to be a
significantly better solution than the traditional rule.
The crucial problem with the
various formulations of the proximity test examined so far is that they look at
the problem strictly from the perspective of the defendant. Given the
eminently pragmatic and policy basis of decisions about liability in this
area, the situation of both the defendant and the plaintiff must be
examined in cases of this kind. In particular, the plaintiff's ability to
foresee and provide for the particular damage in question is a key factor in
the proximity analysis.
It is legitimate to consider
which party is the better loss bearer in this type of case for three reasons:
policy concerns with respect to deterrence and cost internalisation are
generally at least substantially met by the tortfeasor's primary liability to
the property owner; the approach merely articulates another policy lying behind
a well-established rule; in this field the crucial problem remains that of limiting
liability and a significantly higher threshold for recovery is entirely
justified.
Analysis of loss bearing
ability involves asking which party is in a better position to predict the
frequency and severity of CN's economic loss when bridges are damaged, and to
plan accordingly. CN was undoubtedly in a better position to bear the loss in
this case than was Norsk. First, in light of the significant information
available regarding bridge failure and CN's long use of the bridge, CN was
probably at least equally competent in terms of estimating the potential risks
of bridge failure. Second, CN was clearly in a better position than Norsk to
estimate the potential costs of bridge failure to CN's operations. Third, CN
was better placed to protect itself from the consequences of those losses
through first party commercial insurance or self-insurance, or through contract
with both the bridge owner and with CN's customers. Even if recovery were
allowed in this case, parties such as CN will still need to protect
themselves. The critical effect of allowing recovery is that it would also
require defendants in Norsk's position to insure for potential contractual
relational economic loss.
To justify recovery in cases
of this nature, the plaintiff would, at the very least, have to effectively
respond not only to the concern about indeterminacy but also show that no
adequate alternative means of protection were available. Other concerns may
also need to be met. The question of whether recovery should be allowed in the
residual cases in which these two barriers are overcome does not require an
answer in the context of this case. The exclusionary rule is not in itself
attractive. The rule only becomes defensible when it is realized that full
recovery is impossible, that recovery is in fact going to be refused to the
vast majority of such claims regardless of the rule we adopt, and when the
exclusionary rule is compared to the alternatives. It should not be disturbed
on the facts of this case.
Cases Cited
By McLachlin J.
Applied: Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington
Iron Works, [1974] S.C.R. 1189; Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen,
[1984] 2 S.C.R. 2; considered: Anns v. Merton London Borough Council,
[1978] A.C. 728; Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. v. The Dredge "Willemstad"
(1976), 11 A.L.R. 227; not followed: Murphy v. Brentwood District
Council, [1991] 1 A.C. 398; referred to: Donoghue v. Stevenson,
[1932] A.C. 562; Ultramares Corporation v. Touche, 174 N.E. 441 (1931);
Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875), L.R. 10 Q.B. 453; Spartan
Steel & Alloys Ltd. v. Martin & Co. (Contractors) Ltd., [1973] Q.B.
27; Leigh and Sillivan Ltd. v. Aliakmon Shipping Co., [1985] Q.B.
350; Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners Ltd., [1964] A.C.
465; Junior Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co., [1983] 1 A.C. 520; Morrison
Steamship Co. v. Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners) (The Greystoke Castle),
[1947] A.C. 265; Domar Ocean Transportation, Ltd. v. M/V Andrew Martin,
754 F.2d 616 (1985); Amoco Transport Co. v. S/S Mason Lykes, 768 F.2d
659 (1985); Union Oil Co. v. Oppen, 501 F.2d 558 (1974); East River
Steamship Corp. v. Delaval Turbine, Inc., 752 F.2d 903 (1985), aff'd 476
U.S. 858 (1986); Cass. civ. 2e, April 28, 1965, D.S. 1965.777 (Marcailloux
v. R.A.T.V.M.); Joly v. Ferme Ré‑Mi Inc., [1974] C.A. 523; Regent
Taxi v. Congrégation des petits frères de Marie, dits frères maristes,
[1929] S.C.R. 650; Hôpital Notre‑Dame v. Laurent, [1978] 1 S.C.R.
605; Agnew‑Surpass Shoe Stores Ltd. v. Cummer‑Yonge Investments
Ltd., [1976] 2 S.C.R. 221; B.D.C. Ltd. v. Hofstrand Farms Ltd.,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 228; MacMillan Bloedel Ltd. v. Foundation Company of Canada
Ltd., [1977] 2 W.W.R. 717; Gypsum Carrier Inc. v. The Queen, [1978]
1 F.C. 147; Star Village Tavern v. Nield (1976), 71 D.L.R. (3d) 439; Sutherland
Shire Council v. Heyman (1985), 60 A.L.R. 1.
By Stevenson J.
Approved: Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. v. The
Dredge "Willemstad" (1976), 11 A.L.R. 227; Ross v. Caunters, [1980] Ch. 297; not
followed: Murphy v. Brentwood District Council, [1991] 1 A.C. 398; Candlewood
Navigation Corp. v. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. (The Mineral Transporter),
[1986] A.C. 1; Junior Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co., [1983] 1 A.C. 520; referred
to: Agnew‑Surpass Shoe Stores Ltd. v. Cummer‑Yonge
Investments Ltd., [1976] 2 S.C.R. 221; B.D.C. Ltd. v. Hofstrand Farms
Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 228; Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen, [1984] 2
S.C.R. 2; Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875), L.R. 10 Q.B. 453; Simpson
& Co. v. Thomson (1877), 3 App. Cas. 279; Donoghue v. Stevenson,
[1932] A.C. 562; Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners Ltd.,
[1964] A.C. 465; Morrison Steamship Co. v. Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners)
(The Greystoke Castle), [1947] A.C. 265; Rivtow Marine Ltd. v.
Washington Iron Works, [1974] S.C.R. 1189; Anns v. Merton London Borough
Council, [1978] A.C. 728; Ultramares Corporation v. Touche, 174 N.E.
441 (1931); Leigh and Sillavan Ltd. v. Aliakmon Shipping Co., [1986]
A.C. 785; Société anonyme de remorquage à hélice v. Bennetts, [1911] 1
K.B. 243; Weller & Co. v. Foot & Mouth Disease Research Institute,
[1966] 1 Q.B. 569; San Sebastian Pty. Ltd. v. Minister Administering the
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (1986), 162 C.L.R. 340; Candler
v. Crane, Christmas & Co., [1951] 2 K.B. 164; Clarke v. Bruce Lance
& Co., [1988] 1 All E.R. 364; Haig v. Bamford, [1977] 1 S.C.R.
466.
By La Forest J. (dissenting)
Gypsum Carrier Inc. v. The
Queen, [1978] 1 F.C.
147; Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. St. Lawrence Seaway Authority, [1978] 1
F.C. 464; Star Village Tavern v. Nield (1976), 71 D.L.R. (3d) 439; Weller
& Co. v. Foot & Mouth Disease Research Institute, [1966] 1 Q.B.
569; S.C.M. (United Kingdom) Ltd. v. W. J. Whittall and Son Ltd., [1971]
1 Q.B. 337; Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd. v. Martin & Co.
(Contractors) Ltd., [1973] Q.B. 27; Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington
Iron Works (1972), 26 D.L.R. (3d) 559, rev'd [1974] S.C.R. 1189; Kamloops
(City of) v. Nielsen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 2; Hedley Byrne & Co. v.
Heller & Partners Ltd., [1964] A.C. 465; Murphy v. Brentwood
District Council, [1991] 1 A.C. 398; State of Louisiana v. M/V Testbank,
752 F.2d 1019 (1985); Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875), L.R. 10
Q.B. 453; Candlewood Navigation Corp. v. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. (The
Mineral Transporter), [1986] A.C. 1; Simpson & Co. v. Thomson
(1877), 3 App. Cas. 279; Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. v. The Dredge
"Willemstad" (1976), 11 A.L.R. 227; Robins Dry Dock &
Repair Co. v. Flint, 275 U.S. 303 (1927); Abramovic v. Canadian Pacific
Ltd. (1989), 69 O.R. (2d) 487; Leigh and Sillavan Ltd. v. Aliakmon
Shipping Co., [1986] A.C. 785; Société anonyme de remorquage à hélice v.
Bennetts, [1911] 1 K.B. 243; Donoghue v. Stevenson, [1932] A.C. 562;
Rothfield v. Manolakos, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1259; B.D.C. Ltd. v.
Hofstrand Farms Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 228; Haig v. Bamford, [1977] 1
S.C.R. 466; Elliott Steam Tug Co. v. Shipping Controller, [1922] 1 K.B.
127; MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co., 217 N.Y. 382 (1916); Overseas
Tankship (U.K.) Ltd. v. Morts Dock & Engineering Co. (The Wagon Mound),
[1961] A.C. 388; Cass. civ. 2e, June 25, 1975, Bull. II
no. 195, eventually returned to that court, Cass. civ. 2e,
February 21, 1979, Bougues‑Montès, J.C.P. 1979, IV, 145; Cour
d'appel de Colmar (Ch. détachée à Metz), April 20, 1955, D.1956.723 (Football
Club de Metz v. Wiroth); Cass. civ. 2e, November 14, 1958,
G.P. 1959.1.31 (Demeyer v. Camerlo); Trib. gr. inst. Nanterre, October
22, 1975, G.P. 1976.1.392 (Brunet v. Rico et Caisse mutuelle d'assurance et
de prévoyance); Cass. civ. 2e, April 28, 1965, D.S.
1965.777 (Marcailloux v. R.A.T.V.M.); Morin v. Blais, [1977] 1
S.C.R. 570; J. E. Construction Inc. v. General Motors du Canada Ltée,
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APPEAL from a judgment of the
Federal Court of Appeal, [1990] 3 F.C. 114, 104 N.R. 321, 65 D.L.R. (4th) 321,
3 C.C.L.T. (2d) 229, affirming a judgment of the Federal Court, Trial Division
(1989), 26 F.T.R. 81, 49 C.C.L.T. 1, allowing respondent's action in damages.
Appeal dismissed, La Forest, Sopinka and Iacobucci JJ. dissenting.
P. D. Lowry and M. A. Clemens,
for the appellants.
David McEwen, for the respondent.
//La Forest J.//
The reasons of La Forest,
Sopinka and Iacobucci JJ. were delivered by
La Forest J.
(dissenting) -- This case concerns recovery in tort for economic loss. Though
some of the arguments are framed as if the case turned on the broad question
whether such damages are generally recoverable, the specific issue is much
narrower. It is whether a person (A) who contracts for the use of property
belonging to another (B) can sue a person who damages that property for losses
resulting from A's inability to use the property during the period of repair.
(I call this "contractual relational economic loss", a convenient if
somewhat barbarous phrase.)
The issue arises in a context
where a barge collided with a bridge while being pulled by the defendants' tug,
thereby preventing the plaintiff (CN) from making use of it. Ordinarily, a person
whose operations are disrupted by damage to a bridge belonging to another
cannot at common law pursue the person who caused the damage. But the
plaintiff claims that it may do so by reason of its particular relationship
with the owner of the bridge and with the tortfeasor. As in the case of three
other railways, it has a contractual right to use the bridge for railway
purposes, but the plaintiff relies on additional facts to establish its special
relationship. It is by far the major user of the bridge, which is a central
link in its operations, so much so that many of those who operated on the
river, including the master of the defendants' tug, thought it belonged to the
plaintiff. As well, CN's contract requires it to repair and maintain the bridge
when necessary at the request of the owner; CN also owns land close to the
bridge.
The courts below and my
colleagues, Justices McLachlin and Stevenson, are all of the view that CN's
claim should be upheld. But this unanimity is more apparent than real, for
they do so for different reasons and, indeed, there is significant disagreement
on the determining issues. I take the opposite view. For sound policy
reasons, the courts have established a clear rule (the "bright line"
rule) that persons cannot sue a tortfeasor for suffering losses to their
contractual rights with the owner of property by reason of damages caused to
that property by the tortfeasor. That rule, I have no doubt, may be subject to
exceptions for clear and overriding policy reasons, but as I will indicate, I
have been unable to determine any reason for excluding CN from the general rule
in the present case.
This, in broad outline, is
what this case is about. It is necessary, however, to set forth the facts in
some detail.
Facts
The Accident
The New Westminster Railway
Bridge, which spans the Fraser River between Surrey and New Westminster, was
built in 1904. It carries a single railway track. Its sole purpose is to
service railway traffic, both passenger and freight, but it incorporates a
swing span to permit marine traffic to navigate the waterway.
On November 28, 1987, the
barge Crown Forest No. 4, while being towed downstream by the tug Jervis
Crown in heavy fog, collided with the bridge. The Jervis Crown was
owned and operated by the Norsk Pacific Steamship Co. and the Norsk Pacific
Marine Services Ltd., both hereafter referred to as Norsk. The accident caused
extensive damage to the bridge and it was closed for several weeks while
repairs were made. The appellants admitted liability for negligence as to the
collision itself.
While the bridge was closed,
the four railway companies that used the bridge had to reroute traffic over
another bridge further upstream. Freight was either delayed or not transported
at all. The use of the waterway was also interfered with, and cargo was
delayed or transported by land.
This accident gave rise to a
number of legal actions which were consolidated in the judgment of Addy J. The
Department of Public Works ("PWC"), representing The Queen in right
of Canada, claimed damages as owner of the bridge against both Norsk and the
owners of the barge Crown Forest No. 4 and the tug Westminster
Chinook (another tug which was helping the Jervis Crown at the time
of the accident). Only the action against Norsk succeeded. Norsk was held
liable to PWC for all damages resulting to PWC from the collision. This
decision was not appealed.
In addition to the action by
the owner, three of the four railway companies claimed for economic loss
against Norsk and the other defendants. The smallest railway user, Canadian
Pacific Ltd. ("CP"), did not participate in the litigation. Before
trial there was an agreement that the entitlement of the other two railways,
the Burlington Northern Railway and the B.C. Hydro and Power Authority Railway,
to recover for pure economic loss would stand or fall on the result of the CN
claim. It was therefore only the CN claim that was directly in issue. The
trial judge allowed CN's claim against Norsk and dismissed its claim against
the other defendants. Norsk's appeal was denied in the Court of Appeal. Leave
to appeal to this Court was granted to Norsk on November 15, 1990.
Much of the written and oral
argument before us was directed to the nature of the relationships between the
plaintiff and the property owner on the one hand, and between the plaintiff and
the tortfeasor on the other. I have therefore set forth the facts of these
relationships in some detail. I also consider two other relationships to be of
interest: that between the tortfeasor and the property owner, and that between
the plaintiff and other potential plaintiffs or victims of the accident. The
latter relationship will be examined in the course of my analysis.
The Relationship Between the Plaintiff
and the Bridge Owner
The bridge and the tracks on
and adjacent to the bridge are entirely owned by PWC. Four railways were, by
contract with PWC, licensed to use the bridge. The tracks owned by PWC connect
with tracks owned by three of the railways on the north and south sides of the
river. Of the four railways CN was the principal user, accounting for 85 to 86
per cent of the railway cars using the bridge in 1987. On average it sent 32
trains with 1530 cars a day across the bridge.
CN has used the bridge
continuously since 1915. It constitutes an integral part of the railway's main
line and is in effect the connecting link between the Vancouver terminus and
the main line. It is the sole direct link between the CN tracks on the north
and south shores of the main arm of the Fraser River. CN owns land and rail
track close to the bridge. However, paragraph 13 of its licence to use the
bridge clearly retains Canada's full property rights to the bridge. Despite
the existence of CN's property on either side of the bridge, Canada has the
right to terminate the licence agreement on three years' notice. Paragraph 22
explicitly rejects the idea that the agreement gives any leasehold estate or
interest in land to CN. The unit rate charged to the railways for each
crossing is set by Canada based upon the principle of "total recovery to
Canada of all the costs of operating and maintaining the Bridge".
The licence agreements with
the four railways are identical except that CN's agreement has an extra clause,
paragraph 10, which reads as follows:
10. The Railway agrees
that it will:
(a)in
the case of emergency, (as determined by Canada), and upon request of
Canada, proceed to make such repairs, changes, or alterations to the
Bridge, or maintenance thereof, including without limiting the generality of
the foregoing, the approaches thereto, the wooden trestles, steel
superstructures, (including the swing span) thereof and the signal system
thereof, (including the interlocking plant therefor), as are absolutely
necessary, in the opinion of Canada, for the safe and proper operation
of the Bridge, (including all approaches thereto), and that Canada shall
reimburse the Railway the reasonable cost of making such repairs, changes,
alterations, or maintenance in accordance with accounts rendered therefor from
time to time to Canada by the Railway; PROVIDED HOWEVER, that no such repairs,
changes, alterations or maintenance shall be made or carried out until Canada
approves a Memorandum of Understanding to this agreement, setting out the
nature of the repairs, changes, alterations or maintenance required to be done,
the details of the work to be performed in relation thereto, and the basis of
payment therefor; and
(b)upon
the written request of Canada from time to time, provide to Canada
consulting services or inspections related to the planning, design and
construction of the Bridge; PROVIDED HOWEVER that no such services or inspections
shall be performed or made until Canada approves a Memorandum of Understanding
to this agreement, setting out the nature of the services or inspections to be
performed, the details thereof and the basis of payment therefor; and
(c)upon
the written request of Canada from time to time, perform such maintenance
and repairs to the signal system and interlocking plant of the Bridge as are
requested; PROVIDED HOWEVER that no such maintenance or repairs shall be
made or carried out until Canada approves a Memorandum of Understanding to this
agreement, setting out the nature of the maintenance and repairs required to be
done, the details of the work to be performed in relation thereto, and the
basis of payment therefor. [Emphasis added.]
CN thus agreed to provide PWC, on a
contractual basis, with such services as repairs and maintenance, consulting
and inspections as the latter might request. Under the contract, PWC both
authorizes all such services in advance and pays for them as needed.
CN also provides some
services voluntarily. Consulting services are provided to PWC without charge
by a full‑time engineer employed by CN. The engineer's sole duties
involve responding to problems at this bridge and two other railway bridges
belonging to CN in the vicinity. CN periodically arranges without charge for a
complete inspection of the girders, stringers and other metal portions of the
bridge. The "Sperry" car used to inspect its own rails on either
side of the bridge also inspects the bridge rails as it crosses the bridge. At
times, CN provides materials for the bridge. Thus, following the collision, it
supplied PWC without charge with a large girder to assist the jacking up of the
swing span, thereby saving several days of bridge closure. When the bridge is
closed for routine maintenance, the timing and duration are negotiated and
arranged between CN and PWC.
The commercial marine traffic
transiting the Fraser River through the swing span is substantial, and
throughout its history the bridge has on a number of occasions been damaged by
ships colliding with it. Apart from the cost of repairing structural damage,
the bridge closures resulting from such damage and repairs have caused
inconvenience and losses to railway companies, river users and industries
relying on it. PWC has maintained a record of such incidents since 1950.
The risk of collisions and
their minimization has been the subject of considerable study. In particular
the following reports have been made:
(a)Report
on the Vulnerability of Bridges in Canadian Waters by the Canadian Coast Guard
(b)Report
on the Fraser River Railway Bridge, a Current Review by the Fraser River Bridge
Working Committee of the Western Transportation Advisory Council (WESTAC) ‑
1977
(c)Report
on Ship Collision Risk Analysis for the New Westminster Railway Bridge at New
Westminster, B.C. Phase 1 and Phase 2 by Crippen Consultants for PWC ‑
1984
(d)Report
on the feasibility study of guide structures for hazard reduction by the Marine
Directorate of PWC ‑ 1986.
The second of these studies forms part
of the record. The study was prompted by an accident in 1975 in which a log
barge was ripped from its mooring by a severe storm and blown into the bridge,
causing it to be closed for over four months. The study, in which CN actively
participated, was carried out by a working group composed of representatives
of all parties interested in the bridge. The Committee examined a wide range
of problems and concluded that the only problems of significance were the
relatively high risk encountered by deep-sea vessels navigating under the
bridge and the very high levels of damage that could ensue from a collision
with the bridge supports and structure. Gypsum Carrier Inc. v. The Queen,
[1978] 1 F.C. 147, involved yet another ship collision accident in which the
same railways as in this case made essentially the same claims for loss caused
by the closure of the bridge. Recovery was denied.
In my view, both the
surrounding circumstances and the contract itself indicate that the parties
either did or ought to have considered the issue of allocating the risk of the
bridge's closing as a result of a ship collision. Indeed, the licence
agreement between CN and PWC of April 1987, which was in force at the time of
the accident, did just that. The agreement provides as follows:
11. Canada
may at any time and from time to time, by giving 7 days' notice in writing to
the Railway, require the Railway absolutely to stop, delay or suspend its use
of the Bridge, as provided for under this license, where, in the opinion of
Canada, such stoppage, delay or suspension is necessary; PROVIDED THAT in
cases of emergency, as determined by Canada, Canada may require the Railway,
without written notice, to so immediately stop, delay or suspend its use of the
Bridge, but such stoppage or suspension shall continue only so long as may be
absolutely necessary, in the opinion of Canada, and the Railway shall not be
entitled to claim any compensation or damages from Canada in respect thereof.
. . .
15. In
the event of the complete or partial destruction of the Bridge or any damage
thereto, the Minister shall forthwith decide whether or not Canada intends
to rebuild, replace or repair such destruction or damage and shall give the
Railway notice of such intention within 24 hours of the Minister's decision;
PROVIDED HOWEVER that Canada shall be under no obligation to rebuild,
replace or repair such destruction or damage and the Railway shall not be
entitled to claim any compensation or damages (including, without limiting
the generality of the foregoing, any compensation or damages the Railway may be
required to pay any customer, passenger or user of the Railway or its services)
from Canada in respect thereof. In the event Canada chooses not to
rebuild, replace or repair such destruction or damage the Railway shall have
the option of terminating this license from the date of such destruction or
damage and on such termination all rights and privileges hereunder shall cease
forthwith and the Railway shall have no claim whatsoever against Canada;
PROVIDED FURTHER that the Railway shall forthwith pay to Canada, up to the date
of termination, any sums that have accrued or may have accrued due to Canada,
up to the date of such termination. [Emphasis added.]
The Relationship Between the Tortfeasor
and the Plaintiff
Prior to the accident, the
owners and operators of the bridge, the Jervis Crown, the Crown
Forest No. 4 and the Westminster Chinook knew that damage to the
bridge would cause delays and rerouting. All the defendants were fully aware
of the fact that CN was the primary user. Captain MacDonnell, the master of
the Jervis Crown and other masters and seamen operating in the river
commonly refer to it as the CN rail bridge. Captain MacDonnell himself had
been familiar with the bridge for over 40 years and until sometime after the
collision actually believed it belonged to CN.
All the defendants knew that
the Port Mann‑Thornton marshalling and switching yard of CN, the main
switching yard for the greater Vancouver area, is situated approximately 1½
miles upriver from the bridge on the south bank of the Fraser River. The
defendants knew that there was no other rail bridge over the main arm of the
river below the Westminster bridge and, because the bridge had been damaged
before, they also knew that in the event of closure of the bridge owing to
damage, CN would have to detour over the CP bridge upriver between Mission and
Matsqui and divert over CP tracks on the north bank of the Fraser River.
The Relationship Between the Property
Owner and the Tortfeasor
PWC arranged and paid for the
repair of the bridge. As property owner, we saw, it recovered at trial all
damages resulting from the collision from the tug Jervis Crown and its
owners, and that judgment was not appealed. As earlier noted, the licence
contracts between PWC and the railways provided for no indemnification in case
of interruption of bridge service. Unable to claim under its contract, CN
brought this action in tort against Norsk and the other defendants, claiming
for the actual costs incurred by reason of the bridge closure.
The Issues
It is crucial at the outset
to set forth precisely what is, and what is not in issue in this appeal. The
issue is not whether economic losses are recoverable in tort, as my colleague
McLachlin J. seems to frame it in her analysis. For reasons I shall explore
later, I would have thought it clear that they are indeed recoverable in
certain cases. And, though the parties disagree with respect to the points in
issue, they did not frame them in that way in their factums in this Court.
The appellants (defendants)
argue that the question in this appeal is whether a duty of care can arise
between A (the defendants here) and C (the plaintiff CN here) where A
negligently damages the property of B (PWC here) that results in a contractual
disruption and consequent economic loss to C. The appellants contend that the
nature of CN's relationship with PWC is merely contractual and that this fact
is dispositive of the case.
CN concedes that a
contractual interest simpliciter does not justify recovery, but it
disagrees with the appellants' description of the damage suffered as being
merely contractual disruption. Its argument proceeds essentially on two broad
fronts which overlap to some degree.
The first front can be termed
the alternative interests argument. CN first argues that its interest
is more than a mere contractual one. To this end, it put forward essentially
two arguments: first that it suffered from a transferred loss of use; and,
secondly, that it is involved in a common adventure with PWC. These arguments
are centred on the relationship between the plaintiff and the property owner,
i.e., between CN and PWC. They represent an attempt to avoid the
application of the rule barring recovery for mere contractual interests.
The second broad front on
which CN proceeds may be termed the "special relationship" front.
Here it argues that, even if the Court rejects its alternative interests
argument and finds that its interest is merely contractual, the
existence of other factors is sufficient to constitute a special relationship
with the tortfeasor and to ground recovery for its contractual claims. In
particular, it points to the high degree of subjective and objective
foreseeability in this case as sufficient to constitute a special relationship
between Norsk and CN, but other factors are invoked as well. These arguments
are largely centred on the plaintiff-tortfeasor relationship, i.e., the
relationship between CN and Norsk. They represent an attempt to qualify
the application of the contractual relational economic loss rule.
CN's two strands of argument
overlap, so that the factors that underlie its alternative interests arguments
are also at times invoked in support of the existence of a special relationship
or, more broadly, of proximity. It thus builds its argument on the allegedly
particular characteristics of its relationship with the property owner on the
one hand and the tortfeasor on the other. The appellants, on the other hand,
consider that the contractual nature of the plaintiff's relationship with the
property owner is dispositive of the case.
Part I of the analysis in
this judgment examines the appellants' contention and focuses on the narrow
problem of contractual relational economic loss. In my view, this question has
been unhelpfully bound up with the larger question of pure economic loss. The
first part of these reasons retraces these developments and sets forth the
rationale for considering this narrow issue as a separate problem.
Part II examines CN's
arguments to the effect that it has more than a mere contractual interest. My
conclusion is that it does not.
Part III returns to the issue
of contractual relational economic loss. It examines the various proposals
that have been made to relax the bright line rule excluding recovery for
contractual relational economic loss, including those set forth by my
colleagues McLachlin and Stevenson JJ.
Part IV examines the
rationale for the exclusionary rule. My conclusion is that the bright line
rule excluding recovery for economic loss owing to interference with
contractual relations that results from damage to a third party's property
should not be modified, at least on the facts of this case. I should underline
from the outset that this conclusion is not a rejection of recovery for pure
economic loss in general terms. It is limited, for reasons that will be set
forth, to cases where property damage to a third party has occurred and where
the plaintiff's interest is contractual.
Analysis
Part I: The Need to Recentre the
Analysis on Contractual Relational Economic Loss
To phrase the key issue in
this case as a simple one of "is pure economic loss recoverable in
tort?" is misleading. I do not doubt that pure economic loss is
recoverable in some cases. It does not follow, however, that all economic loss
cases are susceptible to the same analysis, or that cases of one type are
necessarily relevant to cases of another. Nor does it follow that the
constellation of policy concerns that have grown up around the issue of
economic loss can be ignored. The fact is that different types of factual
situations may invite different approaches to economic loss, and it seems to me
to be at best unwise to lump them all together for purposes of analysis. Professor
Feldthusen distinguishes five different categories of economic loss cases which
involve different policy considerations: see Feldthusen, "Economic Loss in
the Supreme Court of Canada: Yesterday and Tomorrow" (1991), 17 Can.
Bus. L.J. 356, at pp. 357-58. They are as follows:
1. The
Independent Liability of Statutory Public Authorities;
2. Negligent
Misrepresentation;
3. Negligent
Performance of a Service;
4. Negligent
Supply of Shoddy Goods or Structures;
5. Relational
Economic Loss.
The present case fits into his fifth
category. In my view, both policy and precedent justify narrowing the focus in
the present case to loss cases of the kind described in that category.
Professor Feldthusen
considers that the cases and strong policy reasons support a general rule
precluding recovery of all relational loss, which he frames in the following
terms: "The recovery of pure economic loss will be precluded in
negligence when it is consequent upon an injury to the person or property of a
third party": see Feldthusen, Economic Negligence (2nd ed. 1989),
at p. 200. He recognizes, however, that such a rule would be subject to a
number of specific exceptions.
In general terms, we are here
concerned with relational loss resulting from property damage, and I need not
consider relational loss arising out of personal injury. Turning then to an
examination of the category of cases in which the initial damage is to
property, it is apparent that contract is not the only relation that can lead
to losses. If the property is publicly owned, users may not be required to
contract for its use. Thus persons who regularly use an ordinary bridge or
other publicly maintained facility have no contractual right to do so but may
nevertheless suffer damages by having to find alternative routes for themselves
or their goods, and their suppliers or customers may also suffer damage. Those
suffering such damage will ordinarily not recover: see Bethlehem Steel Corp.
v. St. Lawrence Seaway Authority, [1978] 1 F.C. 464, (claims for loss of
profits owing to ships being held up after a bridge destroyed and a canal
obstructed were refused, as was a claim for extra shipping costs arising out of
the same accident); Star Village Tavern v. Nield (1976), 71 D.L.R. (3d)
439 (Man. Q.B.), (recovery by tavern owner suffering losses owing to bridge
closure refused). To impose such indeterminate liability on tortfeasors is
almost unthinkable as the cases make clear. The courts have similarly refused
recovery in other cases of relational economic loss; see, for example, Weller
& Co. v. Foot & Mouth Disease Research Institute, [1966] 1 Q.B.
569, as explained by S.C.M. (United Kingdom) Ltd. v. W. J. Whittall and Son
Ltd., [1971] 1 Q.B. 337, at p. 342, and Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd.
v. Martin & Co. (Contractors) Ltd., [1973] Q.B. 27.
Where the government is able
to sue as owner (as in this case and as in most bridge cases), I can see no
reason for any difference in treatment depending on whether use is based on
contract or not. In my view, contractual relational economic loss cases are
perhaps best conceived as a variant of relational loss. At least in terms of
result, the different types of relational economic loss cases generally appear
to be dealt with in the same way by the courts. As will become evident, many
of the underlying policies are, in my view, the same. Nevertheless, most of
the reported cases involve claims for contractual relational economic loss,
probably because most of the others appear obvious. To avoid possible doctrinal
confusion, I propose as much as possible to narrow the focus to contractual
relational economic loss only.
Policy
Cases of contractual
relational loss have a number of specific characteristics that differentiate
them from other economic loss cases, and certainly from other non-relational
loss cases. The first is that in such cases, the right of action of the
property owner already puts pressure on the defendants to act with care. The
deterrent effect of tort law, to the extent that it survives the advent of
widespread insurance, is already present. In this case PWC collected
substantial damages. Consequently, Norsk was already under a substantial
incentive to take care with respect to the bridge since its liability to the
bridge owner would and did require the payment of substantial damages. In most
cases of this type, imposing further liability cannot reasonably be justified
on the grounds of deterrence (unless a policy of full internalization of all
losses resulting from accidents to the party who could have avoided the
accident is to be pursued at all costs).
This is a critical difference
with respect to the other types of economic loss cases. Professor Feldthusen
underlines the importance of this first key aspect of contractual relational
economic loss cases, in the following passage dealing with relational loss
generally ((1991), 17 Can. Bus. L.J. 356, at p. 377):
. . .
in each of [the first four] categories [identified above], the issue is whether
the law of negligence applies at all to sanction the defendant's
careless conduct. Relational loss cases are different because the defendant will
be held liable to the victim of physical damage. The issue is whether additional
liability to third parties is warranted. The better analogy is not to how the
claim in Hedley Byrne or Rivtow Marine was resolved, but to how
an additional claim brought by the best customer of the plaintiffs in each
of those cases would have fared. [Emphasis added.]
I come now to a second
distinction. A firm exclusionary rule in this area does not have the effect of
necessarily excluding compensation to the plaintiff for his or her loss.
Rather, it simply channels to the property owner both potential liability to the
plaintiff and the right of recovery against the tortfeasor. The property owner
is both entitled to recover from the tortfeasor and potentially liable under
contract to the plaintiff. Here, the licence agreement explicitly rejected any
liability, so the plaintiff cannot recover under it against PWC. In contracts
between sophisticated parties such as those in the case at bar, who are well
advised by counsel, such exclusions of liability often result from
determinations regarding who is in the best position to insure the risk at the
lowest cost.
A third distinction is that
perfect compensation of all contractual relational economic loss is almost
always impossible because of the ripple effects which are of the very essence
of contractual relational economic loss. This aspect has been recognized as
critical from the very beginning. It is in this sense that the solution to
cases of this type is necessarily pragmatic and involves drawing a line that
will exclude at least some people who have been undeniably injured owing to the
tortfeasor's admitted failure to meet the requisite standard of care.
In other types of economic
loss cases, ripple effects may not be of concern. Thus cases like the present
are significantly different from the situation in Rivtow Marine Ltd. v.
Washington Iron Works, [1974] S.C.R. 1189, in which Rivtow was the sole
victim of the type of damage for which it claimed. Full compensation of all
those to whom a private law duty is owed is also realistically possible in the
situation dealt with in Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen, [1984] 2 S.C.R.
2. In cases like the present, claims that the denial of recovery in the type
of case here would be "unjust" must take into account that other
"just" claims are inevitably denied in this type of case.
Finally, contractual
relational economic loss cases typically involve accidents. This distinguishes
them from both products liability economic loss cases like Rivtow, in
which by definition there is no accident, and negligent misrepresentation cases
like Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners Ltd., [1964] A.C.
465. This aspect is of fundamental importance with respect to tests of
liability founded on the foreseeability of an individual plaintiff or an
ascertained class of plaintiffs, which I shall discuss in Part III.
In light of these substantial
differences between contractual relational economic loss cases and other pure
economic loss cases, I agree with Professor Feldthusen, that "it assists
little, if at all, to generalize on the basis of proximity from other types of
economic loss cases to the relational loss cases" ((1991), 17 Can. Bus.
L.J. 356, at p. 376). For the purposes of the present case, it is not
necessary to proceed to an exhaustive categorization of economic loss cases.
There is, in my view, at the very least a clear difference between economic
loss in three types of cases.
In the first type, which
involves what has been termed consequential economic loss, the plaintiff claims
for economic loss in addition to his claims for property damage or personal
injury. Focusing on the issue of remoteness of damage, the courts have
established guidelines regarding the availability of damages for economic loss
in these cases.
In the second type, which can
be termed non-relational economic loss, the plaintiff claims for pure economic
loss unrelated to any personal injury or property damage suffered by either the
plaintiff or any third party. The law in this area is developing. In view of
my analysis of the issues in this case, it is not necessary for me to say much
about these cases. I doubt, however, that this group can be analyzed in terms
of a single rule. The extract from Professor Feldthusen above contends that
this group can be further broken down into four distinct categories. It is
sufficient to say that I fully support this Court's rejection of the broad bar
on recovery of pure economic loss in Rivtow and Kamloops. I
would stress again the need to take into account the specific characteristics
of each case. I agree with McLachlin J. that Murphy v. Brentwood District Council,
[1991] A.C. 398, does not represent the law in Canada.
The present case, however, is
of a third type. It involves a claim for contractual relational economic loss
by the plaintiff as a result of damage caused to someone else's property.
Precedent
The English Background
It is helpful to retrace the
development of the so-called rule against recovery of pure economic loss in
order to place the argument in this case in context. The debate has often been
obscured because of the existence of at least two different versions of the
rule, one narrow and one broad. American cases have occasionally addressed
specifically the issues in this case in terms of the breadth or narrowness of
the economic loss rule. Particularly instructive in this regard is the recent
case of State of Louisiana v. M/V Testbank, 752 F.2d 1019 (1985).
The original formulation of
the rule of the categorical exclusion of economic loss in cases such as Cattle
v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875), L.R. 10 Q.B. 453, was narrow. In its
narrow formulation, the rule excludes claims for negligent interference with
contractual relations where a third party's property has been damaged
and where the damage to the plaintiff's contractual relations is caused
as a result of that property damage. The rule thus applies to exclude recovery
for a plaintiff's pure economic loss flowing from the property owner's property
damage, damage which I have termed contractual relational economic loss.
The development of the
original narrow rule is well set out in Candlewood Navigation Corp. v.
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. (The Mineral Transporter), [1986] A.C. 1, at pp.
15-17, a case that dealt with a time charterer's claim for economic loss.
Because of the importance of clearly understanding this development, I
reproduce Lord Fraser of Tullybelton's account in that case in extenso:
This
issue is one of fundamental importance in maritime law and in the law of
negligence generally. There is a long line of authority in the United
Kingdom for the proposition that a time charterer is not entitled to recover
for pecuniary loss caused by damage by a third party to the chartered vessel.
The reason is that a time charterer has no proprietary or possessory right in
the chartered vessel; his only right in relation to the vessel is contractual:
see Scrutton on Charterparties and Bills of Lading, 19th ed. (1984), p.
47. The proposition in relation to a time charterer is thus only one example
of the more general principle stated by Scrutton L.J. in Elliott Steam Tug Co.
Ltd. v. Shipping Controller [1922] 1 K.B. 127, 139-140:
"At
common law there is no doubt about the position. In case of a wrong done to
a chattel the common law does not recognize a person whose only rights are a
contractual right to have the use or services of the chattel for purposes of
making profits or gains without possession of or property in the chattel. Such
a person cannot claim for injury done to his contractual right: see on this
point the judgment of Blackburn J. in Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co.
(1875) L.R. 10 Q.B. 453, where a contractor making a tunnel on K.'s land
claimed against a wrongdoer to K.'s land, whose wrong made his contract less
profitable, and was held not entitled to recover. It is for this reason that
underwriters cannot sue directly a wrongdoer against property they have
insured, but must proceed in the name of the assured, as explained by Lord
Penzance in Simpson v. Thomson (1877) 3 App. Cas. 279, 289. It is for
this reason also that charterers under a charter not amounting to a demise do
not and cannot sue in the Admiralty Court a wrongdoer who has sunk by collision
their chartered ship. The same principle was applied by Hamilton J. in Remorquage
à Hélice (Société Anonyme) v. Bennetts [1911] 1 K.B. 243, to prevent the
owner of a tug suing the wrongdoer who had sunk his tow, whereby he had lost
the benefit of his contract of towage."
The
general principle was stated in Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co., L.R.
10 Q.B. 453, a case which had nothing to do with ships or maritime law. The
facts have been summarised sufficiently for the present purpose in the passage
just cited from Scrutton L.J.'s judgment in Elliott's case. The reason
for the decision appears from the following passage from the judgment of the
Court of Queen's Bench which was delivered by Blackburn J., at pp. 457-458,
where, after stating that the court would have been glad to avoid giving effect
to the rule against permitting the contractor to sue, he went on to say:
"But
if we did so, we should establish an authority for saying that, in such a case
as that of Fletcher v. Rylands (1866) L.R. 1 Ex. 265, the defendant
would be liable, not only to an action by the owner of the drowned mine, and by
such of his workmen as had their tools or clothes destroyed, but also to an
action by every workman and person employed in the mine, who in consequence of
its stoppage made less wages than he would otherwise have done. And many
similar cases to which this would apply might be suggested. It may be said
that it is just that all such persons should have compensation for such a loss,
and that, if the law does not give them redress, it is imperfect. Perhaps it
may be so. But, as was pointed out by Coleridge, J., in Lumley v. Gye
(1853) 2 E. & B. 216, 252, courts of justice should not `allow themselves,
in the pursuit of perfectly complete remedies for all wrongful acts, to transgress
the bounds, which our law, in a wise consciousness as I conceive of its limited
powers, has imposed on itself, of redressing only the proximate and direct
consequences of wrongful acts.' In this we quite agree. No authority in favour
of the plaintiff's right to sue was cited, and, as far as our knowledge goes,
there was none that could have been cited."
It is
apparent from that citation that the court in Cattle's case regarded the
rule as a pragmatic one dictated by necessity.
The
same appears even more clearly from the other foundation case in this branch of
the law, Simpson & Co. v. Thomson (1877) 3 App. Cas. 279 which was a
Scottish appeal arising out of a collision between two ships belonging to the
same owner. The House of Lords held that the underwriters, who had paid the
insurance due on one of the ships which was lost and which was not to any
extent to blame for the accident, had no right of action against the owner of
the other ship which was solely to blame, because they (the underwriters) had
no independent right of action but only such right as they might have derived
from the owner of the lost ship in whose place they stood. He had no right of
action, as owner of the innocent ship, against himself as owner of the
negligent ship. Lord Penzance gave a rather fuller statement of the reasons
behind the rule against allowing the underwriters to sue, at pp. 289-290:
"But
in the argument at your Lordships' Bar the learned counsel for the respondents
took their stand upon a much broader ground. They contended that the
underwriters, by virtue of the policy which they entered into in respect of
this ship, had an interest of their own in her welfare and protection, inasmuch
as any injury or loss sustained by her would indirectly fall upon them as a
consequence of their contract; and that this interest was such as would support
an action by them in their own names and behalf against a wrongdoer. This
proposition virtually affirms a principle which I think your Lordships will do
well to consider with some care, as it will be found to have a much wider
application and signification than any which may be involved in the incidents
of a contract of insurance.
"The
principle involved seems to me to be this ‑‑ that where damage is
done by a wrongdoer to a chattel not only the owner of that chattel, but all
those who by contract with the owner have bound themselves to obligations which
are rendered more onerous, or have secured to themselves advantages which are
rendered less beneficial by the damage done to the chattel, have a right of
action against the wrongdoer although they have no immediate or reversionary
property in the chattel, and no possessory right by reason of any contract
attaching to the chattel itself, such as by lien or hypothecation.
"This,
I say, is the principle involved in the respondents' contention. If it be a
sound one, it would seem to follow that if, by the negligence of a wrongdoer,
goods are destroyed which the owner of them had bound himself by contract to
supply to a third person, this person as well as the owner has a right of
action for any loss inflicted on him by their destruction.
"But
if this be true as to injuries done to chattels, it would seem to be equally so
as to injuries to the person. An individual injured by a negligently driven
carriage has an action against the owner of it. Would a doctor, it may be
asked, who had contracted to attend him and provide medicines for a fixed sum
by the year, also have a right of action in respect of the additional cost of
attendance and medicine cast upon him by that accident? And yet it cannot be
denied that the doctor had an interest in his patient's safety. In like manner
an actor or singer bound for a term to a manager of a theatre is disabled by
the wrongful act of a third person to the serious loss of the manager. Can the
manager recover damages for that loss from the wrongdoer? Such instances
might be indefinitely multiplied, giving rise to rights of action which in
modern communities, where every complexity of mutual relation is daily created
by contract, might be both numerous and novel."
These
two cases of Cattle, L.R. 10 Q.B. 453, and Simpson, 3 App.Cas.
279, have stood for over a hundred years and have frequently been cited with
approval in later cases, both in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. They show,
in their Lordships' opinion, that the justification for denying a right of
action to a person who has suffered economic damage through injury to the property
of another is that for reasons of practical policy it is considered to be
inexpedient to admit his claim. [Emphasis added.]
Lord Fraser felt it was unnecessary to
refer to all the many cases in which either or both of the cases of Cattle
and Simpson & Co. v. Thomson (1877), 3 App. Cas. 279, have been
cited but he did go on to note the favourable treatment given to the narrow
rule in Scotland, Canada and the United States.
Subsequently, in the second
stage of the development of the rule, it was greatly broadened. The remarks of
Mason J. in Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. v. The Dredge
"Willemstad" (1976), 11 A.L.R. 227 (H.C.), are illuminating, in
that they illustrate the passage from the narrow rule discussed in the above
passage to a broader rule (at p. 269):
None
the less before Hedley Byrne the influence of the early cases was strong
and it seems to have been generally considered that financial loss not
consequential upon property damage could not be recovered. For the most
part the cases concerned a claim by a plaintiff that he suffered a loss or lost
a profit under a contract because the defendant's negligent conduct damaged or
destroyed property of the other contracting party thereby putting an end to the
contract or rendering it unprofitable. Yet the cases were thought to establish
a general principle relating to the recovery of pure economic damage.
[Emphasis added.]
As Mason J. notes, in its broad
formulation, the rule was said to exclude all claims in negligence for pure
economic loss, i.e., economic loss in the absence of property loss or personal
injury loss, to the plaintiff in question. The crucial factor of
property damage to a third party that existed in the early cases fell
completely out of the picture. Interestingly, the same evolution appears to
have occurred with respect to the holding in Robins Dry Dock & Repair
Co. v. Flint, 275 U.S. 303 (1927), in the United States, which I shall more
fully discuss later. The result was that until 1963, it was generally felt
that no recovery would lie for pure economic loss.
A new stage in the
development of the law on economic loss opened with the great case of Hedley
Byrne v. Heller, supra. The speeches of the Law Lords were
principally concerned with the problem of liability for negligent words, rather
than with the issue of economic loss itself. As Atiyah notes, the problems of
liability for negligent misstatements and the problem of economic loss had
become entangled before Hedley Byrne and with both problems arising
again in that case, it is perhaps not surprising that in subsequent cases, the
two issues have not always been completely distinguished: see Atiyah,
"Negligence and Economic Loss" (1967), 83 L.Q. Rev. 248; see
also the discussion of Hedley Byrne in Stapleton, "Duty of Care and
Economic Loss: A Wider Agenda" (1991), 107 L.Q. Rev. 249, at pp.
259-61.
Only two of the Lords in Hedley
Byrne, Lord Hodson and Lord Devlin, dealt specifically with the issue of
economic loss. Both rejected the broad exclusionary rule. It was clear that
henceforth economic loss was recoverable at least in some circumstances. With Hedley
Byrne to guide the way, the broad rule came increasingly under attack in a
variety of situations during this third phase.
Many recent cases on economic
loss have approached the problem at a very high level of generality. They have
addressed the question of whether we should abandon the broad rule altogether.
Many examples of the broad interpretation of Cattle and the other early
cases can be pointed to: see, for example, Abramovic v. Canadian Pacific
Ltd. (1989), 69 O.R. (2d) 487, at p. 492; Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen,
supra, at p. 28. My colleague, McLachlin J., I may say, interprets Cattle
broadly in this manner, although she recognizes that the case dealt with
relational losses.
The result of this broad
approach is that cases on relational economic loss are bound up with other
types of economic loss cases which raise different policy concerns. This leads
to all types of economic loss cases being canvassed in order to resolve the
case at hand. The judgment of the Court of Appeal in this case has been
criticized for its undifferentiated approach to the issue of pure economic
loss. Professor Feldthusen (1991), 17 Can. Bus. L.J. 356, writes, at p.
375:
The
main effect of this scatter-gun approach is to obscure the state of the
authorities on relational loss, and to present instead the accurate, but
largely irrelevant, impression that recovery of economic loss is often allowed
in negligence.
In the second phase, cases decided on
the narrow facts of contractual relational economic loss had been interpreted
very broadly to exclude liability for all pure economic loss. Now, it was
argued, the rejection of the broad rule in cases like Hedley Byrne and Rivtow
should eliminate the specificities of economic loss in all cases. Today CN
urges us to extend this approach to include contractual relational economic
loss cases.
In my view, the precedents
support a distinct approach to the issue of contractual relational economic
loss. The original exclusionary rule developed in such cases and was expressed
in narrow terms. In addition, the recognition that Cattle stands for a
narrow rule has never completely disappeared. Recent cases have referred to Cattle
and the early cases as establishing the narrow rule: see the extracts from Candlewood,
supra; Leigh and Sillavan Ltd. v. Aliakmon Shipping Co., [1986]
A.C. 785, at p. 809; Murphy v. Brentwood District Council, supra,
at p. 485. Cases that frame and treat the question in terms of the narrow rule
have generally upheld it. The major exception is Caltex, which I will
discuss at length later.
The Decisions in this Court
The respondent, the courts
below and McLachlin J. rely heavily on the decisions of this Court in the cases
of Rivtow and Kamloops. The respondent argues that these cases
refute the existence of a broad exclusionary rule. I agree but, in my view,
both these cases belong to the second group of economic loss cases mentioned
above in which the plaintiff claims for pure economic loss where the defendant
has not caused damage to a third party's property. They are not directly
relevant to contractual relational economic loss. There is nothing in those
cases indicating that this Court considered that the narrow exclusionary rule
was ill-advised. However, I find those cases particularly significant in the
context of this case for the way in which the specific policy concerns raised
in the particular case were addressed.
An examination of Rivtow
reveals that the concern over indeterminate liability is only one among several
policy issues that arise in economic loss cases. What is particularly
instructive about Rivtow, rather than any wide dicta about
proximity in economic loss cases, is the manner in which both judgments
analyzed the policy considerations underlying the exclusionary rule. Of these,
indeterminate liability was only of secondary importance. The broad rule was
qualified and recovery for economic loss upheld only after a searching
examination of the functions the rule served in the type of case there in
question.
In Rivtow, the
plaintiff (appellant) chartered by demise a log barge, the Rivtow Carrier,
fitted with two cranes designed and manufactured by the first defendant and for
which the second defendant was the sole representative and distributor in
British Columbia. Neither defendant was in a contractual relationship with
Rivtow: see the facts as stated in the court below (1972), 26 D.L.R. (3d) 559
(B.C.C.A.), at p. 560. The manufacturer and distributor had become aware of
structural defects in this type of crane as early as 1963, and certainly by
late 1965 they were aware of many cracks in the legs of the cranes. They also
knew that the plaintiff was using the cranes for the logging work but did not
warn it of the potential danger.
On September 16, 1966, the
aft crane of the Straits Logger, another barge fitted with the same type
of crane, collapsed owing to a failure in the rear legs. It tore itself free
of the front legs, fell to the deck and bounced into the ocean, killing the
crane operator. The same day, the Rivtow Carrier was about to begin
loading logs at Kitimat. Word was received of the Straits Logger
accident, and the Rivtow Carrier was ordered to return empty to
Vancouver. As a result, the barge had to be taken out of service for repairs
in the busiest part of the logging season.
Rivtow sued for loss of the
use of the barge during the repair period and for the cost of repairs to the
cranes. Ritchie J., for the seven judges in the majority, held that the lower
courts were right in disallowing the claim for repairs and for such economic
loss as it would in any event have sustained even if proper warning had been
given. The full Court concurred with the part of Ritchie J.'s judgment that
recognized a manufacturer's duty to warn of known dangerous defects and held
the manufacturer liable for loss of extra profit caused by the failure to warn
promptly in a slack period.
Two judges, dissenting in
part, would have included in the allowable loss the cost of repair of the
cranes on the ground that threatened physical harm should be treated in the
same way as actual physical harm. Laskin J. (Hall J. concurring) specifically
excluded general contractual relational loss. He stated, at pp. 1218‑19:
. . .
the doctrine of Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd.,
which has been considered in this Court and has been applied in other Courts in
Canada, shows that economic or pecuniary loss is not outside the scope of
liability for negligence.
The
present case is not of the Hedley Byrne type, as the reasons of my
brother Ritchie show, but recovery for economic loss alone is none the less
supported under negligence doctrine. It seems to me that the rationale of
manufacturers' liability for negligence should equally support such recovery in
the case where, as here, there is a threat of physical harm and the plaintiff
is in the class of those who are foreseeably so threatened: see Fleming, Law
of Torts, 4th ed., 1971, pp. 164-5, 444-5.
Support
for such recovery in the present case will not lead to "liability in an
indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class",
to borrow an often-quoted statement of the late Judge Cardozo in Ultramares
Corp. v. Touche [255 N.Y. 170 (1931)], at p. 179. The pragmatic
considerations which underlay Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. will not
be eroded by the imposition of liability upon Washington as a negligent
designer and manufacturer: cf. Fleming James, "Limitations on
Liability for Economic Loss Caused by Negligence: A Pragmatic Appraisal",
(1972), 12 Jo.S.P.T.L. 105. Liability here will not mean that it must also be
imposed in the case of any negligent conduct where there is foreseeable
economic loss; a typical instance would be claims by employees for lost wages
where their employer's factory has been damaged and is shut down by reason of
another's negligence. The present case is concerned with direct economic
loss by a person whose use of the defendant Washington's product was a
contemplated one, and not with indirect economic loss by third parties, for
example, persons whose logs could not be loaded on the appellant's barge
because of the withdrawal of the defective crane from service to undergo
repairs. It is concerned (and here I repeat myself) with economic loss
resulting directly from avoidance of threatened physical harm to property of
the appellant if not also personal injury to persons in its employ.
[Emphasis added.]
As this passage makes clear,
the Rivtow case involves significant policy considerations. The incursion
into the broad rule is carefully justified on policy grounds. As Laskin J.
notes, at p. 1222, "[t]he case is not one where a manufactured product
proves to be merely defective (in short, where it has not met promised
expectations) but rather one where by reason of the defect there is a
foreseeable risk of physical harm from its use and where the alert avoidance of
such harm gives rise to economic loss". In Laskin J.'s view, the courts
must be careful to avoid giving redress in tort for "safe but shoddy"
products. Where the products are unsafe, however, tort may have a role:
prevention of threatened harm resulting directly in economic loss should not be
treated differently from post-injury treatment. The narrow rule barring
contractual relational economic loss is explicitly left intact.
The majority's examination of
the policy issues lead to a lesser incursion on the broad exclusionary rule.
Ritchie J. wrote, at p. 1207:
Mr.
Justice Tysoe's conclusion [in the B.C. Court of Appeal in the same case] was
based in large measure on a series of American cases, and particularly Trans
World Airlines Inc. v. Curtiss‑Wright Corp. [148 N.Y.S. 2d 284
(1955)], where it is pointed out that the liability for the cost of repairing
damage to the defective article itself and for the economic loss flowing
directly from the negligence, is akin to liability under the terms of an
express or implied warranty of fitness and as it is contractual in origin
cannot be enforced against the manufacturer by a stranger to the contract. It
was, I think, on this basis that the learned trial judge disallowed the
appellant's claim for repairs and for such economic loss as it would, in any
event, have sustained even if the proper warning had been given. I agree with
this conclusion for the same reasons; but while this finding excludes recovery
for damage to the article and economic loss directly flowing from Washington's
negligence and faulty design, it does not exclude the additional damage
occasioned by breach of the duty to warn of the danger.
Ritchie J., at pp. 1213‑14,
expressly considered whether the tort duty he imposed would have the effect of
disrupting contractual relations:
In
the present case there is no suggestion that liability should be based on
negligent misrepresentation and to this extent the Hedley Byrne case is
of no relevance. I refer to it for the sole purpose of indicating the view of
the House of Lords that where liability is based on negligence the recovery is
not limited to physical damage but extends also to economic loss. The case was
recently distinguished in this Court in J. Nunes Diamonds Ltd. v. Dominion
Electric Protection Co. [[1972] S.C.R. 769], where Pigeon J., speaking for
the majority of the Court, said at p. 777:
Furthermore,
the basis of tort liability considered in Hedley Byrne is inapplicable
to any case where the relationship between the parties is governed by a
contract, unless the negligence relied on can properly be considered as
"an independent tort" unconnected with the performance of that
contract . . . This is specially important in the present case on
account of the provisions of the contract with respect to the nature of the
obligations assumed and the practical exclusion of responsibility for failure
to perform them.
In
the present case, however, I am of opinion that the failure to warn was
"an independent tort" unconnected with the performance of any
contract either express or implied.
However, because in Ritchie J.'s view
the failure to warn was an independent tort, he considered that the plaintiffs
should recover for the economic loss resulting from the inactivity of the barge
for the period after the respondent became seized with the defects.
The respondent CN submitted
that, in Ritchie J.'s judgment in Rivtow, proximity was based on the
defendants' knowledge of the use of the cranes by Rivtow and on their potential
danger, and that similar knowledge by Norsk should also give rise to proximity
here. This argument fails to recognize that the defendants' knowledge in Rivtow
was pertinent with respect to a particular duty: the duty to warn. Because
they knew about Rivtow as a specific user, they could have warned Rivtow. In
the case at bar, Norsk had no opportunity to warn CN in any meaningful sense.
In neither judgment in Rivtow
does the plaintiff recover solely because the indeterminacy problem is solved.
Rather, criteria are put forward which either logically impose particular
duties on defendants (a duty to warn) or specify a particular type of damage to
plaintiffs which raises specific concerns (a threat of physical damage raising
safety concerns). The "threatened physical harm" criteria employed
by Laskin J. serves to distinguish among plaintiffs those who were in a
particular position with respect to a particular risk. The recent decision in Murphy,
supra, appears to contest this distinction as too arbitrary. However, I
think Laskin J.'s concern with safety and the prevention of further damage is
justified. The duty to warn imposed by the majority serves to distinguish
among defendants who could and should have warned, and those who could not.
Furthermore, both judgments explicitly consider another policy issue: the
impact of the imposition of tort liability on contractual relations. In
addition, the criteria meet the test of indeterminate liability, but that
stage of the analysis constitutes in some sense a second step, after the
imposition of liability has been justified on grounds that legitimately
distinguish particular groups of plaintiffs or particular groups of defendants.
The criteria put forward by
CN in the present case respond only to the concern about indeterminate
liability. The respondent has put forward 14 factors that create a
"special relationship" making this case "unique". This
surely provides the court with plenty of flexibility to distinguish future
cases from this one. But no argument is presented as to why the uniqueness is
relevant in terms of either deterring specific behaviour by the defendants or
protecting a specific interest of the plaintiff different in nature from that
of the typical contractual claimant.
CN argued that the passage in
Ritchie J.'s judgment, at pp. 1211-12, called for a general revision of
approach in contractual relational economic loss cases in terms of proximity.
In my view, Ritchie J.'s suggestion is best interpreted as a call for a more
differentiated analysis of economic loss cases such as the approach I am
suggesting. He rightly questioned the broad interpretations given to Cattle
and Société anonyme de remorquage à hélice v. Bennetts, [1911] 1 K.B.
243. On the facts before him he found, at p. 1212, that the broad rule has
"no relevance in a case where liability flows from the manufacturer
acquiescing in the continued use of an article which he knows to have become
dangerous when used for the purpose for which it was intended, without giving
warning to a known user of the article who is a stranger to the contract of
sale". He suggests that the notions of proximity and remoteness at the
time Cattle and Société anonyme de remorquage à hélice v. Bennetts
were decided need reassessment in light of Donoghue v. Stevenson, [1932]
A.C. 562 (H.L.), but he does not suggest that those cases were wrongly
decided. His call is best interpreted as an invitation to reconsider the broad
rule in the variety of situations in which it has been applied after careful
consideration of the policy issues raised in each type of case.
MacGuigan J.A. in the court
below ([1990] 3 F.C. 114) considered that Ritchie J.'s judgment, despite
denying recovery, was very broad in opening up recovery for economic loss. He
wrote as follows, at p. 151:
Despite
the wider recovery he would have allowed, Laskin J. is much closer to the
exclusionary rule than the majority because of his retention of the physical
harm concept. For the majority, it seems that any economic loss which occurs
apart from a relationship between the plaintiff and the tortfeasor is
recoverable if there is a sufficient "proximity of relationship" between
the two parties. In fact, the principle adopted by the majority is the
corollary to that adopted by the majority in Nunes Diamonds (J.) Ltd. v.
Dominion Electric Protection Co., [1972] S.C.R. 769. Ritchie J. quotes
Pigeon J. in that case (at page 777) to the effect that "the basis of tort
liability considered in Hedley Byrne is inapplicable to any case where
the relationship between the parties is governed by a contract".
I am not certain what MacGuigan J.A.
meant by the phrase "any economic loss which occurs apart from a
[contractual] relationship between the plaintiff and the tortfeasor is
recoverable if there is a sufficient `proximity of relationship' between the
two parties". If he meant that an undifferentiated Hedley Byrne
type approach should govern all cases of economic loss other than those that
arise between contracting parties, I respectfully disagree with his
interpretation of Ritchie J.'s judgment. To say that Hedley Byrne does
not apply to cases between contracting parties is not the same thing as saying
the Hedley Byrne test applies to all cases other than cases between
contracting parties.
I turn now to Kamloops,
supra. The issue there was whether a municipality can be held liable
for negligence in failing to prevent the construction of a house with defective
foundations by a purchaser who took without notice either of the state of the
foundations or of the inadequacy of the municipal surveillance. Recovery was
ultimately allowed on a statutory basis. The judgment of MacGuigan J.A. recognized
that neither the result nor the reasons are therefore directly relevant to the
case at bar. Nevertheless, it seemed to him that both the thrust and the tone
of what the Court did militated against an absolute exclusionary rule. If he
was referring to a broad absolute exclusionary rule, I agree. I cannot
agree, however, that the judgment of Wilson J. can be interpreted as contesting
the existence of the narrow exclusionary rule.
Wilson J. for the majority
extensively surveyed the cases on recovery for pure economic loss since the
municipality argued that the economic loss in the case was analogous to the
cost of repairs to the crane which was expressly disallowed by the majority in Rivtow.
Wilson J. acknowledged, at p. 33, that "the majority judgment of this
Court in Rivtow stands until such time as it may be reconsidered by a
full panel of the Court".
She distinguished Rivtow
on at least two grounds: (1) Rivtow was a lawsuit between private
litigants as compared with a claim against a public authority for breach of a
private‑law duty of care arising under a statute; (2) "there are no
contractual overtones to this case as there were in Rivtow" (at p.
34).
Wilson J. recognized the key
role of concerns about the interaction of tort and contract. At page 34, she
states:
I
tend to think that the problem of concurrent liability in contract and tort
played a major role in the restrictive approach taken by the majority in Rivtow
and that, as in the case of Hedley Byrne, we will have to await the
outcome of a developing jurisprudence around that decision also. . . .
It is notable that both of the
distinguishing factors in Rivtow are present in the case at bar.
Wilson J.'s judgment is also
finely attuned to the specific policy issues raised by public authority
liability cases which are very different from those raised in the present
case. A number of key factors must exist before liability is found: the
statute has to create a private law duty to the plaintiff alongside the public
law duty; the loss must not result from a policy decision made by the public
authority in the bona fide exercise of its discretion. She specifically
emphasizes that economic loss will only be recoverable if as a matter of
statutory interpretation it is a type of loss the statute intended to guard
against. She also recognized the policy reasons for recognizing liability in
the following passage, at p. 35:
It
seems to me that recovery for economic loss on the foregoing basis accomplishes
a number of worthy objectives. It avoids undue interference by the courts in
the affairs of public authorities. It gives a remedy where the legislature has
impliedly sanctioned it and justice clearly requires it. It imposes enough
of a burden on public authorities to act as a check on the arbitrary and
negligent discharge of statutory duties. For these reasons I would permit
recovery of the economic loss in this case. [Emphasis added.]
Recognizing a duty in statutory
authorities has the salutary effect of placing some incentive on public
authorities to discharge their statutory duties properly; see also Rothfield
v. Manolakos, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1259. No similar effect results from
imposing a duty in this case.
CN asserts that in B.D.C.
Ltd. v. Hofstrand Farms Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 228, Haig v. Bamford,
[1977] 1 S.C.R. 466, and Kamloops, all of which involved economic loss,
the ascertained or limited class test was used. It is true that in addition to
the just mentioned factors which serve to control liability, Wilson J.
established a limited class of plaintiffs test in Kamloops. At page 35,
she stated: "The plaintiff has to belong to the limited class of owners
or occupiers of the property at the time the damage manifests itself."
The class of plaintiffs test is not defined here in terms of foreseeability of
a limited class or of a particular plaintiff. Rather, the test is framed to
allow protection of certain interests and not others. Specifically, it excludes
contractual relational claimants. Recovery for economic loss is explicitly
limited to owners and occupiers. Whether the limited class test makes sense in
policy terms in cases of contractual relational economic loss will be addressed
below. It is surely relevant that the only economic loss case in this Court
that involved an accident established a "limited class" test that
unequivocally excluded all contractual claimants.
My understanding of the
foregoing cases is also supported by the majority judgment of Estey J. in Hofstrand
Farms, supra. In that case a courier company had contracted with
the province of British Columbia to deliver an envelope which, unknown to the
courier, contained a Crown grant which it was imperative that the proposed
recipient register by a particular date. Through the carelessness of the
courier in not delivering the envelope in a timely way, it was not received by
that date, and Hofstrand Farms Ltd. sued the courier. The trial judge found
the courier had no duty to the recipient but the British Columbia Court of
Appeal held it was liable. In its view, the recipient belonged to a
"known limited class", likely to be affected by the courier's
carelessness. This Court unanimously reversed the decision. In the course of
his reasons, Estey J. clearly underlined the different policy concerns that
underpinned cases like Rivtow (which he categorized as a products
liability case) and Hedley Byrne and Kamloops (which he viewed as
cases involving reasonable reliance respecting the provision of services) from
the case before him. He understood the desirability of affording redress where
reasonable and workable limits to liability could be found in the types of cases
mentioned, and I have no doubt there are others. At the same time, he
underlined the need of clearly defined limits for limiting indeterminate
liability. But except for cases that could be confined within workable limits,
he underlined the need for a clear pragmatic rule against indeterminate
liability. He stated, at p. 243:
No
doubt the courts of this country will continue to search for reasonable and
workable limits to the liability of a negligent supplier of manufactured
products or services, to the liability of a negligent contractor for
contractual undertakings owed to others, and to the liability of persons who
negligently make misrepresentations. In this search courts will be vigilant to
protect the community from damages suffered by a breach of the
"neighbourhood" duty. At the same time, however, the realities of
modern life must be reflected by the enunciation of a defined limit on
liability capable of practical application, so that social and commercial life
can go on unimpeded by a burden outweighing the benefit to the community of the
neighbourhood historic principle. [Emphasis added.]
In sum, I consider that
precedent and policy justify an approach that focuses on the specific question
of contractual relational economic loss. In addition, recourse to comparative
law reveals that other legal systems have also isolated these cases as
presenting specific problems.
The United States Experience
In the United States,
contractual relational economic loss cases are dealt with under the rubric of
negligent interference with contractual relations, a less barbarous but perhaps
less accurate name; see Feldthusen, Economic Negligence, supra,
at p. 201.
The leading United States
case in this area is Robins Dry Dock, supra. There the time
charterer of a steamship sued for profits lost when the defendant dry dock
negligently damaged the vessel's propeller. The propeller had to be replaced,
thus extending by two weeks the time the vessel was laid up in dry dock. The
charterer sued for the loss of use of the vessel for that period. The Supreme
Court denied recovery to the charterer. Holmes J. wrote as follows, at p. 309:
. . .
no authority need be cited to show that, as a general rule, at least, a tort to
the person or property of one man does not make the tortfeasor liable to
another merely because the injured person was under a contract with that other,
unknown to the doer of the wrong. . . . The law does not spread its
protection so far.
Holmes J. relied notably on the earlier
English case of Elliott Steam Tug Co. v. Shipping Controller, [1922] 1
K.B. 127, referred to in the extract from Candlewood reproduced above.
I should also note here that the fact that the tortfeasor is unaware of the
contract is not of central importance: as noted in the Restatement of the
Law, Second, Torts 2d, section 766C, it is more likely the character of the
contract itself that has led the courts to refuse to give it protection against
negligent interference.
Holmes J.'s opinion broke no
new ground; it applied a principle then settled in both the United States and
England, that refused recovery for negligent interference with contractual
rights. In a remarkable parallel development to that experienced by
Anglo-Canadian law, the Robins decision, which barred recovery in a
contractual relational economic loss case, was extended to a broad holding
precluding recovery of economic loss in the absence of physical damage to the
plaintiff. There was a lively movement in the United States in the 1920s and
1930s, mostly among commentators, to expand recovery for indirect economic loss
in a way that would bring it more closely into line with the law governing
physical injury; see James, "Limitations of Liability for Economic Loss
Caused by Negligence: A Pragmatic Appraisal" (1972), 12 J.S.P.T.L.
105. The failure of this movement to gain momentum takes on added significance
when it is placed in the context of the vast extension in the law of negligence
that has occurred in the United States. The decision in Robins Dry Dock
itself took place 11 years after Cardozo J.'s opinion in MacPherson v. Buick
Motor Co., 217 N.Y. 382 (1916), had shattered the doctrine of privity.
A searching re-examination of
the scope and rationale of Robins took place in the recent case of State
of Louisiana v. M/V Testbank, supra. The court there referred to
the earlier doctrinal debate and noted, at p. 1023, that "[t]he push to
delete the restrictions on recovery for economic loss lost its support and by
the early 1940's had failed". In Testbank, two vessels collided in
the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet. A large quantity of toxic chemicals was
lost overboard one of the ships and, fearing great contamination, the
authorities closed the outlet to navigation for about 20 days. Fishing, the
catching of shrimp and other related activities were also suspended for a short
while in a surrounding area of about 400 square miles. Forty-one lawsuits were
filed and eventually consolidated. The plaintiffs came under a number of
fairly distinct categories, namely: commercial fishermen, recreational
fishermen, operators of marinas, bait and tackle shops, cargo terminal
operators, restaurants, etc. The trial court dismissed all the claims except
those of the commercial fishermen. A panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed
but, in light of the importance of the issue, the case was reheard by the
entire 15-judge Fifth Circuit.
The opinions thoroughly
canvassed the relevant American law. What is most striking about them is that
both the majority and minority agreed that Robins made eminent sense in
its own particular fact situation. Where they differed was in the breadth they
considered the Robins rule to have. As colourfully put, at p. 1021:
"The meaning of Robins Dry Dock v. Flint . . . (Holmes,
J.) is the flag all litigants here seek to capture." The majority
concluded that the Robins rule should be upheld in its broad rule
version to exclude all claims for economic loss in the absence of physical
injury to the plaintiff. At page 1021, it stated:
After
extensive additional briefs and oral argument, we are unpersuaded that we ought
to drop physical damage to a proprietary interest as a prerequisite to recovery
for economic loss. To the contrary, our reexamination of the history and
central purpose of this pragmatic restriction on the doctrine of foreseeability
heightens our commitment to it. Ultimately we conclude that without this
limitation foreseeability loses much of its ability to function as a rule of
law.
In a judgment concurring with the
majority, Garwood J., at p. 1035, underlined the insufficiency of the proximate
cause, foreseeability and remoteness formulations to "alone provide an
adequate guide for distinguishing, on a normative, pre-event basis,
between the classes of cases in which recovery will be allowed and those in
which it will not" (emphasis added).
The minority disagreed as to
the scope of the Robins rule and consequently as to its application to
the facts of the case. In essence, it considered that Robins excluded
only contractual relational economic loss. The minority recognized the
"sound reasons" underlying the narrow formulation of the Robins
rule and did not contest its applicability where the claim is derived solely
through contract with an injured party (at p. 1039):
Courts
recognize that once they permit recovery for economic loss to parties linked in
a serial chain of contracts, defining a stopping point becomes nearly
impossible.
Recognizing that perfect compensation
is not possible since losses are widely disseminated, the minority accepted
that the bright line test of Robins made good sense. It is notable that
both the majority and the minority opinions in Testbank
recognized the existence and rationale of the exclusionary rule with respect to
contractual relational economic loss. Where the minority disagreed with the
majority was in the extension of Robins to exclude
non-contractual claimants.
As noted, the Restatement
of the Law, Second, Torts 2d, devotes section 766C to the narrow question
of negligent interference with contract or prospective contractual relations.
The comment notes that although a number of cases scattered through the years
have allowed recovery, no general recognition of liability exists for negligent
interference with an existing contract or with a prospective contractual
relation. The Restatement rule unconditionally excludes recovery for pure
economic loss that results from negligent interference with a third person's
performance of his or her contract with the plaintiff, with the plaintiff's
performance of his or her own contract or with the plaintiff's acquisition of
prospective contractual relations.
Civil Law Systems
Since my colleagues have also
supported their conclusions by forays into comparative law, and notably their
understanding of the civil law experience, I find it necessary to enter into
some discussion of that experience. I say at the outset that it does not seem
to me to provide as much comfort for my colleagues' views as they seem to
derive from it.
It is undeniable that not all
legal systems have isolated cases like the present as presenting specific
problems. Some civil law systems do not apply any particular rules either to
pure economic loss cases or to contractual relational economic loss cases. The
opinions of my colleagues in this case particularly rely on the law of France
and Quebec. The argument from French and Quebec law is really about the
floodgates argument. Since those systems allow recovery for pure economic loss
without breaking down, the argument goes, we should not be deterred by
floodgates arguments: see Jutras, "Civil Law and Pure Economic Loss: What
Are We Missing?" (1986-87), 12 Can. Bus. L.J. 295, at p. 310. In
my opinion the relevant comparative reference is to contractual relational
economic loss, not to the broad question of pure economic loss. To consider
comparative law at the level of generality of "economic loss" is not,
in my view, helpful. I have already explained why I think the cases grouped
under the rubric of economic loss deserve a more refined analysis. The same
narrowing of the question should be employed in the recourse to comparative
law. The legal system of every society faces essentially the same problems and
solves these problems by quite different means, though often with similar
results: see Zweigert and Kötz, Introduction to Comparative Law, Volume I --
The Framework (2nd ed. 1987), at p. 31. While some of these systems have
not retained the concept of "economic loss" as a limiting factor,
they have generally not recognized claims of the type put forward here.
Second, the French and Quebec
approach involves applying the same criteria to a case of this type as to any
other tort claim. Although some scholars argue that the common law should
change its focus entirely to a concern with causation as the limiting factor
(see Tetley, "Damages and Economic Loss in Marine Collision: Controlling
the Floodgates" (1991), 22 J. Mar. Law & Com. 539, at p. 584),
this does not appear to me to be an advisable option. Our current causality
test of foreseeability is clearly insufficient to control liability. The
directness criterion was rejected in Overseas Tankship (U.K.) Ltd. v. Morts
Dock & Engineering Co. (The Wagon Mound), [1961] A.C. 388, for
determinations as to remoteness and does not seem to me to provide much
predictive value: see S.C.M. (United Kingdom) Ltd. v. W. J. Whittall and Son
Ltd., supra, at p. 343.
A close examination of French
law in this area reveals that the floodgates problem is resolved by the use of
a number of control devices such that liability is very rare. French delict
doctrine treats the question of dommage par ricochet in relation first
to the requirement that the injury suffered must have a "personal
character"; see Viney, "Les obligations: La responsabilité:
conditions" (1982), in Ghestin, Traité de droit civil, nos. 288 et
seq. Undoubtedly, in general terms, French law allows generous recovery
for dommage par ricochet: see Viney, at no. 309. However, with respect
to persons who were contractually linked to the initial victim, Viney writes as
follows, at no. 312:
[translation] The courts have from time
to time had before them claims made by some customer, supplier or creditor, or
by a partner, employee or employer, of the initial victim when the latter's
death endangers their interests. In general, the courts have so far been
very hesitant to allow such claims, especially those made by a creditor,
employer or partner; but at the same time a more liberal solution may well be
envisaged in the case of employees who are thrown out of work by the employer's
death.
The
position in French law is no more harsh in this respect than that of foreign
systems of law, which generally refuse to take into consideration this type of
repercussive damage. [Emphasis added.]
The distinction of the case of the
employee is not specifically justified, but the most obvious rationale for
distinguishing that particular case is surely that the employee is least able
to protect himself or herself from the consequences of the accident. As for
mere créanciers of the primary victim like CN, recovery is generally
denied. The 1975 Cour de cassation case which left open the issue of recovery
for a creditor whose debtor died as result of the defendant's fault, Cass. civ.
2e, June 25, 1975, Bull. II no. 195, eventually returned to that
court in 1979: see Cass. civ. 2e, February 21, 1979, Bougues-Montès,
J.C.P. 1979, IV, 145. The finding that the damages were indirect and hence
unrecoverable was, as noted by Durry, partly justified by the fact that the
lender should have protected himself by contract by requiring his debtor to
contract life insurance; see "Obligations et contrats spéciaux"
(1979), 77 Rev. trim. dr. civ. 610. Larroumet speaks of recovery in
such cases (other than in cases of contracts concluded intuitus personae)
as a "hypothèse d'école" and notes that "on a bien du
mal à en trouver dans la jurisprudence": see Bordeaux, May 17, 1977,
D.1978, I.R. 34, note Larroumet.
Cases in which contractual
relational economic loss have been awarded as a result of property damage to a
third party are even more rare. These cases are admittedly also subject to the
same basic framework of analysis. However, the Cour de cassation exercises its
control over the lower courts determinations of causality; see Starck, Droit
civil: Obligations: 1. Responsabilité délictuelle (3rd ed. 1988), by
Roland and Boyer, at no. 851. Recovery is rarely allowed. Durry describes the
state of the law in this area as follows, "Obligations et contrats
spéciaux" (1976), 74 Rev. trim. dr. civ. 132, at p. 134:
[translation] Physical repercussive
damage to one who is neither parent, relative, fiancé or mistress of the
immediate victim responds to a well‑known dialectic: though in principle
compensation may be obtained it in fact rarely is.
Markesinis' comparative examination of
English and French law in this area (Markesinis, "La politique
jurisprudentielle et la réparation du préjudice économique en Angleterre: une
approche comparative", [1983] Rev. int. dr. comp. 31, at pp.
44-45), also points out the remarkable similarity of result despite the
different analytical approaches:
[translation] The first point to note
is that French judges are fully aware of these dangers. Some fifty years ago
the Tribunal civil of Bordeaux indicated it had no doubts on the matter when it
said "that extending entitlement to damages to everyone who might in some
way suffer tangible or intangible injury from a quasi‑delict would
amount to creating a kind of social disorder which can never be the purpose of
the law" . . . Accordingly, what is special about this
judgment is that it openly expresses the philosophy of many judgments
which have followed and which, though in theory they admit the
possibility of compensation, have in many if not all cases proceeded to a
denial of the right of action in practice. Consequently, what is interesting
in these cases is to examine the method used to arrive at the result which
English law obtains in a generally and rigidly applicable manner.
A
variety of "causal" dispositions, which sometimes seemed to involve
duplication, have been skilfully (and at times arbitrarily) used to attain this
result. In some cases, it is said that the victim assumed the risk; in other
cases, that the injury suffered is only indirect; and in still others, that it
is only hypothetical and not certain; but in all cases, the possibility of
compensation is recognized in theory. [Emphasis added.]
Recovery has been allowed in
a few contractual relational economic loss cases. The first is where the
contract that is disturbed is intuitus personae, i.e., a personal
service contract where the particular individual cannot be replaced. In one
case, a soccer club recovered for damages incurred as a result of the death of
a star player: see Cour d'appel de Colmar (Ch. détachée à Metz), April 20,
1955, D.1956.723 (Football Club de Metz c. Wiroth). Even here, however,
the law is not certain: recovery was denied to an opera director for the loss
caused by an injury to the leading tenor: see Cass. civ. 2e,
November 14, 1958, G.P. 1959.1.31 (Demeyer c. Camerlo). In a
preliminary procedure at first instance, recovery was allowed to employees
whose unemployment was caused by the tortfeasor who damaged their hair salon:
see Trib. gr. inst. Nanterre, October 22, 1975, G.P. 1976.1.392 (Brunet c.
Rico et Caisse mutuelle d'assurance et de prévoyance).
Marcailloux v. R.A.T.V.M., Cass. civ. 2e, April 28,
1965, D.S. 1965.777, cited by McLachlin J., involved a traffic accident that
led to a traffic jam. The person who caused the accident was held liable for
damages of 39 francs to the local transport authority for the loss of receipts
caused by the resulting delay to the circulation of its vehicles. It is
unclear what distinguishes this claim from other potential traffic jam claims.
The note by Professor Esmein in the Marcailloux case observes that the
characterization of a particular damage as direct or indirect, far from being a
factual inquiry, is simply the statement of a conclusion as to recovery; in
this regard, it plays a similar function to the concept of proximity in our
law. See Note under Cass. civ. 2e, April 28, 1965, D.S.1965.777.
In Quebec, the expansive
interpretation of "another" in art. 1053 of the Civil Code of
Lower Canada referred to by McLachlin J. has served to shift the analysis
to the terrain of causality: see Baudouin, La responsabilité civile
délictuelle (3rd ed. 1990), at no. 177. Baudouin recognizes the difficulty
of generalizing with respect to determinations of directness but he considers
that a trend toward an exclusion of liability is discernable, supra, at
no. 354:
[translation] The problem of
determining what is "direct" damage is complex and here again any
attempt at generalization would be presumptuous. However, one trend seems to
be clear. The courts will not recognize loss the immediate source of which is
not the fault itself but some other injury already caused by the fault. In
other words, damage resulting from damage, repercussive damage, "second
degree" damage, is indirect.
However, as the author recognizes, this
is at most a trend. He further notes that Quebec courts have tended to
consider causality as a question of fact: supra, at no. 349. This would
constitute a significant difference with the French regime. However, the
author notes that the decision of this Court in Morin v. Blais, [1977] 1
S.C.R. 570, considered the question of causality to constitute a question of
law. Recovery of contractual relational economic loss has been allowed in a
few cases in Quebec. Employers have been allowed to recover for the loss of
the services of their employees.
In my view, the French and
Quebec experience remains inconclusive. Although the cases are theoretically
not subject to any special requirements for recovery, cases of recovery of
contractual relational economic loss are few. The rarity of the cases has
resulted in little doctrinal discussion of the issues raised and the brevity of
the reasons makes the grounds for determination difficult to analyze. While
French law does not establish an absolute bar, it is very close to establishing
a de facto bar through the use of the dual requirements of directness
and proof of causality. The number of cases in which recovery has been allowed
is very few when one considers that relational losses occur as a result of
practically every accident causing property damage in the commercial area.
Furthermore, one is at pains
to establish the grounds for distinguishing successful claims from other
relational claims. What little doctrinal discussion there is appears to be
both keenly aware of the potential for open-ended liability and conscious that
recovery is generally denied. Such analysis also points to factors entering
into the directness and causality analysis that would exclude CN's claim,
factors such as the intuitus personae nature of the contractual
relationship and the inability of the plaintiff to protect itself through
contract or otherwise. I shall have occasion to consider such factors later.
In addition, civil law
scholars have remarked on the lack of emphasis in French and Quebec law on the
problems raised by the nature of particular protected interests; see Jutras, supra,
at pp. 295-96 and 310-11. In civil law systems such as the German system
which, unlike the French system, have focused significant attention on the
problems posed by the nature of different protected interests, (see Limpens,
Kruithof and Meinertzhagen-Limpens, "Liability for One's Own Act", in
International Encyclopedia of Comparative Law, vol. XI, ch. 2, IV.),
recovery is denied for contractual relational claims based on the type of
damage; see Markesinis, A Comparative Introduction to the German Law of
Torts (2nd ed. 1990), at pp. 39 et seq. Other civil law systems
have strict exclusionary rules. Switzerland apparently excludes le dommage
par ricochet, allowing only recovery for wrongful death; see Herbots,
"Le "Duty of Care" et le dommage purement financier en droit
comparé" [1985], Rev. dr. int. et dr. comp. 7, at p. 32.
What conclusions can be drawn
from the civil law? First, I think there is general agreement that economic
loss cases cannot simply be subjected to the same analysis as cases involving
other types of damage: see Atiyah, supra, at p. 270. No one is
suggesting, after all, that we modify the rules adopted in Hedley Byrne
for an undifferentiated Donoghue test in economic loss cases.
There remains the argument
that French and Quebec experience puts the lie to the floodgates problem in
this area. In my view, this is simply not borne out. First of all, as
Markesinis points out, French judges are acutely aware of the potential for
unlimited liability. They use different analytical tools to reach much the
same result.
One can of course attempt to
meet the floodgates argument by contending that recovery for contractual
relational economic loss will remain exceptional even if the exclusionary rule
is relaxed. This is perhaps the most that can be drawn from the civil law
experience: the replacement of an exclusionary rule with what amounts to very
close to a de facto bar will not lead to many cases being brought
forward. Unlike the civil law rules in these areas, however, the traditional
control devices in our tort law have been elaborated to deal with damages that
are generally by their nature limited.
I am principally concerned
about the relative advisability of attempting to draw a line within the group
of contractual claimants as opposed to distinguishing based on the nature of
the interest at stake. Specifically, I am concerned about the nature and the
workability of the criteria used to distinguish valid claims. In my view, any
incursions into the exclusionary rule should be carefully justified on policy
grounds. With respect to this question, I do not find any theory put forward
in either France or Quebec that would aid in making distinctions amongst
contractual claimants on valid policy grounds; see the discussion by Mayrand J.A.
of the difficulties in making the directness determination with respect to
"victims by ricochet" in J.E. Construction Inc. v. General Motors
of Canada Ltd., [1985] C.A. 275, at pp. 278-79.
To the extent that recovery
has been allowed, the inability of doctrine to elucidate the characteristics
leading to recovery or to a finding of directness gives the lie to the idea
that allowing recovery in a few cases of this nature will provide material for
an ex post rationalisation that the court is incapable of formulating
beforehand. I do not share McLachlin J.'s confidence that turning this issue
over to the common law to decide cases on the basis of proximity will lead to
the gradual formation of categories of recovery that make sense in policy
terms, and nothing in the civil law experience with findings of directness
leads me to greater confidence in this regard: see Herbots, supra, at p.
21.
The narrow exclusionary rule
distinguishes between property claims and contract claims and excludes the
latter in cases of property damage. This bright line test has been in the
past extended to the wider field of pure economic loss; in this wider field, it
is in retreat in a number of areas. In my view, this case presents the court
with the following problem: should the court eliminate the bright line test in
the narrow area of contractual relational economic loss in favour of a test
that will discriminate differently, this time amongst the class of contractual
claimants, those who merit recovery and those who do not? If yes, what
criteria should govern recovery?
Before dealing further with
the question of contractual relational economic loss, however, it is necessary
to consider a different set of arguments advanced by the respondent.
Part II: Alternative Interest Theories
Introductory
CN argues that its case does
not rest on a mere contractual interest. It seeks to avoid the application of
the narrow exclusionary rule by arguing that it has alternative interests at
stake that differentiate it from the ordinary contractual claimant. It does
not seek to place itself under a long-standing exception to the exclusionary
rule enunciated in Simpson & Co. v. Thomson, supra, at p.
290, which involves cases allowing recovery to a plaintiff with a proprietary
or possessory interest. If CN could argue that its interest in the bridge was
analogous to the interest of a demise charterer in the chartered ship, it would
be able to recover since it would be, vis-à-vis third parties, the temporary
owner of the bridge; see Scrutton on Charterparties and Bills of Lading
(19th ed. 1984), at pp. 47-52; Baumwoll Manufactur von Carl Scheibler v.
Furness, [1893] A.C. 8 (H.L.); The "Father Thames", [1979]
2 Lloyd's Rep. 364. A demise charterer's interest typically entirely supplants
the interest of the owner of the ship, even in the repair of physical damage:
see Candlewood, supra, at p. 18. For example, in Rivtow,
the plaintiff was a demise charterer. No argument was directed to contesting
Rivtow's interest.
CN's licence agreement gives
it no proprietary or possessory interest. This state of affairs was surely not
entirely fortuitous in light of the fact that the existence of such an
interest was a central consideration in the Gypsum Carrier case. CN's
contract with PWC establishes no proprietary or possessory interest in the
bridge, and it did not attempt to argue that its contract resembled that of a
demise charterer.
Unable to contend for the
existence of a possessory right to the bridge, CN, we saw, put forward
essentially two arguments to the effect that its interest is more than that of
a mere contractor. First, it says, it suffered from a transferred loss of
use. Secondly, it maintains, it is involved in a common adventure with PWC.
These arguments are centred on the relationship between the plaintiff and the
property owner, i.e., between CN and PWC.
Transferred Loss Theories
CN frames its argument with
respect to transferred loss in two different ways. First, it submits that
"P.W.C. initially suffered the physical loss for the damage to the bridge,
but pursuant to their contracts with the railways all costs are ultimately
borne by the railways, substantially by the C.N.R.". Along a similar
line, it contends that PWC "acted like a trustee" in providing the
bridge to the railways and particularly CN. The second manner in which it
frames its argument on transferred loss involves arguing that granting judgment
to CN in this case would not impose additional liability on the defendants over
and above what they would normally be incurred by the owner of commercial
property. I will deal with these in turn.
The respondent's first
argument, as I understand it, is that the contract provides for a particularly
mechanical passing through of the costs of the accident to the eventual users.
CN's claim is thus different from the typical contractual relational claim.
I find this unconvincing.
The rates are not set after all the costs are established. Canada unilaterally
sets the rate for each three-year period of the licence after the initial
three-year period, in light of the principle set out in the preamble of
"total recovery to Canada of all the costs of operating and maintaining
the Bridge" (see Recital E of the Preamble of the License Agreement).
After each renewal of the contract the railway has a guaranteed unit rate for
three years. CN is less exposed to costs incurred by the property owner than
the typical consumer, for whom the costs incurred today are often passed
through almost immediately. Before any such costs are passed through to CN,
the current unit rate must expire and CN must decide that it wishes to renew
the contract for another three-year period.
Second, it must be noted that
PWC recovered damages as property owner in this case. Since PWC was fully
compensated, none of the costs of property damage in this case will be passed
through, even in the future. The only transferred loss in this case concerned
a loss of use.
Third, the real reason all
the loss of use costs appear to be passed through in this case has nothing to
do with any special characteristics of CN or of the licence agreement. Rather,
it results from the fact that PWC runs the bridge on a non-profit basis. PWC
did suffer a loss of use of its fee-earning capacity; its pricing policy is
such that the economic value of its loss of use is zero. In most cases, the
owner of a profit-making chattel damaged by the tortfeasor will suffer a loss
of use in the form of reduced payments by users. Here, the loss of use appears
to be transferred in toto only because PWC does not use the bridge to
earn a profit so it incurs no financial loss owing to interruption of transit
fees. PWC's pricing policy, which happens to be particularly advantageous to
CN and the other users at the expense of the taxpayers of Canada, does not mean
that any more transferred loss of use occurred in this case than in the typical
case.
Fourth, the toll structure
does not support the "unique relationship" theory since all railways
were equally situated with respect to this factor. The loss of use in this
case was initially spread over the four railways. A wide range of people and
companies were undoubtedly affected by the unavailability of the bridge.
People who contracted for carriage of their goods by the railways, for example,
may well have had shipment of the goods delayed in transit. The eventual
bearer of this loss would be determined by the terms of the contract of
carriage.
As the appellants rightly
suggest, the contract CN had for the shared use of the bridge puts it in no
better position to recover its loss than a time charterer who contracts for the
sole use of a vessel. Recovery has been regularly denied in the time charterer
cases: see Konstantinidis v. World Tankers Corp. (The World Harmony),
[1967] P. 341, at p. 362.
The unique features of the
toll structure are not such as to found an alternative legally protected interest
over and above the contractual interest of the plaintiff. A fortiori,
they also are not such as to justify a characterization of PWC as a trustee.
The second manner in which
the respondent frames its loss of use argument involves arguing that granting
judgment to CN in this case would not be extending the liability of the
defendants over and above what they would normally incur to the owner of
commercial property. Here, the respondent essentially argues that the
defendants' liability should not be reduced merely because it was fortunate
enough to strike a bridge being used by railways. Had PWC, i.e., the owner,
been using the bridge, it could have recovered loss of use profits as
consequential economic loss.
A variant of the respondent's
transferred loss argument was rejected in the Candlewood case, supra,
on stronger facts for the plaintiff than in this case. There, the ship Ibaraki
Maru was damaged in a collision with the Mineral Transporter owned
by the defendant. The negligence of the Mineral Transporter was
established. Repairs to the Ibaraki Maru were delayed for several weeks
owing to labour unrest.
The plaintiff time charterer
("time charterer") was also the owner of the Ibaraki Maru. As
owner, it had let the ship on a bareboat charter to the second plaintiff
("bareboat charterer") and by a time charter of the same date, the
bareboat charterer had let it back to the owner on a time charter. The
bareboat charterer had a proprietary or possessory interest and could bring an
action for damage to property and for consequential economic loss. Under the
terms of the bareboat charter, the bareboat charterer was liable as against the
owners to bear the cost of repairs resulting from the collision. It paid this
amount to the owner and collected damages for this amount from the tortfeasor.
Under the terms of the time charter, the daily hire payable during the time
charter was reduced while the ship was undergoing repairs to about one quarter
of the normal daily rate. The bareboat charterer also recovered the amounts
necessary to make up the reduced payments. These findings were not challenged
before the Privy Council where the case centred on the rights of recovery of
the time charterer.
The time charterer claimed
for the amount of hire it paid while the vessel was not operational and the
profits it lost during that period. Its first argument was that its
reversionary interest as owner was sufficient to ground recovery. Their
Lordships rejected this contention on the ground that the claim was made in
respect of losses it suffered as time charterer (at p. 18). The time
charterer's second argument was that, if it had incurred the loss of use in its
capacity as owner, it would have been entitled to recover the whole cost of
repairing the collision damage, and also its whole loss of profits while the
ship was out of service. Because the ship was subject to the bareboat charter
and the time charter, the loss was divided between the bareboat charterers (as
disponent owners) and the time charterers, but the loss was the same and should
be recoverable by the party on whom it happened to fall. The court apparently
pushed the first plaintiffs to take their argument to its logical conclusion:
if there had been a chain of sub-charterers and sub-sub-charterers, each party
in the chain would have been entitled to recover his particular loss. Lord
Fraser of Tullybelton rejected the argument on the following grounds, at p. 19:
It
may be asked, and Mr. Gleeson did ask rhetorically, why the wrongdoer should
escape paying for part of the loss for which he is responsible merely because
the loss is divided between two victims. One answer was given by Holmes J. in
Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint, 275 U.S. 303, where he said,
at p. 309:
"justice
does not permit that the petitioner [wrongdoer] be charged with the full value
of the loss of use unless there is some one who has a claim to it as against
the petitioner" (emphasis added).
If
the bareboat charter and the time charter are accepted as valid and effective
contracts, it cannot be right to disregard them or to treat claims from parties
to them as if the contracts did not exist. Another, and perhaps less
technical, answer is that the argument, if accepted, would have far-reaching
consequences, which would run counter to the accepted policy of the law. If
this exception to the rule against allowing recovery by persons who are in
merely contractual relationship with the injured party were admitted, there
appears to be no reason why contracts under time charters should be treated
differently in this regard from other contracts between the owner or disponent
owner of a ship and other parties. In the, not uncommon, case where the
damaged vessel is the subject of a chain of sub-charters and sub-sub-charters,
made at different dates, some of the charters may be profitable to the
charterer though the respective rates of profit may be different, and some
charters may result in a loss to the charterer. Is a sub-charterer who is
wholly or partly released from a loss-making charter to be expected to
contribute to the damages fund, in order to relieve the wrongdoer pro tanto?
That would be surprising, yet it seems to be the logical consequence of
treating the damages as a fund which is divisible among those who have suffered
loss in proportion to their loss. And if claims for economic loss by
sub-charterers are to be admitted, why not also claims by any person with a
contractual interest in any goods being carried in the damaged vessel, and by
any passenger in her, who suffers economic loss by reason of the delay
attributable to the collision? An exceedingly wide new range of liability
would be opened up. Their Lordships accordingly reject this submission.
Lord Fraser's speech also noted that
the appeal of the argument was strong in that case because the whole loss of
use fell on only two parties. In the case at bar, the loss of use fell
initially on only the four railways. However, if the theory of recovery is based
on a transferred loss of use rationale, there is no reason to limit recovery to
such cases. Obviously, all users of a damaged bridge suffer a loss of use of
the bridge and damage to bridges, unlike damage to a single ship, is very
likely to cause loss to a wide group of people. Difficulties of measuring,
tracing, and apportioning damages would bring excessive uncertainties and
complexity into damage actions, and thereby overburden the courts. There would
be a significant risk of duplicate recovery. Setting up a fund to compensate
all such losses in every case of transferred loss would be impractical.
The facts in Candlewood,
as I noted, were more favourable to the plaintiff than those in this case. The
time charterer was also the actual owner. It suffered exactly the same kind of
damage as the owner would suffer. It constituted a single user whereas CN is
merely one of four users of the bridge. The respondent attempted to
distinguish Candlewood on a number of grounds. They first argued that the
time charterer had mere contractual rights. If a time charterer who suffers
the entire loss of use has mere contractual rights, I am unable to see
how a company like CN, which merely suffers a partial loss of use, has anything
more. Second, it asserts that the time charterer was attempting to recover
loss of profit whereas it is trying to recoup losses. This contention involves
a misreading of the case: the time charterer was claiming both for the amount
of hire paid whilst the vessel was not operational and for loss of profits.
Its claim to recoup losses was rejected as was its claim for lost profits.
CN also attempted to
distinguish the case on the ground that the defendants had no knowledge of the
identity of the charterer or even that the vessel was chartered at all and that
the plaintiff owned no adjacent property that was interfered with because of
the negligent act; in sum, there was no special relationship. I shall deal
with these arguments in Part III devoted to the special relationship question.
A time charterer typically
suffers exactly the same type of damages the owner would have suffered. This
gives particular force to the transferred loss argument in that context. The
use value of the ship is limited to chartering fees and transport profits. The
defendant would not be exposed to a different liability from that which he
would ordinarily expect; see Feldthusen, Economic Negligence, supra,
at p. 234. It is this similarity which explains why in certain cases in the
United States, the rule against recovery by a time charterer has occasionally
been relaxed. In Venore Transportation Co. v. M/V Struma, 583 F.2d 708
(1978), the time charterer had to continue paying charter hire during repairs.
The court found that the time charterer could recover his lost charter hire but
not lost profits, at pp. 710-11:
. . .
payment for loss of use of the damaged vessel is a conventional item of
recovery, and the fact that the charter party has transferred the risk of
loss of use from the owner to the time charterer should not extinguish the
right to a recovery of a traditional item of damages. [Emphasis added.]
I am uncertain whether it is advisable
to so extend recovery to a type of damages that would normally be
recovered by an owner. I am certain, however, that to extend recovery to
everything that could be recovered by an owner would be impractical.
To accept wide recovery for
transferred loss as proposed by the plaintiff here would have the effect of entitling
the plaintiff to compensation in all cases dealing with contracts for the use
of another's property. If loss of use is extended to include the costs of
finding alternate sources for the same benefits, it goes considerably beyond
what is normally payable to the owner in commercial cases, although admittedly
it could be payable to the owner.
True transferred loss cases
involve a claim which is in essence a claim for property damage which
the owner himself would have recovered, had the loss not fallen on the
plaintiff because of their contract. A true transferred loss case requires
that the risk of property damage have passed, as in the case of goods
damaged in transit after the risk (but not the property) has passed to the
buyer. In such a case, unless the buyer is given a right of action, the
carrier will be liable to neither party: not to the seller because he has
suffered no loss, nor to the buyer who has no protected interest; see Fleming, The
Law of Torts (7th ed. 1987), at pp. 164-65.
Even in that type of case,
recovery was denied in the recent House of Lords decision in Leigh and
Sillavan Ltd. v. Aliakmon Shipping Co., supra, essentially on the
ground that contract law provided a sufficient protection in the circumstances
of that case. It was only the particular variation of the contract to which
the buyers agreed that deprived them of their usual right of action.
The present is not a true
transferred loss case. PWC has collected for the property damage it has
sustained. The transferred loss claimed in this case is thus not with respect
to the property damage claim. Rather, it is a claim for the transferred loss
of use, or transferred economic loss.
In these circumstances, I
fail to see how the respondent suffered a transferred loss such as to create an
alternative protected interest to its contractual interest.
Common Adventure or Joint
Venture
MacGuigan J.A. refers, at p.
167, to the finding of the trial judge that recovery is supported by "the
CNR's role in supplying materials and inspection and consulting services for
the bridge, and CNR's preponderant usage of the bridge, recognized even in the
periodic negotiations for routine maintenance closings". CN argues that
these findings bring into play the "common adventure" cases: see Morrison
Steamship Co. v. Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners) (The Greystoke Castle),
[1947] A.C. 265; Aktieselskabet Cuzco v. The Sucarseco, 294 U.S. 394
(1935).
I disagree. In my view, the
appellants are correct in arguing that there was no common adventure in this
case. The parties agreed that the bridge was owned, operated and maintained by
the PWC. PWC was, by contract with the railways, obligated to operate and
maintain the bridge.
CN's preponderant usage of
the bridge and participation in negotiations over bridge closure do not justify
a finding of common adventure. I can see no reason to allow recovery based
simply on the plaintiff's status as a principal client. Undoubtedly, many
suppliers of services consult with their principal clients with respect to
planning necessary interruptions of supply so as to minimize disruption. While
this is certainly good business practice, it does not establish a finding of
common adventure.
CN also argues that paragraph
10 of its licence agreement (cited supra), together with its provision
of materials for repairs, is sufficient to constitute a "common
adventure" between itself and PWC. In my view, that provision is far from
sufficient to create an alternative interest. While it does provide that CN
will make emergency repairs, it provides both for prior approval and reasonable
reimbursement by Canada. The consulting services, inspections, maintenance and
repairs are subject to a similar regime. These provisions merely provide for
the establishment of further contractual relations between CN and PWC. CN is
both a supplier to PWC and a contractor for services from PWC. None of the
clauses provides for any joint responsibility for property losses. It would be
curious if a bridge user could found a contractual loss claim on the fortuitous
circumstance that it also was the company hired to fix the bridge on occasion.
There is no case for a common
adventure that equates to the relationship between ship and cargo in a general
average case. In cases of common adventure, A, the ship, has suffered damage
which is recoverable against the wrongdoer C. B is bound to contribute
to A's loss and seeks to recover the amount of its contribution from the
wrongdoer: see The Greystoke Castle, supra, at p. 304, per
Lord Simonds (dissenting). In The Sucarseco, supra, the United
States Supreme Court considered a claim by owners of undamaged cargo against
the non-carrying ship arising out of a collision. The cargo owners claimed for
damages in the amount of their contributions to the general average. In
allowing the claim, Hughes C.J. carefully distinguished the case before him
from a general contractual claim (at pp. 404-405):
This
is not a case of an attempt, by reason of "a tort to the person or
property of one man," to make the tort-feasor liable to another
"merely because the injured person was under a contract with that other,
unknown to the doer of the wrong." See Robins Dry Dock & Repair
Co. v. Flint, 275 U.S. 303, 309; Elliott Steam Tug Co. v. Shipping
Controller [1922] 1 K. B. 127, 139, 142; The Federal No. 2, 21 F.
(2d) 313. Here, cargo as well as ship was placed in jeopardy. That
jeopardy was due in part to the negligence of the vessel against which the
claim is made. The fact that the vessel and the cargo under the "Jason
clause" bear their proportionate shares of the expenses gives Sucarseco no
ground for a contention that the expenses themselves, or the share that cargo
bears, were not occasioned directly by the tort. In the light of the nature
of the general average contributions, and of the event which made them
necessary, the fact that they were made under the stipulation in the
"Jason clause" is no more a defense to Sucarseco than is the fact
that the cargo was placed on board under a contract to carry it. [Emphasis
added.]
Earlier in his reasons, the Chief
Justice had underlined that the Jason clause "in no way changes the
essential features of general average contributions" (at p. 402). In
addition to the other distinctions with respect to the case at bar, the contractual
clause in these cases largely serves to reaffirm the application of a special
legal regime.
The Greystoke Castle, supra, is very similar to The
Sucarseco and the House of Lords in fact relied on the American case. It
involves the law of general average and is easily distinguishable from this
case. I would confine Lord Roche's dictum, at p. 280, to cases of general
average and common adventure narrowly defined: see Murphy v. Brentwood
District Council, supra, at p. 460, per Lord Keith. At the
very least, a requirement exists that the expenses be incurred in avoiding or
mitigating personal or property damage threatened by the defendant's
negligence: see Fleming, supra, at p. 164.
These cases involve
discretionary decisions made in the common interest that impose cost
disproportionately amongst those who benefit from the decision. In the words
of Hughes C.J. in The Sucarseco, supra, at pp. 402-403: "It
must still appear that voluntary and successful sacrifices have been made or
extraordinary expenses incurred on behalf of those interested in the adventure
in order to avert a common imminent peril, with resulting benefit to the
adventure upon which the burden of such sacrifices and expenses appropriately
rests." In my view, these general average cases are not applicable to the
facts of this case. There was no common imminent peril. CN was not required
to contribute to PWC's loss. The loss fell exactly where the contract between
CN and PWC attributed it. It cannot suffice that losses were incurred by both
parties, for that is always the case in this type of situation.
With respect to CN's
voluntary contributions to bridge maintenance, which constitute the principal
extra-contractual aspect of the relationship between the plaintiff and the
property owner in this case, it should be remembered that CN and the other
railways were paying a low price under the contract, merely sufficient to cover
PWC's costs. In return, PWC's repair obligations under the contract were not
particularly strict. In the event of the complete or partial destruction of
the bridge or any damage thereto, the decision to replace or repair was
entirely at Canada's discretion. Canada was under no obligation to rebuild,
replace or repair such destruction or damage and the railway was not entitled
to claim any compensation or damages. No time limits for repairs were provided
for. It thus made perfect commercial sense for CN to voluntarily inspect and
repair the bridge on occasion in its own interest, especially since it must, in
any event, maintain the necessary manpower and equipment to repair its own
bridges in the area. CN may have provided some maintenance services when it
suited its purposes, but it cannot be said that CN operates and maintains the
bridge. The railway had no obligation to provide any service without being
paid. It also had no obligation to contribute financially in any manner to
compensate any losses incurred by PWC. CN's voluntary contributions are not
such as to constitute a joint venture.
It remains unclear to me how
the Court is to proceed to establish the existence of a joint venture other
than by looking at the contractual relationship between the plaintiff and the
property owner. McLachlin J. considers that the evidence in this case is
sufficient to establish the existence of a joint venture. With respect, I am
unable to agree. None of the traditional indicia of a joint venture is present
either through contract or extra-contractually. There was no legal entity in
the nature of the partnership. There was no joint undertaking of any
commercial enterprise. There was no duty to share both profits and losses. In
my view, where the contractual or extra-contractual relationship between the
parties excludes any form of possible joint lability or contribution in cases
of loss of this type, a finding of the existence of a joint venture in this
context is excluded.
In conclusion, I do not find
the respondent's arguments to the effect that it had more than a mere
contractual interest convincing. CN's entitlement to use the bridge finds its
sole source in the contract. The contract sets out the full extent of CN's
rights: without the contract, CN would be trespassing. It has wisely not
argued the existence of any possessory interest. Its transferred loss is
merely the transfer of a loss of use and is a less compelling case for recovery
than the loss incurred by a time charterer. This case does not involve a
common adventure such as exists in the cases dealing with general average
contributions. As a result, I cannot accept the rationale for recovery set
forth by McLachlin J. to the effect that the purpose of allowing recovery in
this case is to permit "a plaintiff whose position for practical purposes,
vis-à-vis the tortfeasor, is indistinguishable from that of the owner of the
damaged property, to recover what the actual owner could have recovered".
CN's recovery in the courts
below, however, was not founded on a different interest than the typical
contractual claimant; rather, it was founded on greater proximity with respect
to the same interest. As a result, I propose to return to the issue of
contractual relational economic loss. I will first examine the various
proposals to relax the bright line rule. Then I will consider the rationale
behind that rule in light of the proposals.
Part III: The Proposed Tests
CN argues that even if we
reject its "alternative interests" argument and find its interest
merely contractual, the existence of other factors is sufficient to constitute
a special relationship with the tortfeasor and to ground recovery for its
contractual claims in this case. In particular, it points to the high degree
of subjective and objective foreseeability in this case as sufficient to
constitute a special relationship between Norsk and CN, but other factors are
invoked as well. The respondent does not deny the existence of the rule in Cattle.
It contends, however, that the rationale for Cattle is simply that the mere
disruption of contractual rights without more is insufficient to ground
recovery. These arguments represent an attempt to qualify the
application of the contractual relational economic loss exclusionary rule.
My colleague McLachlin J. has
set forth guideposts for the search for the answer to the issue in the case at
bar. In brief, she underlines the need for limits to liability, the need for
the limits to be reasonably clear and the need for the rule to respond to
considerations of policy and fairness. She also recognizes that a single rule
for all economic loss cases is probably unattainable. I am in substantial
agreement with her on these points but I consider that a number of additional
aspects are relevant to the choice of a rule in this area.
First, with respect to the
need for limits to liability, it is important to underline that perfect justice
is not possible in this area; it is impossible to compensate everybody who
suffers loss owing to their contractual relationships with the property owner.
Some losses, which were undoubtedly incurred as a result of a defendant's
negligence, are going to remain uncompensated. The challenge, then, is to come
up with a rule that divides the winners and the losers in the best possible
manner.
A good test should
distinguish on a rational basis between potential plaintiffs, all of whom were
injured by the defendants' negligence. The plaintiff's proposed rule should
offer a convincing and practical rationale for distinguishing its claim from
those other claims, contractual or otherwise, which are to be rejected.
Victims whose claims are to be denied must perceive a minimum of justice in the
result. In my view, none of the theories that involve the acceptance of CN's
claim but which would lead to the rejection of the claims of the other railways
can be accepted as just from this perspective.
A test for recovery in cases
of economic loss to contractual entitlements caused by property damage to
another party should reflect the characteristics of this type of litigation,
described in Feldthusen, Economic Negligence, supra, at pp.
207-8:
The
defendants in this type of case are not typically heinous wrongdoers, but
rather individuals and enterprises engaged in common and useful social
activity. The same is true of the plaintiffs who are inadvertently harmed by
some unfortunate and often inevitable consequence of modern life. Few
important moral, social or symbolic issues are involved. Here, if anywhere,
the economists' suggestion that the law should devise rules which permit the
occasionally incompatible activities of plaintiffs and defendants to continue
at the lowest possible total social cost should be taken seriously. This
includes rules which encourage both parties to take cost-efficient
accident prevention measures. And in respect of the unavoidable accidents
which remain, it suggests that the loss should be borne by the party who can
insure against it at the lowest cost.
This description is pertinent in the
present case. A good rule should thus place some incentive on both parties to
act in an economically rational manner to reduce total accident costs.
The rule must, of course,
also confront the problem of indeterminacy. It is often suggested that this is
the only problem the rule must confront. This was perhaps natural in
light of the importance of potential indeterminate liability in negligent
misrepresentation cases and the fact that the breakthrough in allowing recovery
for economic loss came in Hedley Byrne. However, this confusion between
the two issues tended to obscure the variety of issues raised in different kinds
of economic loss cases. If the principal reason lying behind the broad
exclusionary rule for pure economic loss is the concern over indeterminate
liability, then the exclusionary rule can be easily discarded in favour of a
more direct test of whether liability would be indeterminate. The plaintiff's
case here is essentially built on this proposition and they offer this Court a
wide variety of factual distinctions which they contend respond to the concern
about indeterminate liability. As the above discussion indicates, I do not
agree with that approach; a rule in this area should serve to do more than
simply exclude indeterminate liability. However, in contractual economic loss
cases, the proposed rule must certainly confront this issue.
What then does it mean for a
particular liability to be determinate? The first critical question is whether
the liability needs to be determinate before or after the accident. It is
important to underline that since most claims of this nature occur in the commercial
area, the requisite certainty should exist before the accident occurs.
A company like CN should be able to consult legal counsel and receive
reasonably clear advice with respect to potential recovery in the case of an
accident that is as common as a ship hitting a bridge. So should a company
like Burlington Northern Railway. Even more importantly, when the shoe is on
the other foot, CN should also be able to get some reasonably clear guidance
from counsel with respect to its potential liabilities in a case where a train
derails and damages a factory. Estimating such liability is, of course, a key
aspect to the pricing of insurance for potential tortfeasors. Under the
exclusionary rule, liability is determinate before the accident; unless
the contract is such as to create a joint venture or a possessory interest, all
parties are aware that no recovery will lie for damage to those contractual
interests.
The second important point is
that the objection is not simply to a large number of claims since an accident
may injure a large number of people or cause extensive property damage. But in
physical damage cases, the number of potential first-victim claims is usually
foreseeable even when large. Even more importantly, it is rare for multiple
physical damage claims to ripple down a chain; physical injury to one person
rarely gives rise to physical injury to others down a chain: see Stapleton, supra,
at p. 255. Such ripple effects are on the contrary the very essence of
contractual relational economic loss. The concern is that the volume of claims
is indeterminate and therefore difficult and expensive to insure against.
A third important
consideration is the indeterminacy of each claim. Recovery for
contractual expectancies requires analysis of who bore the loss. What would
happen if CN effectively passed on any increased costs incurred owing to the
unavailability of the bridge to its customers? Refusing to address this
question could result in a very expensive tort case leading to compensation for
a party who suffered no loss. In a multi-stage chain of contracts, it becomes
very difficult to analyze the economic effects of an accident on a particular
link in the chain. A related concern is with false or inflated claims: see Spartan
Steel, supra.
The problem with this case
from the perspective of indeterminacy is that it involves a type of accident
that will very likely lead to a great number of claims. It so happens that on
the facts of this case, the number of injured parties is small. The fact that
Norsk was fortunate enough to hit a bridge with few users does not make its
potential liability for contractual relational economic loss any less
indeterminate. Its liability after the accident is, of course, determinate;
but beforehand, when potential tortfeasors are looking for insurance, they and
their insurance company do not know which bridge will be hit. It seems odd to
establish one set of rules for negligent tortfeasors who hit busy bridges ‑‑
liability for economic loss is excused because of indeterminacy ‑‑
and a different set for those who hit bridges used by few users.
I turn to an examination of
the proposed tests. The principal authority in the Commonwealth allowing
recovery for contractual relational economic loss is Caltex, supra.
Caltex involved an oil refinery and pipeline owned by the Australian Oil
Refinery ("AOR") that carried oil to a terminal owned by the
plaintiff Caltex. While oil was moving through the pipeline between the
refinery and the Caltex terminal a dredge negligently damaged the pipeline.
AOR was compensated for its loss as property owner.
Under the terms of the
Caltex-AOR contract, the oil in the pipeline was owned by Caltex but was at the
risk of AOR. Caltex claimed against the dredge and its owners for its economic
loss resulting from the damage, specifically the expense to which it was put in
arranging for continued supply of its terminal either by ship or road. One of
the questions before the court was whether the plaintiff could recover damages
for economic loss sustained as a result of damage negligently caused to the
property of a third party. Although all five judges held that the right to
economic loss must rest on something more than mere foreseeability they all
agreed that the plaintiff must succeed. Each, however, suggested different
approaches for the appropriate test to be applied. I shall examine the various
proposed rules under the headings set out below.
Foreseeability
of the Individual Plaintiff or of an Ascertained Class of Plaintiffs
CN heavily stressed the
defendants' undoubtedly high level of subjective and objective knowledge that
CN as a particular company would suffer loss. My colleague Stevenson J. relies
on this factor as his principal ground for finding liability in this case.
There is no question that Norsk knew and ought to have known that CN would
suffer loss. Indeed, the facts reveal that the tug captain thought CN would
suffer even more than it did, since he erroneously thought the bridge belonged
to it. I am unable to see the importance of this "excess of
foresight" in policy terms, however.
First, the subjective view of
the defendants with respect to the ownership of the bridge is obviously not
sufficient to ground a claim. Such an error does not, of course, negate the
defendants' duty with respect to the actual owner of the property. Why should
it have the effect of creating new duties in the absence of a protected
interest? It remains true, however, that Norsk could reasonably foresee that a
specific plaintiff, CN, would suffer loss as a contractual claimant.
Should this factor distinguish CN from other contractual claimants?
Two judges in Caltex
suggested versions of an individual plaintiff test, at least one that would
allow recovery in this case. At the level of a general test for all cases of
pure economic loss, Mason J. adopted what can be termed the specific individual
test. "A defendant", he held at p. 274, "will then be liable
for economic damage due to his negligent conduct when he can reasonably foresee
that a specific individual, as distinct from a general class of persons, will
suffer financial loss as a consequence of his conduct". Gibbs J. also
incorporated the known plaintiff test into his analysis as a necessary but not
sufficient condition for liability (at p. 245). As he saw it, the existence of
a common adventure or physical propinquity may have supporting roles, but are
neither necessary nor sufficient. The ascertained class test would allow
recovery where the defendant knows or has the means of knowing that the persons
likely to be affected by his or her negligence consist of a definite number of
persons.
In Candlewood, supra,
at p. 24, the House of Lords rejected the individual plaintiff test and the
ascertained class of plaintiffs test in the following terms:
Their
Lordships have carefully considered these reasons for the decision in the Caltex
case, 136 C.L.R. 529. With regard to the reasons given by Gibbs and Mason JJ.,
their Lordships have difficulty in seeing how to distinguish between a
plaintiff as an individual and a plaintiff as a member of an unascertained
class. The test can hardly be whether the plaintiff is known by name to the
wrongdoer. Nor does it seem logical for the test to depend upon the plaintiff
being a single individual. Further, why should there be a distinction for this
purpose between a case where the wrongdoer knows (or has the means of knowing)
that the persons likely to be affected by his negligence consist of a definite
number of persons whom he can identify either by name or in some other way (for
example as being the owners of particular factories or hotels) and who may
therefore be regarded as an ascertained class, and a case where the wrongdoer
knows only that there are several persons, the exact number being to him
unknown, and some or all of whom he could not identify by name or otherwise,
and who may therefore be regarded as an unascertained class? Moreover much of
the argument in favour of an ascertained class seems to depend upon the view
that the class would normally consist of only a few individuals. But would it
be different if the class, though ascertained, was large? Suppose for instance
that the class consisted of all the pupils in a particular school. If it was a
kindergarten school with only six pupils they might be regarded as constituting
an ascertained class, even if their names were unknown to the wrongdoer. If
the school was a large one with over a thousand pupils it might be suggested
that they were not an ascertained class. But it is not easy to see a
distinction in principle merely because the number of possible claimants is
larger in one case than in the other. Apart from cases of negligent
misstatement, with which their Lordships are not here concerned, they do not
consider that it is practicable by reference to an ascertained class to find a
satisfactory control mechanism which could be applied in such a way as to give
reasonable certainty in its results.
In Kamloops, supra,
Wilson J. also questioned the advisability of the individual plaintiff test.
At pages 30-31, she stated:
It
is quite apparent that Gibbs and Jacobs JJ., and possibly Stephen J. also, were
seeking some means of permitting recovery for pure economic loss while avoiding
the undesirable consequences of applying the reasonable foreseeability rule,
namely indeterminate liability to an indeterminate class. They saw the
solution in limiting foreseeability to specific individuals rather than members
of a class. I am not sure, however, that their exception solves the problem.
It may make the class determinate but it gives no guarantee that it will be
small.
Both Lord Fraser of Tullybelton's
unanimous opinion and Wilson J.'s majority opinion stressed the practical
difficulties in applying such a test. I agree that the practical difficulties
of applying such a test are considerable to say the least.
In my view, problems also
exist at the level of principle. In the absence of any malicious intent on the
part of the defendant, of what significance is the fact that the defendant knew
that the individual plaintiff would suffer? In my view, its only role is to
limit liability. The individual plaintiff or class of plaintiff or special
relationship test serves a very different and more focused policy function in
the context of the negligent misrepresentation cases where it has been
employed: see Hedley Byrne, supra; Candler v. Crane, Christmas
& Co., [1951] 2 K.B. 164. Professor Feldthusen remarks as follows on
its function in those cases ((1991), 17 Can. Bus. L.J. 356, at pp.
376-77):
. . .
the duty of care is derived from a business relationship between the parties
which antedates, and is independent from, the negligent act. The assumption of
responsibility or special relationship duty tests and the known limited class
remoteness test were developed to deal with transaction-specific negligence.
The defendant makes a reflective transactional undertaking to a third
party which affects (and is probably intended to affect) the plaintiff. The defendant
is actually contemplating advice or service and its consequences in the
transaction. It makes some sense to speak of parties known to be at risk from
the contemplated transaction. The entire thrust of misrepresentation and
services law is to limit liability to contemplated transaction-specific
situations. One may describe this in proximity language, but it is a different
use of the proximity principle than in a relational case. [Emphasis added.]
Those cases involve the defendant's
making a representation voluntarily. It makes sense to impose upon the
defendant a requirement that he or she put his or her mind to the question of
who might be affected, since the defendant has the opportunity to reflect on
this issue before making the representation: see Haig v. Bamford, supra.
Here we are dealing with an accident.
There is no intention to affect the plaintiff; rather the effect on the
plaintiff is merely a result of the accident. Norsk cannot be said to
contemplate a particular act of negligence, a particular plaintiff or a
particular loss in the same sense as a bank manager who provides financial
information. Knowledge of the individual plaintiff serves solely to eliminate
"indeterminate liability": it operates arbitrarily both in terms of
singling out defendants and in terms of singling out plaintiffs.
In the context of an
accident, this criterion* has thus no link with fault or with a lack of
care; surely no one is suggesting tort law should strive to protect bridges
with high profile users more than bridges used by anonymous users, or that
defendants who damage bridges with high profile users are more guilty than
others. Its sole function is to distinguish one plaintiff from another and
thus "solve" the indeterminacy problem, a function that could be as
effectively performed by a rule based on the colour of CN's trains.
Allowing CN's claim to be
distinct from the other contractual victims by virtue of its particular
foreseeability as an individual victim would in my view give rise to an unjust
rule owing to its sheer arbitrariness. It serves neither to distinguish
particularly meritorious victims, nor to single out particularly careless
tortfeasors. Its sole function is to reduce the class of claimants to a small
group, a function that could be equally well performed by any other factual
distinction. Further, the test would have the effect of singling out the wrong
parties for relief. It would offer a premium to notoriety, a premium for which
I can find no legal or social justification, particularly since such persons
are most likely to advert to the matter and to contract out or insure against
the harm.
The
Defendant's Foresight with Respect to the Specific Nature of the Loss Incurred
by the Plaintiff
The second factor put forward
as founding proximity is that Norsk foresaw the specific nature of the loss
incurred by CN. The argument based on the foreseeability of the specific
nature of the loss would presumably found recovery for all three railroads, so
it sits rather awkwardly with CN's unique relationship claim. It is also
clearly insufficient to function on its own as a limit on indeterminate
damages, since even if there were thousands of users of the bridge, the
specific nature of the losses incurred would be foreseeable for all users. In
practically all cases of this type, the defendant will be aware that the
"specific nature of the loss" will be the loss of use of the property
he or she has damaged.
Additionally, the tortfeasor
does not actually know the specific nature of the loss, since the allocation of
the loss will depend primarily on the terms of the contract between the
plaintiff and the property owner as well as on other contracts between the
plaintiff and the other parties. It is certain that Norsk knew that CN's use
of the bridge would be interrupted. What is less clear and in fact quite
doubtful is whether Norsk knew about the allocation of risk of bridge
failure in the contract between CN and PWC.
It is thus incorrect to say
that, because Norsk knew that CN's use of the bridge would be interrupted, it
knew the "precise nature of the loss" CN would incur. The precise
nature of the loss, and in fact whether any loss is incurred at all, would be a
result of the contractual allocation of risk, of which Norsk would normally be
unaware. In many cases of contractual relational loss, the variety of
contractual entitlements will be much greater and more complex.
Physical Propinquity
The third factor that is said
to found proximity is the physical proximity of CN's property to the accident.
CN's property is closely joined to the bridge on both sides of the river and
the bridge forms an integral part of its railway network. CN relies here
primarily on the judgment of Jacobs J. in Caltex. Jacobs J. there
recognized that where the plaintiff's loss arises solely from a contractual
relationship with a third party, recovery will be denied (at p. 279). However,
he held, at p. 279, that if the damage arose owing to "physical effect on
the person or property of the plaintiff, it will not be irrecoverable simply
because it is economic loss". The judge, at p. 278, defined physical
effect short of physical injury as an act or omission that prevents physical
movement of a person or physical movement or operation of property. In that
case, the physical effect was the immobilization or the flow of crude oil
through the pipeline.
CN does not, in my view, meet
this physical effect test, even if such a test were adopted. Its trains have
certainly not been immobilized. Its land has not been damaged and it makes no
sense to speak of its being immobilized. In the absence of such a
"physical effect", physical propinquity of property cannot constitute
an alternative potential interest. As the appellants rightly point out, the
other railways suffered identical damages despite not owning any property in
physical propinquity to the accident.
The application of this test
would also lead to minimal damages even if it were met. Jacobs J. describes
the damages that flow from his test as being limited to those resulting from
the physical effect. In the Caltex case, the quantification of the
damage was conceded. No inquiry was required as to whether all the crude oil
for which alternative arrangement had to be made was "at the time of the
incident already in physical propinquity to the place of the incident".
In the case at bar, however, damages under this test would presumably be
recoverable only as regards those trains that were in "physical propinquity"
to the bridge when the barge hit the bridge. How close they would have to be
is a matter for speculation.
My colleague McLachlin J. has
adopted a geographic proximity factor as one element of her proximity
analysis. With respect, I am unable to discern any policy significance in the
fact that a particular plaintiff owns property in proximity to an accident.
Proximity
The fourth approach taken by
the respondent is more general and involves deciding economic loss cases on the
basis of proximity. To this end it puts forward not only the three above
mentioned factors regarding its relationship with Norsk but also the aspects of
its relationship with PWC which I examined, i.e., the alleged common adventure
and the transferred loss. In fact, it provides the Court with a lengthy list
of factors which, it alleges, create the necessary proximity in this case.
Stephen J. in Caltex
adopted this approach. My colleague McLachlin J. also relies on this
approach. I agree with Stevenson J. that the concept of proximity is incapable
of providing a principled basis for drawing the line on the issue of liability
for the reasons expressed by him (at p. 17). As he notes, it expresses a
result, rather than a principle.
The Argument from Morality
Stephen J.'s opinion in Caltex,
at p. 255, rejects the exclusionary rule since it possesses the
"unattractive quality of being quite unresponsive to the grossness of the
wrongdoer's want of care in its exclusion of non-consequential economic
loss". In a similar vein, McLachlin J. at p. 000 criticizes the
contractual allocation of risk argument on the ground that it "overlooks
the historical centrality of personal fault to our concept of negligence or
`delict' and the role this may have in curbing negligent conduct and thus
limiting the harm done to innocent parties, not all of whom are large
enterprises capable of maximizing their economic situation". With
respect, liability in this particular area should not be established based on
the court's perception of the extent of the defendant's moral fault.
Liability is very often
vicarious in cases like the present one. Vicarious liability is not based on
the breach of any personal duty owed by the employer, but on his or her
employee's tort being imputed to him or her: see Fleming, supra, at p.
341. As Fleming notes, "[t]he hallmark of vicarious liability
. . . is that it is based neither on any conduct by the defendant
himself nor even on breach of his own duty". This makes it unrealistic in
this context to calibrate liability on the degree of fault of the tortfeasor.
Second, to the extent that
the concern about fault is linked to deterrence, the deterrent effect of
tort law is already present owing to the tort action of the property
owner. In my view, cases like the present do not fall to be decided on the
grounds of personal fault. Rather they concern the effort to deter accidents
and to allocate losses in a reasonable and efficient manner.
CN's Argument
CN, of course, concedes that
a line must be drawn and that not all losses can be compensated. It suggests,
however, that the line be situated somewhere on the other side of its recovery.
It suggests that although its own and at least some other contractually based
claims should be allowed, the Court should re-erect a bright line barrier
excluding all plaintiffs who are not contractually linked with the property
owner victim. In particular, co-contractors of CN, whatever the circumstances
with respect to foreseeability and other traditional tort doctrines,
"clearly cannot recover" owing to the lack of a direct contractual
relationship with PWC. It is unclear to me why drawing a new bright line
around potential claimants in this manner is a significantly better solution.
Part IV: A Refined Proximity Analysis
in Contractual Relational Economic Loss Cases
The crucial problem with the
various formulations of the proximity test examined so far is that they look at
the problem strictly from the perspective of the defendant. The defendant's
negligence places it in a position of liability vis-à-vis the entire world.
However, if it can show that its liability would be indeterminate, it can be
excused. In my opinion, given the eminently pragmatic and policy basis of
decisions about liability in this area, the situation of both the defendant and
the plaintiff needs to be examined in cases of this kind. In particular,
the plaintiff's ability to foresee and provide for the particular damage in
question is a key factor in the proximity analysis.
The Legitimacy of this
Type of Consideration
In my view, it is legitimate
to consider which party is the better loss bearer in this type of case. This
term requires definition. Determining which party is best able to bear
the loss essentially involves asking which party is in a better position to predict
the frequency and severity of CN's economic loss when bridges are damaged, and
to plan accordingly. Analysis of loss bearing ability emphasizes how the
parties deal with accidents that tort law has not succeeded in preventing,
rather than with preventing accidents.
The question of which party
is best able to bear the loss should be distinguished from the question of
which party is best able to avoid the accident's occurring. Analysis of the
issues pertaining to deterrence, or accident avoidance, involves the question
of the relative ability of parties to act in a way that will reduce the risk of
occurrence of the type of accident in question and is widely recognized as
relevant in tort law. In my view, analysis of loss bearing ability is
particularly relevant in determining whether proximity exists in the context of
contractual relational economic loss cases.
Tort law has not generally
given much consideration to analysis of loss bearing ability. This type of
approach is obviously ill-suited to personal injury cases. In property damage
cases involving the primary liability of the tortfeasor, the courts have often
rightly been more concerned to ensure deterrence by placing liability on the
party best able to avoid the accident's occurring. Under modern conditions,
deterrence may, of course, be difficult to effect through tort law;
nonetheless, placing liability on the injurer serves to internalize the costs
of accidents legitimately to the accident-causing activity. In many cases,
loss shifting to the better loss bearer runs squarely into the powerful
objection that it is not also the better risk avoider. When the case involves
the question whether that party will be held liable at all, the concern
for deterrence overrides the concern about loss-bearing ability. Thus, in
cases involving primary liability for accidents, tort law has given priority to
preventing accidents by requiring those who cause accidents to pay for their
damage or more likely to pay for insurance.
Consideration of loss bearing
ability is by no means entirely absent from the cases, however, and it has been
increasingly recognized in recent cases. In Leigh and Sillavan Ltd. v.
Aliakmon Shipping Co., supra, at p. 819, Lord Brandon relied on the
fact that the plaintiff had open to it an adequate avenue of protection in
contract in refusing liability. A recent article by Stapleton, supra,
at pp. 270-71, has suggested a formulation that seems to me to encapsulate this
aspect of that case and may well be of more general application, as the author
suggests, in cases of economic loss. She writes:
The
power of this neglected argument [that the plaintiff had available to it an
adequate avenue of protection] is that it does not depend on a circular
proposition about where "principle" or precedent has in the past
drawn the tort boundary. It is an argument explaining where that boundary
should, on clear and stated principle, be placed. In our agenda of
considerations, then, about where a tort duty in respect of economic loss should
be recognised, we could place alongside the necessary (but not sufficient)
condition of the absence or controllability of floodgates problems, a second
requirement: the necessary but not sufficient condition that the plaintiff did
not have, nor could reasonably be expected to have acquired, protection against
the risk of economic loss.
In Smith v. Bush, [1990] 1 A.C.
831 (H.L.), the House of Lords, in allowing recovery in a case where a
purchaser acquired defective property in reliance on the competence of a
professional adviser, considered whether the plaintiff could have protected
herself by contract. Prompted by the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977,
1977 (U.K.), c. 50, the House expressly acknowledged the difficulty purchasers
of small houses have in affording a second survey. The issue of indeterminacy
became by the same token of lesser concern, since the ambit of liability was
confined to a relevant vulnerable sub-set of property acquirers ‑‑
those buying modest dwellings; see Stapleton, supra, at pp. 278-79.
Moreover, as I noted in reference to comparative law, in those systems that in
theory allow recovery for relational economic loss, recovery has apparently
been denied in some cases where the plaintiff had adequate means of protecting
itself.
Increasingly, our courts have
openly addressed the issue of insurance as one of these policy concerns. In Lamb
v. Camden London Borough Council, [1981] Q.B. 625 (C.A.), at pp. 637-38,
Lord Denning M.R. wrote as follows:
On
broader grounds of policy, I would add this: the criminal acts here ‑‑
malicious damage and theft ‑‑ are usually covered by insurance. By
this means the risk of loss is spread throughout the community. It does not
fall too heavily on one pair of shoulders alone. The insurers take the premium
to cover just this sort of risk and should not be allowed, by subrogation, to
pass it on to others . . . . It is commonplace nowadays for the
courts, when considering policy, to take insurance into account. It played a
prominent part in Photo Production Ltd. v. Securicor Transport Ltd.
[1980] A.C. 827. The House of Lords clearly thought that the risk of fire
should be borne by the fire insurers who had received the full premium for fire
risk ‑‑ and not by Securicor's insurers, who had only received a
tiny premium. That, too, was a policy decision. . . .
So
here, it seems to me that if Mrs. Lamb was insured against damage to the house
and theft, the insurers should pay the loss. If she was not insured, that is
her misfortune.
See also Fleming, supra, at p.
202 and p. 224.
The judges in Caltex
implicitly or explicitly deny the importance of insurance considerations in
resolving the pragmatic question of where to draw the line in this type of
case. Four of the five judgments did not consider insurance issues at all.
Stephen J. explicitly denies the court any role in this regard. In his view,
the task of the courts remains that of fixing loss rather than spreading loss,
and if this is to be altered it is a matter for direct legislative action
rather than for the courts (at p. 265).
With respect, I do not agree
with Stephen J. that the consideration of insurance changes the task of the
courts from loss fixing to loss spreading. Insurance considerations are merely
one element in an analysis of where it is appropriate to fix the loss, in a
case where a solution is necessarily pragmatic. Many of the extensions of tort
liability that have occurred over the last 50 years would have been inconceivable
in the absence of insurance. Many cases have referred to insurance
considerations to justify extending liability: see, for example, Laskin J. in Rivtow,
supra, at p. 1221. To reject, as does Stephen J., the open
consideration of insurance as "covert judicial action" is
paradoxical, since what is proposed is to bring insurance considerations into
the open rather than merely expressing conclusions in terms of proximity.
Fleming notes that Stephen J.'s concern that the new policy dimension may appear
more germane to the legislative than to the judicial function, but responds, in
my view accurately, that "the change in perspective is dictated by
inescapable external developments, to ignore which would be deliberately
short-sighted and self-defeating": see Fleming, supra, at p. 11. I
agree with my colleagues McLachlin J. and Stevenson J. that insurance deserves
to be considered in cases of this kind; however, I disagree with them as to its
relevance.
In the context of contractual
relational economic loss, policy concerns with respect to which party can best
bear the loss are particularly important for three reasons. First, policy
concerns with respect to deterrence and cost internalisation are generally at
least substantially met by the tortfeasor's primary liability to the property
owner. In cases where the property damage is inconsequential, it might make
sense to impose additional liability on deterrence grounds; that is not the
case here, however, and I expressly reserve that question.
Second, they can be raised
since current law denies recovery; rather than pose the risk of a revolutionary
result, the approach merely articulates another policy lying behind a
well-established rule. In some areas of the law, an examination of relative
loss bearing ability might lead to arguments for fundamental changes in the
law, changes best left to Parliament. Here, however, such considerations
simply serve to establish a new rationale, or perhaps more accurately, to
articulate explicitly an underlying rationale for a long-standing rule in an
area of the law where the importance of policy considerations is now clearly
recognized. As the law of torts has evolved, the courts have not been averse
to modifying their mode of analysis of cases and have not waited for the
legislature to do so. One imagines with difficulty a statute henceforth
requiring the courts to take such considerations into account.
Finally, in this field the
crucial problem remains that of limiting liability. All recognize that recovery
of this type of claim must remain exceptional, if only because the potential
number of claims of this type is practically unlimited. In these
circumstances, a significantly higher threshold for recovery is, in my view,
entirely justified. In other areas of tort law, where the trend has been
towards extending liability, placing an onus on the plaintiff is
inconceivable. In this area, however, there is an overriding need for strict
controls on potential liability.
In my view, it is legitimate
for these reasons to consider explicitly the ability of the plaintiff to bear
the risk of loss in this type of case.
Turning then to an
application of these criteria to this case, a determination of which party is
the better loss bearer is relatively straightforward. CN is undoubtedly in a
better position to bear the loss than Norsk. First, in light of the
significant information available regarding bridge failure and CN's long use of
the bridge, CN was probably at least equally competent in terms of estimating
the potential risks of bridge failure. This aspect seems to me to be clear
in light of the facts.
Second, CN would clearly be
in a better position than PWC to estimate the potential costs of bridge
failure to CN's operations. CN knows exactly how much use it gets out of
the various bridges crossed by its trains. It also knows what the alternatives
are in cases of bridge failure. Norsk, of course, is very poorly placed to
estimate the value of the use that various people and companies get out of the bridges
that cross the rivers its tugs sail on. It is also poorly placed to estimate
the potential costs to those users of an interruption in bridge service.
Unlike the first factor, which depends to a large degree on the facts of each
case, this factor tends to weigh heavily in favour of the defendant in almost
every case of this type.
Third, CN was better placed
to protect itself from the consequences of those losses. This point
requires further discussion. It is hard to imagine a more sophisticated group
of plaintiffs than the users of railway bridges. These parties have access to
the full range of protective options: first party commercial insurance or
self-insurance, contracts both with the bridge owner and with the railway's
customers.
Insurance
My colleague McLachlin J.
rejects the idea that insurance considerations justify a denial of liability
and relies on an article by Bishop: see Bishop, "Economic Loss in
Tort" (1982), 2 Oxf. J. Legal Studies 1. Bishop argues that the
insurance argument must overcome two difficulties in the context of economic
loss. First, he states that to eliminate recovery for economic loss would
reduce the incentive to take care. With respect, I do not find this argument
persuasive in the context of relational economic loss cases, since the
primary liability of the tortfeasor to the owner of the bridge is largely
sufficient to create incentives to take care. This, as I noted earlier, is one
of the key distinguishing features that justifies separate treatment of relational
economic loss cases.
Bishop's second argument is
that insurance is unavailable at reasonable cost. He argues in particular that
insurance for loss of profits is not available. Insurance companies
understandably refuse to insure profitability. However, that is not the issue
here. CN is not claiming for loss of profit, but rather for the costs
occasioned by the interruption of its access to the bridge. That risk
is analogous to a business interruption. Many businesses have interruption
insurance covering interruption caused by factors others than breach of
contract: see Waddams, The Law of Damages (2nd ed. 1991), at {SS}
14.330. Even if insurance is not available in the commercial market, CN is
ideally situated to self-insure.
Undoubtedly in certain cases,
an affected business will not have purchased insurance. However, as James has
noted, if the business community accepts a rule of non-liability for indirect
economic losses without securing insurance protection against them by a
relatively inexpensive method, then this fact at least suggests that these
losses do not present a social problem serious enough to justify the cost to
society in providing for their compensation by the most expensive method in its
arsenal ‑‑ liability based on fault: see James, supra, at p.
114. In other words, if the business community is insured, then there is no
point in shifting the loss from one insurance company to another at high cost.
If the business community is not insured, then that reveals that other ways of
defraying such losses are perceived as superior to insurance and the problem is
not that serious.
Conclusions about the
insurance market are of course somewhat tentative and it would behoove lawyers,
as Atiyah notes, to inform themselves about fundamental matters of insurability
in new tort cases and to see to it that courts are also informed: see Atiyah,
"Note: Economic Loss in the United States" (1985), 5 Oxf. J.
Legal Studies 485. However, the weight of opinion is certainly to the
effect that first-party insurance is a cheaper and more effective method of
protecting against loss than liability insurance, particularly where the
liability is of uncertain amount; see Photo Production Ltd. v. Securicor
Transport Ltd., [1980] A.C. 827, at p. 851; Smillie, "Negligence and
Economic Loss" (1982), 32 U.T.L.J. 231, at pp. 240-42; James, supra,
at pp. 113-16. In my opinion, the burden of showing otherwise must rest on
those who would have the court overturn a long-standing rule excluding
recovery.
Contract
I agree with McLachlin J.
that in many cases the contractual allocation of risk does not supply a rationale
for refusing recovery. Inequality of bargaining power is in fact only one of a
number of reasons why contract may not be a real alternative in a given case.
In many cases, protecting oneself from economic losses through contract is not
possible. In the cases involving interruptions in services provided by
utilities, the service is often supplied by a monopoly supplier on standard
form contracts. Any shifting of the risk from consumer to utility company may
even be statutorily excluded. Such cases involve contracts in name only. Or
again, the risk which materializes may be so unusual that the parties never
contemplated it. Though there may be other reasons for denying liability, in
all of these cases the argument from the contractual allocation of risk is not
convincing.
In this case, however, it
is. The facts in this case establish that all parties were well aware of the
risk of bridge failure. CN knew what it was doing. The very bridge at issue
here had been damaged on a number of previous occasions, and various studies of
the problem had been carried out. CN participated actively in at least one of
these studies. CN was even aware of the traditional legal rule; as I noted, it
brought a very similar claim for bridge failure in similar circumstances in
1973 for which recovery was denied.
The risk of bridge failure
could have been borne by PWC, which also has a right of action in tort. The
economic losses of contractual users of the bridge would then likely have been
made good under the contract. The property owner is able to collect these
losses from the tortfeasor subject to the limiting principles of tort damages.
If PWC contracted to provide bridge services and is unable to do so because of
the negligence of the tug and has to pay damages as a result, it can collect
for those damages from the tug owner: see Fleming, supra, at p. 226.
Liability in the contractual relational economic loss case is channelled
rather than denied.
In many cases, contracting
parties are not willing to insure performance; the contractual allocation of
risk in this case is probably typical in that risk is allocated to the
potential victim of interrupted service, who benefits from a lower price and
who is best placed to take other measures to deal with accidental interruption
of contractual benefits. That such an arrangement is so frequent despite the
fact that under current law it precludes recovery by the contracting party is
significant. That such an arrangement existed in this case despite the fact
that CN's identical claim had been refused in 1973 is doubly significant.
CN's ability to protect
itself through contract is not limited to its contract with the property
owner. CN can also protect itself to some degree through its contractual
arrangements with its clients, suppliers and others. It can plan ahead for the
case of unavailability of the property in question. Denying recovery will
provide incentives to all parties to act in ways that will combine to minimize
the impact of losses once they occur, while still providing the critical
incentive to the tug to avoid causing accidents in the first place.
In my view, a denial of
recovery in this case is justified in light of CN's overwhelmingly superior
risk bearing capacity on the facts of this case.
Before leaving the issue of
CN's ability to protect itself, it should be noted that the rule proposed by my
colleagues will still require parties such as CN to protect themselves
since they will never know before the particular accident whether they will be
part of the determinate class. It is to say the least difficult to predict
whether a particular railway bridge will be knocked out by someone who knows
you by name. Alternatively, it is difficult to know whether of the many
possible bridges that will be damaged, the one that will be damaged is the one
next to which you own property. As a result, the only solution for the prudent
railway will be to purchase insurance. Presumably, the cost of this insurance
will reflect the value the insurance company places on the possibility of its
recovering from the tortfeasor.
The critical effect of
allowing recovery is that it would also require defendants in Norsk's
position to insure for potential contractual relational economic loss as well,
since they will obviously never know beforehand whether the bridges damaged by
its tugs will be used by plaintiffs whose name it knows or who have property
nearby. The principal beneficiaries of the rule proposed by my colleagues
would be insurance companies, who would benefit from the existence of a new and
highly uncertain risk against which companies likely to inflict property damage
would need to insure.
The rules suggested by my
colleagues thus will require that both parties insure at considerable
additional social cost. The only gain will be a slight reduction in the
plaintiff's first party insurance costs to take into account the possibility
that the insurance company will recover from a tortfeasor under the new
doctrine.
A further practical
difficulty should be noted. In cases where the tortfeasor is either not
insured or insufficiently insured with respect to the initial property damage
or personal injury claim or the relational claim or both, serious problems will
arise with respect to the primacy of one type of claim over another. For
example, if the tortfeasor is liable for both a $500,000 personal injury claim
and $500,000 in relational claims but his total assets and insurance only cover
half of that amount, the actual compensation of the personal injury claim will
presumably be halved in order to allow recovery for a relational claim which
as noted will often involve recovery for a subrogated insurance company: see
Feldthusen, Economic Negligence, supra, at p. 207.
Conclusion
It is unclear to me why the
current state of the law on contractual relational economic loss, which
channels claims to the property owner, is unsatisfactory at least in the
commercial area involving sophisticated parties. It is also unclear whether
significant amounts of court time should be expended in distinguishing between
contractual relational economic loss sufferers those who are proximate to the
tortfeasor and those who are not.
There is no question that the
outcome of cases of this nature under the exclusionary rule depends upon the
terms of the contract. This operates in two ways: the contract may create a
possessory interest or a joint venture or it may provide for an indemnity from
the property owner. The question to be resolved is whether allowing the
contract to determine whether the plaintiff has the requisite interest and
where the loss falls is more arbitrary, unfair or unworkable than the various
tests referred to above.
The arguments against
recovery in this case can be summed up as follows. First, the arguments for
recovery are weak. It is not necessary to impose liability to ensure that
tortfeasors like Norsk are dissuaded from damaging bridges. The increase in
deterrence that would result from imposing the additional liability called for
in this case would not likely have much impact on the behaviour of potential
tortfeasors. The only purpose served by recovery in this case to which the
judgment of McLachlin J. refers, at p. 000, is "the purpose of permitting
a plaintiff whose position for practical purposes, vis-à-vis the tortfeasor, is
indistinguishable from that of the owner of the damaged property, to recover
what the actual owner could have recovered". In my view, the argument
that CN is indistinguishable from the owner founders on the fact that CN does
not qualify under the well-established cases in which the law provides for
recovery by the contracting party where it in fact has a proprietary or
possessory interest. CN's interest is merely contractual.
CN argues that restricting
recovery to the owner or person in possession is based on pragmatism not logic,
and therefore to require logical support for an exception to a pragmatic rule
which in a particular case results in an injustice, is in itself illogical. In
my view, cases such as Rivtow and Kamloops which have allowed
recovery for pure economic loss have established criteria that do provide
logical support for an exception to a pragmatic rule.
The argument that Norsk was
at fault and CN was innocent and that fault should justify recovery is also
unconvincing here. Fault alone cannot justify recovery in this area since some
admittedly injured claimants will have their claims denied. Since the whole
exercise in this kind of situation involves drawing a line amongst those who
are undeniably injured by the tortfeasor who was undeniably at fault,
appeals to fault beg the question. The defendants were equally at fault with
respect to other claims that will be denied. CN is unable to show any special
damage different in kind from that suffered by the other potential contractual
claimants. None of the factual distinctions the company puts forward has any
relevance with respect to the defendants' fault.
The second group of reasons
focus on the weaknesses of the proposed rules that would allow recovery. The
tests that would allow recovery do not meet the criteria that a rule should
have in this area. The concept of a "special relationship" is not
applicable to cases involving accidents. None of the facts put forward by CN
as indicative of its special relationship has any other policy significance
than to attempt to meet, after the fact, the problem of indeterminate
liability. The individual plaintiff test would presumably preclude recovery by
the other railways that suffered losses identical in nature to those suffered
by CN. If the test were extended to cover a foreseeable class of plaintiffs
such as users of the railway bridge, it would simply restate the general
requirement that the plaintiff be foreseeable and recovery would be allowed
whether the users of the bridge were four or four thousand. The proximity test
has practically no predictive value; it remains impossible to say whether that
test would lead to recovery for the other railways in this case, let alone its
application in other cases.
Finally, there are the
reasons supporting the exclusionary rule. These are, of course, essentially
pragmatic, as has been recognized in cases of this type from the very
beginning. First, denial of recovery places incentives on all parties to act in
ways that will minimize overall losses, a legitimate and desirable goal for
tort law in this area. Second, denial of recovery allows for only one party
carrying insurance rather than both parties. Third, it will result in a great
saving of judicial resources for cases in which more pressing concerns are put
forward. The difficult job of drawing the line is at least done quickly
without a great deal of factual investigation into the various factors that
found proximity. The right to recover can be most often determined from the
face of the contract. Fourth, it also eliminates difficult problems of sharing
an impecunious defendant's limited resources between relational claims and
direct claims. Fifth, the traditional rule is certain, and although like any
pragmatic solution, borderline cases may cause problems, the exceptions to the
rule in cases of joint ventures, general average contributions, and possessory
and proprietorial interests are reasonably well defined and circumscribed.
This case, in my view, does not even constitute a borderline case in this
respect, since CN has no property interest of any kind. The consequence of
that certainty is that contracting parties can be certain of where the loss
with respect to the unavailability of property will lie in the absence of any
contractual arrangement.
I add one final
consideration. This case is one of maritime law, which in large measure
encompasses a global system. The bright line exclusionary rule against
recovery has for nearly a century been in effect in that system, and continues
to be followed by the major trading nations, in particular Great Britain and
the United States. In making arrangements for allocating risks in essentially
maritime matters, those engaged in navigating and shipping should, as much as
possible, be governed by a uniform rule, so that they can plan their affairs
ahead of time, whether by contract or insurance against possible contingencies.
In my view, to justify
recovery in cases of this nature, the plaintiff would, at the very least, have
to respond effectively not only to the concern about indeterminacy but also
show that no adequate alternative means of protection was available. Other
concerns may also need to be met. At the very least, the requirement that the
plaintiff not have had any commercially reasonable method of protecting itself
is an important addition to what remains a conceptually difficult ex post
facto inquiry into the "determinate nature" of the particular
victim and damage from the perspective of the defendant.
The question of whether
recovery should be allowed in the residual cases in which these two barriers
are overcome does not require an answer in the context of this case.
Individuals and small businesses may be incapable of effectively protecting
themselves in any meaningful fashion. In some cases, of course, contractual
relational economic loss may occur in a different form such as loss of salary
and the failure to protect against it by first-party insurance cannot be said
to lead to an inference of social unimportance. In such cases, however, the
indeterminacy problem is often very acute. If the number of potential
individual plaintiffs is great, recovery will be denied on the grounds of
"indeterminacy", even though the plaintiffs may not have had any real
ability to protect themselves. Where the plaintiff passes the indeterminacy
tests, it will often be sophisticated. The argument that recovery should be
denied to those who could have protected themselves does not support a bright
line in and of itself. Rather, it complements the indeterminacy analysis. It
suggests that those who are most likely to emerge from the indeterminacy
analysis are those with the ability to protect themselves and questions the advisability
of a rule with the effect of allowing recovery to only that group of
contractual claimants, rather than denying recovery to all.
The exclusionary rule is not
in itself attractive. It excludes recovery by people who have undeniably
suffered losses as a result of an accident. It also leads to some arbitrary
but generally predictable results in cases at the margin. The results with
respect to time charters may be "capricious", but time charterers
know their rights and obligations from the start and can act accordingly. The
rule only becomes defensible when it is realized that full recovery is
impossible, that recovery is in fact going to be refused in the vast majority
of such claims regardless of the rule we adopt, and when the exclusionary rule is
compared to the alternatives. In my view, it should not be disturbed on the
facts of this case.
I should add a few words
about McLachlin J.'s suggestion that the essential difference between her
approach and mine lies in the flexibility allowed by her approach. She
characterizes my approach as providing for recovery depending exclusively on
the terms of the formal contract between the plaintiff and the property owner.
She considers an approach based on the terms of the contract involves a
"rigid categorization which denies the possibility of recovery in new
cases which may not meet the categorical test" (at p. 000), a problem that
is avoided under the proximity test she sets forth.
I do not see the essential
difference between our two approaches as that between certainty and
flexibility. In my view, the key difference is between a principled
flexibility, which adheres to a general rule in the absence of policy reasons
for excluding its application, and arbitrariness. Among the policy factors considered
in the course of this opinion that might justify relaxing the rule are the
ability of the plaintiff to protect itself and the quantum of property damage
caused by the tortfeasor with its attendant impact on the issue of deterrence.
I have not found it necessary to consider the precise role of these factors in
this case since CN was clearly able to protect itself and the property damage
sustained was sufficient to afford deterrence. Whether such factors would in
fact provide workable criteria sufficient to provide for recovery despite the
strong arguments in favour of the long standing exclusionary rule, based on
certainty and other factors, is an open question. What I have decided is that
in the absence of all of these factors, there is no reason to disturb the rule.
Thus I do not say that the
right to recovery in all cases of contractual relational economic loss depends
exclusively on the terms of the contract. Rather, I note that such is the
tenor of the exclusionary rule and that departures from that rule should be
justified on defensible policy grounds. The Court should do more than simply
establish a rule that allows judges to resolve cases as they see fit. That, as
I see it, is the effect of the approach proposed by my colleague.
Disposition
I would allow the appeal and
dismiss the claim for damages.
//McLachlin J.//
The judgment of
L'Heureux-Dubé, Cory and McLachlin JJ. was delivered by
McLachlin
J. -- The issue in this
case is whether a person who contracts for the use of the property of another
can sue a person who damages that property for losses resulting from his or
her inability to use the property during the period of repair. Can purely
economic losses such as this be recovered? Or is the right to recover in tort
confined to cases where the plaintiff can show that his or her property or
person was injured?
The Facts
The accident which gives rise
to these proceedings occurred near the mouth of the Fraser River in British
Columbia. A tug owned and operated by the Norsk Pacific Steamship Co. and
Norsk Pacific Marine Services Ltd., negligently struck a railway bridge owned
by Public Works Canada ("PWC"). A number of railway companies,
including the Canadian National Railway ("CN"), held contracts with
PWC for the use of the bridge. CN was the primary user of the bridge (86
percent of the total use), which was known locally as "the CNR
bridge". The bridge connects the Vancouver terminus to the main line and
is the sole direct link between CN rails on the north and south shores of the
Fraser.
CN has property (land and
rails) close to the bridge. When the bridge is closed for maintenance, the
timing and duration are negotiated between PWC and CN. The appellants knew
that the bridge was essential to CN's operations since there was no other rail
bridge in the area. In fact, the bridge had to be closed once due to an
accident and, as a result, the appellants were aware of the consequences of
such closing for CN.
After the accident involving
Norsk's tug, it took several weeks to repair the bridge. CN and the other
railways had to reroute their traffic. This raised the cost of their
operations and may have diminished the amount of freight hauled.
The railways sued the tug
owners and operators for the additional cost incurred as a result of the
closure of the bridge.
Judgments Below
The trial judge, Addy J.
(1989), 26 F.T.R. 81, held that the plaintiffs could recover. He concluded
that while the rule which had once excluded recovery of such loss no longer
existed in Canada, not all economic loss is recoverable in tort. He declined
to enunciate a rule for when pure economic loss is recoverable, but suggested
three factors upon which recovery of such loss might be conditioned:
(1) knowledge
of the specific person who is likely to suffer damage (as opposed to a class of
persons);
(2) foreseeability
of the precise nature of the loss; and
(3) sufficient
proximity between the act and the injury to permit objectively the conclusion that
the tortfeasor is "morally bound" to compensate the victim.
Addy J. found these requirements to be
met. CN was the known user of the bridge and the precise nature of the loss
was foreseeable, as it had occurred before. Moreover, the railway's relationship
was sufficiently closely connected with the bridge, both physically and in
terms of use, to establish proximity.
The Federal Court of Appeal,
[1990] 3 F.C. 114, upheld the finding that the loss was recoverable. The old
exclusionary rule no longer prevailed. According to MacGuigan J.A. (Heald J.A.
concurring) as well as Stone J.A., the only prerequisites to recovery are
sufficient proximity and reasonable foreseeability.
Analysis
This case requires the Court
to confront squarely the vexed question of the extent to which damages for pure
economic loss may be recovered in tort at common law. I propose to consider in
turn: (1) the nature of the problem; (2) how different jurisdictions have
dealt with the problem; (3) the approach which should be adopted in the common
law provinces of Canada; (4) application of the indicated approach to the facts
of this case.
1. The Nature of the
Problem
A fundamental proposition
underlies the law of tort: that a person who by his or her fault causes damage
to another may be held responsible. Where the fault is negligence, the duty
extends to all those to whom the tortfeasor may foreseeably cause harm: Donoghue
v. Stevenson, [1932] A.C. 562 (H.L.). This is a proposition of great
breadth. It was soon realized that it would be necessary to limit recovery for
practical, policy reasons. As Cardozo J. put it in Ultramares Corp. v.
Touche, 174 N.E. 441 (N.Y. 1931), at p. 444, limits were needed to
prevent "liability in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to
an indeterminate class".
The search for a principled
mechanism of limitation has proved elusive. The law began by limiting recovery
to cases where the tortfeasor had caused physical loss or injury to the
plaintiff: Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875), L.R. 10 Q.B. 453.
That case denied recovery of "relational losses" consequent upon the
negligent infliction of damage to the property of another person. Only a
person whose person or property is damaged can recover in tort. This rule was
followed for decades in England and elsewhere in the Commonwealth.
While the criterion of
physical damage successfully avoided the spectre of unlimited damages, it
suffered from the defect that it arbitrarily, and in some cases, arguably
unjustly, deprived deserving plaintiffs of recovery. Why, it was asked, should
the right to recover economic loss be dependant on whether physical damage,
however minuscule, had been inflicted on the plaintiff's property? Why should
a plaintiff who waits for a defective machine to break and cause physical
injury or damage be able to recover, while one who prudently repairs the
machine before the physical damage or injury occurs be left without remedy? Is
there really a generic distinction between the loss resulting from repair of
physical damage and loss resulting from loss of use in a commercial situation
where the only real loss is one of profit? While it may be argued that
physical injury is inherently more deserving than economic loss, particularly
where the economic loss is not associated with physical damage (see Feldthusen,
Economic Negligence (2nd ed. 1989), at pp. 8‑14), that does
not explain why the law should not permit recovery for economic loss where
justice so requires nor how damage to property and economic losses can be
distinguished in many situations. Someone who invests in a bridge in order to
use it cannot be distinguished from someone who leases a bridge in order to use
it. If the bridge is lost they have both lost something of value: the use of
the bridge.
Not surprisingly, the courts
began to allow recovery of pure economic loss where they thought it was just.
However, apart from reliance damages for negligent misrepresentation, the
course of the law has been neither uniform nor uncontroversial. This appeal
raises anew the issue in the Canadian context.
The answers to the question
of recovery economic loss in negligence are not easy, as the uncertain history
of the cases attests. On the one hand, the jurisprudence of the past three
decades discloses a resurgent feeling on the part of judges that in some cases
beyond physical damage and reliance, economic loss should be recoverable in
negligence. On the other hand lies the fear of indiscriminately opening the
floodgates of liability.
It is worth stating at the
outset certain general propositions which have been often put and may serve as
guideposts in our search for the answer to the difficult issue we face.
First, some limits on the
potentially unlimited liability which can theoretically flow from negligence
are necessary; potential defendants must be able to gauge the extent of the
risk they incur and frivolous litigation should be discouraged. The need for a
limiting device is recognized in Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works,
[1974] S.C.R. 1189, and acknowledged in Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen,
[1984] 2 S.C.R. 2.
Second, the limits should be
relatively clear. Commentators have adverted to the need for certainty such
that commercial enterprises have some appreciation of what risk is to be borne
by whom. See, for example, Smith, Liability in Negligence (1984), at
p. 166, Winfield and Jolowicz on Tort (13th ed. 1989), at
p. 86, and Fleming, The Law of Torts (7th ed. 1987) at pp. 162
et seq.
Third, as Lord Denning
observed in Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd. v. Martin & Co.
(Contractors) Ltd., [1973] Q.B. 27 (C.A.), (at p. 36), "At
bottom ... the question of recovering economic loss is one of policy."
The question is not only one of legal doctrine, but of where, from the point of
view of individual fairness and economic policy, the loss should ultimately
fall.
Finally, a single, simple
criterion for recovery in all the disparate circumstances where economic loss
is foreseeable and ought to be recoverable is, given the record to date,
probably unattainable: see Oliver L.J. in Leigh and Sillivan Ltd. v.
Aliakmon Shipping Co., [1985] Q.B. 350, and Wilson J. in Kamloops (City
of) v. Nielsen, supra.
From this general statement
of the problem, I turn to a more detailed analysis of the search for a limiting
principle on the right to recover damages for economic loss in tort or delict
in different jurisdictions.
2. Limiting Recovery for
Economic Loss -‑ A Comparative View
A summary of how different
courts in different jurisdictions have dealt with this problem affords us
perspective both on the nature of the problem and the possible solutions.
(a) United
Kingdom
The traditional exclusionary
rule of Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. restricted recovery of
economic loss to cases where the plaintiff had suffered physical damage. This
rule was lifted to allow recovery for pure economic loss in an action for
negligent misstatement in Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners
Ltd., [1964] A.C. 465 (H.L.). The exception was pinned on the concept of
reliance. Where the defendant negligently made a misstatement which the
defendant should have foreseen others would rely on, and where the plaintiff
relied on it and suffered financial loss, the plaintiff was entitled to recover
that loss, notwithstanding the absence of any physical harm to the plaintiff.
This exception is now firmly fixed in the law of tort.
Various courts in the
following two decades attempted to widen the exceptions to the exclusionary
rule. For example, it was extended to products liability cases in Junior
Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co., [1983] 1 A.C. 520 (H.L.). And it was allowed in
maritime law where the plaintiff could be said by reason of its contract to be
in a "joint venture" with the owner of damaged property: Morrison
Steamship Co. v. Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners) (The Greystoke Castle),
[1947] A.C. 265. These cases culminated in the dictum of Lord Wilberforce in Anns
v. Merton London Borough Council, [1978] A.C. 728 (H.L.), which suggested
that recovery should not depend on the category of case, but should lie
wherever two general conditions were found: (1) foreseeability and sufficient
proximity between the negligent act and the loss; and (2) the absence of
considerations which call for a limitation on liability.
The House of Lords recently
resiled from Anns and returned to the old proposition that economic loss
could be recovered in negligence only where the plaintiff had suffered physical
damage or in the reliance situation of Hedley Byrne: Murphy v.
Brentwood District Council, [1991] 1 A.C. 398. The reasons cited in Murphy,
at p. 472, for the return to the narrow rule focus on the absence of any
"coherent and logically based doctrine" or device for avoiding the
spectre of unlimited liability, an absence, in the view of Lord Keith,
calculated "to put the law of negligence into a state of confusion defying
rational analysis". The only way to avoid this result, in the view of
their Lordships, was to return the law to its former narrow, if arbitrary
state.
(b) Australia
In Australia recovery in
negligence is not confined to the established cases of physical damage to the
plaintiff's property or person or reliance. In Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd.
v. The Dredge "Willemstad" (1976), 11 A.L.R. 227, the Australian
High Court awarded economic loss caused by negligence in the absence of
physical damage to the plaintiff. While Gibbs J. based his decision on the
special circumstances of the case, Stephen, Mason, Jacobs and Murphy JJ. held
that in Australia it is possible to recover economic loss unrelated to reliance
without physical damage.
(c) United
States
The prevailing approach in
the United States has been characterized as "pragmatic": see Tetley,
"Damages and Economic Loss in Marine Collision: Controlling the
Floodgates" (1991), 22 J. Mar. Law & Com. 539, at p. 575.
The jurisprudence continues to be dominated by Cardozo J.'s fear of opening the
floodgates and remains reluctant to award damages for pure economic loss. Such
damages have sometimes been awarded, however in three classes of cases:
(1) in
cases where the economic loss is closely related to physical damage, e.g., Domar
Ocean Transportation, Ltd. v. M/V Andrew Martin, 754 F.2d 616 (5th Cir.
1985) where a tug was held to be an integrated unit of a barge which was
physically damaged permitting recovery of economic loss for loss of use of the
tug; and the Amoco Transport Co. v. S/S Mason Lykes, 768 F.2d 659 (5th
Cir. 1985) where a cargo holder recovered non‑physical damage due to
collateral physical damage to a vessel). This may be regarded as the
equivalent of the U.K. "joint venture" exception;
(2) pollution
cases such as Union Oil Co. v. Oppen, 501 F.2d 558 (9th Cir. 1974),
where, on grounds of public policy, economic loss has been awarded to
commercial fishermen and others who suffer as a result of pollution;
(3) certain
products liability cases, at least where the defective product creates an
unreasonable risk of harm to persons or property and such harm materializes:
see East River Steamship Corp. v. Delaval Turbine, Inc., 752 F.2d 903
(3d Cir. 1985), aff'd 476 U.S. 858 (1986).
(d) Civil Law
Jurisdictions
The civil law jurisdictions
of France and Quebec make no distinction between physical and economic damage.
Nor do they base liability on concepts of reliance. Loss of any type is
recoverable wherever fault, damage and a direct and immediate causal connection
between the two are established. Thus pure economic loss is recoverable. For
example, it has been held in France that a bus company can recover losses of
revenue from the person at fault in a car accident which congested traffic:
Cass. civ. 2e, April 28, 1965, D.S. 1965.777 (Marcailloux v.
R.A.T.V.M.); and in Quebec, that a chicken farmer can recover profits lost
as a result of negligence which caused a power pole to fall which in turn
caused a power failure: Joly v. Ferme Ré‑Mi Inc., [1974] C.A.
523.
In Quebec, art. 1053 C.C.L.C.
states: "Every person capable of discerning right from wrong is
responsible for the damage caused by his fault to another, whether by positive
act, imprudence, neglect or want of skill." Parties able to recover in
delict have not been restricted by this Court; "another" has been
found to include all persons suffering a loss, including economic loss, as a
direct result of the defendant's fault: Regent Taxi v. Congrégation des
petits frères de Marie, dits frères maristes, [1929] S.C.R. 650, and Hôpital
Notre‑Dame v. Laurent, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 605.
This is not to say that the
civil law does not impose limits on the recovery of economic loss. The control
mechanism against unlimited loss in the civil law lies not in the type of loss
but in the factual determination of whether the loss is a direct, certain and
immediate result of the negligence. It appears to have worked well in avoiding
frivolous claims and the threat of unlimited liability. Thus Tetley, supra,
concludes at p. 584:
The
vigorous application of this solid theoretical framework to the analysis of
damage claims of all types in the civil law appears to result in
`economic loss' (to use the common law term) being compensated in approximately
the same types of cases as in common law jurisdictions, without the
`indeterminate' liability so much dreaded in those latter jurisdictions
actually ensuing in practice.
(e) Canada ‑‑
Common Law Jurisdictions
Canadian judges early on
evinced skepticism about the possibility of limiting damages for negligence to
cases of physical injury to the plaintiff or reliance. In 1974, four years
before the landmark English case in Anns v. Merton London Borough Council,
supra, this Court allowed recovery of pure economic loss in Rivtow
Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works, supra. There was no actual
physical damage. The majority, per Ritchie J., allowed damages for the loss of
use of a defective crane during its repair period on the basis that the loss
was the "proximate" result of the duty to warn. Laskin J.,
dissenting in part, would have additionally allowed recovery for the cost of
repair of the crane because the repair was necessary to prevent foreseeable
damage resulting from the collapse of the crane, even though no physical damage
had yet occurred.
In subsequent years this
Court repeatedly held that economic loss can be recovered in tort in the
absence of injury to the plaintiff's person or property in appropriate cases: Agnew‑Surpass
Shoe Stores Ltd. v. Cummer‑Yonge Investments Ltd., [1976] 2 S.C.R.
221, at p. 252, Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen, supra, and B.D.C.
Ltd. v. Hofstrand Farms Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 228, at p. 239. It has,
moreover, repeatedly affirmed the test for tort liability adopted in Anns v.
Merton London Borough Council, supra.
This Court in Kamloops
(City of) v. Nielsen, supra, held that the purchaser of a house
which the defendant municipality had negligently caused to be constructed could
recover his financial loss in the absence of physical damage, affirming the non‑exclusionary
test of Anns v. Merton London Borough Council. It confirmed that claims
for economic loss in negligence are not confined to cases where the plaintiff
has suffered physical damage or where there has been reliance. Determination
of when such liability arises is not a matter so much of finding a single
universal formula, as of identifying criteria associated with valid claims.
The Court, faced with the same issue which confronts us in this case ‑‑
whether recovery for economic loss should be allowed in a new category of case ‑‑
adopted an approach at once doctrinal and pragmatic, asking: (1) is there a
duty relationship sufficient to support recovery? and, (2) is the extension
desirable from a practical point of view, i.e., does it serve useful purposes
or, on the other hand, open the floodgates to unlimited liability?
The departure from the narrow
exclusionary rule in Canada has not opened the floodgates to claims for pure
economic loss. While acknowledging that pure economic loss could be recovered,
many cases in the years that followed failed for want of satisfactory proof:
see MacMillan Bloedel Ltd. v. Foundation Company of Canada Ltd., [1977]
2 W.W.R. 717 (B.C.S.C.); Gypsum Carrier Inc. v. The Queen, [1978] 1 F.C.
147; Star Village Tavern v. Nield (1976), 71 D.L.R. (3d) 439 (Man.
Q.B.); B.D.C. Ltd. v. Hofstrand Farms Ltd., supra.
(f) Implications
of the Comparative Review
The foregoing comparative
review suggests that in some cases damages for economic loss should be
available where the plaintiff has neither suffered physical damage nor relied
in the sense of Hedley Byrne. Civil law jurisdictions, far from
precluding such recovery, require it where it is direct and certain. The common
law jurisdictions started from a narrow rule excluding most pure economic loss,
but found themselves in a situation where judges on a case‑by‑case
basis persisted in awarding damages for economic loss outside the categories.
Even in the United States, where fear of the floodgates of unlimited liability
has held the strongest sway, courts have been forced to make exceptions in the
interests of justice. The fact is that situations arise, other than those
falling within the old exclusionary rule, where it is manifestly fair and just
that recovery of economic loss be permitted. Faced with these situations, courts
will strain to allow recovery, provided they are satisfied that the case will
not open the door to a plethora of undeserving claims. They will refuse to
accept injustice merely for the sake of the doctrinal tidiness which is the
motivating spirit of Murphy. This is in the best tradition of the law
of negligence, the history of which exhibits a sturdy refusal to be confined by
arbitrary forms and rules where justice indicates otherwise. It is the
tradition to which this Court has adhered in suggesting in Kamloops that
the search should not be for a universal rule but for the elaboration of
categories where recovery of economic loss is justifiable on a case‑by‑case
basis.
If a comparative review
suggests that economic loss should be recoverable in circumstances not covered
by the traditional exclusionary rule, it also suggests that the need for some
limit on such recovery is universally recognized. To permit all economic loss
related to a negligent act to be recovered would be to subject potential defendants
to liability which is not only unfair, but which may cripple their ability to
do business.
The search then must be for a
legal formulation which will permit recovery of economic loss in appropriate
cases, while excluding frivolous and remote claims. The comparative
jurisprudence indicates that this may be accomplished in different ways. In
the civil law, a direct connection test appears to provide appropriate limits.
At common law, two approaches present themselves: the "exhaustive rule"
solution typified by Murphy and the incremental approach adopted in Kamloops.
I turn next to a consideration of which of these two approaches should prevail.
3. The Approach Which
Should be Adopted to Recovery of Pure Economic Loss
(a) Doctrinal
Considerations
Murphy makes an important point. It is not
enough that a rule of law be defensible on moral and economic terms. It
should, in addition, provide a logical basis upon which individuals can
predicate their conduct and courts can decide future cases. The history of the
problem in different jurisdictions demonstrates a clear need to allow recovery
of economic loss for negligence in some cases where the criteria of physical
damage and reliance do not apply. On the other hand, a fair and functional
legal system cannot accept that all economic loss related to negligence should
be recoverable. Judges seem able to pick out deserving cases when they see
them. The difficulty lies in formulating a rule which explains why judges
allow recovery of economic loss in some cases and not in others.
Such difficulties are not new
to the common law. It was the great insight of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
that the common law resides most fundamentally not in a set of a priori
principles but in the decisions of the courts. The task of doctrine is to
identify the factors which unite the different applications with a view to
formulating emergent principles, recognizing that absolute logical formulations
may not in all cases be possible or practical.
The decisions of the House of
Lords in Murphy and of this Court in Kamloops illustrate two
different approaches to the problem of defining the legal parameters of common
law rules. The House of Lords in Murphy appears to have taken the view
that what is required is a rule which deals with the problem in an exhaustive
and definitive way. The criterion of physical damage to the plaintiff's person
and property, supplemented by the exception of reliance, provides such a rule.
The approach of Anns, in rejecting arbitrary categories and considering
new cases on a policy basis as they arise, does not provide such a rule.
Therefore Anns was rejected and the narrow but precise physical damage‑reliance
rule reinstated.
The approach adopted by this
Court in Kamloops is quite different.
No attempt was made to formulate an all‑inclusive
rule governing when damages in negligence for pure economic loss can be
recovered. The Court began from the proposition that recovery of pure economic
loss was available in some but not all cases. This much had been established
in Rivtow. But it went on to state that the case before it was not like
Rivtow. It then embarked on a consideration of whether in the category
of cases before it (negligence by public authorities causing financial loss to
third parties) recovery should be allowed. On the one hand, the Court, per
Wilson J., determined that the circumstances imposed a duty of care on the
defendants toward the plaintiff and that allowing recovery would accomplish
"a number of worthy objectives." On the other, the Court satisfied
itself that allowing recovery in this case would not open the floodgates of
indeterminate liability. Accordingly, recovery was allowed. The approach of
the Court in Kamloops is summarized by Irvine "Case Comment:
Kamloops v. Nielsen" (1984), 29 C.C.L.T. 185, at p. 190, as follows:
In
its identification of the bête noire of indeterminate liability; in its
apparent rejection of any wild‑goose chase for a universal formula of
admission or exclusion of economic loss claims; in its readiness to look, case
by case, for factors which inherently serve to negate the prospect of an
avalanche of liability; this judgment seems to be in the mainstream of
constructive modern thinking on the issue...
It is my view that the
incremental approach of Kamloops is to be preferred to the insistence on
logical precision of Murphy. It is more consistent with the incremental
character of the common law. It permits relief to be granted in new situations
where it is merited. Finally, it is sensitive to danger of unlimited
liability.
But where, one may ask, are
future courts to find guidance? The answer is that as the courts recognize new
categories of cases where economic recovery is available, rules will emerge.
This is what happened in the case of Hedley Byrne. Up to that time, it
was accepted that there could be no recovery for negligent misstatement causing
economic loss. The court held that there could be, and formulated conditions
(reliance) which would limit claims and avoid the spectre of open floodgates.
This decision was transmuted to a rule of general application which has
functioned without difficulty and to the betterment of justice ever since.
Other categories of
exceptions have been established in Canada: economic loss is recoverable in
the absence of physical damage where there is a duty to warn (Rivtow),
and where a duty lies on public officials to pursue their statutory duty (Kamloops).
It is not suggested that either has led to difficulty of application. In the
United States, it is recognized that pure economic loss can be recovered in
certain `joint venture' situations and in the case of environmental damage
adversely affecting one's livelihood. Again, these extensions are arguably
capable of application without undue difficulty.
If this approach is followed,
as it has been to date in Canada, new categories of cases will from time to
time arise. It will not be certain whether economic loss can be recovered in
these categories until the courts have pronounced on them. During this period,
the law in a small area of negligence may be uncertain. Such uncertainty
however is inherent in the common law generally. It is the price the common
law pays for flexibility, for the ability to adapt to a changing world. If
past experience serves, it is a price we should willingly pay, provided the
limits of uncertainty are kept within reasonable bounds.
The foregoing suggests that
the incremental approach to the problem of determining the limits for the recovery
of pure economic loss which was adopted by this Court in Kamloops should
be confirmed. Where new categories of claim arise, the court should consider
the matter first from the doctrinal point of view of duty and proximity, as
well as the pragmatic perspective of the purposes served and the dangers
associated with the extension sought.
The doctrinal inquiry
introduces considerations which the cases have traditionally treated under the
concept of proximity. Proximity may be usefully viewed, not so much as a test
in itself, but as a broad concept which is capable of subsuming different categories
of cases involving different factors. Deane J. in Sutherland Shire Council
v. Heyman (1985), 60 A.L.R. 1, at pp. 55‑56, in a passage cited
by MacGuigan J.A., in the judgment below at p. 165, describes proximity as
follows:
The
requirement of proximity is directed to the relationship between the parties in
so far as it is relevant to the allegedly negligent act or omission of the
defendant and the loss or injury sustained by the plaintiff. It involves the
notion of nearness or closeness and embraces physical proximity (in the sense
of space and time) between the person or property of the plaintiff and the
person or property of the defendant, circumstantial proximity such as an
overriding relationship of employer and employee or of a professional man and
his client and what may (perhaps loosely) be referred to as causal proximity in
the sense of the closeness or directness of the causal connection or
relationship between the particular act or course of conduct and the loss or
injury sustained. It may reflect an assumption by one party of a
responsibility to take care to avoid or prevent injury, loss or damage to the
person or property of another or reliance by one party upon such care being
taken by the other in circumstances where the other party knew or ought to have
known of that reliance. Both the identity and the relative importance of the
factors which are determinative of an issue of proximity are likely to vary in
different categories of case. That does not mean that there is scope for decision
by reference to idiosyncratic notions of justice or morality or that it is a
proper approach to treat the requirement of proximity as a question of fact to
be resolved merely by reference to the relationship between the plaintiff and
the defendant in the particular circumstances. The requirement of a
relationship of proximity serves as a touchstone and control of the categories
of case in which the common law will adjudge that a duty of care is owed.
Given the general circumstances of a case in a new or developing area of the
law of negligence, the question what (if any) combination or combinations of
factors will satisfy the requirement of proximity is a question of law to be
resolved by the processes of legal reasoning, induction and deduction. On the
other hand, the identification of the content of that requirement in such an
area should not be either ostensibly or actually divorced from notions of what
is "fair and reasonable ..."
The matter may be put thus:
before the law will impose liability there must be a connection between the
defendant's conduct and plaintiff's loss which makes it just for the defendant
to indemnify the plaintiff. In contract, the contractual relationship provides
this link. In trust, it is the fiduciary obligation which establishes the
necessary connection. In tort, the equivalent notion is proximity. Proximity
may consist of various forms of closeness ‑‑ physical,
circumstantial, causal or assumed ‑‑ which serve to identify the
categories of cases in which liability lies.
Viewed thus, the concept of
proximity may be seen as an umbrella, covering a number of disparate
circumstances in which the relationship between the parties is so close that it
is just and reasonable to permit recovery in tort. The complexity and
diversity of the circumstances in which tort liability may arise defy
identification of a single criterion capable of serving as the universal
hallmark of liability. The meaning of "proximity" is to be found
rather in viewing the circumstances in which it has been found to exist and
determining whether the case at issue is similar enough to justify a similar
finding.
In summary, it is my view
that the authorities suggest that pure economic loss is prima facie
recoverable where, in addition to negligence and foreseeable loss, there is
sufficient proximity between the negligent act and the loss. Proximity is the
controlling concept which avoids the spectre of unlimited liability. Proximity
may be established by a variety of factors, depending on the nature of the
case. To date, sufficient proximity has been found in the case of negligent
misstatements where there is an undertaking and correlative reliance (Hedley
Byrne); where there is a duty to warn (Rivtow); and where a statute
imposes a responsibility on a municipality toward the owners and occupiers of
land (Kamloops). But the categories are not closed. As more cases are
decided, we can expect further definition on what factors give rise to
liability for pure economic loss in particular categories of cases. In
determining whether liability should be extended to a new situation, courts
will have regard to the factors traditionally relevant to proximity such as the
relationship between the parties, physical propinquity, assumed or imposed
obligations and close causal connection. And they will insist on sufficient
special factors to avoid the imposition of indeterminate and unreasonable
liability. The result will be a principled, yet flexible, approach to tort
liability for pure economic loss. It will allow recovery where recovery is
justified, while excluding indeterminate and inappropriate liability, and it
will permit the coherent development of the law in accordance with the approach
initiated in England by Hedley Byrne and followed in Canada in Rivtow,
Kamloops and Hofstrand.
I add the following
observations on proximity. The absolute exclusionary rule adopted in Stockton
and affirmed in Murphy (subject to Hedley Byrne) can
itself be seen as an indicator of proximity. Where there is physical injury or
damage, one posits proximity on the ground that if one is close enough to
someone or something to do physical damage to it, one is close enough to be
held legally responsible for the consequences. Physical injury has the
advantage of being a clear and simple indicator of proximity. The problem
arises when it is taken as the only indicator of proximity. As the
cases amply demonstrate, the necessary proximity to found legal liability
fairly in tort may well arise in circumstances where there is no physical
damage.
Viewed in this way, proximity
may be seen as paralleling the requirement in civil law that damages be direct
and certain. Proximity, like the requirement of directness, posits a close
link between the negligent act and the resultant loss. Distant losses which
arise from collateral relationships do not qualify for recovery.
In many of the cases
discussed above, the judiciary has focused upon the relationship between the
tortfeasor and the plaintiff as an indication of proximity, a focus closely
related to the foreseeability analysis inherent to all negligence actions. In
the classic case of Hedley Byrne, the reliance analysis focuses upon the
connection between the party who made the negligent misstatement and the
injured party, i.e., is that plaintiff a party that the tortfeasor ought
reasonably to have foreseen would rely on his or her statement? The judgments
below focused on the relationship between the tortfeasor Norsk and the
plaintiff CN both within and outside their discussion of proximity. A more
comprehensive, and I submit objective, consideration of proximity requires that
the court review all of the factors connecting the negligent act with the loss;
this includes not only the relationship between the parties but all forms of
proximity ‑‑ physical, circumstantial, causal or assumed indicators
of closeness. While it is impossible to define comprehensively what will
satisfy the requirements of proximity or directness, precision may be found as
types of relationships or situations are defined in which the necessary
closeness between negligence and loss exists.
While proximity is critical
to establishing the right to recover pure economic loss in tort, it does not
always indicate liability. It is a necessary but not necessarily sufficient
condition of liability. Recognizing that proximity is itself concerned with
policy, the approach adopted in Kamloops (paralleled by the second
branch of Anns) requires the Court to consider the purposes served by
permitting recovery as well as whether there are any residual policy
considerations which call for a limitation on liability. This permits courts
to reject liability for pure economic loss where indicated by policy reasons
not taken into account in the proximity analysis.
I conclude that, from a
doctrinal point of view, this Court should continue on the course charted in Kamloops
rather than reverting to the narrow exclusionary rule as the House of Lords did
in Murphy.
(b) Pragmatic
Considerations
Are there practical reasons
why the recovery of economic loss should be confined to cases where the
plaintiff has sustained physical damage or injury or relied on a negligent
misrepresentation? Will extension of recovery of economic loss to other
situations open the floodgates of liability, prove so uncertain as to be
unworkable, or have an adverse economic impact? Such questions are difficult
to answer, but some assistance may be gained from looking at what has happened
where the rule has been broadened and from examining the merits of the economic
arguments urged in support of restricting recovery.
(1) The
Comparative Evidence
The comparative historical
perspective provides little support for the need for a rule which confines
recovery of economic loss to cases where the plaintiff has suffered physical
loss or has relied on a negligent misstatement. The civil law in Canada and
abroad appears to function adequately without recourse to such a rule. In the
common law jurisdictions of Canada, where the availability of damages for pure
economic loss has been accepted for a decade and a half, the twin spectres of
unlimited recovery and unworkable uncertainty have not materialized. And to
the extent that recovery for pure economic loss has been allowed in the United
States, it seems not to have provoked adverse consequences but rather to have
satisfied the public demand for justice so essential to maintaining the
vitality of the law of negligence.
(2) Economic
Theory
The arguments advanced under
this head proceed from the premise that a certain type of loss should not be
seen in terms of fault but seen rather as the more or less inevitable by‑product
of desirable but inherently dangerous (or `risky') activity. Viewing the
activity thus, it is argued that it may well be just to distribute its costs
among all who benefit from that activity, and conversely unfair to impose it
upon individuals who (assuming human error to be the inevitable by‑product
of human activity) are viewed as the "faultless" instruments causing
the loss. This basis for administering losses has been variously described as
"collectivisation of losses" or "loss distribution": see
Fleming, The Law of Torts, supra, at pp. 8‑9. It arguably
amounts to a rejection or diminution of the concept of personal fault on which
our law of tort (and the civil law of delict) is based.
Three arguments are put
forward: (1) the insurance argument; (2) the loss spreading argument; and (3)
the "contractual allocation of risk" argument. None of them, in my
view, establishes that the extension of recovery granted by the courts in this
case is unfair or inefficient.
The insurance argument says
that the plaintiff is in a better position to predict economic loss consequent
on an accident, and hence better able to obtain cheap insurance against the
contingency. From a macro‑economic point of view, this will result in an
overall saving. The argument, however, depends on a number of questionable
assumptions. As Bishop, "Economic Loss in Tort" (1982), 2 Oxf. J.
Legal Studies 1, at p. 2, puts it:
It is
said that the victim, even when he sustains large losses, is the least cost
insurer where financial loss is concerned. This argument must overcome two
difficulties. First, the common law restriction of financial loss recovery
reduces incentives to tortfeasors to take care. For example it is cheaper for
a builder to dig without checking for the presence of gas mains or electricity
cables. Such reduced care will, in the long run, result in more accidents.
So, if the insurance argument is to be sustained, the victim must be not only
the better insurer, but better by some margin so great that it justifies the
losses from more frequent and more severe injury. Second, it seems doubtful
that either victim or tortfeasor could in fact insure at reasonable cost in the
insurance markets of the real world. There does exist `key man' or business
interruption insurance, but no general insurance against lost profit ‑‑
a type of insurance that would suffer from extreme moral hazard problems. The
price of market insurance will always include some cost for administration.
Most firms will find the price too high to justify purchase. Usually the only
insurance available will be self‑insurance. Why should we assume that
victims do that better than tortfeasors?
The loss spreading
justification asserts that it is better for the economic well‑being of
society to spread the risk among many parties rather than place it on the
shoulders of the tortfeasor. Again, this argument is based on questionable
assumptions. To quote Bishop, supra, at p. 2, once more:
[This
argument] is a variant of the insurance argument. The tortfeasor, for example
a small construction firm, easily could be bankrupted by the claims, for
example those arising from interrupted power supply. In such cases it is said
that numerous small losses to victims are to be preferred to one large loss to
the tortfeasor. The victims as a class are natural self‑insurers of the
loss. The tortfeasor would have to engage in expensive market transactions to
insure. Perhaps this is so, but there are two points against it. First not
only the question of justice or of efficient risk distribution are involved.
Where losses are spread by relieving the tortfeasor of liability we can expect
more accidents, and so more losses, to occur. Second, some of the victims may
sustain large losses not small ones.
In
any case, the loss spreading rationale cannot justify the numerous cases where there
is only one victim. [Emphasis in original.]
A third argument focuses on
the ability of persons who stand to suffer economic loss due to the damage to
the property of another, to allocate the risk within their contracts
effectively with property owners. The law of negligence has no business
compensating such persons, it is argued, because it makes better economic sense
for them to provide for the possibility of damage to the bridge by negotiating
a term that in the event of failure the owner of the bridge would compensate
them. The argument, applied to the facts of this case, proceeds as follows:
the lessee (CN) would negotiate for indemnification in the event of damage to
the bridge; any increase in the lease payments, should they result, would be
based on estimates derived from information obtained directly from the parties
who will suffer the loss; in the event of damage to the bridge by the
negligence of a third party, the lessee (CN) would claim under its contract
with the lessor (PWC) for indemnification in the amount negotiated; the lessor
could, as the party suffering physical damage, turn around and claim against
the tortfeasor (Norsk) for the consequent economic losses including the amount
it had to pay out under its contract to the lessee CN. Such a loss is
reasonably foreseeable and falls within the established exception for recovery
of economic loss where physical damage is suffered as well. In this way,
relational economic losses are `channelled' rather than denied.
The proponents of this
position argue that judicial affirmation of a rule that recovery of economic
loss is confined to cases where the plaintiff has sustained physical damage to
its person or property or has relied in the sense of Hedley Byrne, will
send a clear message to the business community to plan its affairs
accordingly. Following this argument, the Court can presume that if CN failed
to contract for this indemnification: (a) CN paid less for its lease; (b) CN
did not consider the risk of unavailability to be significant enough to
negotiate for such indemnification (or, alternatively, to insure itself); or (c)
CN did not act reasonably and was itself negligent in organizing its business
affairs. As such, the preclusion of CN from recovery is justified.
The "contractual
allocation of risk" argument rests on a number of important, but
questionable assumptions. First, the argument assumes that all persons or
business entities organize their affairs in accordance with the laws of
economic efficiency, assigning liability to the "least‑cost risk
avoider". Second, it assumes that all parties to a transaction share an
equality of bargaining power which will result in the effective allocation of
risk. It is not considered that certain parties who control the situation
(e.g., the owners of an indispensable bridge) may refuse to indemnify against
the negligence of those over whom they have no control, or may demand such an
exorbitant premium for this indemnification that it would be more cost‑effective
for the innocent victim to insure itself. Thirdly, it overlooks the historical
centrality of personal fault to our concept of negligence or "delict"
and the role this may have in curbing negligent conduct and thus limiting the
harm done to innocent parties, not all of whom are large enterprises capable of
maximizing their economic situation. Given the uncertainty of these premises,
it is far from clear that the Court should deny recovery of pure economic loss
on the basis of arguments based on allocation of risk.
(3) Summary of
Pragmatic Considerations
I conclude that it has not
been shown that the approach enunciated by this Court in Kamloops
threatens to open the floodgates of indeterminate liability, leads to undue
uncertainty, or causes unfair or inefficient economic allocation of resources.
On the contrary, the Kamloops approach is arguably sensitive to these concerns.
Moreover, should the courts in following this approach extend liability too
far, it is open to the legislatures of this country to impose limits. There is
no practical reason evident at this stage for the courts to retreat to the
inflexibility of a rule that never countenances recovery of economic loss
except where the plaintiff has suffered physical damage or injury or has relied
on a negligent misrepresentation.
4. Application to this
Case
The plaintiff CN suffered
economic loss as a result of being deprived of its contractual right to use the
bridge damaged by the defendants' negligence. Applying the Kamloops
approach, its right to recover depends on: (1) whether it can establish
sufficient proximity or "closeness", and (2) whether extension of
recovery to this type of loss is desirable from a practical point of view.
The first question is whether
the evidence in this case establishes the proximity necessary to found
liability. The case does not fall within any of the categories where proximity
and liability have been hitherto found to exist. So we must consider the
matter afresh.
A number of factors have been
suggested in support of a finding of the necessary proximity. One might fasten
on the fact that damaging the bridge raised the danger of physical injury to
CN's property. CN's property ‑‑ its trains ‑‑ were
frequently on the bridge and stood to be damaged by an accident involving the
bridge. Whether they were in fact damaged is immaterial to the question of
proximity. What is important is that this danger indicates a measure of
closeness which has traditionally been held to establish the proximity
necessary to found liability in tort for pure economic loss. However, to found
the decision on this criterion would be to affirm the minority position of
Laskin and Hall JJ. in Rivtow that danger of physical loss is sufficient
to found liability. I note that the majority's restriction of recovery of
economic loss to the duty to warn has been doubted. Wilson J. in Kamloops
noted that the problem of concurrent liability in contract and tort may have
played a major role in the majority decision in Rivtow, and (at
p. 34) that "as in the case of Hedley Byrne, we will have to
await the outcome of a developing jurisprudence around that decision
also". MacGuigan J.A. below stated at p. 166: "In my
observation, courts will always find sufficient proximity where there is
physical danger to the plaintiff's property". However it is not necessary
to address that issue in this case since other factors clearly indicate the
necessary proximity.
In addition to focusing upon
the relationship between the appellant Norsk and CN -‑ a significant
indicator of proximity in and of itself -‑ the trial judge based his
conclusion that there was sufficient proximity on a number of factors related
to CN's connection with the property damaged, the bridge, including the fact
that CN's property was in close proximity to the bridge, that CN'S property
could not be enjoyed without the link of the bridge, which was an integral part
of its railway system and that CN supplied materials, inspection and consulting
services for the bridge, was its preponderant user, and was recognized in the
periodic negotiations surrounding the closing of the bridge.
MacGuigan J.A. summarized the
trial judge's findings on proximity as follows, at p. 167:
In
effect, the Trial Judge found that the CNR was so closely assimilated to the
position of PWC that it was very much within the reasonable ambit of risk of
the appellants at the time of the accident. That, it seems to me, is
sufficient proximity: in Deane J.'s language, it is both physical and
circumstantial closeness.
Such a characterization
brings the situation into the "joint" or "common venture"
category under which recovery for purely economic loss has heretofore been
recognized in maritime law cases from the United Kingdom (The Greystoke
Castle, supra) and the United States (Amoco Transport, supra).
The reasoning, as I apprehend it, is that where the plaintiff's operations are
so closely allied to the operations of the party suffering physical damage and
to its property (which ‑‑ as damaged ‑‑ causes the
plaintiff's loss) that it can be considered a joint venturer with the owner of
the property, the plaintiff can recover its economic loss even though the
plaintiff has suffered no physical damage to its own property. To deny
recovery in such circumstances would be to deny it to a person who for
practical purposes is in the same position as if he or she owned the property
physically damaged.
The second question is
whether extension of recovery to this type of loss is desirable from a
practical point of view. Recovery serves the purpose of permitting a plaintiff
whose position for practical purposes, vis‑à‑vis the tortfeasor, is
indistinguishable from that of the owner of the damaged property, to recover
what the actual owner could have recovered. This is fair and avoids an
anomalous result. Nor does the recovery of economic loss in this case open the
floodgates to unlimited liability. The category is a limited one. It has been
applied in England and the United States without apparent difficulty. It does
not embrace casual users of the property or those secondarily and incidentally
affected by the damage done to the property. Potential tortfeasors can gauge
in advance the scope of their liability. Businesses are not precluded from
self‑insurance or from contracting for indemnity, nor are they
`penalized' for not so doing. Finally, frivolous claims are not encouraged.
I conclude that here, as in Kamloops,
the necessary duty and proximity are established, that valid purposes are
served by permitting recovery, and that recovery will not open the floodgates
to unlimited liability. In such circumstances, recovery should be permitted.
In deference to the learned
judgments of my colleagues, I add the following comments. With respect to the
reasons of my colleague Stevenson J., I, like La Forest J., would not
accept, by itself, the "known plaintiff" test or the
"ascertained class" test, which, to borrow La Forest J.'s
phrase, places a premium on notoriety. With respect to the reasons of
La Forest J., we are in agreement that the broad and flexible approach set
out in Anns governs the right to recover for economic loss in tort. We
also agree that the law of tort does not permit recovery for all economic
loss. We further agree that where the plaintiff establishes a joint venture
with the owner of the damaged property, it should be able to recover economic
loss. Where we differ, in the final analysis, is on the test for determining
joint venture.
La Forest J. says that
the right to recovery in cases such as this depends exclusively on the terms of
the formal contract between the plaintiff and the property owner. If the
contract creates a possessory interest or a joint venture, or if it provides
for indemnification by the property owner, the plaintiff may recover against a
tortfeasor who damages the property and causes economic loss. I do not read
the authorities which have considered the implications of a joint venture
between the plaintiff and the owner of the damaged property as confining
themselves to the formal terms of the contract. I prefer a more flexible test
which permits the trial judge to consider all factors relevant to their
relationship. The terms of the contract are an important consideration in
determining whether economic loss is recoverable. But the contract may tell
only part of the story between the parties. If the evidence establishes that
having regard to the entire relationship between the owner of the damaged
property and the plaintiff, the plaintiff must be regarded as standing in the
relation of joint or common venturer (or a concept akin thereto) with the
property owner with the result that in justice his rights against third parties
should be the same as the owner's, then I would not interfere. Here as
elsewhere in the law of tort, the question is where the balance between
certainty and flexibility should be struck. It is my conviction, based on the
development of the law relating to recovery of economic loss thus far, that the
balance must be struck this side of rigid categorization which denies the
possibility of recovery in new cases which may not meet the categorical test.
From the point of view of
policy, I share La Forest J.'s concern with avoiding recovery which
increases the cost of dealing with a given loss and agree with the importance
of the considerations he raises as to the contractual allocation of the risk.
While important, I do not find these considerations to be exclusively
determinative of the issue. For the reasons given earlier, the policy
arguments against recovery are not conclusive, particularly when the individual
case is considered. In general, the narrower the scope of tort liability, the
cheaper liability insurance. But that is not the whole answer. It may be that
elimination of all tort liability for accidents would be the best solution from
the point of view of economics, given that casualty insurance is cheaper than
liability insurance. But for reasons of principle and policy the law rejects
such a conclusion.
I agree too that generally
people should be able to predict when they can recover economic loss from third
parties, so they can determine in advance how to arrange their affairs, i.e.
whether to purchase casualty (or accident) insurance or not. I suggest the
test I propose permits this in substantial measure, while leaving open the door
to future developments in the law; at a minimum if there is no special
connection, physical or circumstantial, between the plaintiff's operations and
the property damaged, recovery cannot be assumed and casualty insurance should
be purchased. I doubt greater predictability in practical terms can be
achieved. Is it truly realistic to suggest that a business firm will decide
whether or not to purchase insurance on the basis of what a particular contract
with the owner of a particular property provides, as La Forest J.
suggests? A company such as C.N. has a host of contracts to consider when
assessing whether to buy insurance to cover loss resulting from accidents. Some
will meet La Forest J.'s criteria, some will not. I suspect that
such decisions as to insurance are more likely to be made on the more global
basis of asking whether there is any significant risk of loss in the operations
which may not be recovered by suing third parties. Moreover, no plaintiff can
be sure it will recover its loss, even if the law permits recovery; the party
at fault, for example, may be insolvent or uninsured. If there is doubt on any
of these questions, the prudent firm will purchase casualty insurance. So
predictability is revealed as a more complex matter than looking at a
particular contract.
In the end, I conclude that a
test for recovery of economic loss outside situations akin to Hedley Byrne
-- whether `contractual relational' economic loss or otherwise -- should be
flexible enough to meet the complexities of commercial reality and to permit
the recognition of new situations in which liability ought, in justice, to lie
as such situations arise. With the greatest respect, it seems to me that a
test, which is confined to the terms of the formal contract between the owner
of the property damaged and the person who suffers economic loss as a
consequence of that damage, may not fill these objectives.
Disposition
I would dismiss the appeal
with costs.
//Stevenson J.//
The following are the reasons
delivered by
Stevenson
J. -- I have read the
judgment of my colleague Justice McLachlin and while I agree with her
conclusion, I reach it by a somewhat different analysis and characterization.
Issue
The appellants have
formulated the issue in the following way:
Where
A negligently damages the property of B which results in a
contractual disruption and consequent economic loss to C:
(i)Does
the law recognize a proximity in relationship between A and C
sufficient to support a duty of care, the breach of which gives rise to
liability?
(ii)If
so, does the requisite proximity exist between Railway and tug in this case?
The General Exclusionary Rule
I first must make it clear
that, in Canada, we do not accept a rule that pure economic loss is not
recoverable in a negligence action. Many of the authorities are canvassed in
the judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal, [1990] 3 F.C. 114, and I do not propose
reviewing all of them.
I agree with what was said in
this Court in Agnew-Surpass Shoe Stores Ltd. v. Cummer-Yonge Investments
Ltd., [1976] 2 S.C.R. 221, at p. 252, where Pigeon J. wrote:
It
is now settled by the judgment of this Court in Rivtow Marine Ltd. v.
Washington Iron Works that recovery for economic loss caused by negligence
is allowable without any recovery for property damage.
Also, in B.D.C. Ltd. v.
Hofstrand Farms Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 228, at p. 239, Estey J. wrote:
...in
principle, a defendant could be held liable in tort for economic losses arising
wholly in the absence of associated physical injury or damages.
It should also be noted that
in Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 2, the Court allowed
the recovery of a pure economic loss.
While the general
exclusionary rule has been emphatically re-affirmed in England in Murphy v.
Brentwood District Council, [1991] 1 A.C. 398, I see no justification for
our so doing. A review of the case law discussing the rule satisfies me that
there is no satisfactory rationale for a general exclusionary rule and that we
should, rather than apply an indefensible general rule, examine the policy
considerations that led to its application in the kind of case we are
considering, a claim for economic loss where the claimant has suffered no
damage to property or person.
The general exclusionary rule
is often traced to Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875), L.R. 10
Q.B. 453. In that case, the plaintiff had contracted to build a tunnel for a
lump sum, but the defendant -‑ a third party ‑‑
negligently flooded the tunnel causing an increase in the cost of performance
of the contract. Recovery was denied but not simply because the damage was
purely economic. Recovery was also denied because the loss was a
"relational loss" consequent upon the negligent infliction of damage
to the property of another.
Simpson & Co. v. Thomson (1877), 3 App. Cas. 279 (H.L.), was
the first case that explicitly said that one cannot recover an economic loss if
one has not also suffered a physical loss. In that case an insurance company
claimed for its economic loss. Lord Penzance said at p. 290 about claims
for pure economic losses that
[s]uch
instances might be indefinitely multiplied, giving rise to rights of action
which in modern communities, where every complexity of mutual relation is daily
created by contract, might be both numerous and novel.
...
[An
action can only lie] in the name, and therefore, in point of law, on the part
of one who had either some property in, or possession of, the chattel injured.
The Extension of the Duty of Care
The general exclusionary rule
was faithfully followed for many years. Then came Donoghue v. Stevenson,
[1932] A.C. 562 (H.L.), a case that is so well known that a review is trite.
That case was not concerned with pure economic loss as such, but its general
principles on where a duty of care should lie have influenced the whole law of
negligence. The exclusionary rule could, in fact, be described simply as the
denial of a duty of care for pure economic losses. In Donoghue, the
House of Lords was also confronted with a situation where traditionally,
without the benefit of a contract, there was no duty of care. The House of
Lords enunciated the principles to follow in order to establish a duty of
care. Lord Atkin said at p. 580:
You
must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably
foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour. Who, then, in law is my
neighbour? The answer seems to be -- persons who are so closely and directly
affected by my act that I ought reasonably to have them in contemplation as
being so affected when I am directing my mind to the acts or omissions which
are called in question.
The House of Lords found a duty where
traditionally there was none.
An "Exception" to the
Exclusionary Rule: Negligent Misstatements
In Hedley Byrne & Co.
v. Heller & Partners Ltd., [1964] A.C. 465 (H.L.), the defendant had
made a negligent misstatement to a bank about the creditworthiness of a certain
company. The bank gave the information to the plaintiff who relied on it and
ended up losing money. Interestingly, the case was dismissed because of a
disclaimer clause found in the letter sent to the bank. Nevertheless, in a
long dictum, the Law Lords recognized a right to compensation for purely
economic losses caused by a negligent misstatement.
At page 536, Lord Pearce
interpreted Morrison Steamship Co. v. Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners) (The
Greystoke Castle), [1947] A.C. 265 (H.L.), as authority for the proposition
that "economic loss alone, without some physical or material damage to
support it, can afford a cause of action".
Other Direct "Exceptions"
Exceptions became more and
more frequent. I will first consider the exceptions to the exclusionary rule
itself to which I will refer as the direct exceptions (for a list of many of
those exceptions see Chambers, "Economic Loss" in Finn, Essays on
Torts (1989), p. 43). I will then consider the indirect exceptions, which
are means of circumventing the rule without expressly creating a new exception.
One direct exception is that
for the negligent performance of a service (Feldthusen, Economic Negligence
(2nd ed. 1989), at p. 129). It is found in Ross v. Caunters, [1980] Ch.
297. In that case, a solicitor negligently drafted a will causing the
plaintiff to lose part of her inheritance ‑‑ a pure economic loss.
The plaintiff was allowed to recover.
Yet another exception is that
for defective products. A defective product has not yet caused physical harm
but will eventually cause some. The cost of repair is in fact a purely
financial loss and there has been no physical injury. Yet some commentators
argue that "[e]conomic loss in products liability is a different type of
pure economic loss" (Feldthusen, supra, at p. 170) because the
economic loss would not be distinguishable from the possible physical harm.
The matter will often be governed by statute but at common law the exception
could be called the "imminent risk exception".
Some would argue that an
example of this last exception can be found in the opinion of Laskin J., as he
then was, in Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works, [1974] S.C.R.
1189, at pp. 1216 et seq. The plaintiff had chartered a crane for its
logging business. The defendants knew it needed repair but withheld that
information until they had no choice but to break the news: a similar crane
belonging to someone else had collapsed and killed someone. Had the plaintiff
known of the defect it would have had the crane repaired at a convenient time
rather than at the height of the logging season. The plaintiff claimed the
profits it lost because of a shutdown of its operation. They also claimed the
cost of repairing the crane. At page 1218, Laskin J. wrote:
The
present case is not of the Hedley Byrne type, ... but recovery for
economic loss alone is none the less supported under negligence doctrine. It
seems to me that the rationale of manufacturers' liability for negligence
should equally support such recovery in the case where, as here, there is a
threat of physical harm and the plaintiff is in the class of those who are
foreseeably so threatened. . .
On this point Laskin J. was
in dissent. Ritchie J. for the majority reinstated the decision of the trial
judge which allowed the recovery of the loss of profits on the basis of a duty
to warn but denied the cost of repairs. Although one might wonder why he did
not go as far as Laskin J. did, Ritchie J. for the majority wrote at p. 1215:
I
am conscious of the fact that I have not referred to all relevant authorities
relating to recovery for economic loss under such circumstances, but I am
satisfied that in the present case there was a proximity of relationship giving
rise to a duty to warn and that the damages awarded by the learned trial judge
were recoverable as compensation for the direct and demonstrably foreseeable
result of the breach of that duty. This being the case, I do not find it
necessary to follow the sometimes winding paths leading to the formulation of a
"policy decision".
Both the majority and the
dissent in Rivtow seemed willing to admit that pure economic losses
could be recovered. Most commentators would admit that the majority in Rivtow
introduces another exception to the exclusionary rule and some would argue that
a second exception is introduced by the dissent. The first exception is that
in matters of product liability, one can recover a purely economic loss limited
to the lost profits when that loss is caused by a breach of the duty to warn of
the known defects of a product.
The second exception, more
doubtful because it is based on the dissent of Laskin J., is that one can
recover the cost of repairs -- a pure economic loss -- when there is a risk of
injury to property or persons. That "exception" was mentioned by
Lord Wilberforce in Anns v. Merton London Borough Council, [1978] A.C.
728 (H.L.), at p. 760.
The Reasons for the Rule
In Kamloops, supra,
Wilson J. questioned the need for the exclusionary rule in the following manner
(at pp. 28-29):
How,
it is asked, can one justify to injured plaintiffs the difference in treatment
the law accords to physical and to economic loss caused by a defendant's
negligent acts? In one you are compensated by the wrongdoer: in the other you
have to bear the loss yourself. Does it make sense to permit the recovery of
economic loss for negligent words but not for negligent acts? What is the
significant difference between them? Why, if economic loss is reasonably
foreseeable as a consequence of negligent acts, should it not be as recoverable
as reasonably foreseeable physical injury to persons or to property? And
should Chief Judge Cardozo's fear of indeterminate liability to an
indeterminate class preclude recovery by a very specific plaintiff in a very
specific amount? Can a policy consideration which leads to a manifest
injustice in certain types of cases be a good policy consideration? Is there
some rationale whereby injustice in specific cases can be avoided and
Chief Judge Cardozo's fear guarded against at the same time?
Some argue that there is a
fundamental distinction between physical damage (personal and property damage)
and pure economic loss and that the latter is less worthy of protection.
Professor Feldthusen has attempted to make this argument in Economic
Negligence, supra, at pp. 8-14, but I am left unconvinced. Although
I am prepared to recognize that a human being is more important than property
and lost expectations of profit, I fail to see how property and economic losses
can be distinguished.
Some say that the rule has a
policy justification in insurance and in loss spreading. McLachlin J. answers
that assertion.
The real reason for the rule
is obvious to me. It was eloquently stated by Cardozo C.J. in Ultramares
Corporation v. Touche, 174 N.E. 441 (N.Y. 1931), at p. 444: he feared
"liability in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an
indeterminate class". In my view that is an appropriate general test for
relational losses, but is not a justification for a blanket acceptance of a bar
on the recovery of economic losses. I return later to the problem of
relational losses.
Many judges, lawyers and
jurists seem extremely concerned about what life would be like after the death
of the exclusionary rule against recovery of pure economic loss. The worst
apocalyptic scenarios are feared. Everyone will go bankrupt, business will be
impossible to conduct, the cost of insurance will be astronomical. The
floodgates will be opened and our legal system will collapse. I do not share
these fears.
First I have examined
numerous exceptions to the exclusionary rule which have effectively abolished
the rule in many areas where it used to apply. Has anyone seen any of the
predicted catastrophic consequences?
Second, some personal injury
cases can entail enormous liabilities. Liability for damage to property can
also run in tens of millions of dollars. Oil spills and other environmental
catastrophes can cause tremendous personal and property damage. Yet no one
suggests that such tortfeasors should not be held liable. Why should the
extent of potential liability for economic loss prevent recovery when it does
not for property and personal damage? If our legal system is able to deal with
disastrous personal and property damage, it should be able to deal with
disastrous economic damage.
Third, this Court has the
benefit of being the final court of appeal in a country that has two legal
traditions: the English common law and the French civil law. Our two legal
traditions are independent and should not be confused. Concepts and solutions
found in one tradition should not be imposed on the other tradition. But this
does not mean that there is no place for comparative law on this Court. The
case at bar is a good example of how useful comparative law can be.
The civil law of Quebec and
the civil law of France have no categorical rule preventing the recovery of
pure economic loss (see Jutras, "Civil Law and Pure Economic Loss: What
Are We Missing?" (1986-87), 12 Can. Bus. L.J. 295; Tetley,
"Damages and Economic Loss in Marine Collision: Controlling the
Floodgates" (1991), 22 J. Mar. Law & Com. 539; Herbots,
"Le "duty of care" et le dommage purement financier en droit
comparé", [1985] Rev. dr. int. et dr. comp. 7; note that the German
civil law tradition has such a rule: Markesinis, A Comparative Introduction
to the German Law of Torts (2nd ed. 1990), at pp. 37 et seq.). Yet,
the French civil law system works well, insurance is not impossible to get,
business is conducted as anywhere else in the world. Because of the experience
this Court has in the civil law it cannot be frightened by apocalyptic
scenarios about life after the rule against the recovery of pure economic loss.
As a result, I conclude that
there is in Canada no general exclusionary rule precluding recovery of pure
economic loss in a negligence action. This does not mean, however, that all
economic losses are recoverable in a negligence action. There are policy reasons
which preclude recovery of certain types of economic losses.
Relational Losses
That takes me back to Cattle
v. Stockton, supra, which is the case upon which the relational loss
rule is based. As the appellants correctly point out, that case denies
recoverability for "relational losses" consequent upon the negligent
infliction of damage to the property of another. To limit recovery to the
owner and possessor imposes some restraint. As the appellants point out that
case is seminal. See Candlewood Navigation Corp. v. Mitsui O.S.K. Lines
Ltd. (The Mineral Transporter), [1986] A.C. 1 (P.C.), at p. 25; Leigh
and Sillavan Ltd. v. Aliakmon Shipping Co., [1986] A.C. 785 (H.L.), and Murphy,
supra. Candlewood grounds the exceptions on reasons of
practical policy. Once this Court embraced the Anns approach, as it did
in Kamloops, exceptions to recovery must be based on some acceptable
policy.
Like the loss in Cattle v.
Stockton, the loss in this case is a relational loss. Fleming, The Law
of Torts (7th ed. 1987), discusses relational losses at pp. 162 et seq.
He describes relational losses as those which do not arise directly from an
injury but rather which arise as a result of a relationship with the injured
party. Relational losses usually arise as a result of damage to another's
property. Fleming notes that the law's "most ingrained opposition"
to the recovery of economic loss in tort has been for relational losses. The
reluctance to allow recovery of such losses is illustrated by numerous cases,
such as Cattle v. Stockton, Simpson & Co. v. Thomson, supra,
Société anonyme de remorquage à hélice v. Bennetts, [1911] 1 K.B. 243,
and Weller & Co. v. Foot & Mouth Disease Research Institute,
[1966] 1 Q.B. 569. According to Fleming, the reason that the law is reluctant
to allow recovery of relational losses is not merely that those losses are
purely economic. Rather the law is concerned that recovery of relational
losses would be oppressive, as most accidents entail repercussions for all
persons with whom an injured party is associated.
In other words, the
reluctance to allow recovery for relational losses arises because of the
possibility of indeterminate liability. The concern is not infinite liability
(the "floodgates") but indeterminate liability: Cardozo C.J. feared
"indeterminate" liability, not "infinite" liability. The
courts already deal with massive liability where there is damage to persons or
property, and can also do so for damage which is purely economic. However, it
would be oppressive to expose defendants to indeterminate liability.
Defendants should not be responsible for all of the consequences of their acts,
even if they are negligent. Defendants should be responsible to those they directly
injure, but not to all those who are affected by some relationship with the
injured party. At some point, we must all bear the risk that persons with whom
we are associated will be harmed. This responsibility begins at the point at
which the defendant's liability could become indeterminate. For policy reasons
and for reasons of fairness to defendants, the law must deny recovery of
economic losses which give rise to the possibility of indeterminate liability.
The appellants acknowledge that pragmatic rationale as being at the root of
this limitation when they invoked United States cases on the subject, so the
question we face is starkly a policy one.
Relational losses usually
create the possibility of indeterminate liability. Recovery of relational
losses is therefore exceptional. In Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. v. The
Dredge "Willemstad" (1976), 11 A.L.R. 227 (H.C.), recovery for
damage to the relational interest is acknowledged to be exceptional. The
respondent also acknowledges that the recovery of relational losses is
exceptional (respondent's factum, p. 6, at para. 1.1). As a matter of policy
some limit on recovery of relational losses must exist to prevent indeterminate
liability. The need for some limitation is recognized in Rivtow and acknowledged
in Kamloops. Commentators also generally accept the need for a
limitation, and also express a need for certainty so that commercial
enterprises have some appreciation of what risk is to be borne by whom. See,
for example, Smith, Liability in Negligence (1984), at p. 166; Winfield
and Jolowicz on Tort (13th ed. 1989), at p. 86, and Fleming, supra,
at pp. 162 et seq. Moreover it is clear that the civil law has
developed some form of limitation through the use of concepts of
foreseeability, although Jutras, supra, suggests that civil law may have
gone too far in allowing compensation for pure economic loss which is not
related to damage to a proprietary interest (at p. 311). Yet aside from the
danger of indeterminate liability, there is no reason in principle that bars
recovery of relational losses.
The Limit of Liability
Where do we draw the line?
The decision in the courts below was very much influenced by the application of
the doctrine of proximity. This elusive concept is both embraced and rejected
by commentators on the law of negligence. It seems to be given a secondary
role in Anns but a primary role in Murphy. It is a separate
subject in some commentaries, omitted from the index of others except in the
context of remoteness of damage. I express my reservations about the use of
"proximity" as a test. In my view, proximity expresses a conclusion,
a judgment, a result, rather than a principle. If a loss is not proximate, it
may be said to be too remote. I am impressed by the criticism of the concept
of proximity which has been expressed by commentators, such as McHugh,
"Neighbourhood, Proximity and Reliance", in Finn, supra, at
pp. 36-37, and by judges, such as Brennan J. in San Sebastian Pty. Ltd. v.
Minister Administering the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979
(1986), 162 C.L.R. 340 (H.C. of A.), at p. 368. The concept of proximity is
incapable of providing a principled basis for drawing the line on the issue of
liability.
Rather than rely on the term
"proximity", which figured in the judgments appealed from, I prefer
to echo the approach of Mason J. in Caltex, supra, at p. 274,
and address the rationale for disallowing economic losses consequent upon
damage to property: "the apprehension of an indeterminate liability".
A defendant will then be liable for economic damage due to his negligent
conduct when he can reasonably foresee that a specific individual, as distinct
from a general class of persons, will suffer financial loss as a consequence of
his conduct.
In Anns, Lord
Wilberforce formulated a general theory of tort liability on the basis of a
two-stage test (at pp. 751-52). At the first stage, a prima facie duty
of care is established by reasonable foreseeability of harm. At the second
stage, the prima facie duty of care can be negated or reduced in scope
by policy considerations. In Kamloops, this Court accepted the Anns
formulation of tort liability. As Wilson J. expressed the Anns test in Kamloops
(at pp. 10-11), two questions must be asked to determine whether or not a duty
of care exists:
(1)is
there a sufficiently close relationship between the parties ... so that, in the
reasonable contemplation of the [defendant], carelessness on its part might
cause damage to that person? If so,
(2)are
there any considerations which ought to negative or limit (a) the scope of the
duty and (b) the class of persons to whom it is owed or (c) the damages to
which a breach of it may give rise?
Although in Murphy the House of
Lords expressly overruled Anns, in my view this Court should not depart
from the general formulation of duty of care which it accepted in Kamloops.
The line must be drawn by
considering the policy concerns which underlie the need to limit the recovery
of relational losses. The policy rationale which precludes recovery for most
relational losses does not exist if there is no danger of indeterminate
liability. There is no danger of indeterminate liability, and thus no policy
reason to deny recoverability, when the defendant actually knows or ought to
know of a specific individual or individuals, as opposed to a general or
unascertained class of the public, who is or are likely to suffer a foreseeable
kind of loss as a result of negligence by that defendant. For sake of
convenience, this can be called the "known plaintiff" exception to
the usual position that relational losses cannot be recovered for the policy
reason that indeterminate liability could result.
With a known plaintiff, the
scope of liability cannot become indeterminate. Liability is kept within a
limited and determinate scope. The trial judge recognized that where there is
a known plaintiff there is a restricted scope for recovery, and he cited the
fact that the appellants actually knew that the respondent would be harmed by
their negligence as one reason for allowing recovery (1989), 26 F.T.R. 81, at
p. 100). In Candler v. Crane, Christmas & Co., [1951] 2 K.B. 164
(C.A.), Denning L.J., as he then was, in a dissenting judgment which was
approved by the House of Lords in Hedley Byrne, suggested that limiting
liability to the known plaintiff would be a sufficient guard against
indeterminate liability for negligent misstatement. Denning L.J. recognized a
duty of care for negligent misstatement but "confined the duty to cases
where the accountant prepares his accounts and makes his report for the
guidance of the very person in the very transaction in question" (p.
183). Denning L.J. noted that this approach was sufficient to dispose of the
case before him, but he expressly left open the possibility that there could be
a duty of care to a specific class of individuals, as opposed to a specific
individual. However, Denning L.J. did preclude the possibility of extending
liability generally, as such an extension would create the indeterminate
liability feared by Cardozo C.J.
The known plaintiff approach
was also followed by Gibbs and Mason JJ. in Caltex. Gibbs J. would
still find a general exclusionary rule to preclude recovery of pure economic
loss but would find an exception where there is a duty of care and the
defendant has knowledge or means of knowledge that the individual plaintiff,
not a member of an unascertained class, will suffer loss as a result of the
defendant's negligence. Mason J. began from a different perspective with
respect to the exclusionary rule but came to essentially the same conclusion.
He held that limitations on the recovery of economic loss should be related to
the principal factor inhibiting the recognition of a general duty of care,
namely the fear of indeterminate liability. He would require reasonable
foreseeability that a specific individual, rather than a general class, will
suffer economic loss as a result of negligence. In Ross v. Caunters, supra,
the views of Gibbs and Mason JJ. were approved and applied. Recovery was held
to be possible only if the defendant knew or ought to have known that
negligence would injure the individual plaintiff, not merely as a member of an
indeterminate or unascertained class.
However, there has not been
unanimous approval of the known plaintiff approach. The approach was doubted
in Junior Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co., [1983] 1 A.C. 520 (H.L.), at pp.
532-33, and expressly disapproved in Candlewood, supra, except
with respect to actions for negligent misstatement. In Candlewood it
was felt that the known plaintiff approach would not create a satisfactory
control mechanism with reasonable certainty.
I cannot agree with this
conclusion. While the known plaintiff approach may not be an adequate final
limit on recovery of relational economic loss, it would seem that the known
plaintiff rule at least precludes the threat of indeterminate liability. The
effectiveness of the known plaintiff rule can be demonstrated by comparing Ross
v. Caunters with Clarke v. Bruce Lance & Co., [1988] 1 All E.R.
364 (C.A.). In Ross, the court recognized that a solicitor is liable to
a disappointed beneficiary under a will when negligence in the preparation of
the will invalidates the bequest. In Clarke, the court held that when
advising a testator a solicitor does not owe a duty of care to the general body
of legatees who could be affected by the testator's actions. A duty of care to
the general body of legatees would create the possibility of indeterminate
liability. In Clarke, the court found no duty of care because the
solicitor cannot be expected "to contemplate the plaintiff as a person
likely to be affected by any lack of care" (p. 369). Thus the known
plaintiff rule was used in Ross to permit recovery where there was no
danger of indeterminate liability, and used in Clarke to deny recovery
where there was a danger of indeterminate liability.
It is not necessary, for the
purposes of this appeal, to determine where the precise limit to recovery of
relational losses lies. This limit has vexed courts for many years and a
precise limit may be impossible to express. Nonetheless, the known plaintiff
approach does provide an appropriate basis for excluding the relational loss
exclusionary rule. There is no danger of indeterminate liability when the
defendant actually knows or ought to know of an identifiable plaintiff, as
opposed to a general or unascertained class of the public, who is or are likely
to suffer loss as a result of negligence by that defendant. There is
accordingly no policy reason for excluding recovery for such a relational
loss. There may be other exceptions. For example, it might be possible to
permit recovery to a known specific class of plaintiffs, rather than a known
individual plaintiff, without creating the possibility of indeterminate
liability. Relational losses should be recoverable wherever the policy concern
about indeterminate liability does not apply. At the very least, this policy
concern does not apply where the defendant knows or ought to know of the
specific plaintiff who is likely to be harmed.
Disposition
Viewed in this light the
question in this case becomes: as a matter of policy is this foreseeable
consequence of negligent navigation to be compensable? More specifically, is
there a danger of indeterminate liability? On one hand, we have the genuine
concern that losses are not out of proportion to the neglect, that some losses
fall where they lie. On the other, we have the principle that a person who
acts carelessly should be called upon to provide compensation as between
himself or herself and an innocent party.
The appellants do not deny
that the respondent's loss was foreseeable or that the other usual elements
necessary to found a liability in negligence were present. One navigating near
a bridge would ordinarily realize that damage to the bridge structure will
cause damage to the users of the bridge. To use Lord Atkins' question: ought
this particular plaintiff have been in the contemplation of these defendants?
Ought this class of plaintiff, a known bridge user, a person with a contractual
right to use the bridge be in contemplation? The answer is affirmative.
Viewed in this way this case
becomes somewhat easier to decide in that one cannot readily see a policy
reason for excluding liability. The loss was identifiable, the victim
identifiable, the damage almost inevitable. The defendants ought to have known
that the plaintiff would suffer economic loss as a result of their negligence.
In fact, they even had actual knowledge that such a loss would occur. They
even knew of the precise manner in which this plaintiff would be harmed. Would
we deny recovery in such a case? Liability would in no way be out of
proportion with the neglect. There is no danger of indeterminate liability.
The plaintiff here builds
upon the breach of a duty of care to property. It does not assert any duty to
protect its contractual relationships, which would raise a question of the
relative duties and rights in such situations, discussed in Cattle v.
Stockton itself. It hinges its argument upon the recognition that the
class of plaintiffs needs to be limited: see Haig v. Bamford, [1977] 1
S.C.R. 466, at p. 483, and Kamloops, supra, at p. 35. It is
therefore unnecessary, for the purposes of this case, to determine whether or
not interference with contractual duties can give rise to a duty of care in
tort.
The question in this case may
be viewed as one of who bears the risk of loss. Is the risk of loss borne by
the plaintiff, who has no definable proprietary interest, or the defendants who
must have foreseen that the plaintiff would sustain a loss of use? Policy or
pragmatic considerations might justify a consideration of insurability, but
that would entail empirical studies not available to us. This is one of the
rare situations in which the law reform bodies have not undertaken studies that
might assist in answering the question of who is better able to carry on or
pass on the risk. In a case such as this one we might ask whether the carriers
or the barge operators ought to carry the risk -- the users or consumers of one
product or the other?
In my view, the plaintiff was
and ought to have been within the contemplation of the crew operating the tug.
Economic loss to the plaintiff was foreseeable, in no way indeterminate or
uncertain. Its nature and extent were almost predictable. The specific
plaintiff was actually foreseen by the defendants. I see no policy rationale
for excluding liability on the facts of this case.
I would therefore dismiss the
appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs, La
Forest, Sopinka and
Iacobucci JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the
appellants: Campney & Murphy, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the
respondent: McEwen, Schmitt & Co., Vancouver.